Marcel Winatschek

I’m an artist, writer, designer, photographer, hacker, typographer, illustrator, director, traveler, and popular culture enthusiast who has lived, worked, and studied in Germany, Japan, China, Spain, France, Britain, Italy, Canada, Portugal, and the United States, among other inspiring places. My passions include apocalyptic cinema, millennial tunes, and deliberate sustenance. This notebook serves as a diary of a curious mind and is a collection of my stories, thoughts, and experiences, including philosophical essays on life, art, music, books, technology, movies, fashion, travel, games, and food, as well as photos, videos, and interesting discoveries I stumbled upon on the internet.

A selection of my clients:

Nike, Sony, Adidas, Nintendo, Spotify, Canon, Lufthansa, Nissan, Microsoft, Casio, Huawei, Adobe, Red Bull, Heineken, Samsung, Coca-Cola, Unilever, Mercedes-Benz, Converse, Onitsuka Tiger, Dell, Swatch, BMW, Levi’s, Hewlett-Packard, Asics, Intel, Lacoste, Ubisoft, Absolut, Mazda, H&M, Puma, Burger King, Volkswagen, eBay, Diesel, Ford, Electronic Arts, and Paramount.

City Hunger:

I have nothing left to do but keep breathing. In and out. For all time. Forever. Until you discover me, sit deep within my soul, and finally feel how wonderful I am for you, how you won’t want anyone else in your life anymore, how you send the vultures home. My nightmares grow stronger, weaker, more colorful. Of coughing trees, blonde girls, graceful horses.

When I open my eyes again, the powder lies carelessly scattered next to you. Your breasts glow blue in the moonlight—such a beautiful sight I haven’t seen in a long time. For hours I watch the rises and falls, the rhythmic up and down of your being.

No trace left of the one-sided numbness after the great tremor; my head clear again and soaked with the murky thoughts of recent times. How much everything could change. You, me, the two of us. Next to your reddish-blonde hair lies Hugo, smiling, drooling, sleeping.

An insatiable hunger penetrates my innermost being; my thoughts circle around soggy cheeseburgers, greasy pizza, fried noodles baked over with eggs and cheese. I almost throw up from appetite, get up without kissing your forehead one more time, and run naked through the apartment.

The refrigerator is filled with beer, Red Bull, and champagne. Not a trace of anything edible anywhere. The room begins to spin, the bright light drills straight into my stomach, my lungs, my legs. I collapse onto the floor, start to cry, starving miserably.

When Sina sees me the next morning curled up in front of the open refrigerator like an embryo in the womb, she begins to kiss me all over my body, doesn’t stop until I open my eyes, take her head between both hands, and look deep into her ocean-blue eyes.

Countless stars shine within them, the end of the world, the meaning of life within reach. My parents strike up a cheerful song, dolphins leap around. And before I can finally uncover the secret of our entire existence, the doorbell rings.

Sina smiles, gets up, and opens the door to the postman without bothering to cover herself first. He doesn’t bat an eye, presses a small package into her hand, and says goodbye as politely as usual, with a couldn’t-care-less attitude toward the two of us. I feel ashamed. Are you hungry? she asks me then. I’ll order us a pizza if you want.

It takes almost an hour before I can finally eat something. We sit on the couch and watch *The O.C.* on DVD. The sun shines through the huge windows of the old apartment building. On the horizon, the television tower rises above everything.

When Ryan holds the dying Marissa in his arms, I run into the bathroom and vomit into the bathtub. In that moment it simply seems more fitting for my spontaneous undertaking. Sina comes after me and we have sex on the cold tile floor. When I’m finished, she asks me, Do you promise me that it will stay like this forever? I nod silently. She climbs off me.

The package contains a new camera that I had ordered online. It’s expensive, it’s beautiful, and the first thing I photograph with it is Sina while she’s cleaning the bathroom. Whenever I look at those pictures today, my heart seizes up—an overwhelming, bone-shattering feeling of why I didn’t take better care of her. Why I wasn’t there sooner, when it happened.

The first time I saw you, you were sitting right in the middle of Alexanderplatz. Huddled together, unwashed, with greasy hair. You were hiding behind a cardboard sign with a scrawled message that flowed straight into my heart: I’m homesick. Please give me money so I can afford a ticket back home. I sat down on some steps a few meters away from you and watched you.

You were crying. People passed by without a glance, avoided you, practically despised you, like the dirt of society. Spring hadn’t really arrived yet and it was slowly getting dark. I couldn’t bear the sad sight anymore, stood up, and slowly walked toward you. Come with me. I’ll invite you to eat. At first you didn’t want to listen at all, resisted my help—resisted me—but then you gave up your fortress. You stood up, brushed a strand of hair out of your face with your long fingers, and then walked beside me at a respectful distance.

My name is Sina, you muttered while stuffing a big bite of cheeseburger into your mouth. I found that disgusting. Why do you look like that? While I waited for an answer and increasingly wondered why I had brought you, you repulsive little thing, here in the first place, my thoughts drifted into Berlin’s nightlife. At that moment I could have given in to my urges, my feelings, my thoughts—granted myself a journey into nirvana and then hooked up with some cheap hipster in my huge apartment.

My companion didn’t seem to miss my wide grin, and so she began to open up, trying to pull the attention back to herself. Paula and I ran away from home. She’s my best friend.

You almost choked and first took a big gulp of your cola. I felt nauseous. From your manners, the smacking, that repulsive smell. I was in the bathroom at the main train station. And when I came back, she was gone. With my backpack, my phone, and my money. The stupid bitch.

A tear ran down your freckled face. And suddenly a feeling of pity flickered inside me. Now I remembered why I had ended up with you in this miserable place, and I smiled as I ordered two more meals. We talked the whole evening. You told me about your horrible family, your stupid ex-boyfriend, school, the feeling of not knowing where you belonged. And that Berlin was the last hope of finally getting your life together. I knew that feeling all too well.

As for me, I babbled on about my job as a party photographer and how I had always wondered how I managed to make so much money with such a completely pointless occupation. However, I didn’t tell you anything about the drugs, the excesses, and the prostitutes who came and went from my place. But I did reveal that my father never took me seriously, that my very first love had sex with my two best friends, and that I had once been in prison. Why, for the time being, remained my secret.

If you want, you can stay at my place tonight, and tomorrow I’ll buy you a ticket back home. You looked pretty bewildered. Why would you do that? Why would I do that? No idea. I have money and you need money. I was raised Catholic. All that stuff about sharing and loving your neighbor and all that crap. Fine by me, but you’d better not touch me! Suddenly you were a cat, with fangs and claws and that look full of mistrust, fear, and self-defense.

I liked the strength in you, bursting with woundedness and inner greatness. In your sparkling blue eyes I seemed to encounter myself, before I had lost the fun in all of this. The voices of many ghosts came over me as we finally kissed beneath the dim light of the streetlamp. You were pale, unaware and unsuspecting, your being so full of pain and strength. That was the most beautiful thing about it all.

We slept together the whole night. In the bed, on the table, against the wall. And the next morning you didn’t want to leave anymore. I tolerated you in my place like my housecat. My little monkey. And step by step I introduced you to my world, which after a short time seemed to give you far more happiness than it had ever managed to give me.

Basically, everything we did revolved around sex. Not love, not dancing. When she let that disgusting junkie screw her in the bathroom at the opening of Chan Shin while I was busy taking funny pictures of the party crowd that disgusted me, it didn’t really bother me at all.

And yet I beat Sina bloody in the parking lot when she told me about it so cheerfully. With every blow, every strike, every kick, his face came to mind—how he mounted her like a wild animal, having no idea about her dreams, her longings.

That she liked to drop three lumps of sugar into her coffee. That she snorted like a little pig when someone said something funny on television. And that she wore pink underwear when she had her period. That jerk didn’t know any of that when he pushed her against the wall and rammed his disgusting cock into her flawless body again and again. And he didn’t give a damn.

When they pulled me away from you, you were lying on the dark concrete, gasping and crying. Blood flowed, gleaming, down your freckled face. You stood up and looked at me the way a mother looks at her son who has done something stupid but incredibly sweet.

You love me, don’t you? you ask me as we lie together in bed at night, taking turns on a joint while I kiss your wounds. How do you get that idea? I ask curtly. Because you were jealous. Because I fucked Cosby in the bathroom. You giggle happily. I hate you, I say, turn my back to you, and fall asleep.

I only wake the next morning because of the clicking sounds from your laptop. I blink, see you sitting on the floor in your white nightgown, and kneel down behind you. Anger starts to boil up inside me—you’re chatting with Cosby early in the morning. I grab the MacBook and throw it out the window, like a Frisbee. You look at me, puzzled, give me a kiss on the cheek, and make us some scrambled eggs with bacon. Buy a new one—I want to listen to music.

My name is Sina. Close friends describe me as a bit of a stubborn mule who can suddenly fall head-over-heels for things and people with the full force of a raging storm—only to grow bored just as quickly and drop them again.

In my short life there are only a few scenarios that truly terrify me to the core. One of them is among my worst fears: that someday I might become wealthier than my father.

Because in my mind the evidence is clear: all that money is the reason that idiot is constantly jetting from one world metropolis to the next with an entourage of blonde, anorexic secretaries who aren’t even older than I am—while his loving family always ends up coming second. My mother doesn’t know that he’s sleeping with at least half of those soulless Barbie dolls. Or maybe she doesn’t want to know.

Another uncontrollable fear I clearly have is of small children. I don’t know how to deal with them, I don’t know what to do with them, and I certainly can’t understand how it can be that eight-year-old gnomes with thick pants and even thicker balls either call me a slut or constantly grab my ass at the bus stop. And if you slap one of them, suddenly they start crying and calling for their bull of a father, who then berates you with a mixture of disgust and dripping lust. Thanks for this lovely morning.

But most of all, I really hate the idea that my bikini might slip off when I take a daring leap into the swimming pool or the Stollensee lake. That’s what happened to my best friend Paula last summer. Since then, the whole school knows that she has the biggest breasts and darkest nipples ever. And it’s not just those precocious bitches from the fifth grade who find it hilarious, no, Johnny, self-proclaimed moron and predestined winner of the BILD newspaper reader of the year award, loves to rub it in.

Although, at that moment, he was probably more preoccupied with rubbing it into me, making disgusting grunting noises, and almost falling off the bed in his failed attempt to finger me while humping me. So he decided to leave it at that.

Which was really better for both of us, because he was just slapping around on my stomach like a crazed lunatic anyway. At least I didn’t have to look him in the eye during his very personal interpretation of World War II, so I took the opportunity to look out the open window at the park on this sunny day and think about the important questions of life.

Whether Paula had also forgotten the history presentation that Mr. Dächler had assigned her. How many women were also kneeling on all fours in front of their loved ones at that moment, concentrating intently on counting the clouds. And whether I should finally redeem my gift certificate at Douglas tonight.

There was a new perfume by Calvin Klein that smelled like a mixture of vanilla and raspberry and went incredibly well with my phenomenal natural scent. I had to have it. Turn around, you little whore! came a shout from behind, and before I knew it, I was lying on my back with Johnny’s miniature version of a cock heading straight for my nose.

The idea of going to Berlin to turn my life around and finally figure out what I really wanted to do with my existence came to me a few minutes after this lively experience in Johnny’s filthy bathroom.

I had just splashed my face with warm water and reached for the towel when I accidentally stared straight into my ocean-blue eyes, which seemed to stare back almost disdainfully. Slowly I examined my face while the post-romantic sounds of Rammstein echoed from the living room. The smell of marijuana drifted into my nose.

At that moment it became clear to me: I was more than just a small, red-haired girl whose face was good for nothing but serving as a graveyard for semen. I had character. I was damn creative. I was something special. And I had great tits, too. With this realization in tow, I walked into the living room, grabbed my clothes, ran past Johnny with a loud Adios, you jerk! and stumbled out the door into the courtyard, relieved.

The deaf-mute elderly couple sitting opposite me on a blue bench against the wall of the building seemed to enjoy my striptease out in the open, at any rate. I took my time getting dressed, pulled a cigarette from my pocket, and headed for the bus station. And heaven help it if there was even a single gnome standing around there!

We ate a lavish dinner on her rooftop terrace. Sina and Eva had cooked—lasagna with salad, pudding with little chunks in it—just the way I liked it best. Adam talked about the business. The club. The Chan Shin. How hard it had become these days to keep a place like that running. There was too much competition in the city. And the customers were getting stranger and stranger—but funnier, too.

He was tall, with monumental tattoos on both arms—lions and eagles, stars and roses. Piercings adorned his face, which seemed eaten away by madness, and his dark voice underscored everything he said with an inescapable emphasis.

Eva, on the other hand, was small, narrow, and slender. Together with her blonde, shoulder-length hair, she often transformed in my imagination into the shape of a bright fairy. Her voice was gentle and thoughtful. I would have loved to have Eva read me a bedtime story sometime.

I nodded incessantly, but in truth I didn’t give a damn about anything Adam was explaining at such length. I was one of the most dazzling figures in the business, and I couldn’t care less. Sina knew that. She looked at me with an understanding glance and took a big bite of the lasagna. Back then I found it cute when she stuffed large pieces of food into her mouth.

Why does this world make you so happy? I asked her as we walked home. Which world do you mean? She loosely wrapped an arm around me and then danced cheerfully across the cobblestones. The parties, the clubs, the over-the-top people. The drugs and all that.

She stopped calmly and slowly turned toward me. Because you live in it. I looked at her in disbelief. But I hate it. And you know that. And why?

Because none of it is real. It’s all exaggerated and artificial. People suppress their problems and worries, wash them down with alcohol, and push themselves into strange mental worlds with drugs—only to crash even harder onto the ground of reality the next morning.

With a smile she stepped toward me, took my hands, and pressed a kiss on my mouth—both tender and passionate. I’m real, she whispered softly. And the two of us live in this world.

A bright beam of light broke through my murky thoughts, long ruled by darkness. Howling and shrieking in pain, the demons of my self exploded into a thousand pieces, making room for a green, healing bud that pushed its way upward through the cold, withered earth.

A grin spread across my face, which only moments before had been so thoughtful and sullen with deep conviction and aversion. See? she said, then ran off and spread her arms wide. Come on, let’s fly! she shouted and disappeared around the next corner. Wait for me!

Sina was like a little child, a whirlwind. She reminded me of my own resolutions and convictions that I had lost through life here. Her temperament was always cheerful, carefree, and full of positive surprises. She was Ernie, I was Bert. Don’t be such a Bert!

I enjoyed every minute I spent with her. At least that’s how it felt in hindsight; in truth, she often annoyed me with her overly naive view of existence. Maybe I was simply jealous.

Often I would look at her bright body, photograph it, caress it. I knew every freckle on her, every scar, every tiny hair. I knew how to stroke her stomach so that she would start giggling like a chicken, which spots she didn’t want to be touched, and how I could drive her to inner despair right up to orgasm.

Sina was an open book to me, and yet so many pages still seemed unread. Perhaps unwritten. And those were the ones I was afraid of. A future waiting for me that I didn’t want to know about—because it would change everything, destroy our world, annihilate our existence.

He collapsed in front of me, dropping to the ground, yelping and gasping. Right in the balls! Paula shouted to me triumphantly, beaming from ear to ear. It was dark, it was cold, but because of that good deed I was practically glowing inside. I felt so liberated. What a victory, what a triumph. Johnny grimaced in pain, his brainless friends stared at me like paralyzed rabbits.

Come on over here, you idiots, I’m in a really good mood today! I shouted at them, glaring as fiercely as I could. I had nothing left to lose, and they should feel that. Johnny wailed.

Sina, hurry up, the damn train’s about to leave! I grabbed my backpack and started running. I was running away from my old life—my boyfriend, my family—just get away from here. Johnny shouted after me: You slut! If I catch you, I’ll kill you! Cuuunt!

At that word we jumped onto the train. The doors slammed shut loudly behind us, and shortly afterward we were on our way to a new, better life. I was so relieved that I dropped to my knees and started crying.

Paula was my best friend. She had big breasts and an even bigger heart. I loved her, I adored her, I would have given my life for her. When I opened my eyes, we were holding each other tightly. Outside, trees, mountains, and houses shot past us. I snuggled into her lilac-colored sweater, which smelled so wonderfully of roses, and breathed in deeply. How much longer? I murmured into her ample bosom. A few hours, came the brief reply from above. Aw, man…

When we arrived at Berlin Central Station, we first trudged happily—yet exhausted—to the nearest Burger King, ordered the fattest menu with bacon and large fries, and celebrated our newfound freedom. I was happy, truly happy.

If you want, you can go to the bathroom quickly. I’ll wait here for you. Paula put on her brightest smile. I nodded eagerly, took another quick sip of my cola, and ran off. When I came back, she was gone. At first I thought it was a joke. I kept smiling and acted completely unfazed so I wouldn’t give her the satisfaction when she jumped out from around the next corner. But she wasn’t behind any corner. She was nowhere.

Slowly, panic crept up inside me. I ran through the station—every platform, every shop, every corner. She had my phone. With my last bit of change I called home and, crying, explained my situation. But my mother only laughed cruelly, said it was my own fault, that I should figure out myself how to get out of it, and muttered something about the mess I’d made for myself. Everything started spinning. I found myself on all fours, doing nothing but calling Paula’s name. But she didn’t hear me.

Sina celebrated her 18th birthday at Bar 25. We danced closely entwined to the dull, pounding bass, completely wasted. In the bathroom, two girls absolutely insisted that I photograph them and began undressing each other. I had a headache and had to fight the constant urge to just vomit loudly. The taller one gave me a blowjob while I counted the white, shiny tiles on the wall. When she finished, I went back to my birthday girl to continue the dance we had interrupted. Can we go home? she asked quietly. I’m tired.

That night Sina’s tears wouldn’t stop flowing. Why do I even put myself through all this shit? she shouted hysterically across the room and threw a basket of apples at my head. I love you, you asshole, but you’re a coward, a freeloader, a hypocrite. You hate this world, but you take advantage of it. You hate these people, but you sleep with them. You hate these drugs, but you keep snorting one line after another.

She threw the packet against the wall. Like snow, the little white grains slowly drifted to the floor. I sat on the bed and watched her crusade without doing anything.

This world means nothing to you. I mean nothing to you. Love means nothing to you. How can I open myself up to someone for whom love means nothing? Explain that to me! I’m not answering that trick question. She grew even angrier.

She stomped into the kitchen, came back with a large knife, and began stabbing the pillows and the mattress. I leaned against the wall, smoked a cigarette, and calmly watched the scene unfold. Feathers flew around the room. Sina looked like a naked, exploding angel.

I have to get out of here! she suddenly screamed and dropped the weapon. She got dressed, began stuffing some clothes into her Hello Kitty backpack, and ran out of the apartment before I even remotely understood what was happening.

When I finally snapped out of my paralysis and ran into the hallway, she had already slammed the door shut behind her. I ran to the balcony and looked down the dark street. When I spotted her reddish-blonde head of hair, I shouted down: Sina, where are you going? No answer, no explanation—she disappeared into the next subway station.

I took some orange juice from the fridge, drank from it, and then hurled the carton against the wall in a fit of rage. A large yellow stain still marks the white surface to this day. Her phone lay on the bed. I grabbed one of her panties, snuggled into the torn-up pillows with it, and tried to suppress the dark time.

That night I had a frightening dream whose abrupt ending remained deep in my bones for hours after I woke up drenched in sweat. I staggered into the kitchen, poured milk and cornflakes into a bowl, and still saw her corpse-white face right in front of me—the face I had held tightly to myself while screaming across half the city.

That peculiar smell still lingered in my nose, and I looked down at myself until the blood I could just make out in the corners of my eyes, which seemed to cover half my body, revealed itself as a cynical play of light and shadow. When I dipped the spoon in and brought a load of cornflakes to my mouth, I recognized the faces from the night before—the ones who had stood with me outside the club shouting her name, loudly, over and over again. In one hand I held my phone, in the other a bottle of tequila.

The people around me told each other that she had supposedly disappeared, completely drunk, with a more than shady guy from the Chan Shin, no longer in control of herself. I screamed for my life. Her name. The louder I screamed, the more everything would turn out alright—that much I was certain of.

Opening the window now seemed like a good idea. The cold, fresh air washed over my throbbing, wounded thoughts, and I tried to chase away the memories—how they showed me the way to her, how I ran, how I cried.

And when I turned the corner and saw her lying there, so defenseless in a filthy backyard, it was all over. All the feelings in the world concentrated into that unreal moment—like a shot, a bang, a blow. I ran to her and screamed words that didn’t even seem to exist, but so loudly that I hoped they might still reach her. The faces around me melted into a huge blur of pity as I held her so tightly that everything around me seemed to burst apart. I choked on blood and tears, and the last thing that burned itself into my mind was the image of her unhappy, restless face, whose dull eyes seemed to admonish me as the one who had not been with her when it happened. The doorbell rang.

I celebrated my 18th birthday at Bar 25. The photographer and I danced closely entwined to the dull, pounding bass. When I opened my eyes, he staggered toward the bathroom, two sun-tanned sluts following him. My world was full of colors, voices, and tragedies, so I hurried after them. When I pushed the door open a crack, I could see his strained face and his open pants, while the two girls fumbled around them. When he came back to me on the dance floor, I looked at him intently and asked, Can we go home? I’m tired.

When we got there, I couldn’t stop crying. Why do I even put myself through all this shit? I shouted in his direction, grabbing random objects and throwing them at his head. I love you, you asshole, but you’re a coward, a freeloader, a hypocrite. You hate this world, but you take advantage of it. You hate these people, but you sleep with them. You hate these drugs, but you keep snorting one line after another.

I realized too late that I was holding our new packet in my hand and, the next moment, hurled it against the wall. Suddenly the whole room was full of white specks. The photographer sat on the bed and stared at me silently.

This world means nothing to you. I mean nothing to you. Love means nothing to you. How can I open myself up to someone for whom love means nothing? Explain that to me! I’m not answering that trick question. Anger boiled inside me.

I ran into the kitchen and grabbed the biggest knife I could find. When I returned to the bedroom, I began stabbing the pillows and the mattress, screaming loudly. The photographer leaned against the wall with a cigarette and smiled now and then while taking a drag. Feathers flew through the room and covered me in an explosion of pale color.

I have to get out of here! I shouted, dropping the knife. I stuffed a few clothes into my backpack, looked at the photographer one last time, and then fled the apartment.

Furious, screaming, crying, I stumbled down the stairwell and burst through the front door. Once outside, I ran straight toward the nearest subway station while a voice from above called my name. I didn’t look back—I wanted nothing more to do with that asshole—and soon found myself underground. The quiet down there freed my mind; I could hear a small heart beating.

Whenever we argued, the photographer wanted to finish the fight on my body. I closed my eyes, and behind my eyelids a colorful world of chaos seemed to open up. Crystal-clear tears ran without stopping. How had I ever ended up in this place?

Love and suffering wore dark velvet robes for me, burying my battered body in the broken dreams of my own self. With the sweet words of a clear night and the organs of a rebel, he had entered my soul—and now, out of amusement, recklessness, and fear, he abused everything I had ever believed in.

Nothing struck my youth as hard as the realization that I could not ease his suffering—the suffering of living in a world whose existence and tragedy he himself had conjured. Not through my love, nor through my breasts. Small, gray fears devoured me from the inside and made my joyful moments seem dull and lonely.

All my life I kept constantly encouraging myself. That I was something special. That one day the just balance of things would catch up with me. And that life held a fascinating ending in store for the little girl with the sparkling eyes in the mirror. My tears tasted bitter, but I smiled with confidence. And when I felt the rush of wind from the train on my skin, I opened my eyes and let myself fall onto the tracks.

Are you satisfied with your life? the little blonde girl asked me openly as we strolled hand in hand through the deserted streets of long-forgotten Berlin. Not a breath of wind could be felt, not a sound could be heard, not a single soul could be seen. The war that had once raged had silenced all activity and burst the houses apart in a fiery breath.

I only looked upward—unable either to give an answer or to ask a question. White clouds on a blue background drifted triumphantly above the ruins of the once magnificent city. How alive these streets once were, and yet no one survived the days of eternal night. My battered body lay somewhere beneath these ruins as well. Forever.

My companion and I turned into a nearby park and walked along a path lined with dead trees. Her bright dress shone in the midday sun, and the honest smile on her face made me forget, for a moment, the endless pain I had been carrying deep in my heart for some time. We giggled, we played around, but suddenly she stopped and pointed forward with her arm stretched out.

My gaze froze when I saw the red-blonde, naked girl standing at the other end of the path. I ran toward her, but when I saw her empty stare, her pale face, and the bloody wounds covering her body, I slowed down and stopped in front of her. The sky turned black, the clouds transformed into glowing sparks raining down upon the dead earth, and the ground opened wide at our feet.

When I come to, Paula is holding me tightly in her arms and pressing a glass of cold water toward my face.

Another one of your nightmares? she asks gently. Her large breasts sway with every movement, and the mere presence of her character—the kisses, the smell of cheap perfume and poor intimate hygiene—strengthens my aversion toward her with every breath we both take. Paula likes orange ties.

The fact alone that she has replaced Sina as my companion of the night leaves me with no doubt that something incredibly wrong is happening in the universe, and that it is up to me to restore the balance of our civilization.

I have to find her, I reply curtly and take a large gulp of the refreshing water. More than three months ago she ran off in a rage, crying with hatred, and since then these visions have been haunting me. They’re making me sick.

The room is soaked in dark blue-black tones, and a few empty syringes have been carelessly thrown onto the floor beside the bed. My body is covered in sticky sweat, and while I vomit over the balcony, I imagine the thousands of fantasies that keep appearing. How she dies. How she suffers. How I can do nothing about it. A storm is coming.

She’s your best friend, you fucking slut! I suddenly scream at Paula and curse the day I ever opened my doors to her. The endless nighttime conversations, the crying, the repeated apologies, and the remorseful sex. Where did she even come from? And since when has she been here?

I mix reality with madness, no longer able to clearly distinguish what is actually happening and which parts of my life story are only playing out in my head. The drugs, the music, the women. And yet I only want one thing: to have Sina back. That’s all that matters right now.

It was one of those incredibly hot summer days whose bright glow burned itself into our skin and souls and kept the night away as if by magic. Eva watched the southern waiter dreamily as he walked away, while I tried to crush the ice cubes in my cocktail with the straw. A group of tourists pushed noisily down the street, shouting and laughing. I watched them go by and felt a little envious.

How’s Adam? I asked hoarsely toward the person sitting across from me—more to break the awkward silence than because I was truly interested. We hadn’t seen each other for so long, and yet her life and that of her partner meant relatively little to me.

Good, was the brief, meaningless answer, which led her to ask a counter-question: And how is Sina?

A jolt of thought thundered through my body. I accidentally knocked the cocktail to the ground. The way it shattered on the hard concrete—the mixture of glass, fruit, and liquid—I liked that. I smiled a little foolishly.

Two years had passed since Sina had fled my apartment and my life in tears and in a rush. And we hadn’t exchanged a single word since then. From what I had heard, she had adjusted wonderfully to her newfound freedom in this city, made important connections, and could be found at every good party among the upper circles. Recently she had begun hosting a few shows on a music channel, occasionally modeling for one or another local fashion label, and was rumored to be having various affairs with musicians, managers, and TV personalities.

From time to time I ran into her new self at various social events and even photographed her occasionally, arm in arm with overbred celebrities and emaciated models. She smiled into the camera like a professional, but once the flashes were over, she turned away and moved on—usually straight to the bar. As if she no longer knew me. After that, the evening was usually over for me.

An exceedingly tormenting god seemed to have placed our two fates on a set of scales that were now tipped in a painfully uneven way for me. While Sina’s life had turned—at fast-forward speed—toward happiness, prosperity, and recognition, mine was sinking into a black sludge of self-doubt, dissatisfaction, and ungrateful hatred toward everything and everyone.

What had long ago become my new purpose in life—my search for her—was now turning my hopes, dreams, and certainties into an endless journey of setbacks, disappointments, and trampled feelings. I had become a shadow of myself.

I had scoured all of Berlin for a worthy copy of her. I searched for her playful freckles, her red-golden hair, and her bright blue eyes in every Catholic schoolgirl, burned-out designer, and soulless prostitute in the city. And every time, with less shock but more finality, I had to admit that they were all just empty shells—insignificant side characters who could never measure up to what Sina had awakened deep inside me, and who could never even come close to meeting the false expectations with which I burdened them.

So at night, under the influence of overpriced stimulants and Red Bull, I lay awake, masturbating again and again to the photos on her Facebook profile. I was jealous of everyone who left some sycophantic message on her page, became a fan, or linked themselves into her life. I had become a stalker—a lonely nobody without real friends who had ultimately drowned in this world of glitter, drugs, and false reason. Just as Sina had once predicted.

It must have been a few days after the terse meeting with Eva when I was asked to take photos at the after-show party for Schweighöfer’s new film at a hotel—a party I showed up to already drunk and far too late.

There were plenty of candles, seventeen different martinis, and a constantly wasted boss who spoke German with a New York accent and overdid it completely. Her New York accent made me sick. Only a fraction of the photos I took that evening were usable. But I didn’t care—just like I didn’t care about anything else. After all, I was an artist, and there was no reason not to admire me.

Being a problem person didn’t make life in this world easy. Never had I been so aware of the limits of existence—I kept pushing further, further, even further, until everything around me began to crack and shattered like a glass cube into a thousand pieces. My life was an experiment, and everyone in it became a test subject I could experiment on until I freed them from their fantasies with too much pressure—or until they got there first and fled. It was time for me to disappear.

The rigid faces, the forced laughter, and the sad eyes of the invited guests disgusted me and practically pushed me away from them. I went out onto the balcony to light a cigarette and only after a while realized that a girl was standing next to me, watching intently as I tried to blow smoke rings toward the TV Tower, hoping to bring it crashing down. When I saw her face, I started coughing. Sina smiled at me.

Sina and I stared into each other’s eyes for what felt like several eternities. My head seemed to explode in inhuman colors, my breath stopped. Adrenaline pumped through my body like a maddened bull—the only conceivable conclusion was a stroke.

Where had she come from, why was she there, and—for God’s sake—why was she speaking to me after ignoring and despising me for the last two years, after luring me into a psychological minefield of despair, sleeplessness, and suicidal thoughts and leaving me there?

Hello, I croaked out in a phlegmy voice, cleared my throat quickly and conspicuously, and repeated my greeting, which now sounded almost like a question.

My counterpart kept smiling calmly and steadily, took a sip from her wine glass, and then skillfully and stylishly tossed it over the railing. Long time no see, she slurred toward me. Sina was drunk. And clearly high.

My disappointment at the prospect of having a sober and honest conversation with her must have been written all over my face, because she staggered toward me, wrapped her arms around me, and then grinned with dilated pupils as if looking right through me. Are you alright?

Her apartment wasn’t far from mine. High walls, large windows, a fascinating old building. Every room had been arranged thoughtfully and in a modern style. The walls were covered in soft pastel colors; the furniture was partly new, partly old, but everything fit together. Everywhere it smelled of vanilla and mango, and the lamps and candles filled Sina’s world with a romantically muted light.

Photos of her with her new friends and lovers were stuck to the refrigerator. She was smiling in all of them. I felt bad—seeing in my mind the scenes in which she cried, howled in pain, and balanced on the edge of existence.

Would you like a glass of wine? the most beautiful voice in the universe I knew called out from another room. I nodded, briefly touched my forehead, and then said yes. Why did you let me go so easily back then?

We were lying on her bed, staring at the ceiling, covered in spilled wine. I tried to answer skillfully and eloquently, but the marijuana and the alcohol blocked my reason and let adventurous stories spill from my mouth, pushing the air around us aside—stories of knights and flowers, dresses and bears, whores and drama.

She laughed loudly and for a long time at everything I planted in her red-blonde head. Her hair smelled just like it used to—of ice cream, Red Bull, and a mixture of fast food and a meadow of flowers. Then Sina sat up, took my hands, and said: That one night—the night that separated us—I tried to kill myself.

After that night we started seeing each other more often again—over coffee, at the movies, or at one party or another. Like a puzzle, we revealed our lives of the past years to each other piece by piece. Some things made me smile honestly; others only forced a strained smile from me because they tore at my thoughts.

She never spoke again about her attempt to catapult herself out of life, but all the more about sex, love, and the hard and soft separations. When she asked how things were going for me in those respects, I lied through my teeth. I deliberately left Paula out of it.

But lies had no effect between us. We both knew that. Since that moment on the balcony, we could suddenly read each other again like an open book. As if the time in between had never happened—as if only minutes ago I had been shouting her name down at her through tears and spit while she, empty and at the end of herself, walked along the street and disappeared into the next subway station.

The nightmares, the vodka, the medication—everything rotted away before my eyes into the final remnants of the darkest time of my life. When she realized it, she hugged me tighter than ever and tears ran down my neck. It was terrible, Sina just managed to say. Then we slept together, and for a while, everything was okay.

.

Notes I wrote in March 2026:

The Depressed Girl:

Chiaki’s dead, comes a quiet voice from the other side of the table. Ichika’s eyes search for sympathy, but Kana doesn’t understand a word. Chiaki… which Chiaki? Chiaki Sano? Ichika replies. We were in the same class. The curly-haired one? Ichika nods. What happened? I don’t know. She didn’t leave a note. She killed herself? Yes. With a door handle, at her parents’ house. She used her Mac charger. Was the cable long enough? No idea.

The moment I first spotted the film’s poster in Shimokitazawa, I knew I had to see Desert of Namibia. Kana’s profoundly empty gaze—I wasn’t entirely sure whether it reminded me more of myself or of certain people from my earlier life. A lack of empathy seemed to have been widespread both in my hometown and in my heart. And even today I catch myself wearing that same empty, expressionless look of complete indifference on my face—even when I’m among people I actually like.

Desert of Namibia premiered in the Directors’ Fortnight section of the 2024 Cannes Film Festival, where it won the Fédération Internationale de la Presse Cinématographique Prize and made Yoko Yamanaka, at 27, the youngest woman ever to receive the honor. It’s a prize that feels both apt and slightly beside the point. Desert of Namibia is precisely the kind of film that prizes were invented for: formally daring, emotionally unruly, and stubbornly, almost defiantly, itself.

Yumi Kawai plays Kana with an authority that immediately commands the screen. She’s 21 years old, employed at a laser hair removal salon in Tokyo, and perpetually on the edge of some unnamed outburst. She drifts between two men—Honda, a dependable real estate agent who cooks her meals and keeps the household intact with patient, almost desperate affection, and Hayashi, a free-spirited artist whose charisma masks a capacity for cruelty that mirrors her own. She doesn’t choose between them so much as move between worlds, carrying her restlessness like weather.

Yoko Yamanaka, who made her debut feature Amiko as a teenager in 2017 on a budget of roughly $2,500—a fifth of which reportedly went toward repairing a car she totaled driving to the shoot—has grown into a filmmaker of uncommon assurance. Where her debut crackled with the quick-cut energy of a YouTube vlog, Desert of Namibia holds. It lingers. It zooms, slowly and with maddening patience, onto a face that gives little away. Shot in a boxy 4:3 format by cinematographer Shin Yonekura, the film has the claustrophobic texture of a life lived in small rooms: hair removal cubicles, cramped kitchens, the narrow hallways of shared apartments.

This formal restraint is not mere affectation. It mirrors Kana’s own condition. She’s a young woman surrounded by men—professionally, romantically, medically—who cannot quite hear her, even when she’s screaming. When Honda returns from a work trip having visited a hostess bar at his boss’s insistence, their subsequent confrontation is rendered with scorching honesty: the apologies that pile up and begin to mean nothing, the moment Kana’s quiet fury curdles into something physical and irrational, the way the film refuses to adjudicate between victim and perpetrator. They’re both, somehow, both.

The film’s also, intermittently, very funny. Kana’s workplace scenes at the salon—where she and a colleague speculate freely about why an elderly woman is getting a bikini wax, or where she’s fired for informing a customer that she’s been wasting her money on cosmetic rather than medical hair removal—have the rhythm of sketch comedy, the timing of absurdist theater. A role-play argument in which Kana coaches her boyfriend on how to refuse his boss’s advances at a hostess bar gives way, without warning, into something genuinely unsettling. The tonal whiplash is intentional, a structural analogue to the instability that defines Kana’s inner life.

Midway through the film, Kana visits a therapist. The session’s one of the most acutely observed psychiatric consultations in recent cinema: the doctor’s careful probing, Kana’s sudden tangent into a hypothetical about pedophilia as a philosophical example, the awkward moment when she asks the therapist to dinner. A potential diagnosis of bipolar disorder or borderline personality disorder is floated but not confirmed. Kana’s desire to understand who she is comes closest to a thesis statement in the film, delivered so quietly it could easily pass unnoticed.

The film’s final stretch tips into something stranger and more surreal: a kind of waking dream in which panda ants, campfire songs, and parallel universes intrude upon the social realism of what came before. Some viewers will find this tonal leap liberating; others will feel the ground go out from under them. Yoko Yamanaka earns neither entirely, and the film’s last act is its least controlled. But there’s something right about the incoherence. Kana, in the end, cannot be resolved into a diagnosis, a lesson, or a character arc. She simply continues, which is exactly the point.

Yumi Kawai’s performance has been compared, with some justification, to Gena Rowlands in John Cassavetes’s A Woman Under the Influence. The comparison is generous but not absurd. Like Gena Rowlands, Yumi Kawai makes suffering look like electricity. Her Kana won the Blue Ribbon Award for Best Actress in Japan and received nominations at both the Asia Pacific Screen Awards and the Asian Film Awards, and every honor is deserved. She carries the film on a performance that never condescends to her character, never asks for sympathy on her behalf, never explains her to us.

Desert of Namibia isn’t a comfortable film, and it doesn’t want to be. But it announces Yoko Yamanaka as one of the most necessary voices in contemporary cinema: a filmmaker capable of holding contradiction with the same uneasy, unflinching attention she turns on her impossible, essential heroine.

.

A Weekend Among Dreamers:

Video games are the only art form that can distract my self-diagnosed ADHD brain to such an extent that I don’t constantly slip into self-destructive thoughts or reach for my phone to let pseudo-social media wash over me.

My most cherished memories in life, aside from those of a sexual nature, have something to do with video games. How, as a child, I won both a Super Nintendo and a Game Boy on Austrian children’s television. How I wandered through the flea markets of the surrounding area to snag treasures big and small bearing the PlayStation logo. How I fought gods, demons, and hell-houses with a ragtag party and the last scraps of health bars, to bring well-deserved peace to the fictional world I was inhabiting at the time.

Last weekend I attended GG Bavaria in Munich. The small gaming convention in the Olympic Park can comfortably be seen as the little local sister to Cologne’s Gamescom. Here too, game developers and their fans, as well as artists, cosplayers, and obsessive Japan enthusiasts, gather year after year.

Honestly, I hadn’t expected a gaming convention to sweep me up so thoroughly. But the moment I stepped into the Small Olympic Hall, it was clear: this was no ordinary event.

GG Bavaria entered its fourth edition this year—and you could feel its confidence. The convention opened its doors as early as Friday, giving you a full long weekend to dive in. And dive in really is the right phrase: glowing screens everywhere, playable demos, colorful booths from indie studios, an Artist Alley packed with illustrators and artists, and flowing through it all a stream of people who somehow all speak the same language—the language of gaming.

What impressed me most was the density of Bavarian studios presenting their games here. You could actually talk to the developers whose game you’d just been watching someone play. That direct meeting between creators and community simply isn’t possible at large conventions like Gamescom. Games like A Webbing Journey, Medieval Frontiers, or OrbiTower—all titles I hadn’t had on my radar before, all of which surprised me in different ways.

Speaking of surprises: the Cosplay Catwalk on Sunday was a genuine highlight. Costumes at a level that made you briefly wonder how many hours of work could go into a single outfit. The energy in the room when the cosplayers take the stage is hard to put into words.

Also on Sunday, the GG Awards were presented—five prizes for outstanding indie games, covering everything from best sound to innovative game mechanics to audience favorite. The fact that Bavaria’s own Minister of Digital Affairs personally handed out one of the awards shows just how seriously the political world is now taking the games industry. And rightly so.

New to me was the Career Space—an area I nearly walked past, which turned out to be one of the most interesting at the entire convention. Universities from across Bavaria, from SAE to Macromedia to the University of Würzburg and TH Deggendorf, were represented, showcasing what students in gaming degree programs are building. Panels, Q&As, workshops—anyone seriously looking to break into the industry will find real guidance here.

Musically, the weekend kicked off with a concert by Munich band Oblivion, who blend gaming soundtracks with Balkan grooves and Nordic sounds. It sounds like a strange combination—but it works surprisingly well.

Truth be told, I was mainly at GG Bavaria to visit friends who were presenting their games there, above all Incredibug by my 3D mentor Michi, and Bardcore by Flo, Tomas, Svea, and Ludwig, which I had already playtested several times and been able to share my thoughts on—including, for example, that there weren’t nearly enough waifus on display.

In the first physics-based platformer with Metroidvania elements, you control an adorable pill bug, unite your fellow crustaceans, and rise up against a menacing smart home system. In the second, you play as a colorful troupe of bards defending your village from quirky skeletons and a black dragon.

And since I’m a total sucker for all things Japan, I of course couldn’t pass up the action-packed presentation by the local 北辰一刀流兵法 samurai school, soaking in the small and grand stories of East Asian warriors.

When the hustle and bustle of the convention got to be too much, I made myself comfortable by the lake in the sunny Olympic Park, or fled with others to the nearby supermarket to stock up on caffeinated refreshments.

In the evenings, visitors were ushered out of the hall and the party began. While we stuffed ourselves with rolls, cookies, and free drinks and created characters punished by nature on various screens, a DJ dressed in red shook the hall with nostalgic anime openings and the occasional Nintendo soundtrack. The theme songs from One Piece, Case Closed, and Neon Genesis Evangelion are bangers you otherwise only get to hear at weeb events.

The journey home was in Ludwig’s packed car, which somehow fit not just me but also Tomas, Jan, and Johanna. On the way to the next motorway service station, we chatted about university, water damage, and the pitfalls of village life. No convention is a good convention if you don’t at some point flee from it by car, right Michi?

This year’s GG Bavaria gave me the idea of maybe dropping in on Gamescom again after all. It’s been a few years since I attended—back then, thanks to AMY&PINK, I even had the privileges of a press badge and everything that came with it: access to the press area, invitations to industry parties, and not having to suffocate among the general visitors.

On the other hand, I’ve also been wanting to finally make it to Nippon Connection in Frankfurt to catch the latest films from the Land of the Rising Sun. And I’m not sure my often hard-to-predict energy levels could handle two events of this kind back to back.

All in all, GG Bavaria 2026 felt like an event that has caught exactly the right moment. The Bavarian gaming scene is growing, and this convention is growing with it. If you haven’t been yet—I’d secure tickets early next year. Good Game, Bavaria.

.

The Man Between Masks:

Philipp has probably long since forgotten why his evenings consist of sitting alone in his small apartment somewhere in Tokyo, enjoying a modest bento box with a cold canned beer, staring out the window and watching people on the other side whose lives have taken different directions.

He wonders whether they are happier. Or whether they navigate their daily lives just as lonely as he does. But his life changes rapidly when he is unexpectedly drawn into the depths of Japanese interpersonal relationships.

You have a wedding invitation, but no one to call your plus-one. Your new boyfriend wants to meet your mother, but you’re afraid she’ll embarrass you. You’re tired of going to the cinema alone every weekend, but none of your friends are film lovers.

Who hasn’t wished for an ideal companion in situations like these—someone to fill our emotional voids in uncomfortable social situations? This longing for connection is at the heart of Rental Family.

Philipp is a middle-aged American actor who moved to Tokyo after landing a big gig in a toothpaste commercial. Seven years later, the acting work has dried up, and when his agent sends him on short notice to a job requiring a black suit, he jumps at the opportunity.

When he arrives at the location, however, he discovers he has been paid to appear as a mourner at a funeral—for a man who is still alive and lying in an open casket. As the service concludes, Phillip learns that the man had hired a company to stage his own funeral so he could listen to moving eulogies about himself.

After overcoming his initial shock that such a service even exists, Phillip agrees to meet the owner of the company Rental Family and shortly afterward begins working for the firm. What follows is a journey between hopeful wishful thinking and a reality that keeps pulling him back down to earth. The deeper Philipp immerses himself in the artificial worlds of his clients, the more genuine bonds emerge—blurring the boundaries between performance and reality.

The longing for human connection represents a central social phenomenon of contemporary society, one that has found a particularly distinctive commercial expression in Japan: the so-called rental family industry. This is a well-documented phenomenon with its origins in the 1980s, which has attracted increased academic and cultural attention.

There are currently an estimated 300 such companies in Japan, whose employees—trained actors—take on the roles of parents, friends, spouses, or other close figures for an hourly fee. Particularly in urban centers like Tokyo, but also in rural areas, social isolation can be a defining experience of everyday life.

Notably, the demand for these services is primarily driven by a need for human closeness: despite the commercial nature of the interaction, clients frequently report that genuine friendships develop within the two to three hours spent together. The growth of this industry can be attributed to structural factors such as increasing loneliness, social isolation, and the persistent stigma surrounding mental health care in Japan.

Compared to Western countries—particularly the United States—mental health services in Japan are significantly less accessible, especially in terms of telehealth options. As a result, many people turn to informal support services: while rental family agency employees are not licensed professionals, they offer a form of low-threshold emotional support through empathetic listening and personal perspective.

It’s almost unsettling how much Philipp reminded me of my loneliest moments in Japan. When no one had time for me. When I was too tired to leave the house. When I was no longer sure why I was sitting here at all—alone at the other end of the world—jealously watching people become one with the city around them.

But Philipp also embodied a possible future version of myself, and my fear of becoming someone who has realized their dream of moving to Japan and building a better life there—only to end up completely alone. And how every day spent in this illusory world, corroded by false hopes and shattered dreams, costs him whatever happiness might exist somewhere else.

As Phillip begins working in the rental family industry, he quickly realizes that the relationships he enters into with his clients are far more than mere business transactions. As he becomes aware of the emotional impact of his work, he is forced to grapple with the ethical implications of his new career path.

His moral compass is put to the ultimate test when he meets Mia. Mia is being raised by a single mother who wants her daughter to attend a prestigious private school. The school’s admissions committee initially rejects the girl, however, because she does not come from a two-parent household.

Mia’s mother turns to the rental family agency to hire an actor—Phillip—to play her father in meetings with the school. But the assignment demands more from Phillip than simply appearing before the admissions committee. He must build a genuine relationship with Mia so that their connection appears authentic. And so Mia, who grew up thinking she was abandoned by her father, suddenly believes she has one—and quickly begins to form a deep attachment to him.

At its core, Rental Family is an odyssey in search of ourselves: a question of what we want, who we are, and what makes us happy—and a constant series of decisions about whether to follow the rules or break them in order to bring happiness to ourselves and others. For every new path taken offers both opportunities and risks in equal measure.

Brendan Fraser as Phillip can safely be called the perfect casting choice. His deeply emotional presence carries the film and moved me to spontaneous tears more than once. And yet, even by the end, it remains unclear who Phillip really is. He seems to perpetually stumble from one role to the next—like a man between masks.

Rental Family is a film that could only be set in Japan, serving as a mirror of that specific society. Tokyo as a stage-like diorama is a backdrop for people who hunger for fulfillment in the depths of this concrete jungle and take curious detours along the way. And not infrequently, even the providers of these wishful worlds embark on that same journey themselves.

Philipp has probably long since forgotten why his evenings used to consist of sitting alone in his small apartment somewhere in Tokyo, enjoying a modest bento box with a cold canned beer, staring out the window and watching people on the other side whose lives had taken different directions. Because now he is one of those people who has dared to take an unfamiliar path—and will hopefully be rewarded for it.

.

My Only Constant:

The questions that occupy me most when designing this website are: Who am I? What do I want? And what’s the point of any of this? The answers to these self-centered existential crises are not easy to find, because they shift depending on my mood and emotional state, and reveal themselves as traps whenever I finally manage to corner them and practically beg for mercy—and the enlightenment that should follow.

Then I try to remember why I started blogging in the first place. Did I want to feel important? To connect with others? To prove to the world out there that I existed? Did I simply lack alternatives, given that shortly after the turn of the millennium there was no YouTube, no podcasts, and the written word was one of the few means of carrying my thoughts, feelings, and opinions outward?

My love of blogging probably stems from the fact that I enjoyed reading books as a child, and through that developed a fairly extensive vocabulary that I wanted to express, garnished with my own stories. This ambition was barely noticed or appreciated by my teachers, but it was by people in my closer circle, who wanted to know whether—and what—I was writing about them.

My love of publishing texts on the internet is probably rooted in the knowledge, or at least the desperate hope, that people I knew were reading them. Friends I had hurt. Acquaintances I hadn’t seen in a while. Girls I was in love with. Through my blog, I could transform my longing for them into frequently very embarrassing texts, without having to address those feelings to them directly.

Perhaps this approach was somewhat cowardly, and maybe my words—saturated with heartache and world-weariness—never reached the eyes they were actually intended for. But at the very least, I had created a creative island for myself where I could do as I pleased. And that was not only incredibly liberating, but gradually became an important part of my life.

At many points along my path, I could only begin to pursue happiness again after pulling various spiraling thoughts from my head and hurling them onto digital paper, only to then blast them out into the great wide world. The nameless feeling that came with clicking Publish was somewhere between catharsis and orgasm. The more personal, honest, and emotionally naked my confessions were, the greater the relief. I’m only happy when my words change the world—at least the one I call home.

Over the decades, my blog has evolved into a diary whose intimate entries lie buried under a mountain of attention-hungry, now entirely worthless drivel. Sometimes I come across one of them and feel a little sad that it’s no longer part of this great wide world, but seems to have been erased. Perhaps I can undo that.

The questions that occupy me most when designing this website are: Who am I? What do I want? And what’s the point of any of this? I still haven’t found the answers to these self-centered existential crises, but at least I’ve begun to track them down through countless psychologically questionable acts of self-reflection—or so I hope.

It’s difficult for me to find the line between introverted solitude and extroverted self-expression. One extreme would be a diary locked in a vault, into which I write all my thoughts in secret symbols; the other, an OnlyFans account in which I expose not only myself but also my sensitive data—passwords and all. Middle grounds are hard for me to walk.

In order to design something and actually finish it to the point where I can fill it with content, I first have to strip a project’s purpose down to its essentials. And at this task—which sounds so simple yet is incredibly complicated—I have obsessively worn myself to the bone. After all, this publication is meant to represent me and my thoughts. And to achieve that, I first had to figure out who I actually was—or at least, who I no longer was.

I now want to treat this dispatch as a personal notebook, into which I can enter texts about art, music, books, technology, film, fashion, travel, games, food, and my life in general. What matters to me is that everything I write must relate to me—my thoughts, my experiences, my feelings, my dreams, my fears, my hopes, and my opinions—because otherwise it’s worthless.

Going forward, I will focus primarily on the written word. I have removed the images that used to decorate every single post, because I realized that I sometimes never published certain texts for the simple reason that, even after hours or sometimes days of searching, I couldn’t find a suitable illustration. If I want to add a photo or video to a post from now on, I will simply link to it directly within the text—life can be that simple.

As a fitting typeface, I have chosen Libre Caslon Condensed by Pablo Impallari, because it works well even on small mobile screens. In the past I always found a sans-serif counterpart for headings, timestamps, and supplementary information—but even that felt like too much in this design. Instead, I’m largely limiting myself to the various weights of my new favorite typeface. Japanese characters are the one exception, represented by two variants from the Zen family by artist Yoshimichi Ohira.

I hope that this blog—and everything I have cut, burned, and destroyed for it—will help me figure out who I am, what I want, and what any of this is for. Perhaps I need to become (again) conscious of the fact that this journal is not only the center and pivot point, but also the only constant in my otherwise chaotic life. But this can only work if it becomes a part of that life once more.

.

20 Nights in Tokyo:

I’ve decided to use Japan as the thematic foundation for my upcoming bachelor’s thesis in design. How exactly I want to approach this is still somewhat uncertain. At first, I intended to shoot a documentary about the colorful underground cultures in the Land of the Rising Sun. Cultures permeated by depression, anxiety about the future, and a kind of resentment toward society by their followers.

I wanted to cover everything from eccentric horror manga and underage idol groups to rape porn that only narrowly falls under artistic freedom, and speak with pop-culture experts about whether Japan’s aging population might eventually cause these scenes to die out. However, this plan ultimately struck me as somewhat too overambitious. I should probably be a little more modest.

Then I remembered that my professors at the Japanese university where I studied had always encouraged me to use my projects to explore stories drawn from my own life, my own feelings, and my own experiences. Because it gives an intention much more soul.

At the very least, I know that I want to address Japan and my time here in my bachelor’s thesis. And I want to take this chance to connect the project with my love for Tokyo. For when I close my eyes and think of Japan, I see not only the brightly lit streets of Shinjuku, Shibuya, and Akihabara, plastered with neon signs, but also the countless secrets hidden within them—secrets waiting to be uncovered and told.

Since I now at least understand that I want to portray Tokyo at night in film for my thesis, I will spend the next three weeks in Japan’s capital, preferably venturing out after sunset to wander through temples, parks, and towering buildings in search of my own story that I want to bring to life by film.

For this purpose, I have booked a bed at a quite cheap capsule hotel in the Sumida district and will dive into the always loudly pulsing metropolis from there. What exactly will come out of all this, I still don’t know. But sometimes I simply have to throw all my previous plans overboard and take a courageous leap of faith in order to transform adventures into stories.

.

Goodbye Kumamoto:

My time here in Kumamoto is now coming to an end. For a full year I have been an exchange student at the Faculty of Design of Japan’s Sojo University, exploring new ideas in both artistic and technical fields.

Day after day, I wandered the two campuses that rise above the city, learning about typography, painting, and graphic design in lecture halls, tinkering with Arduinos and Raspberry Pis in the computer club, and studying Japanese in the library with friends.

I’ve met so many wonderful people, traveled across half the country with them, and through them gained deep insights into a different kind of society—glimpses that remain forever closed to most travelers. It’s hard to express how grateful I am to have lived through these colorful adventures.

I came to see my year in Kumamoto as my own little Persona game, determined to experience every side of this city. That’s why I dragged my friends to every restaurant, café, izakaya, karaoke bar, shop, park, cinema, and exhibition Kumamoto had to offer.

I wanted to taste every dish, see every movie, and join every festival. I even felt a quiet pride as I rushed past tourists to complete my own personal missions at city hall, the post office, or the housing agency—tasks usually reserved for locals.

I walked the narrow path along the river through all four seasons, from the first cherry blossom to the final snowflake. And on every single day, there was something new waiting to be discovered.

Of course, I’m sad to leave, to part from so many people with whom I shared my days, my worries, my hopes, and dreams. Yet I’m deeply grateful for every moment I was allowed to spend here. Kumamoto and its people will always hold a quiet place in my heart.

This year at the far end of the world has shown me that I can find my way anywhere, make friends everywhere, and keep gathering new goals, ideas, and insights. I’ve grown in Kumamoto, and that growth has prepared me for whatever adventures may come next.

Wherever life takes me, I’ll carry this place within me. Farewell, Kumamoto—and perhaps, one day, our paths will cross again. At least, I hope so.

.

One Year in Japan:

For exactly one year now I have been living in Japan. I have a Japanese phone number, a Japanese bank account, a Japanese social security number. As a student at the art faculty of a Japanese university, I have met many local creatives as well as wonderful people from all over the world who, like me, are trying to find their place in this demanding society.

When I’m not sitting in lecture halls, studios, and cafeterias having my broken Japanese put to the test, my life plays out by day between cinemas, galleries, and museums, and by night between izakaya, karaoke bars, and supermarkets that stay open twenty-four hours a day, on nearly every corner of the city, bright and humming.

When I look back on this year, I see myself walking with friends along the river lined with freshly blossoming cherry trees, heading to the next spring festival. It’s the same river that led us in summer to the fireworks, in autumn to the castle, and in winter to the Christmas market, and where on quiet days white egrets basked beside turtles looking bored.

In the park the frogs croaked, in the brook, patterned koi raced each other, between the laundromat and the fast-food place I told the girl with the roguish smile and the short, thick, jet-black hair that I liked her. 好きだよ! still echoes through the cold night, before the brightly lit temple on the hill called us. 付き合ってください!

Even after this year, Japanese society remains a book with seven seals to me. Somewhere between well-meant politeness and militant rule-conformity, people operate day in, day out with the same mixture of a desire for individuality and a fear of otherness.

The Japanese are a close-knit and perfectly synchronized collective that, up to a certain point, tolerates outside influences with interested curiosity and at the same time rejects everything that isn’t through and through Japanese.

This cultural instinct for self-preservation hasn’t diminished my love for Japan in the least, for at every moment here I have felt welcome. And I can hardly wait to see what adventures still await me in this fascinating country in the months and years ahead.

.

A Midsummer Night’s Dream:

On a warm summer evening, when the cicadas were diligently chirping away and the moon was slowly pushing itself onto the stage of the sky, a friend and I were on our way home from an exhibition when, not far off, we first heard music and shortly after cheerful laughter. Because we were curious and still had a bit of energy left, we decided to see what was going on there.

So we picked our way through the neighborhood’s ever-narrowing streets and walked past streams, houses, and playgrounds until, a short time later, we stood at the edge of a small park where a neighborhood festival was underway. And it took less than a minute before friendly, perhaps slightly tipsy, people invited us to join the little festivity.

So we made ourselves comfortable on the blue tarp spread out in the middle of the park and looked around. In front of us a thrown-together band was playing familiar Japanese songs, and all around small stalls had been set up selling cool drinks and fried delicacies.

Around us sat talkative families, and children chased dogs, cats, and each other, or danced acrobatically and interestingly to the guitar tones of the cheerful musical artists.

We watched the summer spectacle unfolding before us with interest, and my companion confessed to me that she hadn’t known about this festival at all—despite the fact that she had already lived in this neighborhood for several years.

I personally was glad to be allowed to be part of this small gathering. After all, I don’t stumble into a little Japanese summer festival every day.

And as much as I love darting over the crossing in Shibuya, admiring Sensoji in Asakusa, and indulging in the latest nerd trends in Akihabara, my heart truly opens only when I discover Japan from intimate sides that remain hidden to most outsiders. Because they aren’t made for them, because they aren’t advertised, because they happen off all the beaten paths.

And so we stayed until the end, until the band had given its last turn onstage. And as people said their farewells, we too set off home, warmed by the sense of having experienced something small we will draw on for a long time.

.

The Samurai’s Grave:

We arrived at the foot of Mount Tatsuda, the site of the Hosokawa family temple, Taishoji. Today the grounds belong to Tatsuda Nature Park, green, wide, and quiet.

Among bamboo and cedars stand four mausoleums: for Hosokawa Fujitaka, first lord of the Kumamoto domain, his wife, his son Hosokawa Tadaoki, the second lord, and Tadaoki’s wife, Hosokawa Gracia.

History you can touch. The teahouse Ko-sho-ken moved me most. Restored from Tadaoki’s drawings, it recalls a man who was a warrior and a tea master.

At the entrance sits a hand-washing stone he loved. In Kyoto, Toyotomi Hideyoshi and tea master Sen no Rikyu drew water from it. Later the Hosokawa lords carried a basin on sankin-kotai journeys to Edo to hold tea ceremonies—a traveling vessel.

And then there is the shadow of Miyamoto Musashi. One of his supposed graves is said to be here. In all, five places in Japan claim to be Musashi’s final resting place—three of them in Kumamoto, where he spent his last years and died in 1645.

Another grave lies in Musashizuka Park on the old Ozu road, the former National Route 57, among cedars. Legend says Musashi was buried there in armor with his sword, following his wish to protect the Hosokawa from behind as they passed.

The park holds a stone inscribed Stone Pagoda of the Sword Master Musashi and a bronze statue. The third grave, Nishi-Musashizuka, is in the Shimasaki district. Which is the real one? No one knows to this day.

Since 1955 the area has belonged to the city of Kumamoto as a loan from the Hosokawa family and has been called Tatsuda Nature Park. For people here it is simply a lovely place to breathe: walking paths, shade, birds, benches, a hush in the trees.

Officially, together with the Myogeji temple precinct in Kitaoka Nature Park, the site is designated a National Historic Site, because the Hosokawa family graveyard lies here.

If you like history but not glass cases, the Taishoji temple grounds offer a quiet, dignified spot. Tea, samurai, and stories—and yet it is only a park where children laugh, strollers roll by, and the air smells of resin after sun, and crows wheel overhead. That, to me, is the Kumamoto I love.

.

Embracing the Escapism:

Sometimes I wished I could muster the courage to leave everything behind, lock myself away forever in an apartment, and devote the rest of my life to a single online role-playing game.

In the midst of an enchanted fantasy world full of wonders, dreams and secrets I would transform from a peasant boy into a heroic warrior, find unimaginable treasures and fight monsters, and band together with other outcasts bored with real life to form a sworn adventuring party.

My days would be governed by quests, rituals, and leveling, by the pulse of raids, and the slow comfort of companionship the real world denied me. My existence would turn into a digital meaningfulness whose end would arrive only when the servers were switched off.

Moriko Morioka, thirty years old, single, and unemployed, put my dream into practice: An escape from reality. After losing her job she became a NEET, neither working nor studying, and seeking refuge she drifted into the World Wide Web. There she immersed herself in online games and reinvented her life as a young man named Hayashi.

As a newcomer she nearly dies in the game but is rescued just in time by a girl called Lily. Through Lily she finds allies she can trust and begins a life online that finally feels fulfilling.

Meanwhile, in the real world, she meets a handsome businessman who reminds her of someone she recently encountered. Will that encounter influence the life she has built in the game, and what will become of Moriko’s fulfilled MMORPG life?

Recovery of an MMO Junkie by Rin Kokuyo is one of my comfort anime, even though I am not much for romances and the director involved later turned out to be a disgrace.

I still love anime about people living inside online role-playing games like World of Warcraft, Guild Wars 2, or Final Fantasy XIV. Whether it is Sword Art Online, Shangri-La Frontier, or Bofuri: I Don’t Want to Get Hurt, so I’ll Max Out My Defense, I enjoy watching others enact my secret dream: finding not only the time of their lives but a kind of meaning in an otherwise hollow existence.

And perhaps one day I, too, will summon the nerve, like Moriko, to renounce the drab, gray, utterly magic-less reality and finally surrender forever, without regret, to the warm, connected wonder of a digital world.

.

Happiness Between Two Buns:

Japan is a country full of treats. Those who want to fill a hungry stomach efficiently and cheaply can find sushi, tempura, and ramen on every corner, in different price ranges, in hidden restaurants or crowded supermarkets. But Japan would not be Japan if it hadn’t absorbed other culinary cultures and made them its own.

Cities brim not only with steaming noodle shops and futuristic chains where raw fish on rice travels past on conveyor belts, but also offer delights from Spanish and Italian kitchens or, for those who prefer hearty, fatty, generous portions, the American culinary world.

You encounter these options everywhere, from tiny stalls and family-run izakayas to high-end restaurants and bustling food halls in the most unexpected neighborhoods.

Although I love Japanese food in all its health-promoting variety, I sometimes have to descend into Western-influenced fast-food depths to keep from losing my mind. After all, nothing soothes a stressed head like calorie-drenched soul food.

Japan tempts hearts that long for an early death by cheeseburgers, French fries and sugary cold drinks not only with imported names such as McDonald’s, Burger King, and TGI Friday’s, but also with homegrown chains founded in the Land of the Rising Sun.

From MOS Burger to Dom Dom and on to Zetteria, the choices range wide: sandwiches piled thick with meat, cheese, and vegetables, fried platters, and combos that seem to dare you to resist. They are available at train stations, convenience locations and late-night outlets across the country.

My personal go-to franchise, frequented with friends, is Freshness Burger, known for its delicious fat bombs. Its first branch opened in Shibuya in the early 1980s. The official slogan, Burger cafe where adults can relax that proposes a high-quality eating habit, is as curiously phrased as the similarly English-sounding slogans of other competitors.

But in my experience Freshness Burger not only serves the most generously topped and juiciest sandwiches, it also often offers surprising specials that I am only too happy to devour.

And, what is almost more important: The fries taste, unlike those from the better-known rivals, as if they were more than a sadly looking side dish. Gigi Hadid once famously said: Eat clean to stay fit, have a burger to stay sane. And she was right.

.

For the Alliance:

My journey begins in the Northshire Valley, enclosed by high mountains, somewhere in the thickly wooded Elwynn Forest. Before me stands not only the abbey of the local brotherhood but also an adventure that will take me into frozen deserts, bubbling volcanoes, and creepy ghost towns.

When I meet my friends, masquerading as knights, thieves, and wizards, behind the towering gates of the royal fortress Stormwind, and outfit myself there with keen blades, shining shields, and magical potions, I can hardly rein in my anticipation.

The scent of pine and old stone, the flutter of banners, and the clanking of armor all heighten the thrill. One thing is certain: Whatever challenges await in this digital wonderland, we will endure and overcome them together.

World of Warcraft is probably the largest and thus best-known online role-playing game, where paying participants slip into the roles of elves, dwarves, gnomes, orcs, trolls, and even talking pandabears on the fantastic planet of Azeroth.

They explore mysterious continents, live through adventures and complete quests, forge friendships, build alliances, and clash with enemies for power and glory. Players create characters, shape their skills, take on professions, tackle dungeons, trade, and socialize.

When the heroes are not busy fishing, collecting pets, or idly bouncing around auction houses, they immerse themselves in an epic saga of love, hatred, and broken dreams in which Alliance and Horde face each other bloodily and vie for the favor of gods and devils—by any means imaginable.

When I installed World of Warcraft on my newly bought Mac Mini in the mid-2000s, I played straight through until exhaustion set in at dawn. The months that followed were an experience that can never be repeated. Everything felt new, thrilling, and magical.

People around the globe logged into World of Warcraft to swap dreary everyday life for a generic but interactive Lord of the Rings copy. Some players became completely lost in it, even to this day, although twenty years on the initial fascination has largely faded.

I would give anything to wake once more in the Northshire Valley, ringed by high mountains, and set off with my friends to rediscover Azeroth and its fantastic tales, as if seeing it anew. But times change.

.

My Summer in Japan:

Summer here in Japan is slowly drawing to a close, though no one has informed the sun. It remains so hot and muggy that every step outdoors becomes a sweaty ordeal, at least when I dare to leave the house in broad daylight.

Even so, over these past months I’ve tried to see, experience, and take in as much as I can. After all, every minute in this country, in this adventure, is precious.

Sooner or later I’ll be back on a plane, heading home, and any moment I haven’t used to the fullest will feel wasted. I want to keep that potential regret small, so I push myself to go, to look, to listen, to be present, and to savor what this place offers.

I grabbed dear friends and headed with them into every shop and restaurant that looked even vaguely inviting. We drove into the mountains and out to the water. We wandered through cities, museums, and temples. I met locals and people from every corner of the globe whose stories, dreams, or simply their way of not taking life too seriously touched and inspired me.

Japan is a riotously colorful grab-bag, a lucky packet worth opening and exploring. Whether in nerdy manga shops, smoky izakaya, or mist-shrouded samurai graveyards, I’m grateful for each memory I’m allowed to carry along on the rest of my journey, a pocketful of moments that clink like coins and remind me why I came so far in the first place.

And while the sun spent the days of this summer beating down on us without mercy, as if to taunt us and prove itself the ruler of the sky, Kumamoto at night turned into an idyllic dreamscape, a black-blue paradise full of chirring cicadas, croaking frogs, and purring cats.

Fireworks stitched light across the dark vault, and in meadows ringed by small houses people sat and grilled, drank, and sang. Neighbors waved, wind bells tinkled, and smoke drifted upward like a prayer.

Now summer here in Japan is coming to an end—and with it my year in this city at the far edge of the world, a place that welcomed me, challenged me, and, in ways I never expected, changed who I am.

.

My Favorite Cinema:

The other night over dinner, a friend asked why I love lesser-known films so much. Her favorites are American action blockbusters like Die Hard, The Transporter, and the high-octane The Fast and the Furious series with Vin Diesel, Paul Walker, and Michelle Rodriguez, while my patchy watchlist includes titles like Nightcrawler, Melancholia, and My Small Land.

My quick, perhaps rash, answer was that I enjoy movies that lodge in my memory, that I might still recall years later because they moved me, fascinated me, or taught me something. Maybe it’s simply that I was in love with someone in the cast. I chase the afterglow: A scene that lingers, a line that won’t fade, a feeling that taps me on the shoulder after the credits roll.

In the shadow of the multiplexes in Kumamoto, somewhere between Toho, Aeon, and SMT, which lure crowds with hits like Jurassic World, Under Ninja, and the latest Demon Slayer, plus popcorn, tortilla chips, and syrupy cola in huge cups, stands my favorite cinema: The Denkikan.

Its dark walls, hung with obscure posters, host local gems and far-flung wonders, whose popularity sits somewhere between celery salad, cloudy sunsets, and computers running Linux as a daily driver.

How many people can say they saw Oasis, The Jazz Loft, or All We Imagine as Light in a theater? A haven where the projector hums, the aisles creak, and I catch whispers of other lives. A schedule like a treasure map inviting me to trust the curators and go somewhere unexpected.

With a freshly brewed coffee on one side and a companion on the other, I let the Denkikan carry me into unfamiliar worlds. On these long screenings, there are often no more than five fellow travelers, scattered among the seats.

Of course, I value the blockbuster experience too. Surrendering to wild action with sweet-and-salty snacks is as valid as falling for small secrets. Yet there is special magic when, in my little favorite theater, I watch Japanese indie films like Rainy Blue, At the Bench, and Linda Linda Linda.

Those are the films that make my heart beat faster, the ones that hum behind ordinary days, turn the walk home into an epilogue, and remind me that quiet stories can claim space in a life.

.

Arrow in the Knee:

Staggering from the cave on my last reserves, I let my eyes adjust to the harsh sunlight as a vast, mountain-studded snowscape unfurls before me. In towns clasped by timber and stone, merchants, thieves, and kings ply their trades. Dragons, werewolves, and vampires wake. Bright hoards and darker magics hide from the gaze of a budding civil war.

I wipe fresh bear blood from my skin and set out for the next village. It is not the first time I have roamed these forests, nor will it be the last. Once more I have returned. To the valleys of Skyrim, where the wind bites like iron and distant watchtowers blink with fire as paths fork, promising danger, coin, and stories for the stubborn and brave.

Two hundred years after the Oblivion Crisis, the Empire of Tamriel in The Elder Scrolls V stands at the brink. The High King of Skyrim has been assassinated. New alliances form and stake their claim to the throne.

Yet amid this conflict, a far more perilous, ancient threat stirs to life. The dragons, whose existence is whispered in long-forgotten passages of the Elder Scrolls and deemed extinct, have returned to Tamriel.

Skyrim’s future, and that of the entire Empire, hangs in the balance as the land waits for the prophecy to unfold: the coming of the Dragonborn, a hero wielding the Power of the Voice, the Thu’um, and the only one capable of standing against the dragons—foretold in runes and shouts carved into cold stone walls.

Nothing sets my little nerd heart racing like diving into The Elder Scrolls V. Again and again. Sometimes as a kindhearted knight who rescues fair maidens, builds homes, and adopts children. Sometimes as a ruthless mage who slaughters monsters and farmers alike. And sometimes as a naked madman who, thanks to supernatural powers, can vault over castle walls, marry deities, and fight Spider-Man, with essentially one overriding goal: to hoard every cheese wheel in the realm.

The Elder Scrolls V is a vast playground full of marvelous characters and intriguing stories. Returning to the world of Skyrim is, each time, a blend of adventure and coming home, a feeling only a handful of computer games ever manage to create with enduring comfort for me.

.

Magazine for City Boys:

Although my chest houses the heart of a digital minimalist and light-footed traveler who thinks in bits and bytes and has gradually moved the baggage of his not-so-young life into the cloud, I have nonetheless kept a soft spot for printed media.

Whether books, magazines, or newspapers, something happens to me when I hold these riotously colorful works of art in my hands and can not only look at them but also feel them, smell them and, to a certain extent, even hear them.

I buy them sometimes fresh off the press at the kiosk or happily second-hand, always knowing that I will take their secrets into myself and then release them back into the world before someone else can fall in love with them.

One of my favorite magazines is the Japanese Popeye. It’s a monthly fashion and men’s magazine based in Tokyo, addressing clothes, sports, and everyday culture from a young male perspective.

Popeye was founded in 1976 by Yoshihisa Kinameri, who saw Japan at the time in a state of drift and wanted to encourage the country’s youth toward a healthier lifestyle.

In the meantime it has grown into one of the nation’s most influential cultural publications. The magazine is widely known for introducing American youth culture to Japanese readers.

In his book Ametora: How Japan Saved American Style, W. David Marx described Popeye’s debut issue as a sunny take on life in California, where youth were carving out the future for the rest of civilization.

Each issue tackles a specific theme that it introduces to its readers. Sometimes it is about trips to the small and big metropolises of the world, New York, Seoul, London, Taipei, Paris, about the freshest films, books, and fashion trends, about cool restaurants with which city boys can impress their girlfriend—if they even have one.

But most interesting to me is the Japanese gaze on the world and the selection of stories Popeye correspondents bring back to readers in Tokyo, Osaka, and Kyoto, and also from the farthest corners of Okinawa, Hokkaido, or Kyushu.

I dig the style, the interviews, the photo features, especially the Girls in the City series. Popeye is a beautifully designed declaration of love to mindful consumption and one reason print must never die.

.

After the Rain:

The weather over the past few months here in Kumamoto seems to recognize only two possible settings. Either it strives to mimic the lava-laced dungeons of hell and cook us alive, or it bombards us so mercilessly with rain, gales, and typhoons that building an ark seems the logical step for ferrying ourselves, and a few stray animals, to safety.

Thanks to climate change, or rather to those who deny it, the weather has digivolved into my personal arch-enemy, and I, in turn, into one of those people who cannot help, at every opportunity these days, lamenting how awful things already are and how much worse they are likely to become—assuming, of course, there is any future left for us at all, for anyone paying attention.

The other day I came home seared through, surely nurturing one or two splendidly developing cases of skin cancer, only to realize that, precisely as I pulled the front door shut behind me and took a brief cold shower to stop the sweating, the rain began outside.

The joy at this long-overdue cool-down, and the prudent fact that I had just finished the groceries and therefore did not need to venture back out, did not last long.

What started as an exciting thunderstorm, complete with flash after flash and rolling thunder, quickly morphed into a rainstorm so merciless that one chirpy, softly whirring disaster notification after another began lighting up my phone, stacking themselves into a cheerful little tower of alarms on the glowing lock screen.

In front of my house the street turned into a long paddling pool, while I was first instructed to evacuate and later, because the bridges were overflowing, told to wait it out.

Since I live on the second floor, I watched the drama through the window and on special reports on TV. My only fear was that the power might fail or the water supply be hit, but that did not happen.

Sleep was impossible that night, because my phone chimed every few hours, sending grim alerts one after another. While I, as I learned next morning, got off lightly, others coped with flooded homes, cars, and supermarkets. Let us hope this was the worst we will have to endure in the near future.

.

King of the Monsters:

There are certain Japanese subcultures to which, to date, I’ve never really found an entry point. Among them are animated VTubers, masked superheroes à la Kamen Rider, and kaiju—giant monsters that, at regular intervals, stomp Tokyo flat. Well-known examples include Rodan, Mothra, King Ghidorah, Gamera, and of course the universally beloved Godzilla, brought to life by Ishiro Honda.

I did see Roland Emmerich’s American version in theaters in the late ’90s, yet the destructive spectacle didn’t leave much of an impression on me whatsoever. And that’s strange, because I generally adore it when the world is reduced to rubble in the media I consume. Somehow, though, this particular behemoth and his city-crushing antics never quite worked their way under my skin.

The basic idea for Godzilla came from producer Tomoyuki Tanaka. The inspiration is said to have been the incident of a Japanese fishing boat that strayed into the fallout zone of an American nuclear weapons test.

The first film, from 1954, in its original Japanese version is not only technically impressive in its effects, it is also a thoughtfully constructed work in terms of plot and drama, one that can be read as an allegory for Japan’s trauma after the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, or as a direct reaction to the nuclear mishap that struck the small fishing boat. Since then, and with a nod to King Kong, Godzilla has run amok and spread fear and terror—most often in Japan’s major cities.

To develop feelings for the skyscraper-tall and perhaps even misunderstood reptile, I recently watched the newest, critic-lauded installment in the film saga, Takashi Yamazaki’s Godzilla Minus One.

There, a kamikaze pilot tormented by survivor’s guilt seeks redemption when a giant monster he failed to kill is transformed by radiation from atomic bomb tests and lays siege to postwar Japan. It’s about honor, guilt, love, grief, friendship, responsibility—and, naturally, many demolished properties.

Unfortunately, I was as whelmed by this Godzilla outing as I once was by Roland Emmerich’s attempt to bring the creature to New York. Maybe I simply don’t fear irradiated monsters, no matter how loudly they roar. Godzilla and I, despite its cultural relevance, will probably never be friends. What a pity.

.

A Smoky Smell:

Summer in Japan is barbecue season. Partly that’s because it is, let’s say, bold to leave raw fish outdoors for longer than three seconds in these godless, blistering temperatures, let alone try to serve it to anyone.

And partly it’s because there is nothing more flavorful than sinking your teeth, with an ice-cold beer, or in my case tea loaded with rattling ice cubes, in freshly grilled scraps of meat, blazing-hot sausages, and the occasional almost-scorched piece of vegetable.

Ideally it happens while good conversations flow and cheerful company gathers around. In that setting even the sweatiest evenings can be endured with a little style, a lot of taste, and decent entertainment, and somehow they pass pleasantly instead of painfully. That, in short, is summer survival, Japanese-style.

A few friends and I therefore met above the rooftops of Kumamoto, at the American-leaning burger, hot-dog, and barbecue spot Jiro 26, to celebrate that day’s sunset once again for the brief coolness it brought along.

We were entrusted with cute little gas grills and got to ornament each of them with bite-sized steaks, strips of bacon, and wiener sausages. Between the meats we set down carrots, cabbage, and bell peppers. When everything was cooked through and tantalizing, we dipped the treats in punchy sauces and let them melt away on our damp tongues.

From the terrace we watched the city settle as the sky dimmed. Tongs clicked and grills hissed softly while we hovered, trading pieces, comparing doneness, raising toasts to the breeze and fading light.

Because we are, all of us, small gluttonous creatures, we raided the steaming pot of curry after the barbecue, as well as the rice cooker standing beside it with an almost innocent air.

To wrap things up we went bowling at the nearby sports center, where we taught the pins a lesson in fear. Evenings like these are my regular reminder of why I love Japan—apart from the candy-colored entertainment industry and the tropes that are so quick to see through.

After all, here I get to have a wonderful time with even more wonderful people I would never have met otherwise. They anchor me to ordinary joy and make the city feel friendly, close, and warmly lived-in—and delicious barbecue comes on top.

.

Want to Come Down With Me?:

Sometimes I refuse to consume media that has become too popular. Whether films, shows, or video games, once the hype train really gathers speed and it feels as if the entire planet is trying to convince me that I have to watch, listen to, or simply experience this thing because it’s the finest achievement humanity has produced in its more than 300,000-year history, I react almost reflexively with a defense mechanism that looks suspiciously like an allergy.

I tense up, dig in my heels, and avoid it on principle. Familiar examples are Squid Game, The Weeknd, and Balatro, whose emotional impact on my life falls somewhere between militant indifference and a burning, slightly irrational hatred that I can’t quite justify even to myself.

Yet I have decided to change this attitude. Exercising healthy agency by refusing to chase every, mostly artificially stoked, trend is admirable, and I still value that instinct. But when I renounce every recommendation, even those from close friends, and retreat into obscure niches, I insulate myself bit by bit from the mainstream and thus from the shared experiences of an entire generation, depriving myself of any chance to feel genuine empathy for others.

I stop speaking the same cultural language. Following this new logic, I recently watched Bong Joon Ho’s Parasite, approaching it with open curiosity, and trying to meet the work on its own terms rather than through resentment. That was my small but deliberate experiment in loosening my stubborn grip.

In the film, the Kim family has hit rock bottom. Father, mother, son, and daughter live in a dim semi-basement and will take any odd job. Only when the youngest gets hired as a tutor in the ultra-chic villa of the Park family do the Kims board the carousel of class conflict.

With clever schemes, talent, and teamwork, they push out the Parks’ employees one by one. Before long, the Kims are indispensable to their new employers. Then an unforeseen incident sets off a chain of events as unpredictable as it is unbelievable.

I found Parasite as brilliant, surprising, and surreal as everyone said. I’m glad this positive experience is my first step back toward a renewed love of pop culture.

.

My Odyssey:

The Japanese language is a mountain that can be climbed only through perseverance, diligence, and the support of people who have already mastered it. Step by step, piece by piece, and word by word, I haul myself from one ledge to the next.

What began as a picturesque hike through the gentle woods of romaji, hiragana, and katakana, sweetened by simple vocabulary and understandable grammar, with one little success after another, turned, with each waystation I managed to reach, into a personal odyssey among ambiguous kanji, hazy shades of politeness, and pitch accents I can hardly distinguish.

As I climb, the air thins and I lean on the ropes offered by guides. Yet even as the path narrows and the rocks bite, the summit still glints somewhere ahead, inviting.

On my Japanese-learning journey so far I have ridden out every high and low. There is euphoria when I not only understand something but can reshape it and use it in my own words. And there is frustration when the cashier at the nearby supermarket asks me a question and all I can manage is 大丈夫, because from her stream of speech I could not catch any of the usual anchors like 伏る, カード, or .

At those times I either feel a surge of drive and reconfigure my whole life into Japanese, listening to podcasts, buying stacks of manga, and watching YouTube, only to crash, burned out, a few days later. Or I simply want to quit, once and for all, and walk away from the mountain altogether.

After riding those emotional waves, I realized that everyone has to find a personal way of learning Japanese. For some people it works to ban every other language from daily life and, for a time, almost become Japanese. Others keep studying Spanish, Korean, and Icelandic alongside it and somehow rack up more progress than I do. For still others the best path is to keep things loose, curious, and fun, following interest rather than duty, and letting momentum build slowly.

I very clearly belong to that last group. And I count myself fortunate that there are kind people who actively encourage me, answer questions, correct my stumbles, and cheer from the trail as I keep moving forward, sometimes crawling, sometimes striding, but always, stubbornly, continuing the climb.

.

The Maddest Obsession:

From early youth, my life was divided into chapters named for the women I happened to love at the time. Whether in Berlin, in Tokyo, or wherever I drifted, and whether anything became a relationship, whether intimacy happened or not, it was always too easy for me to become so intent on one woman that she defined an entire era.

From this came obsessions that at times stretched across years, fed by depression, obsessive compulsive disorder, and a self-diagnosed borderline condition, and they often ended in an emotional detonation. After a few quiet weeks or months, another woman would appear. Hopes, dreams, and fantasies were projected onto her, and the cycle began again.

There is a name for this hyperfocused state: Limerence. The term was introduced in 1979 by Dorothy Tennov, an American professor of behavioral psychology, in her book Love and Limerence.

It denotes an extreme form of being in love, already more than just having a simple crush on someone, and the patterns that accompany it: relentless, nearly compulsive thinking about the beloved. Longing for reciprocation. Constant fear of rejection. A blind spot for her negative traits. A narrowing of perception to objects and incidents that relate to her. And shyness and uncertainty in her presence.

According to Tennov, limerence may pass into love if a relationship takes hold. If it remains one-sided, it fades of its own accord, and the state can last from a few months to several years.

My limerences resulted in me organizing entire days around the woman I’m currently fixated on. There is no stalking on my part, yet jealousy and possessiveness appear, of course at odds with reality. When energy runs high, an open, charismatic version of me steps forward. When my body and mind are tired, withdrawal follows.

Over time it became clear that my fixation is not on the woman as she is, but on the separate fragments of an ideal assembled for her. The fall begins when my feelings go unreturned and expectations collapse, and the only useful act is an unconditional retreat and a renewed willingness to meet other people, with the hope that this vicious circle will finally break—no matter how, and by whom.

.

Hobo Horror:

Good stories put a quiet spell on me. Whether they arrive as books, films, or video games, what lingers afterward, often for far longer than I expect, isn’t the glossy, polished shell so many media try to sell these days, but the people inside and the moments that temper them into something tougher and wiser.

That is why adventures pull me in. Maniac Mansion, Leisure Suit Larry, and The Secret of Monkey Island don’t just tell varied, engaging tales—they let me stand close enough to feel them. And sometimes the mood can tilt darker, which suits me fine. So it does in the pulp thriller The Drifter, where the light thins and the edges grow hard.

In The Drifter we follow Mick Carter as he is hauled headfirst into a tangled web of shady corporations, murder, and a madman’s thousand-year obsession. The hobo has been adrift for a while, trading one job for another, never staying long anywhere. He jumps a freight car toward the town he once called home, witnesses a brutal killing, is chased by high-tech soldiers, thrown into a reservoir, and drowned.

That, however, is only the beginning of his trouble. His consciousness comes loose and is forced back into his body mere seconds before death. He ends up wanted for the murder he saw, tormented by his own past, and stalked by the conviction that something from the far side is on his trail.

What begins as supposed fantasies in a middle-aged loser’s head swiftly becomes a layered adventure suspended between a tragic past and a future that looks spent. The story moves Mick along at a sure pace, one situation to the next, with barely a breath in between.

One moment he’s assembling a Molotov cocktail from a bottle of high-proof rum. The next he’s interrogating a corrupt neurosurgeon. Before long he has to swing out of a high-rise window on a frayed extension cord.

The Drifter is a gripping rollercoaster of feeling, its lineages easy to sense: Steven King, Michael Crichton, and John Carpenter, with a trace of 1970s Australian grindhouse. In the end, good stories never die out.

.

Wurstcutters:

I never thought of myself as particularly attached to home, yet staying away too long causes a small ache that points, stubbornly, toward Germany. Sometimes it’s nothing more than the sound of the language, its clipped edges and sudden softnesses, absent from the air around me. At other moments a single habit or custom goes missing, and the day stumbles.

An unspoken social rule fails to hold where I am, and the floor feels a little slanted. There are days when none of that speaks loud enough, and the craving reduces itself to something simpler and more insistent: Food. The kind that anchors a life even when one pretends not to notice.

After almost a year in Japan, the local fare has become familiar and, I admit it, beloved. Sushi and sashimi. Ramen and soba. Karaage and tempura. Bowls of rice, miso soup drifting its warm salt, plates of pickled vegetables that square the meal.

When a different appetite insists, the shelves and coolers answer with Japanese versions of spaghetti, pizza, and richly filled sandwiches from convenience stores and neighborhood supermarkets, each with its own taste and charm that refuses easy comparison.

Still, there are hours when German hausmannskost presses forward. The Sunday dishes my grandmother conjured onto the table at noon, the steam rising as if from her sleeves. Beef roulades, käsespätzle, fried potatoes. Or, if nothing else, a good, moist loaf of black bread.

To quiet that longing, Erika and I went to the German beer restaurant Oden in downtown and set out to fill our bellies with Central European comforts. The menu staged its pretzels, bratwurst, and potato salads between Japanese side dishes in a way that didn’t look especially German, and the food came with chopsticks that we used with wide smiles on our faces.

The room didn’t shift into Bavaria, nor did time turn obliging. The city outside kept its pace, and we ate the meal it offered. Yet the distance shortened by a finger’s width, and the missing eased for the span of an afternoon, enough to carry me back into the week with a quieter hunger for home.

.

Fellowship of the Fat Dragon:

It’s no secret that, deep in my heart, I’m a nerd. I love wacky video games, quietly vibe to anime soundtracks, and enjoy stories in which foolish villagers become true heroes. Pen-and-paper adventures draw me in, and I gladly take part. Among mixed groups of barbarians, mages, and warlocks, I fight monsters, find great treasure, and rescue fair maidens.

Although my media consume often leads me down the psychological abysses of human beings to understand them, and perhaps myself, better, from time to time I simply need a hefty pinch of fantastic, humorous tales somewhere between fantasy and science fiction. The kind that let my soul hang loose. One such refuge was the film Honor Among Thieves from the Dungeons & Dragons universe, which I finally managed to watch recently.

Is there honor among thieves? Our unusual hero in this exciting fantasy flick certainly doesn’t ask. Former bard and thief Edgin breaks out of prison with his partner, the barbarian Holga. In a world full of long-lost legends, opaque magic, and overweight Wyrmsmiths, the two join the wizard Simon, the druid Doric, and the paladin Xenk to form a thieving crew.

Their special mission is clear: Recover a lost relic and stop the cunning rogue Forge and his dark plans. Yet he knows how to make the lives of our heroes as difficult as possible. The magical venture is full of dangers, and plenty goes wrong, but the thieves are not easily discouraged. Where there is no honor, there are no rules. Whatever awaits them, they will be ready. Perhaps.

Honor Among Thieves is a colorful, witty, and adventurous fantasy film in the best sense. The world around Baldur’s Gate, Neverwinter, and the Sword Coast invites a mental dive and resurfacing. It reminded me of those absurd pen-and-paper evenings with friends, when we pulled every kind of nonsense and regularly drove our game master to madness.

The film pleased me so much that I urgently long for a sequel. As a series, the story would also have worked. Some narrative strands could then have been told more fully. It was like a smaller The Lord of the Rings, one that doesn’t take itself quite as seriously as the original sometimes does. Through Honor Among Thieves, I rediscovered my affection for classic fantasy and would gladly see more of Edgin and his cheerful crew.

.

Weightless Wanderer:

Everyone seems to hold a different idea of minimalism. For me it means freedom. Freedom from objects that weigh on me, distract me, or hold me back. Consciously and unconsciously I try to remove, or at least shrink, anything that blocks spontaneity or agency.

Over the years I have learned to let go. I have noticed that many things that seem essential are nothing more than cargo—both material and mental. When they are gone, I breathe more steadily and act more directly.

Most of the time the rule is simple: Once something leaves my field of vision, it leaves my mind as well. The room created by subtraction becomes quiet, and in that quiet I can decide what I truly want.

I have become a nomad without fixed roots, moving from place to place and observing each location with childlike curiosity. Whether my journey stretches across Europe, America, and now Asia, or consists of a short walk to the nearest café, I want to rise, step out, and move without schedules, packing lists, or negotiation.

Even the laptop that once promised mobility began to interfere. Whenever I left the room I needed a backpack, and the weight on my shoulders sharpened my awareness of limitation.

That awareness felt heavy, not only on my body but on my thoughts. I learned that mobility is not only distance but also ease. When ease disappears, travel becomes a task rather than a movement.

To carry as little as possible and still be ready for anything, I placed my whole digital existence inside one object: my phone. It holds my books, movies, games, music, and personal pictures. I can write, photograph, and record anywhere, whether I sit by the sea, climb a hill, or lie in a hospital bed.

The screen guides me through unfamiliar streets, links me with other people, and manages my knowledge, plans, and finances. Even if the city unravels around me, the small rectangle in my pocket holds its quiet order and points me toward the next turn.

I no longer measure freedom by the number of things I own but by the lightness with which I can leave them behind. To me, pure minimalism is carrying my entire life in the single device that never leaves my side.

.

French Fantasy:

Since my earliest days I have loved Japanese role‑playing games. No other genre draws me so deep into hidden worlds, deliberate stories, and mentally unstable characters. Dragon Quest, Secret of Mana, Chrono Trigger—whenever little boys rise to become god-slayers, I remain before the glowing screen for hundreds of hours, tracing each dialogue box while the world outside steadily burns to the ground.

Over the years I learned that these Far Eastern legends reach far beyond my room. They travel across languages and teach strangers to dream in the same fantasy worlds. Today their imprint is visible in Clair Obscur: Expedition 33, a surprise hit from a studio in France. The developers do not hide their admiration. It breathes through every single visible polygon.

The game unfolds on the small island of Lumière, housed inside the Belle Époque filtered through stone, steel, and smoke. For sixty‑seven years the inhabitants have faced an annual event called Gommage. Each summer a goddess known as the Paintress writes a number on the sky, always one smaller than the previous. Everyone whose age is the same or greater dies, quietly, without marks.

To break this cycle, the city council selects a squad after each ceremony and sends it across the channel to stop the Paintress before the next inscription. None have returned. Expedition 33 boards its vessel with hopes, dreams, and fears of what lies beyond the sea. We follow the march of these brave souls through a world that almost seems to be too beautiful to be true.

Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 is not a Japanese role‑playing game, even when the palette, the soundtrack, and the battle rolls insist on that lineage.

During my journey I recognised fragments of NieR Automata, echoes of Final Fantasy, and the depths of Xenoblade Chronicles. Yet the imitation stops short of substance.

The protagonists are nothing but tristful replicas of stratified, flesh-and-blood individuals. The world changes little and blends together, its flora and fauna repeating in blurred loops, and the final revelation comes short in epicness.

Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 is the Avatar: The Last Airbender of video games—a botched attempt to mimic the emotional range of its idols without grasping the force that makes the originals so devastating and compelling. What remains is a rebuilt framework in vaguely French attire. I’d rather stay inside my Japanese wonderlands.

.

Fishers of Men:

I have lived in Japan for almost a year now. The steady scrutiny that accompanies the life of a so‑called gaijin outside the big cities no longer unsettles me.

Children greet me as they coast past on bicycles, pensioners bow if I avoid blocking the aisles, and girls in navy uniforms let their eyes linger for a moment when they think no one notices.

Instead of discomfort, I feel quiet ease. People treat me with kindness or at least with courtesy that seems honest. Many are happy to speak a few words, test their English, or ask why I picked their town over the neon capitals they know from television. Each morning I rehearse simple Japanese, relieved when the sounds land cleanly.

I come from a country known for old wounds and a renewed appetite for exclusion. It’s hard for me to ignore or even forget that.

Japan is conservative, and I understood that before stepping off the plane, yet I was still shaken when an extremist party drew strong support in the recent election, most of it from voters my age or younger, some of them friends who share coffee with me on Saturdays.

Their approval surprised me more than the numbers on the screen. It showed me that the rejection I thought I had left behind can surface anywhere. The campaign’s orange flyers appeared suddenly, on walls and in hands. Some teachers at my university shrugged, saying protest votes were unavoidable, then changed the topic.

My frustration grew when I could not show those friendly, curious people how they were being guided. This nation’s fishers of men use the same routine every radical group prefers. Short slogans, invented statistics, and a steady supply of unease. With those tools they collect not only votes but also the public attention needed for patient work on real, often tangled problems.

Some asked why I remain liberal. The reason is simple and selfish. I want to live in a world that does not restrict movement, a place where eyes follow me only out of curiosity and never out of hate. Nothing else seems worth defending.

I remind myself that freedom rests on ordinary choices made every ordinary day. I count each conversation as practice for that defense, even when it ends in silence.

.

Konbinis Are Churches:

I was living on FamilyMart rice balls and low blood sugar dreams. Tokyo nights too hot to sleep and too cold to stay awake. It’s always 3:47 a.m. when you walk into a konbini. The neon light like a kiss from a dying god. The buzz of the fridges like the sigh of someone who’s given up.

Meet me at the 7-Eleven by the tracks. She brought a can of Strong Zero and an open wound. Konbinis are churches. Sacred spaces where nobody prays but everyone kneels. Bent before microwave ramen, counting coins.

The salaryman, suit crumpled like a used cigarette box. The girl with smeared lipstick, eyeliner like bruises. The boy in a school uniform who’s not going home tonight.

I stood in front of the refrigerated drinks like it was an altar. Pocari Sweat, lemon chu-hi, cold coffee in PET bottles. I bought a rice ball with salmon, a pack of melon bread, and a lighter I didn’t need.

My hands were shaking. I liked the way they shook. Made me feel alive, or close to it. Outside, the rain tasted like metal and regret. I sucked it off my lips and watched people slide through the streets like ghosts.

There’s a konbini every few blocks, like veins pumping sugar and trash into the city’s bloodstream. Every one of them the same. Open 24/7, eyes never blinking.

I can lose myself in them. Not in a romantic way. In the way people vanish into cracks, forgotten until they rot.

We sat under the flickering sign, plastic bags between us, fingers greasy from karaage. I bought condoms and a manga I didn’t understand. She bought cough syrup and a toothbrush. We were both lying.

The konbini is where you go when you have nowhere else. When your apartment’s too small, too quiet, too full of memory. When your body wants something. Salt, sugar, heat, nicotine.

You know it won’t fix anything, but you go anyway. Because the lights are always on. Because the shelves are always full. Because the world ends softly, one plastic bag at a time.

Let’s stay here forever, she said. Sure. But we both knew, morning was coming. And nothing golden ever stays.

.

Food and the City:

I’m collecting places like bruises. My plan is to swallow Kumamoto whole. I want its bars, its noodle shops, its grease-stained counters. I want every damn corner of this city that smells like soy and sweat.

I want sushi with my hands, ramen burning my tongue, pizza in alleys that look like everyone forgot they were alleys. I want it messy, I want it cheap, I want it at 2 a.m. when only ghosts and drunk boys are awake.

Neon-lit karaoke rooms where someone’s always crying into a mic. Dark izakayas where salarymen tell the same story again and again. Host clubs with smiles made of plastic and eyes like black tea. Coffee shops with maids, with books, with silence thick like syrup.

I’ll go. I’ll sit. I’ll eat. Whether it’s the city center pulsing like a neon heart, or out near the edge where the streets aren’t even part of a map.

Morning, noon, dusk, night. I don’t care. Just give me someone beside me. Someone local, someone who knows the places that don’t exist online. They take me there. And I pay in conversation. I pay in time. I give them stories. I give them laughter, a little light.

Like that one night with her. We found a hot pot joint downtown. The broth was boiling like we were. Meat, mushrooms, vegetables drowned in soy. We fished them out with chopsticks like tiny survivors. Robot waiters mercilessly rolled around with fake smiles and real pudding.

There’s no better way to know a place than to eat it. No better way to belong than to chew on its streets and sip its secrets. I don’t want the tourist version. I want the version with stains. The version with whispers.

I want every bite, every bar, every brokenhearted song in a tavern at midnight. I want Kumamoto to feed me until I forget why I ever came here in the first place.

And while the sauce stained our fingers and the sky got darker, we made quiet plans for what came next. Places we haven’t touched yet. Nights we still want to break open.

There was this feeling, buzzing just under my ribs, that maybe we’re not just consuming, surviving here. Maybe we’re building something.

.

Me at the Zoo:

They said it was for our Japanese Arts Class. Something about sketching wild animals to improve our line sensitivity. But in reality, it was about sunshine, good company, and getting to know some new place—at least for me.

I walked to the local zoo on the other side of the city. It took hours, but I didn’t mind. I had my AirPods with some cheesy J-pop on and the sky above me was this deep electric blue, full of possibility.

I passed babbling creeks that glittered like broken mirrors and old parks where tiny dogs pulled at their leashes like they had somewhere better to be. Streets were quiet, except for the soft whir of bicycle wheels and wind brushing tree leaves like secrets.

At the zoo, I met my friends. Paint-stained fingers, backpacks full of snacks and sketchbooks. We were a mess, but in a beautiful way. The kind that makes old ladies smile at you like they remember being wild once too.

We wandered through the zoo like it was a playground for our eyes. Yeah, the cages were small. But even depressed animals are at least something. Tigers with lazy elegance. Bears scratching their backs against stones like it was their full-time job. Flamingos standing like proud poets in pink.

Then came the petting area. Round guinea pigs, soft like clouds, twitchy noses, black and soulless eyes, the kind of small joy that gets under my skin in the best way possible.

We rode the creaky Ferris wheel and watched over the lake, surrounded by red oaks. Then we found these old mechanical animals. We dropped in a coin and zoomed across the pavement like we were five again. It was ridiculous. It was perfect.

Lunch under the trees. Bentos from the nearest konbini, crispy chicken, egg rolls, rice sprinkled with furikake. Someone had these chocolate cubes wrapped in gold foil.

We shared, laughing with our mouths full. We didn’t talk about work. Or stress. Or anything heavy. Just strolling, eating, laughing. Making something out of the moment.

We were together, the sun was shining, and it felt like one of those days I tuck into my memory forever.

.

A Serene Fairytale:

Who gives a shit what Hollywood’s golden boys are sweating over in their hot rooms with their endless rewrites and plastic champagne. Because at the beginning of this millennium something happened. Something too soft to scream and too sharp to forget.

The best movie of all time slipped through like smoke. Lost in Translation. And all the computer effects and starlet tits in the world can’t erase it.

Coked-up executives can pump a movie full of crap and call it love, but it won’t bleed like this one. It won’t ache like this one. This one didn’t even need Los Angeles, New York, or whatever American tax haven dump bent over the lowest—it had Tokyo like a slow pulse under pale skin.

Bob Harris is falling apart. A middle-aged ghost in a five-star coffin. With some whisky in one hand and endless exhaustion in the other. Charlotte is drowning quietly in a fresh white dress, married but lonely like a window in winter.

They find each other in silence, in elevator glances, in night-blue bars and half-empty hotel pools. No grand confession. No clichéd strings. Just that quiet panic of two souls brushing against each other in a foreign city that doesn’t care whether you live or die.

They don’t fall in love. They dissolve together. Time fucks them over like it always does. But for a few moments, they forget the script. They make up something better. Something real.

Bill Murray doesn’t act. He exists. Scarlett Johansson doesn’t fake. She glows like she’s lit from inside by something bruised and holy. Sofia Coppola doesn’t direct. She whispers through the lens. And somewhere in the distance I can hear Happy End’s Gather the Wind, like an echo that holds this serene fairytale together.

Lost in Translation isn’t for people looking for endings. It’s for the ones who stare at strangers in the subway and want to cry. For those who fall in love with cities. With moments. With people they were never supposed to meet. It’s for the broken, the dreamers, the ones who can’t stop remembering things that never quite happened. And yeah. It’s fucking beautiful.

.

My Plum Ghost:

I participated in an art contest. Nothing serious, but it swallowed me whole. The theme was Yokai. Japanese spirits, monsters, the beautiful weirdness that lives between shadows and dreams.

For this, I built a canvas with my bare hands in my Japanese Arts class. Cut the wood, stretched the cloth. I wanted it to feel like something real. Not digital. Not fake. Something that bleeds when touched.

I used traditional materials. Glue, brushes, powdered pigments that smelled like the inside of a shrine. Nothing fancy. Just old magic.

I spent days sitting in our classroom, hunched over it like a secret I couldn’t share. The canvas stared back at me. It whispered things. Or maybe I was just tired.

My yokai was mine. No one else’s. A hybrid born from salt and fear—a cross between umeboshi, that sour, shriveled plum that tastes like a punch in the mouth, and umibozu, the sea ghost with a black, formless body that capsizes ships when no one’s looking.

I called it Umebozu. A pun. A joke only the sea would understand. It looks like a plum, but it drowns you. The painting was a colorful homage. An amateurish love letter.

I shaped my small world to mirror Katsushika Hokusai’s wooden masterpiece The Great Wave off Kanagawa, but in a more cheerful way. The yokai stared from the center of the storm. Big eyes. Wrinkled skin. A hidden smile that made me happy.

People asked what it meant, and I explained. They smiled. They liked it. Sometimes I imagined the Umebozu slipping off the page, crawling into the real world, hiding in rain puddles or tea cups or behind vending machines late at night.

I started seeing it everywhere. The curve of a wave in the river. The color of a bruise on my arm. It followed me home in the folds of my clothes, in the ink under my fingernails. I dreamed of salt and storms and laughing things that lived in the sea.

And when I woke up, I missed it. I missed him. My little yokai. My plum ghost. Maybe he was never just a joke. Maybe he was the part of me that never fit, never spoke. But always smiled.

.

Call Me Ishmael:

I was drifting. Low blood sugar. Air like soup. I hadn’t eaten all day, or maybe I had, I don’t remember. I was walking through a supermarket in Japan, one of those blinding clean ones, all neon light and weird elevator music. Cold, too cold. Fish eyes watching me from slabs of ice.

And then there it was. Whale. Rae flesh like wet velvet. Whispering to me from behind cellophane. I stared at it the way I stare at someone I’ve seen in a dream before. Wrong and perfect at the same time.

Bought it like buying a secret. No one stopped me. No one said a word. The machine at the checkout beeped after I fed it with some yen. And then the small pieces of a slaughtered giant were mine.

Back home, the silence was loud. I didn’t cook it. Just opened the package, dropped the slices on some shredded carrots and radish, squeezed a lemon wedge like a little prayer. Ate them with some metal chopsticks. They tasted like horse. Like blood and memory.

I thought about the whales. I thought about the protests and the documentaries and the guilt people wear like expensive jackets. I thought about extinction and betrayal and all the things I’m not supposed to do.

But mostly I thought: when else? When else would I ever get to know this feeling, this very specific wrongness melting in my mouth like ice cream? I ate the whole thing. Slowly. Like a ritual. Like a dare.

And when it was done, I just sat there. No music. No talking. Just the low hum of the fridge and the sound of my own breath, sticky and strange, rising and falling like I was learning how to breathe for the first time.

There was something curling in my gut, not quite guilt, not quite satisfaction—something older. Animal. Primitive. Like I’d remembered something I shouldn’t have.

Next time, I want to eat dolphin. I don’t know why exactly. Maybe to feel worse. Maybe to feel better. Or maybe just to feel anything at all. To scratch some unreachable itch deep inside me. It’s not about taste. It’s not even about curiosity anymore. It’s about going somewhere I can’t come back from.

.

A Neon Disease:

Neo-Tokyo is a wound. It breathes smoke and vomits neon. It’s filthy. It’s alive. The streets are soaked in broken dreams. Syringes, sex, safe hopelessness. Skyscrapers scream in color, pink and blue and acid green. And deep inside this cyberpunk hellhole, built onto the ruins of a wiped out city, lives Tetsuo. He was a boy, like so many others.

Then a special kind of magic awakened inside him. Power. Screaming, impossible power. Not even he could hold it. And then the men in the shadows came. The ones in coats. With needles. With wires. With orders. Contain him, they said. Because they were afraid, of Akira. Always Akira. That name. That myth. That black hole of a boy.

Kaneda loved Tetsuo like a brother. Rode like a god on that red beast of a bike. Fast enough to forget. Tough enough to survive. They were kids. Rebels. Orphans. Dust. Racing through trash-light and chemical rain, chasing adrenaline, chasing heat.

No dreams, just the hum of the engine and the static on the radio. They didn’t ask for meaning. They just wanted to burn. Then the city turned. Started watching them. Started whispering their names into the wires.

Until the streets swallowed Tetsuo whole. Split him open, filled him with electricity, madness, grief. Not love, not anymore. Just power. Too much. Way too much. Kaneda couldn’t reach him.

Akira bled into the eyes of a nation. It was ugly. Beautiful. Real. Black ink on white paper like veins bursting under skin. Katsuhiro Otomo didn’t tell the future. It was the future. Then, the screen couldn’t hold it. The movie exploded. Cells melted. Worlds shifted. We all got infected.

No one was safe. Not the artists. Not the kids. Not the ones who thought they’d seen it all. Neo-Tokyo became a virus. A neon disease that glittered in the dark and tasted like sugar, sluts, and static.

I saw it once, and it lived in me. Curled up behind my teeth. Waited in my spine. Everything changed after that. They said it was fiction. But it was prophecy. And we’re still catching up.

.

The Wandering Mind:

Sometimes I’m not sure whether the world I currently find myself in is real. Then I strain to search for glitches that the simulation around me may have overlooked—only to eventually give up in frustration and realize, disappointed, that I’m not permitted to catch even the slightest glimpse behind the curtain.

And this despite the fact that I could swear there have been enough moments in my life when I should have slipped into eternal oblivion. Yet I’m still here—if only in the fading aftereffects of my own thoughts.

Perhaps I’m forbidden from being forgotten—by myself as well as by others. I was born in the year of dystopia, on an unremarkable winter morning somewhere in southern Germany. My mother raised me on her own, supported by her family, who soon became mine as well.

I was never particularly diligent, let alone ambitious. Instead of doing homework, I preferred to daydream and lose myself in the colorful worlds of television series, video games, and fantasy novels. After catching enough Pokémon, watching enough anime, and kissing enough girls in my small hometown, I eventually felt drawn out into the big wide world.

I found myself in Berlin, Tokyo, and New York. In London, Paris, and Rome. In China, Canada, and Turkey. Whether I was ever truly in those places, or whether all my small and great adventures took place only in my imagination, may perhaps reveal itself at the end of my journey.

At the moment, I’m roaming the streets of a mid-sized city in southwestern Japan while studying the analog and digital arts of depressed people and even more depressed robots. After searching far too long for the truth of everything within myself, I recently decided to throw myself into the unknown with open arms and allow myself to be swallowed by the countless possibilities of this planet.

.

Culture Isn’t a Museum:

I swore to myself I’d wring every last drop of experience from this burning, breathing, chaotic place called Kumamoto. Time is a cruel lover, always ready to leave, so I decided to chase after moments like they were pills I could swallow to stay alive just a little longer. When my friend asked if I wanted to go to a classical concert with her, I said yes before my thoughts even had time to catch up.

It was one of those days where the sun painted everything gold, like the whole world had been dipped in light. We’d just eaten something amazing. Rice soft as clouds, soup that tasted like secrets passed down from grandmothers, miso clinging to the corners of our mouths like a gentle goodbye kiss.

We walked slowly, almost lazily, like the city belonged to us. Bustling sidewalks, vending machines humming like they were keeping some rhythm only locals understood, children chasing pigeons, pigeons chasing dreams. The concert hall rose up like something quite sacred. Glass, stone, elegance. Inside, it was full of families. Kids cheering, parents looking tired but kind.

Onstage, a young man played the flute like it was an extension of his body. First came classical pieces, and then, like a soft rebellion, the familiar notes of My Neighbor Totoro. The air changed. Ghibli music isn’t just music. It’s memories. It’s growing up and not realizing it. It’s wonder wrapped in bittersweet sadness.

A woman stepped forward, her voice strong, deep, and fearless. She sang with her whole body. Then a child, probably no older than twelve, took the mic and trembled out a few songs, eyes wide, voice like paper folding itself into cranes.

And then something beautiful and absurd happened. People started dancing. Singing. Laughing like they were drunk on something better than alcohol. We were all kids again.

Culture isn’t a museum. It isn’t glass cases and hushed tones. It’s loud, alive, and full of rhythm. It’s messy. It’s fun. It’s the sound of childhood slipping through a flute, turning strangers into something softer than friends. For the first time in days, I didn’t feel alone.

.

Bubbling Like a Fever:

The city is opening up to me like a fairytale. At first, it was gray, anonymous, all edges and noise. But now it’s bleeding color—flashing signs, temple eaves glowing under dusk, vending machines humming like lullabies. Kumamoto. It wasn’t mine, not at all. But I started stealing pieces of it. Slowly.

Every time I open a new door or take a wrong turn, the city breathes a little louder. I’m beginning to hear its rhythm. Every day, something reveals itself. The blank spots in my head, those static-filled no-places—they’re finally vanishing. They become convenience stores glowing at midnight, playgrounds with rusty swings, alleys where cats stare like they know what I’m hiding.

I found people too. Accidental encounters. Strangers who became storylines who became friends. Faces, voices, footsteps beside mine. They teach me things. We walk this city like it’s a puzzle we’re trying to solve with our bodies. They show me corners I wouldn’t have dared to enter alone. We move through it, through each other, like we belong nowhere.

The city never waited for me. But somehow it lets me in. It stares back at me with curiosity, like it’s trying to figure out what kind of ghost I am. Every corner hides something either heartbreakingly old or ridiculously new. Shrines behind cafés. Salarymen passed out on benches. High schoolers eating fries like it’s a ritual.

We visited a mall the other day. Huge. Unapologetic. Floating over the train station like a spaceship made of steel and fluorescent dreams. On top of it, above the noise and sorrows, red broth was bubbling in a hot pot like a fever. Meat curling. Mushrooms blooming. Vegetables losing their color like they were giving up dreams.

The city sprawled outside the window, buildings layered like old scars. And we sat there above it all, dipping, chewing, and talking about everything and nothing. We burned our tongues and fears at the shabu-shabu place. We laughed. And we promised not to waste a moment, not to go quiet. That day felt like part of the city decided to remember us back.

.

Love Machines:

Being in Japan feels like a dream on loop—neon syrup, dazed smiles, and a never-ending maze of misconception. I think I’m free, that I’m just wandering past Tokyo’s electric veins, Osaka’s late-night sighs, and Kyoto’s soft ghosts.

But soon, really, really soon, this particular feeling appeared out of nowhere. A tickle on the back of my neck. Not fear. Not paranoia. Something subtler. The feeling of being watched. Observed. Loved, maybe, in a machine-made way.

They’re everywhere. It doesn’t matter if I’m lost in the middle of Shibuya’s famous crossings, walking through a rain-washed mountain village where even the wind feels exalted, or just crying behind the supermarket.

It’s 2 p.m. or 4 a.m. or some haunted hour in between. In the heat of summer, in the ache of winter. Alone in a forest, or swallowed by a crowd of strangers. They always find me. The machines. Vending machines. Jidouhanbaiki.

They glow like altar fires, humming softly to themselves, full of answers I didn’t ask for. They don’t just sell drinks. That would be too easy. They whisper temptations in aluminum and plastic—icy lemon soda, scorching black coffee, milk tea with floating pearls.

But they go further. They offer me exotic fruits sealed in glossy wrapping. Used underwear, when I’m feeling lonely. Ties, raincoats, and umbrellas like forgotten lovers. They’re more than machines.

They’re quiet survivors, like junkies who got clean but never quite forgot the high. The convenience stores might be the heartbeat of Japan, but the vending machines are the blood—rushing, steady, always there. They never close. They never talk back. They offer me something warm in the cold and something cold when I’m burning.

Sometimes, they look like art. And sometimes, they are art. Metal dreams stacked with color-coded longing, waiting for me on every corner like a past version of myself who still believes in miracles. I don’t know if they’re watching me. Or if they are me. But I keep pressing buttons. And they keep giving me what I didn’t know I needed.

.

Memoirs of a Samurai:

Kumamoto Castle rises against the sky. We stand at its base, looking up. A monument of samurai, sieges, fires. The earthquake, when the ground split open and the walls crumbled. They rebuilt it. Stone by stone, piece by piece, putting history back together. Some parts new, some parts old, all of it held together by something invisible. Effort. Memory. Time.

The air feels different here, charged with something that isn’t quite present but isn’t gone either. We walk along the stone walls, stopping where the lines blur between past and present. Some of the stones are darker, weathered, soaked with rain, with sun, with war. Others are newer, cleaner, set into place with precision and care.

Inside, the past lingers behind glass. Swords, armor, old rifles that still seem to hum with gunpowder and blood. A mask stares at us, its iron grin sharp, empty. Behind it, a face once breathed, once sweated, once fought. Now it’s just lacquer and metal, something to be looked at, something to be remembered. Names carved into plaques, letters written by hands.

Words fade, ink smudges, but the feeling stays. The smell of iron, of old paper, of wood polished smooth by time. Outside, the world is loud again. The food market is alive, thick with the smell of frying oil, of soy sauce, of something sweet drifting in the warm air. Steam rises from skewers, from bowls of noodles, from sizzling pans.

We find a small shop selling fried croquettes with minced horse meat inside. The first bite is hot, rich, and unfamiliar. The second, deeper. The third lingers, something heavy, something that doesn’t quite belong to the present. The wind shifts, carrying voices—chatter, laughter, orders being called out from behind the stalls.

But beneath it all, something else, something older. Hoofbeats in the dirt. The distant clash of metal. The low murmur of men waiting for battle. The taste of salt, of iron, of something unspoken. Night falls, and the castle glows in the dark. It stands tall again. The sky stretches wide above it, deep and endless, as if history itself could dissolve into the black.

.

Last Night I Dreamt of Flowers:

Tokyo swallows me in its heat. The asphalt quivers, glass panes tremble. Neon lights flicker in my eyes like broken memories. I drift with the crowd, let myself be pushed, my body feverish, my head full of everything and nothing. Then I’m inside—inside the world of teamLab. Borderless—no walls, no doors, no boundaries. Only light.

Waves of color ripple across the floor, over my shoes, over my hands. The warmth of the room caresses my skin, as if the light itself had fingers. I walk on. A dark hall. Then—explosions of flowers, meadows rising from shadows, pollen drifting in slow motion. I raise my hand, and the room shifts with me. My body is a line in a poem writing itself.

I run through the rain of the artificial night, lights bursting on my tongue like candy. My reflection fractures into glassy surfaces—thousands of versions of me staring back. Girls made of light, boys made of shadows, ghosts in a city that never stands still. Someone laughs, a sound like an echo from a dream. I lie down on the floor, looking up into the nothingness, flooded with color.

No beginning, no end—only this moment. My heart beats to the rhythm of the light. I close my eyes. Tokyo whispers. And I’m weightless. I dive deeper into the colors, as if I could drown in an ocean of light. But it doesn’t feel like drowning. It feels like being lost, like time has stopped chasing me.

The walls breathe, the floor pulses, and I forget myself in the movement, in the silence, in this odd dance of pixels and dust. Everything is near and distant at once, like the sound of a song I’ve never heard but somehow remember. Every step reshapes the world around me, painting a new image onto the canvas of space.

A flower blooms beneath my feet, and in its petals, I see myself—fractured yet whole, shifting through all my contradictions. I turn in circles. Colors weave and unwind, vanish only to return. The light makes my thoughts flicker, my heart jumps to the beat of a melody only space knows. It’s a dream that never ends. Or maybe it’s the moment I finally wake up.

.

One Night in Ikebukuro:

If I want to experience Japan at its most exuberant, I must venture into the heart of Tokyo after sunset. Ikebukuro is the Sodom and Gomorrah of this East Asian island. Here, night after night, the pent-up energy of identical-suited salary men is unleashed in its fullest.

In the countless bars and restaurants of this neighborhood—renowned far beyond Japan’s borders thanks to films, novels, and video games—people eat, drink, and penetrate each other until the first subway train runs again in the early morning.

Ikebukuro is a place of love—whether real, fake, or simply for sale. Anyone left alone in the glow of the colorful billboards must be doing something seriously wrong.

Ikebukuro never sleeps. A district of electricity and nicotine, cheap cocktails, and burnt-out light bulbs, trapped between the wings of the Yamanote Line. The neon lights twitch like frayed nerves on the brink of collapse. Pachinko balls rain against metal walls, the city breathes fast and greedy, like someone who has smoked too many cigarettes yet still craves another.

I wander through the streets, my eyes half-closed, half-awake. The air smells of ramen, of unspoken words, of hot plastic and the dreams of those who seek refuge here. Girls with gum-sticky lips linger outside love hotels. Boys in cheap suits lean against walls, waiting for something that may never come.

In Sunshine City, the entire town is reflected in the glass facades. There is a point up there from which I can see everything: The chaos, the glimmer, the people losing themselves. Stay, the city whispers. Here, I can be anything—a ghost, a shadow, a song that never stops playing. Ikebukuro is an ember that never burns out.

I dance through the light, lose myself in the shadows, and observe the mayhem. The city murmurs stories in my ear—tales of broken promises and nights that never wanted to end. Somewhere behind the flickering signs and steaming food stalls lies another life. But my feet remain stuck here, as if the asphalt had long since decided that I should never leave.

.

Life’s a Bowl of Ramen:

One of the favorite pastimes of people here in Kyushu is asking me about my favorite Japanese food. My answer depends on the day, but I usually say ramen. And no, I don’t mean the cheap instant kind you find in supermarkets. I mean real ramen—made with real ingredients. The kind you find in a tiny restaurant tucked away in some unknown back alley.

Nothing revives me more at night than a hot, steaming bowl of soup filled with noodles, meat, vegetables, mushrooms, and a soft-boiled egg. And because I spent years addicted to Sriracha and thoroughly destroyed my taste buds, I pile on as much chili powder and fresh garlic as the Japanese immigration authorities will allow.

Getting into ramen is like diving into a rabbit hole of broths, noodle varieties, and regional specialties. Originally, wheat noodle soup came from China, but in the early 20th century, Japan adopted it and made it their own. After World War II, when wheat imports from the U.S. increased, ramen became a staple. Today, every region has its own version.

Some shops simmer their broth for over 24 hours to achieve the perfect flavor. Others focus on experimental fusion creations—something that fascinates me as much as the food itself. I’ve tried quite a few bowls of ramen, and despite all the variations, one truth remains: A good bowl of ramen always feels like coming home.

On my trip to Fukuoka, I couldn’t miss the chance to try the city’s most famous dish—one that’s beloved far beyond Japan’s borders: Tonkotsu ramen. This broth is the opposite of subtle—thick, smooth, and packed with umami. The secret? Pork bones simmered for hours until they break down, infusing the soup with that unmistakable milky richness.

The noodles are thinner than in other types of ramen, allowing them to absorb the heavy broth. It’s served with tender pork belly, fresh spring onions, and a creamy egg. If you know what you’re doing, you order a noodle refill. My sensei and I certainly did enjoy it at 大砲ラーメン. Tonkotsu ramen isn’t just a dish—it’s an addiction.

.

Fonts Turn Words Into Stories:

I adore good typography. The bigger, bolder, and more brutal it is, the more I fall in love with it. Whether classically placed on a snow-white background or chaotically scattered across colorful illustrations, typography is truly effective only when it snaps people out of their wandering thoughts the moment they see it.

As British artist Mark Boulton aptly observed: Most people think typography is about fonts. Most designers think typography is about fonts. Typography is more than that, it’s expressing language through type. Placement, composition, typechoice. And as part of our ongoing design studies, we took a trip to Fukuoka to visit an annual typography exhibition.

Nestled on the northern shore of Japan’s beautiful Kyushu Island, Fukuoka is a vibrant city where tradition and modernity blend seamlessly. Known for its welcoming atmosphere, it’s a haven for food lovers, with steaming bowls of Hakata ramen served at bustling yatai street stalls.

Beyond its culinary delights, Fukuoka boasts serene temples like the iconic Kushida Shrine, sandy beaches, and a quite thriving art scene. With walkable streets, sleek shopping districts, and a reputation for being one of Japan’s most livable cities, Fukuoka offers curious visitors like us a chance to experience Japanese renowned warmth and innovation, all wrapped in an irresistible coastal charm.

The exhibition itself was a vibrant exploration of Asian and Western typography created by students and masters alike. Whether featured in books, on posters, or even online, the famous Japanese dedication to perfection was evident in every single project.

Personally, I was especially drawn to works that made bold use of hiragana, katakana, and kanji, creating a modern form of calligraphy that made my Japanophile heart beat faster. After viewing the exhibition, we had the freedom to explore Fukuoka on our own. We first hopped on a bus to the city center, treated ourselves to a bowl of hot ramen, and then wandered through the streets to soak in more of this enchanting city.

.

To the Lighthouse:

The lanterns outside 老之倉庫 glowed with a soft, amber light, cutting through the early evening haze like scattered fireflies. It was the kind of place you’d pass a hundred times without noticing until someone told you it was worth stepping inside. That someone, in my case, was a group of classmates from Sojo University.

After the school festival, they had decided we should celebrate here. Inside, the air was warm, alive with the hum of conversation and the low, melodic clinking of glasses. The aroma of hops blended with the scent of food. I found myself at a long table, surrounded by faces that were both familiar and foreign, a constellation of new friendships still forming.

You don’t drink? someone asked, their tone more curious than judgmental. No, but I’m here for the company. This answer seemed to satisfy them, and soon the table’s attention turned back to ordering. Golden drafts arrived, frothy and luminous, like small suns. I watched as my friends lifted their glasses in a toast, their voices rising together in a symphony of celebration. Kanpai!

It wasn’t the beer that mattered. It was the act of sharing, of weaving ourselves into the rhythm of the evening. My oolong tea’s earthy bitterness grounded me, a counterpoint to the effervescence of the room. As I sipped, I thought about how people often seek connection through what they consume.

The conversation ebbed and flowed. Stories about the festival, plans for the weekend, fragments of dreams shared in halting English and Japanese. Outside, the city exhaled softly, the sounds of distant cars and bicycles slipping through the cracks of the night. By the time we left, the lanterns had grown brighter, their glow pooling on the cobblestones like liquid amber.

I felt lighter somehow, not because of what I had drunk but because of the time spent together, the threads of connection woven tighter. As we slowly walked to one of Kumamoto’s karaoke clubs, I realized that Ichinosoko wasn’t just a place to drink, it was a place to belong, even if only for an evening.

.

The School Festival:

Over the weekend, my Japanese university transformed into a vibrant school festival. Students from all faculties buzzed around the campus like busy bees, setting up tents, stages, and stalls, and filling them with life, color, and energy.

There was an abundance of food, drinks, games, performances, raffles, and competitions—including a show by a somewhat famous idol from Tokyo, whose appearance drew an enthusiastic crowd. The spectacle concluded with a dazzling fireworks display that lit up the night sky.

Afterward, we gathered at an izakaya downtown for the final celebration, where we laughed, reminisced, and spent our hard-earned money on very delicious food and drinks.

Our group ran a stall at the festival, selling Sri Lankan delicacies like fried noodles with meat. My first day began at the archery clubhouse on the outskirts of campus, where we worked together to prepare the ingredients—carefully cutting meat and vegetables into bite-sized and pan-ready portions.

Once everything was ready, we transported it to our stall, where the ingredients were fried to perfection, packed into transparent boxes, and enthusiastically advertised to passing festival-goers.

Meanwhile, students from other courses were equally busy, offering sweet waffles, hot yakitori, fresh coffee, and an assortment of games like goldfish catching, ring tossing, and a lively lottery.

Gamers showcased their skills in intense Super Smash Bros. matches, flexed their strength in arm wrestling contests, and danced with boundless energy to popular K-pop hits.

As the festival neared its end, the main stage transformed into the site of an exciting raffle. Visitors who had diligently collected stamp marks at various food and game stalls over the two days eagerly awaited their chance to win fantastic prizes like AirPods, smartwatches, and even a Nintendo Switch.

Our reward was simpler yet equally satisfying: Feasting on leftover food, savoring the beauty of the fireworks display, and, to top it all off, visiting an izakaya and singing our hearts out at karaoke in the city center.

.

At the Soy Sauce Brewery:

The water reached two meters, Sodai Iwanaga recounted, gesturing toward the flood lines that once submerged his hometown of Ashikita, in Kumamoto Prefecture. In 2020, torrential rains devastated Kyushu, leaving 77 dead and two missing. Among those affected was the Iwanaga family, proud soy sauce producers now in their fifth generation.

Despite the devastation, the Iwanagas never considered abandoning the business, founded in 1909. Instead, they turned to crowdfunding, raising nearly $90,000 from almost 1,000 supporters. Messages of encouragement poured in, including one that read, Our dining table has never been without a bottle of Iwanaga soy sauce.

We visited the Iwanagas’ brewery as part of our graphic design course at Sojo University. Located in Ashikita, a serene town in the southern part of Kumamoto near the west coast, the small factory is renowned for its high-quality local products. Soy sauces, vinegars, and miso pastes are crafted here with remarkable care and passion, embodying generations of tradition and dedication.

As very creative design students, however, our interest extended far beyond the flavors and meticulous production methods. While we were deeply moved by the tales of resilience in the face of a devastating natural disaster, our focus was more on the visual language of their high quality products.

The scars of the disaster remain visible across Ashikita, from damaged homes to fragments of daily life unearthed at mudslide sites. Yet, resilience and determination define the community’s spirit. Residents have worked tirelessly to rebuild, even as memories of the destruction linger.

Shattered neighborhoods are finding new life, and local traditions, like soy sauce brewing, have emerged as symbols of perseverance. The Iwanagas’ approach not only preserves tradition but also captures the essence of Ashikita’s spirit, creating products that tell a story beyond their taste or texture. It’s a testament to the strength of a town determined to rebuild itself, one bottle of soy sauce at a time.

.

Day at the Museum:

Few places in the world exude a more peaceful aura than museums and galleries—though perhaps supermarkets at 4 o’clock in the morning come close. These sanctuaries of natural wonders, historical milestones, and cultural achievements stand apart from the chaotic events of the outside world.

Those who step inside join an exclusive clientele, people who have deliberately chosen to immerse themselves in what they hope is an inspiring parallel universe. Within these walls, time seems to pause, encouraging visitors to leave with the aspiration of making the world a little better—or at least not worse. A friend and I recently visited the Contemporary Art Museum here in Kumamoto.

Situated in the heart of the city, this museum is far more than a repository of art—it is a symbol of Kumamoto’s commitment to inclusivity, creativity, and forward-thinking ideals. Its mission is clear: To foster a tolerant city that embraces diversity and to inspire a future where every citizen can live a fulfilling, art-enriched life.

The museum’s vision is built upon three core principles: offering a welcoming space for cultural exploration, stirring deep emotional connections through art, and collaborating with the community to envision a brighter future for the city. This is a place of reflection, imagination, and shared inspiration—a space where the lively spirit of Kumamoto is celebrated.

The exhibitions we explored at the Contemporary Art Museum in Kumamoto ranged from thought-provoking Japanese paintings to intimate photography and interactive installations, each one a visually stunning testament to the museum’s dedication to showcasing a rich tapestry of creative expression. By the end of our visit, we even had the chance to become part of a colorful, participatory work of art.

Kumamoto deeply values culture, and the Contemporary Art Museum is just the beginning of my journey. There are countless museums, galleries, and exhibitions waiting for me to discover, each promising its own unique contribution to the city’s vibrant artistic landscape.

.

Gotta Catch ‘Em All:

There’s always something interesting happening in the center of Kumamoto. On my way to the city’s downtown museum with a friend to check out a few free public exhibitions on a special open day, we stumbled upon a toy swap meet in front of a popular shopping center—and the runtish crowd that came with it.

This colorful event didn’t catch us entirely off guard, as our art teachers had not only warned us in advance but also handed us a few action figures to trade. So, before immersing ourselves in the world of paintings, photography, and installations, we took a deep breath and dove into the exciting universe of bright plastic toys, cute plush animals, and shiny trading cards.

As with most things here in Japan, the swap meet also had some kind of system. At one stand, we could exchange our action figures for points, which we then used to buy toys displayed on the other tables. The more valuable the product, the more points it cost—simple enough. Wandering through mountains of Far Eastern playthings, we picked out a few favorites.

I chose a small book about Japanese ghost figures, which fit perfectly with my participation in the yokai drawing competition. I was quite thrilled with my find, though we didn’t have enough points for much else. What we weren’t prepared for was the grand finale waiting for us at the very end of the amusing event.

The climatic highlight of the swap meet was an auction, where children, parents, and some random nerds like me could bid their leftover points on especially valuable toys. The selection included everything from Pokémon plushies to musical instruments and brightly wrapped plastic sculptures, the purpose of which I still can’t fathom.

While I spent just two small points on my cute book, the little monsters around us were screaming bids in the triple digits just to take home a goofy-looking sheep. Some kids cried. After witnessing this lively social and cultural spectacle, we finally made our way to the museum. Admission was eventually free on that very day, after all. Hurray!

.

Draw Me Like One of Your Yokai:

I recently joined a drawing class here at my university in Kumamoto. After learning the fundamentals of Japanese painting over the past few weeks, it’s now time to put that knowledge into practice.

Most of the works my diligent fellow students create, sometimes after months of effort, are entered into various competitions, primarily national ones, offering not only fame and honor but sometimes even monetary rewards or other prizes.

Following the well-known saying, When in Rome, do as the Romans do, I’ve decided to participate in a competition as well. And I’ve really found a good one: The sunny island of Shodoshima is hosting a drawing competition with a focus on yokai.

Yokai are supernatural creatures, spirits, or beings from Japanese folklore, embodying a wide range of traits from mischievous and playful to malevolent and terrifying. They often reflect cultural beliefs, natural phenomena, or moral lessons.

Famous examples include Kappa, water-dwelling creatures known for their fondness for cucumbers and cunning tricks, Kitsune, fox spirits associated with intelligence and shapeshifting, and Tengu, bird-like beings often depicted as mountain protectors and skilled martial artists.

Yokai are deeply rooted in Japanese culture, often appearing in famous myths, art, and even way more modern media like anime, manga, and video games.

The required canvas size is manageable enough to give beginners like me a fair chance. My teachers kindly provided books on yokai and encouraged me to gather inspiration, develop ideas, and start sketching.

I now have just under a month to complete the painting, which includes preparing the canvas and producing the necessary paints, colors, and glue. I’m very glad that my fellow students are also there to help me.

If I win, I’ll not only receive money and a special artifact but also be part of a ceremony on the beautiful island of Shodoshima. Wish me luck as I compete against master’s students, amateur artists, and professional painters. How hard could it be, am I right you guys?

.

Ghosts in the City:

A few years ago, I snuck out of the house on Halloween night and wandered through my dark, foggy, and eerily deserted hometown. With a scary story by ghost hunter John Sinclair playing in my ear, this one about a brothel haunted by vampires, it felt like the perfect entertainment for such a spooky night.

The atmosphere was electrifying, the kind of mystery that sends shivers down your spine in the best possible way. The only person I encountered that evening was a long-haired bottle collector making his rounds through the dense fog, his silhouette occasionally flickering into view before vanishing again. Every second of that enigmatic Halloween was unforgettable.

Since that night, I’ve developed a deep fondness for exploring the streets of whichever city I find myself in during Halloween. This year, as I’m living in Japan, I made it a priority to continue my quiet tradition here. My daily route often winds around the castle park, past residential buildings, shops, and Kumamoto’s always-vibrant downtown.

Around Halloween, this area transforms into a lively spectacle, with the market square near the popular bus station bursting with food stalls, shops, and a small but lively stage. In the heart of the square, a mix of cute witches, playful ghosts, and furries scurried about, juggling pizza slices, Coca-Cola bottles, and shopping bags.

On stage, children were applauded for their creative costumes. One memorable highlight was a little girl dressed as Sailor Moon, confidently shouting into the microphone with such enthusiasm that it took a gentle intervention to end her impromptu performance.

Halloween has always held a special place in my heart, but celebrating it in a city where others embrace it with equal fervor elevates the experience to another level. There’s a unique magic in blending my reflective tradition of wandering with the vibrant communal energy of a place like Kumamoto. The streets, the costumes, the laughter, and the shared love for all things spooky—this is Halloween at its finest.

.

Trick or Treat:

My Japanese exchange university regularly organizes events on special occasions to bring Japanese and international students together. These include excursions to fascinating places around Kumamoto, like bridges, breweries, and golden One Piece statues, several competitions to improve participants’ English language skills, and farraginous festivities celebrating special cultural holidays.

Halloween, with its colorful disguises, mysterious customs, and sweet treats, sometimes scary, sometimes not, is no exception. The Japanese people here on the island of Kyushu embrace this day enthusiastically, and Sojo University has made its own contribution to this modern tradition.

On the spookiest day of the year, I was invited to a cozy Halloween party hosted by my university at its International Learning Center. The event featured an abundance of Japanese snacks and drinks—many of which were still completely unfamiliar to me. Students and lecturers dressed up as dinosaurs, witches, and bloody knife-wielding murderers, creating a festive atmosphere.

I had interesting conversations with new people, which made the evening even more enjoyable. My costume? Gru from Despicable Me, of course. Despite my immeasurable efforts, I couldn’t secure first prize in the costume competition. Too bad! But I’m not a sore loser—most of the time, at least.

Halloween has become one of my favorite days of the year. Growing up in Germany in the 1980s and 1990s, I only experienced it as it slowly began to gain popularity in Europe.

Unfortunately, by the time German kids started trick-or-treating, I was already a little too old for it. My childhood Halloween tradition was limited to watching The Simpsons Halloween specials on TV while snacking on skull-shaped chocolates.

This year, I’m thrilled to celebrate Halloween in Japan, a country where the fascination with ghosts, spirits, and yokai is deeply ingrained in the culture. It’s been an unforgettable experience to embrace the spooky season in such a unique and meaningful way.

.

Street by Street:

My life here in Kumamoto primarily revolves around three main places: My home, where I mostly just sleep, work, and do laundry. My university, where I rush from one lecture to the next. And downtown, where I spend most of my free time.

Whether it’s stopping by the city hall or the post office, parting with my more or less hard-earned money in various stores, or meeting friends in cafés, restaurants, or at karaoke, the true spirit of Kumamoto thrives in the streets of its bustling city center.

It’s a lively area filled with all kinds of attractive, wondrous, and colorful establishments, and I try to visit it as often as I can, because luckily it’s only a stone’s throw from my apartment.

Kumamoto’s downtown, located directly below the famous and beautiful city castle, is centered around three covered arcades that are vibrant day and night: Kamitori, Shimotori, and Shinshigai.

These streets are lined with restaurants, drugstores, cafés, cinemas, museums, bars, konbini, bakeries, florists, hotels, and an array of small and large retailers, as well as several shopping centers.

I’ve made it my personal mission to visit as many of these places as possible during my time here and keep trying new things. After all, I don’t want to look back in the future and regret wasting this unique opportunity. While I’m here, I want to make the most of it. At least, that’s the plan.

Of course, this is easier said than done. For example, I’ve yet to visit some restaurants because I can’t figure out how to use the ticket machines, which only display Japanese characters.

That’s why I’m always grateful when friends join me, patiently explaining everything so I can press the correct buttons and handle things on my own next time. Hopefully, my Japanese will improve gradually—who knows?

While Kumamoto might not be the first city that comes to mind for tourists visiting Japan, I’m glad to have landed here. It’s an exciting city full of interesting places and nice people. Bit by bit, I’m exploring all of its charms, and it’s been a vastly rewarding adventure so far.

.

Barbecue and Fireworks:

The Land of the Rising Sun is not only renowned for its, let’s call it, alternative entertainment industry but also its breathtaking fireworks festivals. And one of the most stunning takes place every October in southern Kyushu, in the town of Yatsushiro in beautiful Kumamoto Prefecture.

This vibrant spectacle showcases Japan’s finest light and sound artistry, with unparalleled effects created by the country’s leading pyrotechnicians—or at least, that’s how it was advertised to potential visitors.

Intrigued, I took a crowded local train to Yatsushiro with a couple of friends, where we not only admired the dazzling night sky displays but also savored a delightful evening barbecue.

At the cozy barbecue in a local parking lot on the outskirts of Yatsushiro, nestled in a quiet neighborhood, we indulged in an array of delicious Japanese fried delicacies, sweet and salty snacks, and, for those so inclined, an abundance of cold and fruity beer-mix drinks.

During the evening, we struck up a conversation with a possibly tipsy gentleman who claimed to be a famous voice actor from Tokyo. He enthusiastically told us he had starred in iconic robot anime like Gundam. I found this really fascinating and had a pleasant chat with him, but eventually, my friends politely yet firmly ushered him on his way. Bye-bye, Ojisan, I said with a mix of amusement and relief.

The fireworks competition began at nightfall and had a Disney theme. Whether it was The Lion King, Frozen, or Aladdin, each display featured classic animation-inspired scenes, paired with matching music and spectacular explosions in every color imaginable.

Standing there, on the outskirts of a, at least to me, unknown Japanese city, surrounded by wonderful people, delicious food, and a stunning hanabi show, filled me with joy. I couldn’t stop smiling—even while waiting in the long queue at the overcrowded small train station or enduring the, let’s say, cozy ride home a couple of hours later. And I simply can’t wait to experience all the amazing more things Japan has to offer.

.

The Otaku Dungeon:

I realized very early on that Japanese entertainment is far superior to its Western counterpart. As a small child, German television introduced me to series like Maya the Bee, Vicky the Viking, and Heidi, which were far more heartfelt, emotional, and exciting than anything Disney and its contemporaries offered.

Of course, I loved normal cartoons too, but when East Asian classics such as Sailor Moon, Dragon Ball, and One Piece finally arrived in Central Europe a few years later, I found myself craving everything from the Land of the Rising Sun. I devoured anime magazines, bought shonen manga anthologies, and spent my pocket money on Japanese music CDs. An otaku was born.

When you think of otaku paradise, Akihabara, Tokyo’s Electric Town, naturally comes to mind. It’s a haven for every nerdy heart, offering everything from anime and manga to provocative figurines. However, my personal favorite store is on the other side of the city, nestled in the heart of Shibuya. The Mandarake there is somewhat hidden between a ramen restaurant and a guitar shop.

Descending the stairs into this underground otaku dungeon, I suddenly find myself surrounded by everything I truly love. The aisles overflow with movies, comics, trading cards, figurines, CDs, video games, consoles, magazines, drawing supplies, hentai, and all sorts of quirky odds and ends.

Whether it’s iconic series like Pokémon, Astro Boy, and Neon Genesis Evangelion or hidden gems like Excel Saga, Genshiken, and Eden of the East, Mandarake offers such a vast and wonderfully obscure selection that I could easily spend my life savings here—and still only scratch the surface.

The real obstacle, however, is that I’m broke. Sometimes, I wish I were obsessed enough with one series to want every piece of merchandise available. But because I have an eclectic taste and like a bit of everything, I usually find satisfaction in simply wandering through the labyrinthine aisles, soaking in the vibrant atmosphere, and drawing inspiration from the colorful characters around me.

.

Let’s Make Curry:

At Sojo University in Kumamoto, where I am, as you all know by know, spending a semester abroad, a two-day festival with all the trimmings is set to take place in just a few weeks. All the faculties will participate, putting on a vibrant showcase of activities. At least, that’s the plan.

The festival will feature numerous food and game stalls, a large stage with various performances, and a spectacular fireworks display. There’s even a special guest—a pop idol from Tokyo. I imagine the whole thing will feel like one of those heartwarming anime episodes where the entire school plans a festival, only for the city to be attacked by ugly alien monsters—or something along those lines.

Recently, I joined a fun and vibrant group called Sojo Buddies—a lively mix of Japanese and international students from various faculties at Sojo University. The witty group organizes exciting events in Kumamoto and beyond, plans excursions to interesting places, and occasionally meets for meals at delicious restaurants.

Since good food brings people together, we’ve decided to run a food stall at the festival, serving spicy curry and other delicacies inspired by Sri Lankan cuisine. To ensure we know what we’re doing, and to avoid making fools of ourselves at the festival, we held a group cooking session, followed by a very essential taste test—and it was a complete success.

Cooking with such an amusing group was a nice experience, even though my main contribution was aggressively breaking pasta into small pieces—just as the recipe we received instructed. In the end, we were all quite pleased with the result. I got to meet many new people, and we capped off the evening by watching a live broadcast of a local basketball team’s match.

We’re more or less confident our food stall will be a gigantic hit at the upcoming festival, and the more money we raise, the grander our after-show party at some izakaya will be. Now, we eagerly await the festival at Sojo University. Hopefully, no ugly alien monsters will decide to attack our city in the meantime.

.

Shake It Off:

Japan is not only known for its eye-catching fashion, delicious food, and captivating animation art but also for its frequent earthquakes of varying severity, a consequence of its geographical location. Ever since the Great Kanto Earthquake in the year 1923 and, more recently, the Tohoku Earthquake in the year 2011, both the inhabitants of this East Asian island and visitors alike have been acutely aware of the ever-present danger simmering beneath their feet.

Even the city of Kumamoto, where I am currently staying, experienced devastating earthquakes in the year 2016, which not only destroyed a bunch of city districts but also its famous landmark: The Kumamoto Castle.

As a recent resident of Kumamoto City, I felt compelled to, and also had to, attend a disaster preparedness seminar. Together with a few friends, I fulfilled this obligation at the first available opportunity. We visited a local fire station, where we learned how to act in the event of an impending disaster.

The seminar included an engaging video, hands-on simulations involving the four elements, fire, water, wind, and earth, and a Q&A session with the quite dedicated course instructor. After this experience, I feel confident in my ability to pull through should the worst occur. That said, perhaps I should also attend a seminar on surviving a zombie apocalypse—just to be fully prepared.

One key takeaway from the seminar was the importance of having a emergency bag. What should it include? A flashlight, a portable radio, a helmet, a protective hood, work gloves, a blanket, batteries, a lighter, candles, water, food, instant noodles, a can opener, a knife, clothing, cash, and a first-aid kit.

Having gained some expertise in disaster preparedness, I even found myself featured on Japanese television, sharing my thoughts on this crucial topic. Although I’ve grown accustomed to the frequent, minor tremors here, the specter of the legendary Nankai megathrust earthquake looms large in everyone’s mind. But I wouldn’t mind if it held off for a while longer…

.

Autumn Flower:

The sweltering heat of summer is giving way to a cool breeze. Trees begin to change color, and the fields gradually empty. In the supermarket, the fresh harvest awaits eager shoppers. These days, I love strolling through the streets of my new city, searching for unexplored paths—whether in the heart of bustling downtown or along the quiet outskirts of the suburbs.

Sometimes, I encounter a lazy cat basking in the sun, other times, I hop over small streams or stumble upon a hidden café, shrine, or candy store. Kumamoto feels like a treasure chest, waiting to be discovered. Lucy Maud Montgomery once wrote: I’m so glad I live in a world where there are Octobers. I feel you, sister.

To hone our creative skills, the Japanese Arts Masters Club, of which I have recently become a member, organized a cozy walk to a nearby field with a small river meandering through it. Surrounded by rolling mountains and lush green trees, the area felt like a slice of paradise.

The vibrant Red Spider Lily, also known as the Autumn Flower and beloved in Japan, blooms here—its striking petals making it an ideal subject for sketching. We carefully selected a few of the prettiest specimens, unearthed them gently with their roots still intact, and brought them back to our classroom in small containers. There, the beautiful plants immediately became our models for drawing.

Armed with knives-sharpened pencils, soft watercolors, and a specific style in my mind, I set out to immortalize one of the flowers on thick paper. The result exceeded my expectations, giving me confidence that I might soon be ready to attempt my first painting in the style of traditional Japanese art.

I haven’t decided yet on the motif for this creative milestone, but several ideas are already taking shape. I’ve even crafted my first small canvas—it’s waiting to be brought to life. But all in due time. Everything at its own pace. Because that’s one of the things I’ve already learnt here in my time in Japan: Good things take time—and it’s very important to always keep this in mind.

.

The Art of Cheap Eating:

Japan is not just the land of the rising sun and smiles—it’s also a nation of endless culinary delights. Sushi, ramen, sashimi… If you travel to this easternmost corner of the world hoping to shed a few pounds thanks to fresh fish and smaller portions, you may find yourself instead in a land of milk and honey teeming with a thousand delectable treats.

I embarked on an extensive, and extremely delicious, food journey to sample the country’s varied cuisine and step outside the proverbial box, discovering lesser-known delicacies that are especially rare in the West. Or in other words: I try to eat as much different Japanese food as possible while I’m here. Because it’s simply the best.

The result? A vibrant potpourri of Japanese delights that regularly fills my mouth. Whether dining in cheap fast-food joints, upscale restaurants, or cozy bars, my palate and I indulge at every opportunity. Tempura, yakitori, okonomiyaki—nothing is left undiscovered or untasted during my trip to this gastronomic wonderland.

However, there’s one small catch: Japan isn’t exactly known for being a budget-friendly country, especially when it comes to food. Anyone who has stepped into a random Japanese supermarket and seen the absurd prices of perfectly polished apples, bananas, and watermelons knows exactly what I mean. Unfortunately, my wallet isn’t bottomless—yet.

So, how do I survive as a broke-ass student in a nation of overpriced food? Do I subsist on instant ramen, dreaming of biting into a juicy piece of karaage? Thankfully, no. The secret to enjoying delicious food without going broke lies in patience—and in waiting for the legendary man with the stickers.

Every night, this supermarket savior appears, wandering the aisles of bentos, sushi, and pizzas, affixing small discount badges that slash prices in half. Moments later, a ravenous mob descends upon these bargains—and if you’re quick enough, you can snag yourself a cheap and tasty dinner. Congratulations, you’ve mastered the formidable art of dining in Japan on a very tight budget!

.

Painting Is Poetry:

When I showed the last art teacher who had to put up with me my sketches of naked bodies, which I had more or less painstakingly created in the months prior, he said to me, and I am not exaggerating here, that they were the worst works he had ever seen. In. His. Entire. Life. This man certainly knew no mercy.

But not only was he right, his words also confirmed something I had long suspected: I was better suited for digital art than analog art. I even resigned myself to the likelihood of failing his course due to my lack of talent, a fate only avoided when a tipsy fellow student intervened. She sent him a borderline humorous email, miraculously persuading him to let me pass.

Thanks to this pivotal experience, I would have given up the marvelous craft of pen and paper forever if I hadn’t met two inspiring girls in Japan who invited me to drop by their art club. I tried to explain my complete lack of drawing skills, but before I knew it, I was standing in a room filled with paints, brushes, and canvases.

The teachers, bustling around the space, promptly handed me pens, sketch pads, and art books, urging me to create my first painting. I met other nice students, drank some black coffee, and, almost by accident, became part of the Japanese Arts Masters Club. It all happened so quickly and I’m not quite sure if I’ll fit in here. But it can’t hurt to try it out, right?

My first tasks are to study the basics of Japanese drawing and to learn how to create my own art utensils. Once I’ve accomplished that, I’ll start sketching plants and eventually choose a motif to bring to life on paper. With this, nothing stands in the way of my new career as a painter.

Soon, my masterpieces will adorn the walls of the world’s greatest galleries, hanging proudly alongside Vincent van Gogh, Pablo Picasso, and Salvador Dalí. Visitors will marvel at my creations, shed tears of awe, and collapse with joy. And to think, all of this began with joining the art club. Or, as the modern Japanese mangaka Imigimuru aptly put it: This art club has a problem! And that problem… is me.

.

Design Is Everything:

The other day, I asked myself whether I had ever consciously decided to become a designer. The answer was a perplexed shake of the head from one of the little men that haunt my mind. Like much of my life, it was more by chance than sheer will to succeed that I found myself on the path of those who make a living from creative work—or at least try to.

Did I have the potential to choose alternative career paths? Perhaps. Did I make use of it? No. Why not? Maybe because I’ve always been more comfortable with subjectivity than objectivity. Does that mean I’m swimming in money, with my art hanging in the Museum of Modern Art in New York? Yes, no, maybe? Hello? Hello?!

If it weren’t for my almost success-allergic life decisions, I wouldn’t be where I am today: The Department of Design at Japan’s Sojo University in Kumamoto. Not far from the main campus, creative minds, and also me, work under one roof with art students on illustrations, advertising campaigns, products, typography, sculptures, 3D and app design, interfaces, and paintings in every shape and color.

This is where I’ll spend most of my time in Japan, trying to channel as much visionary power as possible into my work so that I don’t feel too out of place when it comes time to present my results alongside my fellow students in the University’s very own art gallery in downtown.

We learn to see the world through fresh eyes, engaging all five senses to explore and create. By paying attention to the everyday, we uncover new perspectives and develop unique ways of expressing ideas. Through trial and error, we shape our creativity, finding inspiration in the ordinary and transforming it into the extraordinary.

This is a place to grow at our own pace, driven by curiosity and a love for discovery. I’m excited to see how much I can learn from this environment and how well I can complement my skills with impressions from a different world. Perhaps this journey will shape me into a designer whose work might one day hang in the Museum of Modern Art in New York.

.

Reborn as a Student at a Japanese University:

Guess who is now officially enrolled at Sojo University in the beautiful city of Kumamoto? That’s right—this guy. Founded shortly after the Second World War, the academy evolved from a technical high school and now offers courses in art, architecture, and various sciences.

I ended up at the famous Faculty of Design, where they teach graphic, illustration, typography, photography, video, and 3D, among other subjects. Since I need to earn a minimum number of credits to complete my semester abroad and have no idea what to expect from the lectures, I’ve enrolled in nearly all the courses offered to me. I’ll narrow them down in a couple of weeks based on what I enjoy most.

Sojo University boasts a konbini, several canteens, and even its own hairdresser. There’s also an international learning center where students from around the world can interact with each other and with Japanese classmates.

My first day here felt like stepping into one of those generic school animes. Curious people bustled everywhere, J-pop played in the cafeteria, and inspiring posters covered in kanji adorned the walls.

Interestingly, I am the only exchange student in my faculty. All my lectures are in Japanese, but the professors and students go out of their way to communicate with me through ambitious English, animated hand gestures, and a variety of translation apps.

Initially, I was quite worried about fitting in here. I’m twice the age of most other students, don’t speak their language at all, and only know the Japanese school system from fantastic tales where usually something supernatural happens in the first chapter.

However, my fears have not materialized. The initial shyness of my classmates quickly faded. They either find me personally, or at least the country I come from, fascinating. They’re eager to show me everything they think I’ll find new and exciting and help me navigate the social, organizational, and, especially, communication challenges of my exotic life in Japan. I believe I’ll have a great time at Sojo University—or at least I hope so.

.

A New Language, a New Life:

As I prepare to spend the foreseeable future in Japan and am passionate about the culture of the Land of the Rising Sun, it feels only natural to learn the language. And where better to embark on this journey, one I hope will ultimately broaden my intellectual horizons, than in the heart of Japan? Exactly.

With that in mind, I visited the Tokyo Metropolitan Central Library in the vibrant international district of Roppongi. Armed with textbooks, a notepad, and a pen, I began learning my third language after German and English, immersing myself in a world I had chosen for myself. As Ludwig Wittgenstein wrote: The limits of my language mean the limits of my world. Amen, brother.

To make this process both efficient and enjoyable, I decided to invest in the みんなの日本語 textbooks, purchased from the 書泉ブックタワー in Akihabara.

This set of books has been an invaluable resource, guiding me through the intricacies of Japanese: learning the hiragana, katakana, and kanji scripts, expanding my vocabulary, mastering grammar, and picking up useful phrases for everyday life.

Like any ambitious student of Japanese, my journey begins with the first alphabet: Hiragana. The word literally means flowing or simple kana, making it the counterpart to the more complex kanji, which no human in the world truly masters because they’re so difficult to learn.

Hiragana and katakana are both kana systems, and with a few exceptions, each mora in the Japanese language is represented by a character or digraph in these sets. Translating words from the Latin alphabet into hiragana is relatively straightforward—I just have to follow the character table consistently.

However, two challenges arise: Navigating tricky rules and knowing when certain words are transliterated not into hiragana but into the more Western-oriented katakana. Mastering hiragana is the easiest hurdle on this linguistic adventure. Once I tackle my first kanji, I’ll look back at the simplicity of hiragana with nostalgia. But let’s not dwell on that future just yet.

.

City of Bears:

Welcome to Kumamoto, a city nestled in the westernmost part of Japan on the beautiful island of Kyushu. Known as the City of Bears, this charming locale will be my cozy home for the next six months as I embark on my exciting semester abroad at the Faculty of Design at the private and prestigious Sojo University.

Here, I hope to refine my skills in typography, illustration, and computer graphics—though, of course, I sometimes wonder if there’s much left to improve. Waiting for laughs. I’m staying in a dormitory with other exchange students from around the world, about twenty minutes from the university’s main campus and another ten minutes from the creative art campus.

From my apartment, located in the higher part of the city, I can see the iconic Kumamoto Castle. Renowned far beyond Japan’s borders, the building sits majestically atop a hill, surrounded by a lush green park and beautifully illuminated with colorful lights in the evenings.

At the heart of Kumamoto lies the lively downtown area, anchored by the Kamitori and Shimotori shopping streets. These bustling arcades are lined with cafés, konbini, book stores, museums, karaoke spots, bars, restaurants, bathhouses, cinemas, boutiques, izakaya, barbers, teahouses, galleries, and countless other shops. Whether it’s day or night, there’s always something thrilling happening in the city center.

I can’t wait to spend the next months exploring its many offerings and getting to know its vibrant culture. Upon arriving in Kumamoto, I couldn’t help but feel like I had stepped into my own Persona adventure.

Much like the game’s protagonists, I find myself in a foreign Japanese city, at a new school, and with a few months to navigate unfamiliar surroundings, forge friendships, and soak up as much as I can—though saving the world might be a stretch.

I’m determined to make the most of this incredible opportunity, collecting unforgettable memories and experiences along the way. After all, I know how rare and special this chance is, and I plan to savor every moment of it.

.

Their Eyes Were Watching Girls:

When I’m not enjoying the crème de la crème of the musical entertainment world, characterized by Italian operas, French chansons, and South American jazz, I immerse myself in the underground bunkers of Japanese idols. From internationally renowned classics like AKB48 to the nostalgic sounds of Morning Musume and short-lived Eurodance groups such as SweetS, D&D, and Folder 5, I know, listen to, and love them all.

These groups, a wild mix of personalities, sing about love, friendship, and emotions, accompanied by cheerfully poppy melodies that barely conceal the melancholic undertones—cries for help aimed at suicidal schoolgirls and kinky hikikomori.

My current favorite idol band is Sakurazaka46, which emerged from Keyakizaka46 with its center, Yurina Hirate. They are some kind of sister group to Nogizaka46 and Hinatazaka46 and a rival to AKB48, NMB48, and SKE48.

Sakurazaka46 briefly attracted international media attention a few years ago when their predecessor group wore outfits resembling the Schutzstaffel military uniforms of Nazi Germany during a concert. This sparked controversy, and the record company had to issue a formal apology.

Despite, or perhaps because of, this incident, fans remained loyal to the group. Today, they call themselves Buddies—and I am really proud to count myself among them.

Because I’m a huge admirer of Sakurazaka46, I couldn’t resist visiting an exhibition in Shibuya as part of their latest single release. The exhibit featured personal messages from members like Karin Fujiyoshi, Rina Matsuda, and Hikaru Morita, along with behind-the-scenes photos, stage outfits, music documentaries, and other smelly fans to mingle with.

On a personal note, I had to process the bittersweet news that Rina Uemura and Fuyuka Saito were using the exhibition as a platform to announce their graduation. But as a connoisseur of Japanese idol culture, farewells are part of the experience. Speaking of farewells, does anyone know what Atsuko Maeda is up to these days?

.

Some People Walk in the Rain, Others Just Get Wet:

Nothing makes me happier than walking through the rainy streets of Tokyo. After the hot days behind us, with concrete and bones alike melting, I wanted to cheer naked and weep with joy at the sight of the first gray cloud creeping over our heads.

The sidewalks are lined with dancing umbrellas, some black, some white, most without any colors, but I don’t want to hide. I don’t want to cower. I don’t want to protect myself from the drops that timidly, then stormily, splash down on us.

For the first time since arriving in this city, I don’t wither away when I bravely step under the open sky. I can finally breathe again. Finally live again. Finally savor my existence—if only for a very brief moment.

The rain lures me into the back alleys of Ueno. I stand on a bridge, the clattering carriages of the Ginza Line rattling below, making their way to the next stations. The parks are empty, people hop around under the awnings of storefronts.

I feel closer to Tokyo than I have in a long time. Away from the must-see places, I find myself at an unfamiliar corner—between a pharmacy, a shoemaker, and a bus stop. It smells of ramen, cars, and opportunities.

A group of yellow-capped children waddles past me in their sailor uniforms. They stare at me. One of them begins to wave and greet me, the others join in, a chorus of Hello! sounds. I say Hello! back. We are all a little happier now.

I wish for the rain to dissolve my body, for me to become one with this city, right here, right now. I don’t care if I perish forever. I want this place at the end of the world to absorb me and never let me go.

Tokyo is my religion, my destiny, my God. If my soul will only find peace when I can proudly proclaim that I am Tokyo and Tokyo is me, then so be it. The sky shifts, trembling blue, red, and black before me, as if watching anxiously to see if the man-made spot of land beyond it will accept my humble sacrifice.

But on this day, the love of my life forgoes my gift, leaving me out in the rain. Perhaps Tokyo graciously wants to grant me a few more days within it before calling me to it forever.

.

The Emperor’s Shrine:

Tokyo is a grab bag of emotions and experiences. Every turn in a new direction brings a fresh adventure and another story to tell. I love wandering through the bustling streets, shops, and cafés of the Japanese capital.

Yet, I am also grateful for moments spent in more or less sacred places scattered across the spacious city. Surrounded by green trees and towering gates, these temples and shrines serve different gods and spirits.

The smaller and more hidden they are, the happier I am to find them, feeling as if I’m the first person in ages to rediscover them. I conveniently ignore the burning candles and fresh offerings that suggest others have been there before me.

Sometimes, though, I seek the enlightenment and support of truly powerful energies. Because I need all the assistance I can get to bring my messy life at least somewhat back on track. This is what led me to the famous Meiji Shrine in Shibuya, nestled between the fashion district of Harajuku and the serene Yoyogi Park.

The shrine, built in the early nineteen-twenties and dedicated to the deified spirits of Emperor Meiji and Empress Shoken, is divided into two sections: Naien and Gaien. Although the original structure was destroyed in the air raids of World War II, it was rebuilt in the nineteen-fifties through public donations. And it’s absolutely stunning.

Though I’m an atheist and think about gods the way I think about unseasoned food and watery coffee, I still tossed a few yen into the donation box, clapped my hands, bowed a few times, and even bought a wooden plaque, or Ema, to write down a few wishes and leave a small part of myself there.

As I strolled slowly through the shrine, watching traditionally dressed miko and fashion-forward trendsetters pass by, I was reminded once again of how much I love Japan’s fluent blend of tradition and modernity. In special places like these, I temporarily let go of my atheism, enjoying the thought of a hidden world intertwined with our own—if only just a little.

.

Tower of My Heart:

Though the Skytree has been a colorful rival towering over Tokyo’s skyline for years now, when it comes to captivating the eyes of residents, tourists, and the occasional bird, the Tokyo Tower remains the landmark of this East Asian metropolis for me.

In how many films, documentaries, and anime series have I marveled at this red-and-orange wonder of architectural significance, serving as the backdrop to tales of great love and even greater destruction? Seeing this colorful tribute to the Eiffel Tower always makes my heart beat faster. No journey to the Land of the Rising Sun would be complete without cozying up to the magical metal of this man-made giant.

The communications boom of the fifties prompted the Japanese government to construct a large broadcasting tower to relay information throughout the Kanto region. Additionally, amid the post-war economic recovery, Japan sought a monument to symbolize its resurgence from World War II—one of the most devastated nations rising again.

The resulting Tokyo Tower gained international fame through mentions in anime and manga like Magic Knight Rayearth, Doraemon, Tenchi Muyo!, Revue Starlight, Please Save My Earth, Cardcaptor Sakura, Digimon, Detective Conan, and Death Note, becoming a symbol of Japan and its eclectic capital for weebs around the world.

Stepping out of the elevator and onto the observation deck, I see the lights of Minato, Shibuya, and Meguro below. The Rainbow Bridge glows with vibrant colors. Around me, tourists fight for the best selfies, capturing themselves with the sprawling metropolis as their backdrop.

Here I am, in the heart of the one and only Tokyo Tower, which graces the pastel backgrounds of Naoko Takeuchi’s popular masterpiece Sailor Moon—the source of my lifelong love for it since childhood. If it were legally, physically, and biologically possible, I would outright marry Tokyo Tower and have lots of cute, little mini towers with it—but I’d probably be deported just for trying.

.

It’s Hot in Tokyo:

If there’s one unsettling truth I hadn’t anticipated, it’s that Tokyo will become a blazing inferno this fall with a single goal in mind: To kill me. The moment I step out of my air-conditioned hotel, I’m transformed into a soaked creature, my sweaty silhouette a testament to a body in agony.

All for wanting a little sightseeing in Shibuya, Akihabara, and Shimokitazawa, only to be punished by some evil god, spirit, or yokai wielding the concentrated power of a thousand suns. I was completely unprepared for this unfair battle with climate change, which ambushed me along the way and turned my joyful journey into an odyssey in the blink of an eye.

I have to plan my daily trips through this burning concrete jungle down to the very minute—though, of course, that’s hardly possible. If I spend even a second too long away from the air-conditioned havens of subway stations, department stores, and art museums almost sealed off from the outside world, I liquefy into a dark, sweaty, and miserable mess that not even the iciest drinks from the omnipresent vending machines can save.

Japan wants me, and anyone else brave, or stupid, enough to face the open air on these diabolical days, to know who’s in charge—and no portable fan, mobile sunshade, or colorful popsicle can spare us from that harsh reality.

The longer I endure this endless game of hide-and-seek with the sun, the clearer it becomes: There’s no point trying to strategize against nature’s brutal counterattack on humanity. My time here in Tokyo is finite, and I’m not going to let a giant fireball in the sky ruin my trip.

Stepping out of a Family Mart onto the midday streets of Asakusa, I begin to melt at the first step, as the beloved konbini jingle morphs into the tune from The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly in my boiling head. Fuck you, sun, I think as a puddle of sweat forms beneath my feet, and I slowly drag myself toward the next temple, shrine, or cute maid café for a few photos. I will survive—hopefully.

.

Wind’s Howling:

As I leave the grimy swamps of Velen behind and stride through Novigrad’s gates, a city brimming with possibilities opens up before me. Cheeky rascals dart through the winding alleys of this bustling harbor metropolis, under the watchful gaze of the Eternal Fire that looms over its inhabitants.

Banks, brothels, and shops of craftsmen line the streets, and I catch the sounds of singing and laughter from countless pubs. I head toward the Rosemary and Thyme tavern to meet my old friends Dandelion and Zoltan, hoping to moisten my dry throat before I continue my journey to the freezing Isles of Skellige to find the most important person in my sad life: Ciri.

There are few video games that linger in my mind even years later. Games that left an enormous impression, that made me love and appreciate their characters, whose music still echoes in my ears, and whose vivid scenes play out in my mind’s eye.

The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt is one of those epic titles. As Geralt of Rivia, I crept through dark, goblin-infested caves reeking of decay, fought off monsters, specters, and whoresons, and wandered through lost worlds that hinted at the end of our own. And when I didn’t feel like doing my duty as a student of the Wolf, I played cards, got piss-drunk, and chased after fair maidens across Redania’s seedy beds.

Sometimes, I crave the chance to dive into a gritty fantasy world and live beyond the bounds of good and evil. Games like Skyrim, Dragon’s Dogma, and Divinity: Original Sin serve as a unique form of escapism. The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt is my personal favorite—a vivid universe where I can fully immerse myself.

Based on the books by Polish author Andrzej Sapkowski, the adventure is a rollercoaster of bloody encounters, humorous moments, and tender scenes. I’d give anything to erase my fond memories of that wondrous journey and walk through Novigrad’s gates for the first time once more, in search of peace, happiness, and the occasional fair maid.

.

Where the Trendy Things Are:

Of course, Tokyo has its ordinary side, its normal, even boring aspects. Men in dark suits, towering walls of skyscrapers, and loud, crowded subways. But then, I step through a door and suddenly I find myself in a sugary Tokyo, where everything around me is glossy, fluffy, and overwhelmingly gaudy.

When it comes to fashion in all its glorious shapes, colors, and magnificence, the Far Eastern metropolis of Tokyo is a vast and vibrant universe, full of small and massive clothing stores, hidden vintage shops, and independent galleries. Old stores close, and new ones sprout like mushrooms in an endless cycle. It’s nearly impossible to stay fully up-to-date.

What’s even more intriguing than just keeping pace with fashion is the experience of wandering through Tokyo’s diverse stores myself. Especially in Harajuku, Tokyo’s iconic district where styles are created, mixed, and discarded faster than I can say kawaii, the sheer variety of colors adds warmth to the bustling crowds of this megacity.

Strikingly printed sweaters, pants, and bags adorned with all kinds of cute accessories fill the alleyways. Style-conscious schoolgirls cast off their dull sailor uniforms after the bell rings and slip into the latest trends they’ve picked up from stores like Nadia, Honey Salon, and Love Drug, ready to showcase them in the lit streets.

Labels such as Milklim, Kirby, and Jóuetie are all the rage among trendsetters in the metropolis. These can be effortlessly paired with established brands like A Bathing Ape, Comme des Garçons, and Billionaire Boys Club. Harajuku is a true Land of Cockaigne. Every step through this magical neighborhood feels like another adventure waiting to unfold.

One moment, Sailor Moon gazes at me from the shelves, the next, I’m standing in a soft toy wonderland, and suddenly, there’s a candy paradise around me. Tokyo is a vibrant wonderland, and nowhere is this more evident than in its peculiar stores, none more dazzling than those found in Harajuku.

.

The Cozy Neighborhood:

There is no place in Tokyo that feels homier than Shimokitazawa. The alleyways are lined with cafés, second-hand shops, and record stores. A few years ago, the neighborhood in Setagaya was considered a hipster haven, but it has since become a meeting point for those who find Shibuya, Harajuku, and Akihabara too crowded, too loud, and frankly, too mainstream.

Visitors who make their way here are seeking slow moments in contrast to the otherwise hectic pace of life. Shimokitazawa smells of pastries, jazz plays softly in the background, and the staff are dressed as if they’ve stepped straight out of fashion magazines like Popeye, Brutus, and Fudge.

At the start of the millennium, the Setagaya City Council released plans to redevelop a large portion of Shimokitazawa, located in the southwestern corner of the Kitazawa district, which included the construction of several high-rise buildings and the extension of a highway through the area.

The narrow, winding streets and small alleyways, cherished by residents and visitors alike as part of Shimokitazawa’s appeal, have made this plan controversial, with some viewing it as degrading and overly commercialized. A decade ago, Shimokitazawa Station was restructured, sparking major changes deep in the heart of this charming neighborhood.

As I sit in a bookstore, watching passersby come and go, I sip my coffee and nibble on the mini chocolate pretzels that came with it. To improve my Japanese, I’ve picked up some textbooks and flip through pages filled with hiragana, katakana, and kanji. If I could move to Tokyo, I’d probably settle in Shimokitazawa.

Then I’d sit in this bookstore every day, drinking coffee, snacking on mini chocolate pretzels, and learning Japanese for the rest of my life. Banana Yoshimoto wrote in her book Moshi Moshi: When I considered the destruction of the earth, I felt I’d deal with it when I saw it happening, but when I thought of losing Shimokitazawa, I felt real fear.

.

The Electric Town:

There’s probably no place in the world that makes weebs’ hearts beat faster than Akihabara. Enthusiasts of Japanese pop culture will find everything they could dream of in this district, known far beyond the borders of Tokyo. From anime, manga, video games, and J-pop CDs to books, trading cards, figures, model kits, cosplay costumes, and even hentai, it’s a paradise for otaku.

But Akihabara isn’t called the Electronic City for nothing. For those less into nerdy pop culture, it’s a haven for tech lovers, offering everything from cell phones and computers to spare parts and gadgets. Akihabara is a phenomenon that completely consumes everyone who enters it.

Historically, Akihabara was located near one of Edo’s city gates, serving as a gateway between the city and northwestern Japan. This made it home to many craftsmen, merchants, and samurai. Since its opening in 1890, Akihabara Station became a hub for freight traffic, fostering the growth of a vegetable and fruit market.

By the 1920s, the station saw heavy passenger traffic as it opened to public transport. After World War II, the district’s black market thrived in the absence of strong government control, transforming Akihabara into a bustling market town. By the 1930s, it evolved into a center for household electronics, solidifying its reputation in this niche.

Walking through Akihabara’s bustling streets, I’m greeted by big-eyed cartoon characters with even bigger breasts. Girls in brightly colored maid outfits shout cheerfully, offering flyers for themed cafés. The air is filled with the scent of plastic, tea, and sweat.

In the stores, young women and middle-aged men alike browse the latest issues of Weekly Shonen Jump, Ribon, and Ciao. Each floor is a universe unto itself—some filled with slot machines, others with art supplies, and hidden ones with cute sex toys. Once I’ve immersed myself in Akihabara’s fantastic anime, manga, and video game world, I may never find my way out again.

.

Open Your Eyes:

As with every nineties nerd, The Legend of Zelda is one of the game series that has accompanied me since childhood. My real entry into the series was the third installment, The Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past on the Super Nintendo. I played this adventure so many times that I knew every area by heart.

Thanks to a questionably legal cheat module I picked up at a flea market, I squeezed every last bit of life out of the game. It allowed me to have all the items from the start and sneak past the otherwise stubborn guards on that rainy, fateful day without even beginning the obligatory castle tour. I’m sure Nintendo wouldn’t have appreciated that kind of rebellion.

The stories in The Legend of Zelda games are typically the same: A silent knight tries to save a kingdom overrun by dark forces and, ideally, wins the heart of a beautiful princess in the process. Since this premise alone wouldn’t draw anyone away from the comfort of their couch, the series thrives on tricky puzzles, quirky characters, and an enchanting world full of exploration.

Of course, The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time on the Nintendo 64 was the game that truly immortalized the series for me. A vast 3D world to freely explore, paired with assets that literally blew my mind. And following that one, Majora’s Mask became my all-time favorite.

For me, The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild on the Switch is the logical progression from the first Nintendo 64 installment. The world is even bigger, the puzzles even trickier, and Zelda even prettier. There’s probably no other game where I enjoy aimlessly wandering, just to see what I’ll discover next.

And I always find something—a deserted beach, a quaint village, a mysterious labyrinth. I only wish there had been a few real dungeons and larger cities with more inhabitants. Running into the same old shrines and stables got a bit tiresome after a while. Nevertheless, Breath of the Wild is an experience that will forever hold a special place in my heart.

.

The Nostalgic Paradise:

Tokyo is much more than just Shibuya, Akihabara, and Harajuku. If I want to experience different places than the usual tourists, I have to go to places that are less well-known but no less exciting. For example, Odaiba, the artificial island in Tokyo Bay, which is a popular entertainment and shopping area for locals.

Before 1996, Odaiba was purely a business district. The Japanese economy was at one of its peaks and the island was to become the model of futuristic living. In total, the construction of the island cost over 10 billion US dollars. But the bubble burst in 1991, an event the Japanese called Kakaku Hakai. Half a decade later, the area was mostly abandoned.

After the renovation, Odaiba became a thriving entertainment and shopping center with all kinds of restaurants, stores, and amusement arcades. A giant Gundam statue looms over visitors, who usually arrive in the evening, and there is no end of comics, collectible figures, and knick-knacks. Odaiba is a nostalgic paradise that visitors to the Japanese capital shouldn’t miss.

The Daiba Itchome Shotengai, which is located in the middle of a shopping center and seems to be from a bygone era, is particularly worth a visit. Coming here is like traveling back in time. Many families, as well as some nerds, take the opportunity to experience exactly that, right there.

When I enter the shopping street, I feel as if I’ve been teleported to a fantasy memory. There are old slot machines, pinball machines, and pachinko machines. Posters of idols from the eighties, nineties, and early two-thousands hang on the walls. I recognize the faces of Yumi Matsutoya, Ayumi Hamasaki, and Perfume.

The shelves are crammed with food and bric-a-brac. There are sweets, ice cream, and chewing gum. But also plushies, toy cars, and colorful printed socks. Anime and manga everywhere. I can catch goldfish at one stand, play Mario Kart at the next, and a ghost house awaits me a few meters away. If I died here and now, I wouldn’t even be angry.

.

A Journey Into the Past:

Tokyo, once known as Edo, began as a small, insignificant dump. It only grew into the most important city in Japan when Tokugawa Ieyasu, the third feudal ruler after Oda Nobunaga and Toyotomi Hideyoshi, built a castle there in 1590.

If I’m looking to explore beyond the hottest fashion trends, tastiest food varieties, and cutest schoolgirls in Tokyo, beyond Shibuya, Harajuku, and Akihabara, then Asakusa is the place for me.

Not only is it home to the hotel where I’m staying, but it also hosts Sensoji, the oldest Buddhist temple in the city. For a long time, Asakusa was known as an entertainment district, home to kabuki and rakugo theaters.

Asakusa has a past I could still sense here and there. After the Meiji Restoration, the modern entertainment industry began to take root, with Western theaters and cinemas emerging. However, after World War II, Asakusa’s popularity as an entertainment hub waned, with districts like Shinjuku rising to prominence.

Today, in addition to Sensoji, Asakusa is primarily known for the Nakamise shopping promenade and the annual Shinto festival, Sanja Matsuri. I also found many delicious traditional restaurants around the temple, where I could grill and season my own food, as well as numerous pachinko halls where I could test my luck.

This enormous metropolis on the other side of the world has a deeply traditional side. And every walk through Asakusa is also a journey into the past. Just a step out of one of the bustling shopping streets, and I’ll find myself in the middle of a small forest, an old temple complex, or surrounded by lovingly crafted shrines.

I can only imagine the small and grand spectacles that have taken place at Sensoji over the past thousand years. Despite all the colorful anime, manga, and video games that I typically associate with Japan, I feel surprisingly grounded and calm here. Perhaps I should visit such holy and magical places more often.

.

That Could Have Been Us, But You Don’t Care:

For many years now, I wanted nothing to do with German culture. I switched all my consumption habits to English and looked down contemptuously on anyone still crawling through the oozy cesspool of German-language entertainment because they didn’t know any better.

For me, German-dubbed TV shows were proof of bottomless stupidity. German novels fell into one of two categories: Cheesy crime junk set on the Baltic coast, or coming-of-age ‘my-mother-is-an-alcoholic-and-I-just-want-to-fuck‘ bullshit. As for German music, I wanted to hear, haha, nothing about it—just the thought of the whole Schlager-pop-Deutschrap crap made me want to vomit.

Now that I’m older, wiser, and totally at peace with myself (#IWish), I’ve come to finally realize that I can’t tear myself away from my German roots, no matter how much, for whatever reason, I wished I could. I need the German language. I love the German language. I don’t want to reject it. Its systematic harshness is simply divine.

And the German language is not just another random dialect on this earth, it’s a shared identity between me and those who use it. I’ve learned that the German language and its accompanying culture can inspire me in ways, especially on a deep, intrinsic level, that no other vernacular can.

So now, I actively seek out people who express their feelings, thoughts, and hopes as authentically as possible in my mother tongue, using it in creative ways, especially in music. Artists like Paula Hartmann, Berq, and Lotte give me a cozy sense of home with their lyrics, even when I’m standing on the other side of the world.

My latest discovery is Liska. Her songs are genuinely emotional without descending into cheesiness, and they resonate with me through various feelings and experiences. German-language music hasn’t been this interesting since Juli, Wir sind Helden, and the very, very, very early days of Silbermond.

.

Center of My World:

When I think of Japan, I picture the bustling intersection at the heart of Shibuya. As the traffic lights at each corner finally turn green, crowds of uniformed salarymen, laughing schoolgirls, and amazed tourists stream toward one another, briefly merging into a homogeneous mass before dispersing back into their daily routines.

On my first visit to the Land of the Rising Sun, halfway across the globe, the very first place I consciously visited was this iconic landmark in the middle of Tokyo. I took the train straight from the airport to Shibuya, met a few friendly people there, and found myself not only in the center of Japan, but in the center of my world.

Due to the anticipation of the 2020 Olympic Games and their underwhelming presentation a year later, the popular district at the heart of Japan’s capital has undergone significant transformation in the recent decade to appeal to both locals and visitors. I became most aware of this with the redesign of the city’s famous Shibuya 109 logo, which sits prominently atop a fashion-savvy shopping center.

The more such signposts change, the more I realize that time is moving on helplessly and doesn’t care about my nostalgic feelings. But maybe that’s a good thing. After all, change is life and the more Shibuya develops, the less I have to worry about its future.

As I stand at the edge of the intersection, I see the red traffic lights ahead, rising above the crowd on the opposite side, and the models advertising clothes, food, and phone contracts on massive screens. I hear the voices of those around me, the eager motorcade, and the man on a platform shouting into the crowd with a megaphone.

I smell a mix of expensive perfume and cheap deodorant, taste the green tea I’m carrying in a plastic bottle, and brace myself to feel the bodies of hundreds of people. Then, the moment comes. Red turns to green. I step forward, becoming one with Shibuya, Tokyo, and Japan—neither for the first time nor the last.

.

All the World’s a Stage:

When Hikari is thrust onto the recently set up stage of a seemingly innocent chamber play, fate strikes a desperate blow against the most stubborn and dangerous form of conservatism—the one powered by pure fear of being alone. The audience demands change before it is suffocated by the dreariness of the powerful. Fresh blood must pave the way for a new future.

Few of the actors suspect that the light of hope conceals a story of self-sacrifice that transcends any level of human friendship. The bright star in the sky seems within reach, but whoever touches it in the end must live on with the possible burden of drifting apart from the ones they love.

Both strangers and friends sometimes ask about my favorite anime. Then I proudly list widely known classics like Neon Genesis Evangelion, Cowboy Bebop, and Ghost in the Shell. After all, these titles suggest what kind of anime I prefer and where my roots lie in this sometimes condemned Japanese art form.

I also secretly hope this keeps me from being labeled a complete weeb if I omit that I also enjoyed series like Akebi’s Sailor Uniform, Miss Kobayashi’s Dragon Maid, and Eromanga Sensei—for various reasons.

However, one of my all-time favorite anime is, and remains, Revue Starlight by Tomohiro Furukawa—because it is simply perfect from start to finish.

Revue Starlight follows a motley group of friendly schoolgirls from a renowned theater academy who secretly battle each other underground to become the star of their personal stage in life. When the lazy Karen’s lost childhood friend suddenly appears in class, it triggers the healing of a world whose progress has come to a standstill.

Everything about Revue Starlight is exceptional. The characters are fantastic, the animation style is striking, and the music is so good that I could listen to the soundtrack on repeat for days. It’s a shame that Revue Starlight is only known to a few hardcore fans. I sincerely hope you watch it one day and celebrate it as passionately as I do.

.

Journey to the East:

The plane I’m on is taking me to a place that couldn’t be further from home. Am I running away from myself, or am I simply longing for another world that will make me love my own again? Those who share my destination feel understood only from afar.

I stifle my fear of the unknown with the certainty that I’ve chosen it over the comforting arms of monotony on purpose. After all, standing still is death, and death will come soon enough. It seems only logical to sacrifice time with people I like for the possibility of uncovering white spots on my personal map. So, I close my eyes and wait for the moment when the doors to a strange universe open for me.

Before I finally begin my semester abroad in the Japanese coastal city of Kumamoto on Kyushu as a student of the renowned Sojo University in October, I plan to spend a few days in Tokyo.

It’s been over ten years since I last visited this enchanted metropolis at the edge of the world, and I can’t wait to aimlessly wander through the wonderous temples of Shibuya, the cheerful bars of Shinjuku, and the farraginous manga stores of Akihabara to see what has changed in the last decade. I’ve booked a room in a modest hotel in Asakusa and will set out from there, day and night, to explore both the bustling streets and the narrow alleyways nearby and beyond.

Having already lived in Tokyo and visited cities like Osaka, Kyoto, and Yokohama, I feel prepared for the biggest culture shocks and can focus on seeking new experiences and adventures—hopefully beyond the typical tourist attractions. The plane I’m on is taking me to a place that couldn’t be further from home.

That place is Tokyo, a man-made melting pot of diverse cultures where all my escapist dreams, hopes, and fantasies converge. May I find even a fraction of my expectations between the lives of millions of people. I hope to return home with new ideas, goals, and visions. Perhaps I’ll even meet myself over there, on the other side of the world.

.

Goodbye Augsburg:

Exactly one year ago, I moved to Augsburg. I wanted not only to be closer to my university but also to the people I had spent most of my time with since starting my studies. The city in the far south of Germany welcomed me with open arms, gradually drawing me into its most remote corners thanks to the warmth of various friendly faces.

I wandered through vivid house parties, colorful music festivals, and boozy riverside gatherings, made myself comfortable in cozy bars, and spent my nights with like-minded souls. No matter where I ended up at the end of the day, I was always surrounded by people whose true love for the present moment seemed boundless.

Now, my self-imposed fate is once again pulling me away from a life I’ve slowly come to love. With my semester abroad in Japan approaching, I’ve sublet my apartment to a fellow student, meaning I’ll have to say goodbye to Augsburg—at least for a while.

I know the city will keep breathing, loving, and crying without me, continuing to be a euphoric playground for all kinds of human escapades. To Augsburg, I am just a fleeting visitor on my eternal quest for happiness. But that’s okay.

I realized long ago that staying in one place too long does me no good. Maybe I’m nothing more than a restless nomad who’s secretly afraid of any kind of commitment.

As I gaze over the seemingly endless rooftops of Augsburg, watching the sky slowly darken while the laughter and lights behind me grow brighter, I realize that I will miss this city and the people I’m leaving behind in it. The stories they write from now on will no longer include my name. I’ll become their past.

But sometimes, I have to make grown-up decisions, even if I’d rather avoid obligations. It’s not so bad. After all, I’m not saying goodbye forever. And with that certainty, I can dive into my next adventure without any worry. Because, deep down, I might already know that Augsburg is a place I’ll want to return to and stay a little longer. At least maybe.

.

An Evening With Friends:

Before we part ways for a while due to our upcoming semester abroad, I spent a few memorable evenings with my friends. Investing quality time with people I care about is incredibly important for maintaining mental stability and avoiding the depressive phases that tend to creep in when I’m left alone with my thoughts for too long.

I’m someone who only understands how much I care about certain people once they’re gone. That’s why I’m a little afraid that I might only realize too late how important the network of friends I’ve built over the past few years is to me—as soon as I step off the plane without anyone else on the other side of the world.

We annoyed neighbors during gaming competitions, sweated up stairs during movings, devoured Asian delicacies on movie nights, flirted in beer gardens and ice cream parlors, emptied cold drinks by rivers and lakes, and fought monsters, priests, and potential murderers during game nights, pen-and-paper sessions, and mystery dinners.

There were also afternoon coffee parties and bar visits at the city’s trendiest spots, with deep conversations about life, love, and death. I spent as much time as possible with other human beings, draining my social battery to the max. But it was worth it, because I knew our window of opportunity would very soon close.

I know myself. It can be dangerous for me to cram too many appointments into a short period of time. That usually ends in temporary burnout, leaving me unable to exit my apartment for days, weeks, or even months—and during those tough times, not even my antidepressants help.

But just before my semester abroad and the impending flight to Japan, I didn’t have the luxury of pacing myself. Sometimes life gets in the way, and you either seize the moments that come with it—or simply miss them for good. I’m glad I had the strength to take advantage of every opportunity that came my way. In the end, I have no regrets when it’s finally time to say goodbye.

.

One Man’s Trash Is Another Man’s Treasure:

I pride myself on having excellent taste when it comes to cultural offerings. The more East Asian indie films from the late nineties I watch, the more superior I feel to the world out there. Although I often have no idea what exactly I’ve just gotten myself into, I like to compare it to jazz: the more I think of tortured cats when I listen to it, the more profound, creative and adult it must be.

As long as I’m consuming something that at least gives me the feeling that I’m witnessing something higher, I’m happy. Maybe if I’m able to fully understand Hideaki Anno’s psychological drama film Ritual someday, I’ll become some kind of holy cinephile god—who knows.

However, there are also evenings when I suddenly find myself in front of one or two reality TV shows on Netflix because my friends wanted me to watch with them how the singer from the band Tokio Hotel, you may still know them from songs like Monsoon, Don’t Jump, and… surely another one, getting fucked up at the Oktoberfest, eats curd balls at his mom’s, and drives through the desert with his twin brother in a camper van.

The fun went on for eight episodes. At the end I wasn’t much wiser than before, quite the opposite in fact, but at least there was delicious Hwachae with watermelon, mango, and some undefinable goo to eat in the meantime.

I more or less secretly hope that there will be a second season of the series, after all, I’ve invested time in it now, which should have paid off. Will Bill and Marc ever become a couple? How much alcohol can the average Kaulitz brother take in a day without collapsing? And do I have to listen to a certain podcast to keep up to date and because I may have promised someone without really thinking about the consequences? I’ll probably never know.

Trash television is a welcome change for my constantly stressed brain. Because sometimes it’s quite a good idea to dive into completely irrelevant parallel worlds with even more irrelevant protagonists in them.

.

Do You Wanna Play a Game?:

As someone who typically enjoys gaming with a controller in hand or a keyboard under his fingers, sitting in front of a screen, and snacking while exploring old ruins, bustling towns, or enchanted forests with my illustrious group of virtual adventurers, I’ve found myself more frequently gathered around a table with others in recent years, passing balls, cards, and dice.

Whether playing for drinks, stakes, or simply for pride, with the right group, a fun evening was always guaranteed. Together, we played through Poker, Tac, and Dungeons & Dragons, held competitions, and sometimes even invented our own rules to make the games more interesting.

It’s amazing how distinct traits of individual players emerge when they’re placed in a group, seated around a table, and given the chance to win a round or two. They love psychology, fantasy, or social justice and show this more or less consciously in their actions.

Some analyze every strategy in great detail, while others dive into the chaos with a naive Leeroy Jenkins mindset. Some try to assist their rivals when they sense unfairness, while others show no mercy. Some lose interest the moment they sense they won’t win, while others persevere until the bitter end. The more distinct my opponents’ characteristics, the more interesting the game becomes.

The game nights I’ve spent with friends have also taught me a lot about myself. For one, my ambition is heavily tied to my mood. When I’m in a good mood, it’s easier to accept losses and celebrate wins. I’ve also realized that the conversations during the games mean more to me than the games themselves. The dialogues that arise are things that might otherwise go unspoken.

And finally, I’ve learned that I really hate Tac. It’s just a complicated version of Ludo with cards, for whatever reason. But despite that, I’m grateful to the wonderful people who have introduced me to a world of tabletop gaming that’s so different from my usual digital realm.

.

How to Cook for Forty Humans:

I enjoy cooking with others because I love combining good food with even better company. Of course, I don’t do this with just anyone, but with people who are either close to my heart or just kinda hot. We go to the nearest store together, decide what to prepare while browsing the colorfully stacked shelves, pick out fresh, delicious ingredients, and then head home with our jam-packed bags.

There, we chop vegetables, fry fish, meat, or tofu, and toss some noodles into a pot. Meanwhile, we listen to the latest playlists on Spotify, chat about the ups and downs of life, and eagerly anticipate the upcoming feast, enjoying some fizzy drinks along the way.

The real fun begins once the cooking is done. Whether there are two, three, or ten of us around the table, we take a moment to look at each other before diving in, filling our plates with salmon, salad, and summer rolls. Conversation flows freely as we talk about the world and its wonders, big and small, or relax with a Netflix show or two.

And if we’re not in the mood for the inevitable clean-up afterward, we simply open a delivery app and save ourselves the hassle, scrolling through pictures of pizzas, sushi, or stir-fried noodles. An hour later we sit on someone’s bed, enjoying some delicious Pad Thai, a cute anime, and some human connection.

Sure, I don’t always need company when I’m eating-whether it’s a carefully crafted meal or a quick snack. Sometimes, I sneak into the supermarket next door in the evening, grab some nearly expired nigiri at half-price, and hope the salmonella gods spare me again, as I wash it down with a bottle of Diet Coke.

Dessert might be a handful of cornflakes that I nearly choke on because a Zelda Let’s Play distracted me from chewing. It can be quite relaxing to spend an evening like that now and then, but I shouldn’t rely on this so-called lifestyle all the time, because, as the saying goes, Food tastes better when shared with friends.

.

Cute Girls Doing Cute Things:

Kaos doesn’t have it easy. Not only does the teenage manga tryhard look like a primary school student and have no friends besides some curious animals she meets on her way home, but she’s just learned that her four panel artworks came last in a survey among national comic book fans.

Before Kaos considers hitting up with Truck-kun to finally end her misery, her editor suggests she move into a dormitory for manga artists to improve her creative skills and perhaps participate a bit more in social life. Before Kaos knows it, she becomes part of a quirky crew of fanatical artists who all share one weeby goal: to achieve their big dream of a career in manga.

In the anime genre Cute Girls Doing Cute Things, the name says it all. There are no epic adventures, devious villains, or hard-to-guess plot twists. These comfy slice of life stories revolve around cute girls doing cute things—nothing more, nothing less. They go out for ice cream, chat at school, hang out in parks, visit bathhouses, and encourage each other in tough moments so they don’t give up.

Shows like Comic Girls are pure balm for the soul when the world feels too chaotic, stressful, and overwhelming. Life can be a real jerk sometimes, but in these colorful fantasy universes, every challenge can be solved with a little courage, fun, and good friends.

In the style of K-On!, New Game!, and Non Non Biyori, the different characters in Comic Girls complement each other, growing stronger together. Little Kaos meets the energetic Koyume, the tomboyish Tsubasa, the shy Ruki, and the somewhat sinister Suzu in the dorm. Each of them has their own fears, but together they can overcome them and make progress in life.

And there’s always something to laugh about, often through awkward or embarrassing situations. When I’m not in the mood for earth-shattering blockbusters, I cozy up with a hot cup of tea and watch anime like Comic Girls, enjoying cute girls doing cute things—nothing more, nothing less.

.

Is Beer Art?:

Every semester, the Werkschau is the grand finale at the Faculty of Design. At this vernissage, students from Technical University of Applied Sciences Augsburg present their final projects from all areas of analog and digital art. From photography, books, and drawings to computer games and interactive installations, everything that’s new, cool, or just fun is included.

There’s also live music, delicious food, and plenty of refreshing drinks, along with many familiar and unfamiliar faces who don’t want to miss out on the hustle and bustle. And if that’s not enough, you can dance into the morning at the after-show party in a nearby club.

I personally had my hands more than full at this year’s Werkschau. Not only was I a member of the generally stressed team that organized this illustrious event, but I also presented my short film Into the Woods, which had previously premiered in a museum.

Additionally, I spoke to fellow students about their entrepreneurial plans after graduation for my work at the start-up incubator Funkenwerk, the central contact point for innovative ideas at Technical University of Applied Sciences Augsburg. I even stood behind the bar as a member of the student council to ensure that everyone stayed hydrated in the sunny weather—mostly with beer.

The end of the vivid exhibition also marked the end of my fourth semester at Technical University of Applied Sciences Augsburg and heralded my temporary farewell. It’s amazing how much mental stress built up over the past few weeks and has now disappeared in one fell swoop.

I will spend the next month and a half organizing all the necessary preparations for my upcoming semester abroad in Japan. I need to sublet my apartment, finalize the last necessary documents, and attend a farewell party or two before most of my friends disperse into the big wide world. So long, my beloved university. We will see each other again next year.

.

The Illegal Girl:

My collection of Japanese indie movies has grown considerably in recent years. What I appreciate most are the quieter slice-of-life titles that provide intimate insights into the small and large everyday problems of East Asian inhabitants.

It doesn’t matter whether the stories take place in the colorful, vibrant streets of Japan’s big cities or among the mountains, lakes, and valleys of rural areas.

Of course, the more I feel connected to the protagonists and their experiences, the more the films resonate with me. As Philip Pullman said, After nourishment, shelter, and companionship, stories are the thing we need most in the world.

Last night, I watched Emma Kawawada’s My Small Land. It’s about a girl named Sarya, whose parents are Kurdish refugees from Turkey living in Japan. She pretends to be German to her friends because she has had better experiences with this than with the truth.

While her father works, Sarya looks after her younger siblings and contemplates her future, as she will soon be going to college. An intimate relationship develops with her colleague Sota, and her feelings become increasingly clear.

Sarya wants a completely normal life. When her father’s application for asylum is rejected, the world she has worked so hard to build begins to crumble.

My Small Land is a haunting movie about the balancing act of a young refugee caught between two worlds, searching for her own. As the story progresses, I felt more intensely the inner turmoil pushing Sarya to her emotional limits as she tries to save her siblings from the fate that lies before them. Sarya’s life becomes a gauntlet of cultural constraints, social circumstances, and her own dreams.

My Small Land depicts the sacrifices people make to avoid being broken by reality. After watching it, I realized once again how much my privileges protect me from these challenges and the hard decisions that I’ve been able to avoid—at least so far.

.

Pen and Paper:

I embrace my nerdy side not only through my limitless Japanophilia, which manifests in an arguably unhealthy consumption of anime, manga, dramas, books, and pop music I can’t even understand, but also through my love of geeky tabletop role-playing games.

In this exciting fantasy realm, I navigate enchanted kingdoms as a magical dragon warrior, explore small towns overtaken by Cthulhu’s monsters as a clumsy policeman, and venture through enemy spaceships as a trigger-happy hophead.

Tabletop role-playing games are like a carefree vacation for my brain, offering a chance to let loose and try things I (probably) wouldn’t dare to do in real life.

A couple of friends and I have been members of a role-playing club for some time now, where we more or less regularly experiment with different scenarios, characters, and rulebooks. From fantasy to science fiction to cyberpunk, there’s nothing we wouldn’t dare to try.

Personally, I prefer the bloody horror one shot adventures, where we slip into the roles of unsuspecting citizens who roam through abandoned settlements, haunted mansions, and cursed cathedrals, only to face crazy cultists, hungry vampires, and, in the last dungeon, an overpowering deity and, in the best-case scenario, be torn to shreds by it. After all, survival is only for cowards.

I’ve wanted to try tabletop role-playing games for a long time after hearing about them in various podcasts, YouTube videos, and not least in Stranger Things. So, I’m thrilled to have found other people who are just as eager to dive into other worlds and let their imaginations run wild.

Where else can you try to ride angry unicorns, shoot the newly born Antichrist, or drown a doomed metropolis in smelly feces to perhaps save it from its fate, only to realize in the end that all these ideas were rather semi-smart? Exactly. When I’m on my semester abroad, we’ll try to hold the sessions online. And maybe I’ll find a group in Japan that’s keen to play, too. Who knows.

.

Public Viewing:

Anyone who knows me even a little bit understands that soccer doesn’t interest me in the slightest. During some World Cups, I am a vague fan of the Japanese national team, but only to the extent that I follow their wins and losses from the sidelines.

I generally have little interest in spending several hours watching others compete in sports unless they are characters in an anime or manga to whom I have formed an emotional attachment.

In the end, my favorite soccer team remains the Kickers around Kakeru Daichi, even though they only know about winning tournaments from hearsay. But at least they scored a goal against the Falcons once. Yeah.

Despite my general disinterest in any ball sports, I went to a public viewing event in the city center on Friday night with some friends because Germany was playing Spain in the last sixteen round of the European Football Championship.

As we all know, our national team lost, but I doubt anyone there cared less about that than I did. So why was I there anyway? Because I realized that it’s essential to socialize regularly, especially when you’re hanging out with people you know, like, and can have fun with. The reason for getting together becomes secondary. It’s much more important to feel connected to others—and eat some snacks while you’re at it.

The time I can spend with these people is finite. And that’s not just because of my own mortality, but because we’ll soon have to say goodbye to each other as the semester abroad is just around the corner. Mine in Japan doesn’t start until the fall, but others will be leaving in a few weeks to explore the world. From Spain to Canada to South Korea, everything is included. We won’t see each other again until next spring.

That’s why I’m trying to spend as much time as possible with my friends before our schedules scatter us in all directions. And that, in turn, means that I even watch soccer with them, despite my interest in it being around freezing point.

.

My Heart Is a Ghost Town:

Although I’ve always considered myself a global cosmopolitan who has long since cut ties with German pop culture, Paula Hartmann’s Kleine Feuer has been my most-listened-to album over the past few months. There were days when nothing else played in my AirPods all day but these 15 songs, from beginning to end, over and over again, morning, noon, and night.

Others see ghosts, I only see you, Paula whispers to herself without any empathy. So long shadows with so little light. You send a smiley face, trap doors open. My heart is a ghost town and you are the ghost. The wine at two makes me cry again at three, then I fall asleep.

Paula’s apathetic voice and the bleakly pulsating beats are the anthem of my default emotional state, which I can only escape when I’m with other people, and which I fall back into as soon as I’m alone. The Berlin singer comments on the world I’m trapped in on solitary evenings.

Wish we could talk to each other, wish us one last summer. Hear my friends say: ‘Everything will be fine one day.’ As long as you swim through the rain and thunder. Where’s our happy home? I’ve forgotten where I live. Listen to our last notes, otherwise silence on my phone. Share no more songs, share no more smoke. Share the stars and the moon.

I like tracks that I can listen to in the background, but also immerse myself in. Paula’s music covers me like a blanket and reminds me that other people feel the same way as I do.

The cord of my hoodie tastes like fall and the first birds are screaming in pain. The colorful ravens put on their black coats. A grandma behind every windowsill. The first bus wipes me up and then breathes me out. A brake light beacon in the exhaust, rusty leaves on cobblestones. A quick thought about you and suddenly gravity has me again. Kicks my legs, fall down and break. Your roof turns gray walls into a house. In it, we exchange disappointments for a lifetime.

.

Hollywood’s Calling:

My favorite project of the semester, which is slowly coming to an end, was a short film I created for the compulsory elective course Motion assets. The topic was Young People and Old Trees.

While my fellow students focused on animations to complete the task, I insisted on making a real film and was allowed to do so. After all, I had always wanted to do something like this.

So, I grabbed a good friend of mine and we went to the nearest forest together to shoot Into the Woods. I can confidently say that the movie is an absolute masterpiece, and I’m expecting a call from Hollywood any second now to become the next world’s most famous director.

The short film is about a young woman who embarks on a journey into the depths of the forest to meet her destiny. I aimed to combine the flair of The Blair Witch Project with the aesthetics of David Hamilton.

The piano music, which I composed while tapping away on my keyboard, is intended to give the story an ominous touch. The countless retro filters I applied to the videos provide the whole piece with a dreamy feel.

Incidentally, the ending features a computer-generated imagery firework that makes even Michael Bay look outdated. I really enjoyed the shooting, even though the model caught eight ticks in the process. Suffering for the sake of art.

Into the Woods premiered in a museum last weekend, and interested viewers asked me afterward whether the young woman survived, what the fire meant, and if the movie was an allusion to the climate crisis we’re currently in.

I replied that I would answer all their questions in the upcoming second part, Into the Woods 2: Revenge of the Trees. Finally, I’ve acquired a taste for chasing nude girls through nature in front of my camera.

Fortunately, I’ve received a bunch of requests from potential models who would like to participate. So, you can look forward to my next magnum opus, which will be shown in an artistic, or adult oriented, movie theater near you.

.

Chaos Nation:

I love dystopian movies. Children of Men, The Road, Snowpiercer—the more hopelessly the future is depicted, the happier I grin. Classical psychoanalytic theory would attribute my passion for the end of the world to the death drive, the urge for doom and destruction.

This concept was first proposed by the Russian psychoanalyst Sabina Spielrein in her essay Destruction as the Cause of Coming Into Being and later expanded upon by Sigmund Freud in Beyond the Pleasure Principle.

Personally, however, I believe I am simply fascinated by chaos because my life is a minefield of self-imposed rules, and I need confirmation that abandoning them would lead to anarchy.

Last night, I watched Alex Garland’s Civil War starring Kirsten Dunst, Nick Offerman, and Cailee Spaeny. In the dystopian thriller, the President of the United States illegally secures a third term in office, plunging the country into another civil war.

A ragtag group of journalists embarks on a dangerous road trip to conduct one last interview with the fascist Donald Trump lookalike before the rebel army reaches the White House to end the man-made horror and restore democracy to the deeply divided nation. But between them and the most powerful man in the world lies a mayhem universe full of racist lunatics, mindless soldiers, and creepy murderers.

The mental appeal of Civil War lies in the increased probability that the world it depicts could become reality with just a few wrong decisions. Many inhabitants of the land of opportunity already yearn for anarchic freedom and want to turn the United States of America into a lawless theme park where anything deemed unpatriotic, or just Mexican, can be shot at.

Perhaps Civil War is not just a glimpse into the future but into our present. And because this idea is only exciting until it comes true, next time I’ll prefer watching another unrealistic disaster movie. Preferably something with zombies, asteroids, or ravenous sharks that live in tornadoes.

.

Too Many People:

A few friends and I were out and about at the Augsburg Summer Nights over the weekend. For a few days, the city center transforms into one big party with all kinds of music stages, food stalls, and even a silent disco.

But before we threw ourselves into the thundering crowds of the Bavarian town, we chilled out in a pal’s garden right next to the hustle and bustle, treated ourselves to a few cool drinks, and shared some funny life stories.

There, I met an amusing sports student whose chaotic love life sweetened my evening, and my psychologically quite committed playmate, with whose help I became the undisputed king of a certain board game.

Unfortunately, I have to say that I didn’t really enjoy the Augsburg Summer Nights—unlike my friends. There were just far too many people crammed into one place. I couldn’t enjoy the various music performances or have a bite to eat in peace. Everyone transformed into a huge ocean of bodies and I felt like I was drowning right in it.

I was glad when I finally stepped out of the barrier into the airy freedom again and took a few breaths without being pushed around by a crowd. The first thing I did with my newfound freedom was grab an ice-cold Coke Zero from a nearby convenience store and watch the colorful and very loud turmoil from afar.

This experience made me realize once again that although I don’t mind lots of people coming together in one place, I only enjoy it if they move in one direction as quickly as I do. That way, I can simply glide through them like some kind of slippery fish, as I do it in big cities like New York, Tokyo, or even Berlin. For the fun part, however, such events are not really for me.

I prefer quieter house parties where I can talk, drink, and dance with the guests without getting run over by a horde of drunken revelers. But after all, everyone has a different idea of fun. And I don’t judge if others had a nice evening or two at the Augsburg Summer Nights. You do you.

.

No Part of My Life:

It’s an afflicting feeling to know people with whom I once felt very close, but who are no longer part of my life. It’s not as if they’ve moved away, disappeared, or even died, but our relationship has changed so much from one day to the next that we no longer communicate. Not even when we are literally standing next to each other.

Then we ignore one another because that’s what you have to do under these circumstances. And if we would usually have talked, laughed, and shared a few worries, we are now like strangers who happen to be finding themselves in the same place and will soon go our separate ways again without even looking at each other’s faces.

I find this situation particularly difficult at times when I experience something interesting or get exciting news that I would otherwise have liked to share with this person immediately. Until recently, these topics eventually mattered to both of us, or at least we knew that the human being on the other side of the city always had an open ear.

But just before I mindlessly reach for my phone to write her an update on my world or record a voice message asking for her honest opinion or valuable expertise, I remember that I’m no longer allowed to communicate with my former friend and have to deal with this current challenge piling up in front of me on my own.

The hole that this person leaves in my heart will close. Her profile photo will slide further down in the messages and, at some point, disappear. Other faces will take her place and talk, laugh, and share some worries with me. I will soon have forgotten this once important character and the melancholy feeling of emptiness that she’s causing.

It will be as if she had never existed at all. And then I will no longer reach for my phone to share a part of my life with her, because for a brief moment I forgot that this person is no longer a part of it. But before that happens, I wonder if this gloomy emotion I’m carrying around could have been avoided, or if it was inevitable.

.

Studying in Japan:

The idyllic town of Kumamoto is located on the island of Kyushu in the southwest of Japan and has not only a beautiful castle, an old samurai house, and a colorful landscape garden to offer but also a university that happens to be the partner institution of my college.

This means that every semester there is a lively exchange of academics-to-be between these two learning establishments. Some students are sent from Japan to Germany, and some students are sent from Germany to Japan in return. And guess who has two thumbs and is one of the ambitious people sent from Europe’s politically split heart to the Land of the Rising Sun? This guy!

I will be spending the upcoming semester as an exchange student at the private Sojo University in Kumamoto, where I’m going to study creative subjects such as Graphic Design, Photography, and Manga Media in the Department of Design at the Faculty of Art.

I will be living in a free dormitory that is only a few minutes’ walk from the university’s campus and available to students from all around the world.

The winter semester doesn’t start until October, but I’ll be spending a few weeks in my favorite city of Tokyo beforehand, exploring my old hoods Shibuya, Harajuku, and Akihabara and hopefully seeing some old friends from back then.

The flights to and within Japan and the hotel in Tokyo are already booked. Now I just have to sublet my apartment in Germany and make the remaining travel arrangements so that I’m ready to go to the Land of the Rising Sun for the third time in my life this fall.

I should probably use the next few months to improve my Japanese language skills. Otherwise, it could be a bit difficult to communicate with my fellow students and the rest of the locals during my semester abroad in Kumamoto, because I probably won’t get very far with just basics like Hello, Goodbye, and Sorry, but where’s the nearest toilet? See you soon, Japan. I hope you’ve missed me.

.

Just Fun:

I’m not sure if it’s my diet, the sun, or my antidepressants, but lately, I’ve generally been worrying less about my life. Whereas I used to spend weeks, months, maybe even years, doing nothing but creating as many sorrows as humanly possible in my mind, I’ve recently been blessed with a stoic calmness that is almost uncanny.

There’s so much free space in my head now, and I can fill it however I want. It’s not as if I don’t care about what happens to and around me, but I take note of it, accept it, grow a little from it, and then continue on my way. Maybe that’s just what you do as some kind of functioning adult—or somebody who pretends to be one.

In the past, even the smallest unforeseeable obstacle would have sent me into acute self-doubt and bottomless panic. But today, I know that difficulties are not only part of life but are essential for me to be a better person tomorrow. And that it is an art to use them to my own advantage.

With this knowledge, I don’t waste a second too much on problems that aren’t really problems at all. Not only that: with this newly acquired form of acceptable equanimity, I automatically allow myself to have fun without any, or at least many, regrets. Because when I invest less time in irrelevant conflicts that should be ignored, I have more time for the good things in life.

So I prefer to spend my time with people who also choose to have fun. I don’t care what exactly they understand by this term or why they have decided to do so. Maybe they don’t want to be alone. Maybe they need a distraction from their everyday worries. Or maybe they have simply learned that celebrating the time we spend together has no negative impact on our future. Quite the opposite.

Life is too short to spend it only in my own head. It’s always the happiest moments that I like to remember the most. So I try to collect a bunch of them before it’s too late. Because as Frank Ocean once said: Have as much fun as possible! Amen, brother.

.

Cheers to the House Party:

Last night I found myself at a house party in a part of town I haven’t been before, where half the girls in attendance seemed to be called Julia. I like house parties. They’re much more cozy than clubs. And you can have intense conversations there, often with people you’ve just met.

The birthday girl had gone to great lengths to make her party pleasant. In addition to champagne, snacks, and suitable music, there was a bowl full of little challenges at the entrance that each guest could complete if they wanted to. My task was to transform myself into a so-called woo girl and to cheer loudly even at the most inappropriate moments.

Between the colorful fog machine, soap bubbles everywhere, and a drying rack turned into a beer pong table, I met new people who sweetened my evening with their stories. A photographer struggling with herself, a psychologist from Vienna, and an artist whose individual skills made a packed balcony roar with laughter.

I think it’s important to surround myself with new people and be inspired, guided, and encouraged by their dreams, hopes, and perhaps even worries at times when I seem to be at a standstill, at a loss, or generally thinking too much about the purpose of it all. And house parties are the perfect opportunity to meet just such folks.

As I step outside and board the over-punctual night bus with two of the many Julias, I am glad to have been here today among all the cheerful faces, whose laughter from the bottom of their hearts makes me forget my own sorrows.

The evening has shown me once again that this city is full of unique and interesting characters. And it is unfortunately far too easy to overlook them repeatedly in my stressful everyday life as I rush through the big and small streets. But it’s worth stopping, listening, and both hearing their stories and enriching them with my thoughts. I’m already looking forward to the next house party—wherever it may take place.

.

I Am Europe:

I voted in the European elections this morning. After I bought a coffee at the nearby coffee shop and went for a walk to the next elementary school, where the voting took place, I chose the Green Party because they most closely represent my political views on environmental protection, digitalization, and human rights.

I don’t want to leave Europe to the radical left or the radical right. People who trample on our fundamental democratic values out of greed, ideology, or sheer stupidity must not be the ones who end up destroying our chances of a future worth living. Because tomorrow belongs to those who are committed not to fear, but to hope.

I don’t believe in heritage, tradition, and nationalism. Although I was born in Germany, I do not feel German at all, but as a citizen of the world who is dedicated to the wonders and possibilities of all the different cultures this planet provides.

For me, the idea of a unified Europe is the logical step away from restrictive borders and towards an open society characterized by a wide variety of people, cultures, and views.

Thanks to the benefits, safeguards, and support of the European Union, I have met countless amazing people from different corners of the Earth that I would never have been able to meet without the opportunities of a united continent.

We should be happy to be part of Europe because it strengthens us financially, socially, and culturally. The European Union must be led by people who have only one goal in mind: to improve our community and the lives of us all.

By casting my vote, I have helped to ensure that we are hopefully spared a dystopian future in which radicals, fascists, and populists, under the guise of democracy, aim to undermine and destroy it and our very own existences following thereafter.

Committing ourselves to the European idea is the best chance we have of a realistic utopia in this period of human history. We are united in diversity, we are the future, we are Europe.

.

War in My Head:

When I was younger, I used to attribute my emotional shortcomings to being a spoiled only child. I had to be the center of attention in every group I was part of. If that didn’t happen, I would go to great lengths to convince everyone around me that I was the focal point of their otherwise unbearable lives. I was an obnoxious drama queen with a distinct main character complex—or maybe I was just bored as hell.

I began to realize that my own thoughts would become my greatest enemy. The constant overthinking about everything and everyone led to a melancholy toward the world and its people. Painful memories gave way to a selfish lack of empathy.

The guilt from poor decisions triggered emotional swings that not only affected me but also those I cared about. I grew afraid of moving forward, knowing that even the smallest steps could end in disaster. My mind became a prison of doubts, loneliness, and self-destruction.

Escaping myself seemed impossible. Even the smallest hint of stress, anxiety, or unpredictability would send me spiraling back into old patterns and harmful habits I thought I had left behind. Most of my mental energy went toward resisting the madness that loomed just one wrong thought away. I knew that if I gave in, I would be lost forever—and that wasn’t worth it. At least, not yet.

I’ve come to terms with a bitter defeat in my ongoing battle with my mind and realized that I can’t go on without professional help. Without support, I keep slipping into the same mental loops and faulty conclusions. Then I grow more frustrated, lonelier, and weaker.

My doctor has diagnosed me with moderate depression. Starting today, I’ll be taking prescription medication to prevent mental crashes, balance my emotions, and hopefully feel happier. I’ve also been referred to a psychiatric ward for therapy. It’s an option worth trying. I hope these steps will help me lead a somewhat normal life, or at least call a ceasefire in the war raging in my head.

.

My Britney Moment:

This event has been planned for weeks in my mind. I storm through the front door, undress, and throw my clothes on the white sheets and pillows-covered bed. I enter the now brightly lit bathroom with a fully loaded electric razor and stand in front of the mirror. A little push in the right direction and the machine starts to buzz.

Anticipation has a habit to set you up for disappointment in evening entertainment but tonight there’ll be some love, Alex Turner yells into my ear. Tonight there’ll be a ruckus, yeah, regardless of what’s gone before.

It’s about time. I’m not allowed to think anymore. Now is the time for action. I place the vibrating device on my head and it starts to shred through my hair. Dark tufts rain down around me. In a few minutes, I will be a new person.

I’m the artist of my own self. I try to optimize my body, my appearance, and my clothes so that they no longer cause me any problems. In my mind and the outside world. Because I’m in a constant battle between minimalism, depression, and mulling over irrelevancies. And, let’s be honest, a big chunk of laziness too.

Usually, it’s the same story all over again. I think about reducing my lifestyle in terms of food, habits, or stuff I own. The longer the decision to do so runs through my thoughts, the result is always something like: sure, why not? So I delete it.

Sometimes it returns somehow but usually I don’t give a fuck about it and it just disappears from my mind, my future, and my life. If I don’t regret doing it immediately, I know that I’ve made the right decision. Like shaving my head and thinking: This action brings me one step closer to my ultimate self.

There must be no more options, just my own unique and individual standard. It’s time to emancipate myself from my doubts. That’s why I choose one path in every single respect. And I try to stick to it, with some adjustments of course. The universe is chaotic enough. So I’m happy about any lack of alternatives—even if it’s only brought about by myself.

This is my Britney moment. The big difference between her situation and mine is that she did it out of mental desperation and I did it out of an unavoidable step in my perfectionist master plan.

The liberating feeling you get when you run an electric razor through your hair and realize that there’s no going back now is probably somewhere between orgasm and murder. And it’s only that good the first time. That’s for sure. Because from now on it’ll be just another routine that I have to implement into my life. It’ll soon become completely normal for me.

I look at my work of art in the mirror. No racing heart, no regrets. Just absolute satisfaction that I no longer have to worry about this part of my life. And, who knows, maybe Britney felt the same.

.

Going Places:

Although life feels like it will drag on forever, and I’m convinced of my own immortality anyway, a bitter truth hangs over my head like the proverbial sword of Damocles: I will die. I’m not sick, at least I hope not, but the day I die will come, without a doubt.

How am I supposed to deal with this bitter realization without slipping into paralyzing apathy or pure panic, weighed down by my weltschmerz? Exactly: I try to make the best of the time I have left on this planet.

This resolution doesn’t always work. Sometimes I lie in bed for days, letting life’s opportunities pass me by, like some fool who doesn’t even understand the fear of missing out.

On days when I have enough energy, curiosity, and hope, I step outside my front door and actively face the universe. I want to experience something new: an adventure, fresh faces, or something I’ve never seen before with my own eyes. It doesn’t always have to be a grand event or life-changing moment.

Sometimes, giving the small things a chance is enough. I visit an unfamiliar place—a café, a store, or a nearby lake—or strike up conversations with people I’ve just met or haven’t interacted with much before. Sometimes they’re hilarious. Or, I confront problems and fears with new approaches, solving and eliminating them for good.

I’m often so blinded by routine, that I don’t even consider exploring alternatives. Coffee? Black. Sneakers? White. Girls? Blonde. Sometimes, though, I avoid the unfamiliar because I’m afraid that even a harmless choice will plunge me into mental chaos, forcing me to expend significant effort to regain my balance—only to return to the tried and tested.

This has happened far too often, and I can’t ignore the risk. But maybe, the one new thing I embrace on a seemingly inconsequential yet fateful day could be the key to a whole new life. Because no matter how small or unimportant it may seem, every possibility carries the potential for something great.

.

Unrequited Expectations:

I firmly believe that expectations are the root of all disappointment in interpersonal relationships. Expectations will always let me down, no matter who or what they’re directed at.

If I assume that someone I care about will act in a way I expect, I’ve already set myself up for failure. There is no exception to this harsh law of life. Even when expectations seem to be met, it’s often an illusion.

Why do people I place expectations on end up disappointing me? It’s not that they do it on purpose, they have their own expectations of situations, goals, hopes, and people. They’re playing the same doomed game, just with different players.

They don’t know what’s going on inside me. And they don’t have to, nor do they need or want to. They have their own thoughts and worries, and they’re busy enough with those.

So, should I never place any expectations on anyone or anything again? Perhaps. But maybe it’s enough to avoid basing my entire emotional world on those expectations and falling apart when things don’t go as I imagined.

I should aim to be strong enough, so grounded in myself, that the actions of others don’t throw me off course. The more satisfied I am with myself, the more I can tolerate not being the focus of others’ attention. And that’s a good thing.

I must be careful not to fall into the same traps as many others who overthink their lives, relationships, and dreams. Unmet expectations can lead not only to disappointment but also to the destruction of important friendships.

Unmet expectations offer valuable lessons. They help me reflect on myself and the people around me. Approaching people without expectations allows me to enrich my life with the experiences they trustingly share, without expecting anything in return.

I shouldn’t close myself off to this opportunity but approach it with an open heart—even if I may never truly become part of the world of the one I hold those expectations for.

.

Self-Destructive Tendencies:

Hello. My name’s Marcel, and my various hobbies include reading, cooking, and sabotaging my own life. Then I chase away friends, place obstacles in the path of my success, and sacrifice myself for irrelevant beliefs.

While normal people know when to stop and avoid repeating the same mistakes, I crave unnecessary drama and go the extra mile. All I reap from these self-destructive tendencies are disappointment, anger, and loneliness.

The worst part is, I know when it’s better to stay quiet, when a situation doesn’t need to escalate—but something inside me wants to watch my world burn, over and over again.

With this attitude, I’m putting people through pointless tests they can’t pass, just to prove to myself that these friendships were doomed from the start. That I’m better off alone, because relying on others only leads to disappointment.

Thanks to my superior mindset, I save myself the time, which I can now spend alone—trapped in my head with no chance of escape.

It’s hard for me to tell who’s truly a friend and who just happens to share the same space. Who’s forced to spend time with me but looks for the next chance to get away. And just when I’m surrounded by people to whom I’ve devoted thoughts, dreams, and hopes, I feel alone again.

Why bother making connections if they’re only going to be shallow, collapsing like a house of cards with just a few wrong words? I could save myself the trouble. I shouldn’t set up false expectations, and if I did get disappointed, I’d only have myself to blame.

Should I stop people from entering my life and wave them away before they even get close? Since there’s nothing left but to spend some time together and then say goodbye?

It’s unrealistic to form friendships with everyone. It’s enough to share a moment, to enjoy each other’s company before moving on. And it’s okay to dedicate thoughts, dreams, and hopes to those fleeting connections.

.

Welcome to the Club:

Each faculty at our university has its very own student council. There is one for computer science, one for humanities and natural sciences, one for architecture and civil engineering, one for electrical engineering, one for mechanical and process engineering and one for economics.

And then there’s the motley crew that I’ve been a member of: The Design Student Council. This is where illustrious people from the three degree courses Communication Design, Interactive Media, and Creative Engineering come together to chat about art, events, and life in general over pizza, beer, and music, as well as to have a bit of a rant about the other student councils.

Through the student council, I got to know all sorts of great people from different areas of the university who would otherwise have remained unknown to me and would have continued to pass me by without a greeting in the canteen. Together we organize flea markets, karaoke evenings, and exhibitions, act as contacts for new students, and try to improve university life with our ideas.

Sometimes we spend hours discussing grievances at our faculty, sometimes we try to answer the eternal question of how many primary school children we could defeat in a fight to the death. The correct answer, of course, is seven—everyone knows that.

I am very glad that in my first semester I dared to sit down week after week in a room full of people who were becoming fewer and fewer strangers to me, and through this, from my perspective, quite courageous step, I became part of a community that enriched my time at university in many ways.

Gradually, more and more of my friends have found their way into the Design Student Council, and thus to free cold drinks, and rumor has it that I have already spent a night or two in our designated room after the evening got a little out of hand. Every faculty at our university has its own student council—and ours is undoubtedly the best.

.

The Wandering Mouth:

We’re at a party. Strange and familiar faces hover around us, drinking and shouting. Cheerful music fills the air. The garden where we celebrate is lit up in bright colors.

You’re having fun, drifting from one bottle to the next, from one taste to another, from one mouth to the next. People are waiting for you to push beyond the limit. Things are spinning out of control. The mood shifts. It’s no longer fun.

The night grows darker. You fall, lying on your back on the grass, laughing with the others around you. Your top has slipped up, exposing more than you realize. I walk over, cover you, and pull you to your feet. It’s hard to tell if you’re laughing or crying.

You try to kiss me. I turn away, pressing your head to my shoulder. I love you very much, I whisper in your ear. Silence. I love you too, you answer quietly. Björk’s voice whispers, Your mouth floats above my bed at night, my own private moon.

You nestle your head against mine, the faint smell of beer, salt, and cigarettes mingling in your breath. Hair to hair. Skin to skin. Pulse to pulse.

Just because the mind can make up whatever it wants, doesn’t mean that it’ll never come true, won’t ever happen. Please, could I change that? I can feel your body against mine. Just because she can. This moment feels like the most important thing in the world.

Is that the right thing to do? Oh, I just don’t know. You turn toward me, your face close. Let me introduce one to the other. The dream and the real, get them acquainted. Introduce. A mouth to a mouth.

Your face becomes mine. I taste your lips, your tongue. Your breath enters me, warm, filled with beer, salt, cigarettes, and a hint of loneliness. The dream and the real, get them acquainted.

Maybe hope can win. Can I just sneak up from behind? I plead. Now please, can I kiss her? I shout. Is that the right thing to do? The void answers softly, Oh, I just don’t know. There’s a line there, I can’t cross it. I wake up, am lost, can no longer deny it.

.

Round Two, Fight!:

Well then, are you all already as excited as I am? Of course you are. Because this week my second semester in the Interactive Media degree program at Augsburg University of Applied Sciences is beginning. And ahead of me—and my daring fellow companions—lie a few months full of fun, excitement, and… very… nice… other… things. The main thing is that there’s something with alliteration. Because that always sounds good.

And since you’re surely absolutely dying to know what awaits little Marcel this semester, why don’t we all take a look at exactly that together. Because let’s be honest: you don’t have anything better to do right now anyway. Exactly. So… let the wild ride begin!

In the Introduction to Interactive Design, we’ll get an overview of systems of order, the principles of interaction and interface design, the basics of creative prototyping, cross-media design and creativity techniques, basic analog and digital design tools, and the fundamentals of usability as well as design theory. Presumably it’s also about the fundamental fundamentals of the fundamentals—but that’s obviously just speculative wishful thinking.

In any case, we’ll definitely learn information design, data visualization, mapping, screen design—so typography, grids, and design systems—the basics of usability and human-centered design, as well as generative design. That all sounds very fascinating indeed.

After successfully completing the module, we’ll be able to apply basic design principles and typography appropriately across different digital output media, independently prototype design tasks using analog and digital design tools, apply fundamental design and creativity techniques, solve tasks experimentally and process-oriented through prototypes and design variants, and analyze and visualize processes.

The course Introduction to Audiovisual Design, in turn, spans a wide arc from the elementary forms of expression in animation to methodological design concepts for time-based media. Both conceptual design and artistic experimentation are encouraged. The lectures challenge us to actively participate and to develop our own positions.

The working groups and workshops provide hands-on experience, fostering personal experience and self-organization within teams. Group work is, after all, the very best thing in the world. Everyone loves it. And the teaching methods are oriented toward critical discourse and practical experience.

A major focus here is animation. In lectures, the most important animation cultures are presented exemplarily, and in workshops, simple animation techniques are practiced. In addition, cinematic means of expression are also covered—again introduced in lectures and then applied in workshops. This is where we build the bridge to storyboarding, an essential design technique for audiovisual media. Discussions of current and classic media art, as well as excursions to relevant festivals and exhibitions, round out the program.

In the Introduction to Web Technologies, we learn all about the internet and how it works. We study the functionality of key browser protocols, the technical foundations of websites, and the basics of frontend programming. We acquire knowledge about the practical and correct use of relevant internet protocols and browser interfaces, the implementation of designed websites, navigation and manipulation of the DOM using JavaScript and jQuery, and the creation of interactive websites.

We also learn how to analyze connection problems and browser traffic performance in relation to web applications, as well as how to plan and implement our own websites using various developer tools. In the end, we’ll understand what HTTP, TCP, APIs, WebSockets, WebRTC, XML, HTML, CSS, JavaScript, and jQuery are. Hopefully. Wasn’t CSS a band once?

In the Introduction to Software Development, we learn how to design, implement, document, and test our own applications. These applications also include graphics and user interaction via graphical interfaces. By the end of the module, we’ll be able to transfer the acquired knowledge and skills to a small, self-developed software project and put it into operation.

We learn all about development phases, requirements analysis, design, implementation, testing, deployment, and maintenance of programs, as well as methods of agile software development and advanced concepts of object-oriented programming such as class hierarchies, inheritance, and polymorphism, along with programming graphical user interfaces. The content is made practically tangible through an individually planned and implemented software project carried out during the lab.

On a very personal note, the next part of the Japanese language course is also coming up for me, in which we’ll learn the second Japanese script, Katakana. It’s basically the alternative—and mostly Western-term-used—little brother of Hiragana. During the course, we’ll even all go out for Japanese food together and order our dishes in the East Asian national language. How exciting. Ichi sushi kudasai!

And since I postponed the programming exam from the first to the second semester—because my private fortune teller decided it should be so—I also get to look forward to another round of Processing. Hooray. At least I’m not alone in this, because some of my fellow students were just as incapable and are therefore in the same boat as me. That immediately makes me feel less lonely.

In any case, I’m excited to see what adventurous projects we’ll tackle in the new courses, and after the one-and-a-half-month-long semester break—which seemed to go on forever—I’m actually looking forward to returning to a somewhat structured daily routine that is not self-determined by me. On the other hand, the semester break could of course have lasted another three to eighty-seven months longer. I would certainly have been the last to complain.

By the end of this semester, we’ll also have to decide whether we want to pursue the artistic or the technical track. My choice is already clear. And that’s not only because of the traumatic computer science exam that I still sometimes dream about—only to wake up late at night drenched in sweat, shouting, A, A, B, B, A, A, B, A, B, A, B, B, B, A… C?!

My heart simply beats more for the colorful world of subjectively evaluated art. Objective technology, with all its rules, regulations, and laws invented by some mathematicians that are nearly impossible to argue away, is for me more of a means to an end—and therefore secondary. Yes, dear computer scientists, I know this sentence hurts a lot. But you’ll just have to get over it. Really.

As in the previous semester, I’ll then once again present you with a conclusion of the months behind me, in which I’ll proudly proclaim why I am the best, smartest, and probably also most handsome student Augsburg University of Applied Sciences has ever had. And while you’re still laughing, I’ll already be sailing off into the sunset on my yacht—paid for solely by my high IQ—with a very lightly clothed Selena Gomez in my arms. Or something like that.

.

Meeting a Master:

This semester, we took part in a workshop with the popular Hungarian artist István Horkay as part of our Werkwoche at Technical University of Applied Sciences in Augsburg. His collage posters are famous and have been exhibited in galleries all over the world.

István Horkay embarked on his journey by graduating from the School of Fine Arts in Budapest. Following this, he was offered an opportunity to enrich his skills at the Academy of Fine Arts in Cracow, where he earned his Master of Fine Arts. And he taught us exactly that: The fine arts.

István Horkay’s art is epitomic in the double meaning of the word. A fragment, an incised part of something that already exists, and, because of this incision, a violation of the finished surface, the tangle of writing or a finished picture. This is based on the experience that people, by transmitting themselves through signs, feign a kind of meaningfulness.

In István Horkay’s work, this textual meaningfulness always appears differently, as contrasting colors appear on the surface in separate places. His posters are not only experimental but life itself.

It was a great experience to work with István Horkay and his lovely wife and design some works under his personal guidance. I was allowed to design a total of three posters, which I called The Book of Love, The Bachelor of Arts and Jazz.

The workshop was complemented by an exhibition that took place together with a display of the most beautiful German books.

The Werkwoche was a great opportunity to creatively break out of the daily routine of studying and try something completely new. I’m looking forward to taking part again in the near future.

My second semester was rewarding—I had a great time, made new connections, and deepened existing ones. That’s what college is all about. At least for me.

In the semester after next I have the chance to spend it abroad and was asked to choose a university in a country that interests me. After some thoughtful consideration, I’ve narrowed down my options to Japan, Taiwan, and Lithuania.

In a few weeks, I will know where my journey will take me. I would agree with all the choices. Simply because each of them offers opportunities that I will never have again.

Let’s see where destiny will take me to. Until then I’m looking forward to my fourth semester with new courses, new people, and new adventures. Yeah.

.

Time to Grow Up:

Since the beginning of my college attendance and the subsequent move to a new city, my entire circle of friends consists of my fellow students. That wouldn’t really be a problem. After all, they are all great people with their very own dreams, hopes, and goals. And I’ve grown very fond of some of them over time.

We’ve partied the night away together, sunbathed by the lake, cooked delicious food, danced, played tabletop role-playing games, watched anime, and had profound conversations about the meaning of it all. The time I spend with these people means a lot to me.

But I’m realizing that the age difference between me and them is leading to interpersonal difficulties. After all, I am now 40 years old and most of them are around 20. And that’s not a very healthy relationship.

When we celebrated my birthday in a trendy bar in the city center a few days ago, we had a lot of fun. Expensive drinks, loud music, and a few colorful drugs. Everything I need to have a good time.

But of course, I noticed that I was the oldest person there. I couldn’t flirt with anyone because otherwise, I would have felt like a creep. And that’s not all: I’m generally not allowed to develop feelings for my fellow students that go beyond friendship. No matter how much I would like to sometimes.

Because otherwise, I feel like I’m abusing their trust in me as a friend. But since I would like to be in a romantic relationship again because I honestly miss that in my life, I now feel a little trapped in this adolescent world.

I have therefore resolved to finally grow up. At least partially. I need to expand my circle of friends. Get to know people who will help me grow. Mentally. And with whom I have the chance to develop intimate relationships that are not possible in my current environment for various reasons.

However, I don’t yet know how I’m going to do this. Maybe I should find a new hobby. Or go to places that are frequented by people of the same age. Or maybe it’s enough to walk through the world a little more consciously and be more open to new folks.

The important thing is not to get too comfortable in my present surroundings. Otherwise, I will deny myself opportunities that are currently hidden from me.

.

Midlife Crisis Outfit:

As of today, I am 40 years old. So it’s about time to talk about my midlife crisis. Strictly speaking, I’ve been in it for four decades now, but in order to have a good starting point for today’s topic, let’s just assume that it’s reached its peak today.

My midlife crisis manifests itself internally through constant reflection, depression, and self-destructive tendencies and externally through continuous optimization of my, at least in my eyes, perfect outfit.

I am a great advocate of a single appearance. While normal people wear a different wardrobe every day, consisting of all kinds of colors, shapes, and brands, I have made it my mission to find the ideal piece of clothing for every part of my body. And, yes, I know that this behavior is the result of some error in my head. But let’s call it minimalism.

I quickly realized that the majority of my individual uniform had to be black. That way I don’t have to worry about any color combinations. Black always fits, looks good, and is also slimming. No other color has so many wins.

What’s more, my outfit has to be cheap, basic, and available everywhere. Even if, for whatever reason, I end up in Guatemala, I need to be able to go into town and replace a used item of clothing there.

That’s why I’ve chosen a few international companies whose products I use to present myself to the world. Of course, I always adapt this decision. After all, my outfit is alive. Like me. I’m not dead. Yet.

Most of my clothes are from H&M. Because the quality is good, the price is reasonable, and availability is guaranteed. One plus point is that the basics are not printed with logos. They are simple, modern, and have a good shape. I can also dye them if they are washed out.

So I’ve bought the same black pants, T-shirts, hoodies, sweaters, jackets, underpants, scarves, and gloves several times so that I can change them every day.

Of course, I can’t wear too many nameless basics, otherwise I have no character. That’s why my cap printed with the New York Yankees logo is from New Era. Because I wanted something American.

And since black only looks good with white accents, because otherwise you seem like a mortician, I’m wearing a pair of white Nike Air Force 1 with white Nike Everyday Cushioned Training Crew socks. Because it’s the default right now.

My outfit is rounded off with black Jisco glasses, a vintage Casio watch, and Apple AirPod Pros. Done. This is how stylish a midlife crisis can be. At least in my head.

.

The Death of Social Media:

When websites like MySpace, Facebook, and Twitter emerged in the early 2000s, I was fascinated by the possibilities they brought. Whether I was chatting with buddies, flirting with girls, or discussing the latest One Piece episode with other fans, social media turned the internet into a place where strangers could become acquaintances, and acquaintances could become friends.

Social media shaped who I am today. Facebook took me to Berlin, Twitter to Japan, and Instagram to America. I reveled in the benefits of this universe, but I watched with regret as these platforms gradually became breeding grounds for hate, ignorance, and depression.

Suddenly, social media was no longer fun. Still, I didn’t want to abandon the dream of a connected world, because there were people on these platforms who meant something to me. For far too long, I ignored my inner voice telling me it was time to say goodbye to the hollow shell that social media had become.

Maybe I was just afraid, or perhaps I was hoping I’d find a reason to keep denying the inevitable. But the longer I stayed, the more out of place I felt amid the angry voices, blunt propaganda, and false promises. So, I had only one choice to finally shed this mental burden that had weighed on me for years: delete social media. And now, I’ve done it.

Besides my retreat from social media, I’ve also stopped using emojis in emails, chats, and text messages. I’ve disabled the buttons that let me decorate my thoughts with colorful little pictures on my phone and computer. My words have to stand on their own. And if they can’t, then I’ve failed as a writer—and as a decent human being.

Of course, emojis serve a purpose. They’re meant to fill the gaps where words fall short. Without them, there will be misunderstandings, arguments, and, ultimately, conflicts. But I don’t care about that. As usual, the world should revolve around me and my decisions, no matter how arbitrary or illogical they may seem.

.

Men of Culture:

When a brave adventurer has spent the entire day climbing mountains, recovering treasures, and battling giants, while trying to keep every single one of his limbs attached to his body, there are three things that drive him to look forward to the next day: Beer. Meat. And sex.

After all, he’s got tough memories in his head, hard-earned coin in his pocket, and an even harder erection in his pants. And he needs to deal with these potential problem-makers as quickly as possible, so they don’t lead to his downfall in the long run. The only question is: Which establishment will help him the most in this delicate matter for the least amount of money?

Stunk and Zel are two prime examples of these now not-so-theoretical fortune hunters. For the jaded human and the high-spirited elf, real life begins when they step onto the streets, now aglow with the city’s colorful neon signs, after a tingling brew at the Ale & Eats inn, run by the ever-bubbly bird lady Meidri.

From there, they can slip into the well-oiled, frequently used orifices of willing prostitutes. After all, there are plenty available here, in every conceivable shape, color, and function imaginable. One day, they rescue the angel Crimvael from the clutches of a wild monster and introduce the innocent soul to the pleasures of jolly light girls.

I enjoyed Interspecies Reviewers more than I expected. Stunk and Zel are two lovable, horny guys who want to mount anything that breaths. Their boundary-pushing sexcapades are so colorful, amusing, and over the top that I’d love to see a second season. But for various reasons, it will likely never happen.

So I have no choice but to close my eyes, have a few warm thoughts, and imagine myself joining Stunk and Zel’s illustrious troupe, about to get down and dirty in the nearest fantasy brothel. I’m even thinking about getting the manga, just because I want to know which brightly lit establishments my testosterone-fueled friends will end up in next.

.

Blessed Blow:

God had the best cocaine. My friends assured me of that. Nothing was as clear, pure, and effective as the contents of the transparent bags she carefully placed on the table at weekends.

God was not even twenty years old. She had long black hair and a round face. We called her God because she went to a notorious Catholic boarding school for girls. We should have named her Devil, at least if her stories from there were to be believed.

Since God liked me, I was always allowed to snort for free. But that privilege made me feel like a mooch, so I paid for her food at McDonald’s and her drinks at Bar 25 in return. Sometimes at least.

While I randomly consumed everything I could get my hands on, God only used cocaine to function. Her minimalist usage made a great impression on me.

After a trip to her parents in the south, God never returned to Berlin. Rumor has it there was trouble with a classmate. God had smashed her head so hard against a sink in the restroom during an argument that it broke. We never heard from God again. That was also the end of my cocaine phase.

.

Jump, Jump, Jump!:

When I think of Japan, my mind drifts to sushi, manga, and suicide. It’s a country of pure contrasts, where neon lights pulse with life, yet shadows loom just as brightly. Recently, I watched Sion Sono’s cult masterpiece Suicide Club, a delirious descent into the bizarre phenomenon of mass suicides sweeping the East Asian nation.

The film from 2001, featuring appearances by Ryo Ishibashi, Akaji Maro, and Masatoshi Nagase, unfolds like a sinister puzzle, with Detective Kuroda and his team fumbling through a trail of cryptic clues: Rancid sports bags, clunky early-internet websites, and a deeply unnerving pop idol group that’s equal parts saccharine and sinister. And I love it.

The opening scene is burned into my head: Dozens of uniformed schoolgirls, hands clasped and faces alight with giddy laughter, throwing themselves in front of a speeding subway train. Blood sprays across the station like something out of a grotesque art installation. It’s horrifying, absurd, and iconic—a tone-setter for the ride that follows.

From there, the movie spirals into a dizzying blend of splatter gore, J-pop surrealism, and psychological labyrinths. What’s it all about? The search for identity? Love? Friendship? Or is it just a meditation on flesh? Sion Sono doesn’t hand out answers. Instead, he dares me to sit with the madness and draw my own conclusions.

There’s something inconceivably irresistible about shows and movies set in Tokyo right around the turn of the millennium. Foldable phones snapping shut with satisfying clicks, Eurobeat tracks pumping through crowded arcades, schoolgirls in sailor suits dashing to catch the last train—it was the very last time when Japan felt like the epicenter of cool, a fever-dream era that unfortunately will never quite return.

Suicide Club captures that strange moment perfectly, preserving it in all its chaotic, messy glory. And if there’s one message I take away from this twisted gem, it’s that you have to treat life like a write-once hard drive. Although, it would be nice to forget the bad things.

.

I Lost My Heart in Tokyo:

Japan is not only a land of cultural traditions, technological achievements, and historical, social, and geographical challenges, but for many enthusiasts it is a nation of great and small wonders waiting to be discovered and explored.

Over the past decades, Tokyo has developed into an international hotspot for pop culture, from fashion and music to art. In Kyoto, you’ll find the most beautiful temples; in Osaka, the most delicious delicacies; in Yokohama, the most exhilarating nightlife.

Those who make it as far as Okinawa, Hokkaido, or Tottori experience Japan in its most multifaceted form. They see that anything is possible here. They realize they are standing in the midst of a cultural treasure trove and need only choose a direction.

In anime and manga, wide-eyed space pirates, power-hungry swordsmen, and brave magical girls come to life. In J-pop and J-rock, both the bright and shadowed sides of life are sung about. And in countless novels—from Banana Yoshimoto and Haruki Murakami to Mieko Kawakami—quiet and outspoken heroes alike search for happiness.

Japanese pop culture is full of love, desire, and passion. It seems to burst outward in every conceivable direction, and with every loud bang a new discovery, a new story, a new potential passion comes to life.

My observations of the Land of the Rising Sun, poured into words, are declarations of love to this seemingly endless universe of creative daydreams—one into which you can immerse yourself at will, whose brightly illuminated gates stand open to all who wander the world with open eyes in search of an inspiring home.

I want to celebrate Japanese pop culture in Germany and beyond. Whether fashion, art, music, films, books, games, travel, technology, food, or life in general—whether anime, manga, or J-pop—whether widely known far beyond the borders of the Far East or long since faded into eternal insider status in its homeland.

For you, I set out on a journey into the distance, in search of an alternative world whose energy can be felt from here, whose courage can be sensed from here, whose love can be felt even from afar. I want to grasp it and understand it—and hold it close to us.

In my texts on Japanese pop culture, which I regularly publish on this blog, I sit beside Spike Spiegel in the cockpit in Cowboy Bebop, save the world with Asuka Langley Soryu and her friends in Neon Genesis Evangelion, and wander with Ginko through the spirit-filled forests of a long-forgotten world in Mushishi.

I dive into the bustling chaos of Takeshita Street in the heart of Harajuku, let myself be swept away by the gaming kids in front of the flickering screens in Akihabara, and settle into a well-hidden jazz café in Shimokitazawa to listen, over a cup of matcha tea, to the lively sounds of Ryo Fukui, Casiopea, and Soil & “Pimp” Sessions.

And now and then, I travel back in time to a Japan that no longer exists: to the exciting 1970s of creative revolution, the brightly glowing 1980s of economic dominance, and the sobering 1990s of financial decline. Each era is as beautiful as it is different, waiting to be discovered and brought back to life.

Every single one of my articles about Japan is a digital homage to the creative spirits of a nation that so often seems far away. If you enjoy looking beyond the cultural horizon, if you are always searching for something new, exciting, and surprising, and if you are not afraid of perhaps losing yourself forever in a labyrinth of otherness, then you are in exactly the right place here.

Discover Japan’s most imaginative side with me, again and again. I look forward to embarking with you, in my upcoming articles about the Land of the Rising Sun, on an unforgettable expedition into the depths of Far Eastern ingenuity—and to uncovering together one or another lost treasure hidden somewhere in the depths of Tokyo, Kyoto, or Osaka.

.

Beer, Beer, and More Beer:

The second semester of my studies in Interactive Media has just said goodbye to me. Officially it doesn’t end until the end of September but with the semester break starting in the next few days, I can justifiably say that my first year at college is now over.

It has been a year full of new people, experiences, and joy of life. I have learned, designed, and programmed. We made our own movies, build machines, and create animations, tried our hand at programming languages, and almost single-handedly destroyed the university’s beverage budget in the form of beer, beer, and more beer.

I joined the design student council and a Dungeons & Dragons club, helped out at events in front of and behind the scenes, and spent some nights at the campus because I missed the last train home more than once.

While a few months ago, I was still convinced that I wanted to devote myself entirely to visual wonders and thus pursue a Bachelor of Arts, in recent weeks I have come to the decision that I would like to try my hand at the Bachelor of Science after all and thus prove myself in the world of bits and bytes.

The good thing about this plan is that if it fails, I can still crawl back into the art world the following semester. Possibly because the physics-soaked math has taken the fun out of it for me. I would then only have to make up a few missing modules.

In the next semester, we will have to try out various elective modules in the areas of design, computer science, and gaming and decide in which country we would like to spend our semester abroad.

I’m currently leaning towards Japan, Finland, or Estonia, but I still have little a bit of time to think about it in peace. Besides, I have to be accepted there first, and this decision is, sadly, not mine alone. But let’s see in which part of the world I’ll end up in the coming winter.

My versatile studies have given me, and I’m not exaggerating, a sense of life again. A reason to get up early in the morning. To come to campus with joy, smile at familiar faces, and experience new adventures with people I already know or just met for the first time. And for that, I want to thank everyone who has shared this journey with me so far.

I’m really glad I decided to apply at Technical University of Applied Sciences in Augsburg last year for being able to have this opportunity and excited to see what challenges await me next semester.

.

If I Can’t Be a Part of Your World:

Of course I can’t always have what I want. That would be far too easy anyway. My own happiness sometimes collides with the dreams and wishes of others. And I have no right to hurt them just because I hold the questionable belief that I absolutely must be the main character in every single story that is told.

Every now and then I have to admit to myself that, in a play, I only occupy a supporting role and that the spotlight is directed at someone else. No matter how hard that may be on my own ego. Sometimes I am neither Romeo nor Juliet, but simply some random fruit vendor who suffers dutifully in the background.

If the slim, black-clad girl I like—with her white sneakers marked by life, who grins shamelessly at just the right moments—the girl I want to spend time with, experience adventures with, forge memories with, and face the perils of the world alongside, already has someone like that by her side, who—surprise—is not me, then the only correct path I should be capable of taking is the one that leads away.

Away from this captivating girl, away from her supposedly radiant happiness, away from the creeping pain I have grown accustomed to in recent times out of sheer ignorance toward myself and perhaps a touch of masochism.

Above all, away from the inner urge to perhaps still obtain—through some random, completely logic-defying miracle of this universe—the chance to become part of this slowly dissolving hope.

Before I cause irreparable damage. To myself and to the girl I actually wanted to win over. Because all I could achieve with this desperate plan is hatred, anger, and an almost unimaginable loneliness. And I certainly don’t want that. Unless I am already lost. But then everything is too late anyway.

So while she’s lying in bed with her boyfriend late at night, having watched a show, he was allowed to dive into her, and now, without sparing a single thought for me, has fallen asleep tightly cuddled up to him, I stand after a mediocre party in the rain, with two cold, rancid McDonald’s cheeseburgers in a bag, at the main station, waiting for the last train home—only to indulge in the one pastime I desperately wanted to prevent: thinking about her.

These embarrassing and pitiful emotional scars could be avoided if I followed the advice that emerged from a boozy round of others. That I should distract myself. That I should talk to the nice but uninteresting faces about more than just a few irrelevant sentences. That I might thereby find someone who could burn themselves into my emotional world just as deeply as the person whose attention I am trying to draw to myself by every conceivable means.

But of course I don’t want that. Because everyone else is just empty shells compared to this one girl. And even though I know perfectly well that this isn’t true, it’s far easier to regard this both subjective and objective lie as an established truth and thus dissolve undisturbed in my own self-pity. After all, heartbreak is much more fun when I abandon all hope.

Perhaps because this way of dealing with sorrow is also much easier than having to face the uncomfortable reality that I may not actually be infatuated with the girl herself, but with the false expectations I pumped into her from the very beginning.

Because what do I really know about this girl, beyond the scattered stories she so graciously shared with me, and the connections I had to piece together myself—otherwise I would have been staring at a patchwork of other people’s memories? Exactly: nothing. I know absolutely nothing. And realizing this fact is the first step out of my own broken head and into the real world.

On top of that, as could hardly be otherwise, I’m a good person. Of course I am. At least that’s what I tell myself so I don’t go completely insane. I don’t want to barge into someone else’s romance, no matter how broken and certainly miserable I might imagine it to be. Such a devious attack would not be my place and would also be deeply misanthropic. And probably very stupid.

Besides—and this is the most important point—it would get me nothing. I wouldn’t be the brave hero rescuing the helpless princess from the clutches of a painful relationship. No, I would simply be some random asshole who got too caught up in his own movie and, from whatever psychopathic abyss, decided that his only chance at happiness was to destroy that of others.

And no one wants anything to do with someone like that. Ever. Least of all the girl far removed from my own crumbling world, whose grin I see before me when I close my eyes. Her happiness should be untouchable. Even if she has decided that I myself may not be a part of it.

So I am left with nothing else but to scrape together the last remnants of my own sanity, my own reason, and perhaps a bit of my own pride, and arrive at the only right decision that is worth pursuing.

Namely, that I must tear down, burn, and blow up these bridges built in the wrong direction as quickly as possible, turn around, and finally walk once more along the ridge of mental health. Before it is possibly too late.

Maybe the other nice faces aren’t just empty shells after all. Maybe one of them can evoke the same feelings in me as the slim, black-clad girl with the white sneakers marked by life. Maybe one of them is just as pretty, smart, and cheeky—if only I allow for that potential instead of dismissing it with irritation from the outset. And if everything goes well, I might even forget why I was so fascinated by that one shamelessly grinning person in the first place.

.

Hope Dies Last:

From up here you can see the lush green meadows, the azure-blue sea, and the clear, sunny sky. Gentle piano melodies echo through the overgrown high-rises. The decaying buildings are the last memorials to a civilization that was not prepared for its sudden departure.

In the distant future, invaders from another world attack Earth without warning and unleash machine lifeforms to take over the planet. Faced with this insurmountable threat, humanity is driven from its home and flees to the Moon.

The Council of the Exiled organizes a technologically seemingly superior resistance force of android soldiers who attempt to reclaim Earth. To finally break the stalemate, the organization deploys a new unit of infantry: YoRHa.

Meanwhile, in the abandoned wasteland that was once a place filled with bustle and laughter, the battle between machines and androids continues to rage. A war that may soon bring to light the long-forgotten truth about this world and the fate of humanity…

Released in 2017, the role-playing game NieR:Automata by the Japanese artist Yoko Taro could easily have disappeared into the depths alongside countless similar titles because of its premise. Alien monsters attack Earth while humanity desperately struggles for survival. As if one had not already seen, heard, and played through something like that thousands of times before…

Yet while all those other works are forgotten shortly after their more or less tedious completion, even years later one keeps thinking back to what was experienced in the visually stunning successor to NieR Replicant. Because the end of the world has rarely been portrayed as so radically depressing, hopeless, and philosophically heavy.

NieR:Automata is an unforgettable experience on many different levels. The characters burn themselves into one’s emotional world. The epic music by Keiichi Okabe continuously shatters even the most cheerful-seeming thoughts. And the fact that you must successfully finish the game multiple times to fully understand the story—only to end up empty-handed again at the very end, after giving it your all—puts the finishing touch on the whole experience.

Anyone who wants to find happiness in a world of merciless hopelessness and ultimately drown in absolute depression cannot avoid NieR:Automata. Before long, they will be fighting side by side with 2B, 9S, and A2 against a seemingly insurmountable fate. And they will become part of a story whose true ending seems to flee with every step taken toward it—only to struggle desperately against its own resolution at the very last moment, by every conceivable means.

.

What I Talk About When I Talk About Walking:

I love walking. Drop me anywhere on this round ball of Earth, point me in any direction, and I’ll set off. From A to B, crisscrossing, straight ahead or in circles. The main thing is to keep going, always further. And when I talk about running, I don’t mean jogging, racing, or sprinting—good God, no—but the most relaxed form of human locomotion: walking.

Over the past few years I’ve gradually increased my walking volume. Not long ago my daily step count was still in the single- or double-digit range, but I kept pushing my limit higher and higher. Three digits soon became four. Four digits eventually became five. And five digits might one day even become six. If that’s humanly possible at all.

The number of ten thousand steps a day—randomly pulled out of thin air by a Japanese company for advertising purposes and scientifically completely irrelevant—I can now easily manage. At the moment I’m hovering around an average of twenty thousand steps, like some kind of elite athlete.

My success—so inspiring to every single human on this planet—rests on three significant pillars of individual achievement: boredom, routine, and distraction. I simply have nothing better to do. I only do things if I’m used to doing them. And I only stick with something if my thoughts are occupied with something else while I’m doing it.

With alternative sporting activities, like jogging for example, I spend every second of the agonizing and seemingly never-ending process hoping that some confused hunter will mistake me for a graceful deer—or at least a somewhat stocky wild boar—and shoot me in the forest so it will finally be over. When I’m walking, on the other hand, I’m often surprised to realize I’ve already been doing it for two, three, sometimes four hours without actively noticing.

During the time when I’m more or less abusing my two still-functioning legs, I prefer listening to some kind of alternative-culture podcasts. For example 8-4 Play. Or Retrograde Amnesia. Or Axe of the Blood God. Anything where a few hardcore nerds passionately talk for hours about a topic that has narrowly missed mainstream mass consumption. The geekier, more multi-voiced, and more lively it is, the better.

Then, armed with my noise-canceling headphones, I stride rapidly through cities, across fields, along the lake. Past cars, people, and nice-smelling cafés, boutiques, and döner stands. Always with just one goal in mind: keep walking, always keep going, until I’m so exhausted I almost have to puke.

In Augsburg, where I’m currently studying as you may know, I have a regular route that has been carefully optimized but still leaves room for experimentation. I like the city a lot because it’s neither too big nor too small, and because you can disappear either into deserted alleyways or into the bustling chaos of the crowds—depending on what you feel like at the moment.

On a day completely at my disposal, I get off two stops before the main station, walk to the university library, treat myself to a coffee and a bit of laptop time, and then take a big loop through the Textile District, one or two parks, and the old town before buying something to eat at Rewe and heading home again.

And I do exactly that every day, over and over again, like a broken robot with no life. But it works. Because it’s routine. Because I like the varied route. Because I know exactly where, along my seemingly random path, I can rest, where I can get online, and where I can go to the bathroom. And that kind of certainty is exactly what mentally disadvantaged autists like me need.

This calculated knowledge drastically reduces the chances of unpleasant surprises while still leaving enough room for new ideas, secrets, and discoveries. And occasionally you even meet people you already know—or haven’t met yet—and can chat with them for a bit. At least that way you don’t feel quite so lonely while stubbornly walking in circles.

But Marcel, if you walk twelve-bazillion kilometers every day, why are you still such a fat pig? To that cheeky and completely unexpected question I have three perfectly thought-out and formulated answers. First: shut up. Second: no idea—how should I know? Third: I’m working on it, okay?! More information will be available in my upcoming self-help book, soon to appear at your trusted bookstore: Boss Transformation: From Battle Colossus to a Line in the Landscape.

While I’m preaching to you here about walking, what I actually want to make clear is that if you, for whatever reason, need more movement in your life, all you have to do is find something that doesn’t completely piss you off while you’re doing it. That can be literally anything. Except maybe sitting on the couch eating chips—unless you’re losing weight while doing it. If you are, then you’ve basically won at life.

The only rule you need to follow is that you must keep trying the different activities available to you until you finally find something where, while doing it, you don’t secretly wish for sudden cardiac arrest as an excuse to stop. Some people get lucky and find it on the first try, others only on the hundredth. That risk is something you just have to accept—but it’s worth it.

And if for me that means walking along paths in spring, summer, autumn, and winter—whether in sunshine, rain, or snow—and hopefully not getting run over by a bus, then for you it might be… who knows… football. Or tennis. Or climbing skyscrapers without safety gear or clothing. If the standard-issue stuff isn’t for you, then you should look beyond the obvious. Life is full of possibilities—you just have to use them.

Alright, enough guru talk for today. I’m going to put on my smelly sports shoes that are already almost crying out loudly for mercy, pick a five-hour podcast about the best Super Nintendo games of the early nineties, and head out into the wide world like little Hans. And if I do end up getting run over by a bus, at least I’ll have died doing something I truly love with all my heart. And not everyone can say that.

.

Dystopian Decadence:

A misaligned photograph of the future, born in the fever of Japan’s growth in the sixties and seventies. Traditions, quiet and fine, threaded through with wabi-sabi as an inner pulse, keep time beneath the noise. Buildings that refuse to shed their rust, that keep a film of dull gray on the fingers, stand as patient witnesses. A floating consolation, and a smell of open country, move down the lanes and linger in the alleys.

The story of Millennium Parade unfolds in a forked-off Tokyo, grown out of this zone – our shared room of side-by-side living. The city has laid aside its earlier addiction to polish and noiseless urbanity. Instead, it sets out toward a strange, beautiful, absurdly ideal future metropolis, nourished by disorder and yet leaning toward transcendence.

The self-titled debut album by the Japanese music group Millennium Parade has been on constant rotation for me since release. After all, the record is packed only with absolute bangers from start to finish. Bon Dance? Slammer. Fly With Me? Slammer. Familia? Slammer.

The only tricky part is explaining the genre, because Millennium Parade simply hurl everything they have, pop, hip-hop, electronic, dance, rock, funk, jazz, and rap, into a single pot, give it a hard stir, and then fling the multicolored mash against the wall to see what dazzles.

It splatters, clings, and somehow composes a picture that feels both chaotic and deliberate, a collage that swings from sugar rush to steel-edged groove, music that keeps its playfulness even while sounding engineered with obsessive care. Unskippable.

Millennium Parade persuade not only with modern songs for modern people, but also with a visual presentation rarely seen. The videos and live appearances by the collective surrounding Daiki Tsuneta of King Gnu overflow with off-the-wall ideas and meticulous craft, mixing animation, stage design, and camera play into a kind of kinetic theater.

Every frame feels engineered, yet the work breathes. Spectacle never strangles the spark. Their aesthetic extends the music’s argument. The future can be unruly and tender at once, a city of images that invites touch. And I can hardly wait to finally hold the new record from this Japanese collective in my own hands, whenever it may choose to appear. Because nothing would make my heart happier than waking in a neon-soaked, alternate-timeline cyberpunk Tokyo.

.

Cool Guys in Their Hot Rods:

Vroom, vroom, vroom—off they go, those daredevil devils in their souped-up death machines. At the Redline, after all, anything goes. The greatest racing competition in the universe only takes place every five years, and that’s exactly why absolutely everyone wants to claim the glory for themselves. All while organized crime and militaristic governments try to exploit the spectacle for their own purposes.

Joshua Punkhead, a reckless hotshot who has clearly never heard of speed limits and who crashes through everything with his ultra-tuned ride that isn’t up a tree by the count of three, has only one goal: to become the winner of the Redline. And that’s despite the fact that his crush, Sonoshee, is also competing—and has absolutely no intention of letting him win.

The murmur among the intergalactic spectators grows loud when it becomes clear that the current race will take place on Roboworld. Its militant inhabitants have absolutely no desire for a bunch of insane sports junkies to tear across their planet and possibly stumble upon one or two secret weapons of mass destruction.

A deadly game begins. Because it’s not just the other racers chasing Joshua—whom everyone simply calls JP—but also the president of Roboworld and his lackeys, who have set their sights on him and his fellow competitors. Can this loudmouthed guy with gasoline in his veins conquer both the Redline and Sonoshee’s heart?

From the first second to the last, Redline is fast-paced and wildly colorful action, occasionally broken up by quieter moments to catch your breath. JP is a likable jerk with his heart in the right place. And both the different drivers and the surrounding characters offer enough depth, soul, or simply fun to keep the audience entertained.

If Redline is anything, it’s stylish. You could pause the film at almost any random moment—every single frame would be a vibrant work of art. Whether it’s the tech-packed racing machines, the densely detailed locations, or the sensual women, Redline bursts with illustrative highlights, all underscored by slick music, bombastic sound effects, and one cool line after another.

By the end, it’s hard to believe what an overwhelming visual spectacle has just unfolded before your eyes, and you almost doubt whether you even caught everything that happened at breakneck speed. After all, the screen practically explodes toward the finale in a firework display of glaring colors. But perhaps that very doubt is what makes you want to watch the film all over again.

You can call Redline many things—but boring is definitely not one of them. Anyone who enjoys cool guys in hot rides and even hotter girls who constantly raise the stakes in every scene will appreciate this anime. Everyone else can keep puttering along in their Fiat Punto through a 30-km/h zone and avoid taking any risks in life.

.

Something Beautiful Is Going to Happen:

The vacation spot outside Vaasa devoured the four Lund girls. With their tiny bones and their tanned skin, an entire era disappeared. Six kilometers of winding coastline, a popular bathing resort in the fifties. Rows of changing cabins, tall reeds rustling in the wind. Here one finds the era the conservatives long for: when parents could send their children to the beach unsupervised, two dollars for ice cream and a bus ticket in the pockets of their summer trousers.

Mom and Dad shook their heads in concern and concealed the news about the children in Messina, Graad, Gottwald, where, it seemed to them, every week the tiny skeleton of a child was found cast into a replacement wall. Regularly, someone’s daughter who had been kept captive in a basement there for thirty years would flee into the street and scream for help.

But not here. Here there is social democracy. And the delicate peach blossoms of social democracy, its gentle aid programs, these progressive things make the broken soul of a person flare up with a kind of hope. This fantasy land will remain forever untouched by that strange technical urge to build a secret underground room, one with a ventilation system whose vents are disguised in the lawn as miniature clay windmills.

These dark fever clouds of the mind cool in the clear mists of open air; the breath of the distant blue glaciers freezes the sick thoughts of a person. Vaasa. One would much rather live here. And then, on a Tuesday morning, clouds beneath a blue sky, the four sisters went swimming.

The computer role-playing game Disco Elysium, released in 2019 by the Estonian studio ZA/UM, takes place in a world that is raw, merciless, and devoid of any sign of empathy. In an era of political upheaval, in which the survivors of a ruthless war still have to wipe the blood from their faces, everyone searches for the remnants of happiness—whether in one of the great metropolises or far away from the depressive bustle.

Harrier Du Bois, a detective of the 41st precinct of the Revachol Citizens Militia, called simply Harry by his few friends and many enemies, wakes one morning in a run-down seaside hotel with no memory of his past or of the world around him. He and his temporary partner from the 57th precinct, Lieutenant Kim Kitsuragi, have been called to the once idyllic coastal town of Martinaise to investigate the brutal murder of a loudmouthed soldier.

The decaying world of Disco Elysium is full of interesting stories, viewpoints, and characters. From the first minute, the game is like a talkative book that wants to devour you and take your breath away with its never-ending chronicles. Wherever you lead Harry—through the enchanted church, the small supermarket, or the desolate swamp—with every step the history of a place collapses over you, a place that shouldn’t even exist like this… or perhaps it should?

Disco Elysium thrives on its enormous freedom of choice and the not-to-be-underestimated weight of chance. This begins even before Harry opens his eyes for the first time and continues all the way to the bitter end—when you only then realize the path you have taken, without having had any sense of what you may have missed. But by then it is already too late.

Harry’s limited time in Martinaise is essentially a search for himself disguised as a detective adventure. Do you want to confront the town’s inhabitants as a permanently drunk Nazi? As an all-knowing philosopher? As an unabashed muscleman? As an authoritarian logician? Or rather as a likable charmer? The possibilities in Disco Elysium seem almost limitless.

Anyone who immerses themselves in the world of Disco Elysium must renounce every distraction; they must become one with every single polygon that transforms into a living painting on the screen; they must become Harrier Du Bois. Or rather: Harrier Du Bois must become you.

Disco Elysium is an experience that likely does not exist a second time in this form or with this intensity. Martinaise may cover only a fraction of what the rest of the world—lingering in a fog that continuously approaches you—has to offer, but one can sense the immense drama hidden all around. And with every conversation, every question, every new idea, you come a little closer to this epic—without ever being able to grasp it fully. For the greater whole, one simply is not ready yet—and probably never will be.

.

The Empty Heart:

If I want to, I can become friends with a great many people in a very short time. No matter where I am, no matter the situation, no matter who I’m dealing with. Then I’m funny, captivating, and so incredibly openhearted that it feels as if we’ve known each other for a lifetime.

I share intimate stories and secrets, confess my greatest sins and fears, and give them the feeling that I understand them and would move even the most unreachable levers just so that, simply by having met me, they might become happier. And that’s despite the fact that we only met for the first time five minutes ago.

In the past, I was almost proud of this ability—to actively switch off my shyness, lethargy, and social phobia and suddenly flip them into their complete opposite. Thanks to a trick I taught myself, which I call spontaneous mental distraction, and which works by thinking about something completely different just before doing something stupid or illogical, I do the boldest, craziest, and most charming things without having the chance to reflect on them beforehand. There simply isn’t enough time.

Those actions then feel completely natural and not wrong at all. And afterward I’m always glad I dared to do them, because it allows you to reach people who would otherwise have remained closed off to you. It’s fun to bend the world to my advantage this way. And I once thought that this absolute accessibility made me a better, more complete—and yes, also more popular—person.

Because of this unconventional character trait, I quickly became a central part of many different circles of friends, some of which only formed because of me. I enjoyed it when people desperately wanted to do things with me, competed for my favor at parties, or fell in love with me simply because they believed I was the first and only person on this planet who truly understood them and their problems. The feeling of emotional superiority eventually became normal to me.

But an oppressive truth that I initially dismissed as nonsense slowly became a sad certainty over time: I am a ghost. An empty heart wrapped in flesh without the slightest trace of empathy. A bus full of loudly wailing orphaned children could explode in front of me and it wouldn’t just be that I didn’t care—I would actually be annoyed that the little brats chose this exact moment to burn in front of me and block my way.

The only reason I can make friends with other people so quickly and easily is that they mean nothing to me. And if I do happen to take a particular liking to someone, I analyze them for so long and so intensely until I’ve finally gotten to the bottom of the fascination that drives me crazy—only to drop them afterward like a hot potato. Because I’ve drained everything from them. And then they become, at best, boring or, at worst, unbearable.

When I look back today, thanks to social media, at the various groups of friends that I once thought I was a fundamental part of, many of them still exist—just without me.

The photos that once showed their faces pressed closely together beside mine now have to make do, years later, with one less forced smile. Friends with whom I spent drunken summer nights and spun countless legends became, as if I had never existed, strangers from one day to the next.

I essentially sucked them dry and moved on. Like a ruthless wanderer of emotions who, just a moment ago, was still in the middle of his loved ones—feeling, celebrating, and fucking—and the next moment, when no one was paying attention, had suddenly disappeared.

Never seen again, on the way to the next adventure, only to pull the same stunt as before—just with different faces. At least I brought a few strangers together, so maybe my hunger for feelings had some good side to it, I lie to myself.

If I want to, I can become friends with a great many people in a very short time. No matter where I am, no matter the situation, no matter who I’m dealing with. Then I’m funny, captivating, and so incredibly openhearted that it feels as if we’ve known each other for a lifetime.

Sometimes I wonder whether I even possess any kind of character at all or whether I’m simply a soulless shapeshifter who only ever reflects whatever brings him closest to his current goal. Ideally into the favor, thoughts, or genitals of the person in front of me.

Always the right answer ready, always a cheeky remark at hand, always the correct balancing act between compassion, seriousness, and humor. And if I do give the wrong response once in a while and feel the inner pain of the resulting mental setback, then I learn from it, adjust a few inner screws, and correct them on the next attempt. But is that really me?

The question of who one actually is is as old and clichéd as life itself. Perhaps I’m simply a Frankenstein’s monster cobbled together from book quotes, television wisdom, and sayings I once picked up from someone I happened to admire—pretending to be a human being, when in truth I am nothing more than a parasite somehow kept alive, feeding on the fears, dreams, and problems of others.

Then I pounce like a starving predator on the first depressed-looking victim who crosses my path, tear them apart skin and hair and bone, and indulge myself in their remains so that something—anything—finally fills me again. A new body, a new thought, a new warmth. Anything other than the tasteless nothingness to which I’ve grown accustomed for so long.

But the hint of satisfaction lasts only a short while and disappears as quickly as it came. Because nothing can fill the seemingly endless emptiness inside me—especially not another person who only wanted to be loved, held, and saved, and who is now nothing more than a vague memory in my continuous bloodlust.

So I move on again, disgusted with myself, toward the next pretty face. Hoping that this time everything will be different. Surely it will be.

.

Adventures on the Sand Planet:

In the future, our planet will transform into a strange new world in which humanity must endure on an Earth without rain or oceans—only vast, desiccated deserts where two teenagers struggle to survive and search for hope.

The sea, the sky, and the land have been completely polluted by humankind when mysterious objects fall from the heavens. These gigantic structures crash onto the planet and absorb the air, the water, and most living beings into their core, stripping the Earth of the very essence of its nature.

The few remaining inhabitants of Earth fight to survive in a hostile environment and against an oppressive ruling race known as the Rodo. A hot-tempered boy named Ran struggles against the Rodo and against a world in which rain has become nothing more than a legend.

Green Legend Ran by Yu Yamamoto and Satoshi Saga, released in 1992 and 1993, is one of those anime titles that rarely appears on cult lists. Sure, Akira, Spirited Away, or Perfect Blue are always represented, but Green Legend Ran has long existed in the shadows—and entirely without justification.

In fact, it was one of the few titles I once ordered from a catalog on VHS. Alongside *El Hazard* and a *Bubblegum Crisis* music video tape. For whatever reason. I had always intended to get the otaku documentary instead—but at the time I was too young, since it was restricted to viewers 18 and older.

As mentioned earlier, Green Legend Ran is set on a post-apocalyptic Earth with a distinct science-fiction aesthetic. After an extraterrestrial invasion in which six of the so-called Rodo—an apparent race of gigantic monoliths—crash down from space, a massive climate shift is triggered that completely eradicates the oceans and rainfall, transforming the planet largely into an immense desert.

By that time, humanity had already devastated the environment, making a kind of apocalypse inevitable—similar to other environmentally themed anime such as Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind, Nadia: The Secret of Blue Water, or Future Boy Conan.

In this brutal new world, two polarized factions have emerged. The first, the Rodoists, is a fanatical religious sect that worships the Rodo while practicing a form of hydraulic despotism. All communities are clustered around one of the monoliths, as they are the only remaining sources of water and food—most of which is gathered near the monoliths in what is known as the Sacred Green.

Travel between communities is rare, since beyond a certain distance from the monoliths the environment becomes so depleted that even the air is no longer breathable, requiring pressurized, spaceship-like vehicles. The second faction, the Hazard, is a secret revolutionary movement that opposes the Rodoists.

The protagonist, Ran, is a young orphan determined to join the Hazard and seek revenge on the scar-chested man who killed his mother. He becomes caught in the middle of a battle between the Hazard and the Rodoists, during which he meets a mysterious silver-haired girl named Aira.

Ran helps several Hazard scouts escape from his city and joins them. Soon afterward, the Rodoist army attacks the Hazard base. Aira is forcibly evacuated by the Hazard against her will. Ran attempts to board the sandship but fails, and begins pursuing it across the desert in a stolen pressure suit.

He is rescued by traveling water and food merchants just before his air supply runs out. The leader of the traders, a thoughtful man named Jeke, offers to help Ran rescue Aira. The rescue attempt goes awry when the Rodoists attack the Hazard sandship and recapture Aira while Ran and the merchants attempt to infiltrate the same vessel.

Divided into three chapters, Green Legend Ran is a rousing adventure film featuring carefully crafted characters who seek happiness after the apocalypse. What begins in a dusty shantytown quickly evolves into an epic journey across deserts, forests, and sacred cities to uncover the secret behind the Rodo.

Co-developed by the well-known illustrators Kenji Teraoka and Yoshiharu Shimizu, the work brims with action, humor, and occasional touches of romance. At times it is quite brutal and, toward the end, features more exposed breasts than many a hentai manga.

Naturally, Green Legend Ran can be interpreted as a metaphor for the environmental catastrophe toward which our species is undeniably heading. Perhaps the Rodo were summoned by the Earth itself to prevent humanity from causing further harm—who knows.

Anyone who enjoys a densely packed adventure anime filled with rugged characters, gigantic sandships, religious fanatics, and a bit of bloodshed will have just as much fun with Green Legend Ran as I did. Not least because of the outstanding soundtrack by Yoichiro Yoshikawa. And who knows—perhaps the film ultimately presents a not-so-implausible vision of the real world’s future.

.

The Modern Diet:

Honestly, I don’t even know why I’ve been eating less meat in the past few weeks. And when I say less, I actually mean a lot less. It just happened that way. At lunchtime, the cafeteria always served a portion of French fries with ketchup and mayo for a buck—and that was enough for me. Out of curiosity, I picked up a pack of vegan salami at the supermarket, which was actually quite good. And a little avocado, hummus, or pickles with the cheese sandwich: Best.

I’m not concerned about health, climate, taste, culture, or even the animals in my newly discovered meat reduction. Let the critters be chopped up. Preferably quickly and efficiently. Why does everyone want to eat only happy animals? The unhappy ones would be much more worthwhile to be torn out of life. Then, at least, it would be over for them.

I can think of at most three reasons why I don’t have to think like a psychopathic Patrick all day long of roasted pigs, fried chicken, and freshly butchered cows just because I’ve stuffed myself with nothing but fruit, vegetables and cereals for a day.

First, I don’t give a shit about what I eat. I’ve long since reached a redemptive point in terms of nutrition, where the focus is on coffee. And everything else is second to seventh priority. Whether I’m shoving a veal cutlet in my mouth or some soy wheat bean mash-based alternative pudding, I don’t give a fuck. It’s all good—as long as it doesn’t make me throw up.

Second, it makes me feel better than everyone else. At least secretly. When I put the vegan cold cuts on the conveyor belt at the checkout and the guy behind me has his half a kilo of mixed mince for 2.99 dollars, I think to myself that I’m the more modern person of the two of us. Of course, I don’t tell him that. But I let him know it by placing the sliced, rancid sunflower seed porridge with shredded vegetables in it in such an optimal position that he can read what’s written there in big letters under the supermarket logo: I’m better than you!

Third, I am a follower. And that’s probably the most important reason of all. You just have to tell me certain things often enough, and eventually, I’ll believe them. When I watch more or less secret recordings of some redneck slaughterhouses, where chickens are trampled, piglets are castrated, and cows are mistreated, then it has at most a short-term effect on me. But the more often I witness such things, the more I think to myself: Okay, okay, from now on more cucumbers, tomatoes, and potatoes should suffer. I get it.

A few years ago, I wrote an insanely important literary text with the brilliant title Vegetarians, fuck you! Meat is for eating, in which I vehemently defended my desire for dead animals. And when I read through this, you can’t call it anything else, philosophical masterpiece, I actually continue to stand by everything I wrote back then. Especially the first three words of the headline are still very close to my heart.

But I have learned in recent months that it is extremely important to try something new and only then decide whether you want to continue on this path—or not. After all, we live in a time that often seems overwhelming and thus equally depressing due to its countless possibilities, but on the other hand, it has never been made easier for us to simply dare to do something different and thereby develop an eclectic view of the world, society and, hopefully, ourselves.

By the way, before any militant vegetarians or even, God forbid, vegans celebrate me now for being the first person on this planet who has at least somewhat reduced his meat consumption, I would like to clarify something. Because I have three more than important rules with this newly discovered life feeling, which I use myself to keep almost rigorously.

First, although I actively do not buy meat and sausage produced from cattle, pigs, chickens, turkeys or, what do I know, monkeys. But I do eat these products when they are offered to me somewhere. For example, when people invite me to eat. The reason is that a little meat can’t hurt. Possibly to prevent some ominous nutritional deficiency. Besides, I assume that this meat, in restaurants or at people’s homes, is of higher quality than when I get a bag of frozen Chicken McNuggets at Aldi.

Secondly, I am not a vegan. It doesn’t matter if it’s milk, cheese, butter, yogurt, eggs, honey, or whatever else you can squeeze out of the critter: It ends up in my mouth. I don’t feel like giving up eighty percent of all food just because, for whatever reason, it contains milk proteins, has been filtered through some fish bladders, or once a chicken egg flew past it. Give it a bone! That amount of boomer mentality is necessary.

Third, I eat fish. Ha! I can already see the surprised look on your face. I love fish. Salmon, pike perch, dorado, trout, halibut, herring, scampi, tuna, clams, crabs, eel, squid, cod, mackerel, plaice, oysters, shrimp, and sardines. Whatever is crawling around in the sea, I will find it, catch it, and inhale it on the spot. And you can send me as many links as you want to some pseudo-scandalous documentaries in which seventy thousand fish have to spend the rest of their lives squeezed into a rain barrel, just so I can slap them on my sushi: I don’t care.

As I write this, I’m stuffing myself with a cheese sandwich with the last vegan salami slice that was still lying around somewhere at home, and I just can’t find a reason why I should have bought the ones with cows, pigs, or horses in them instead. But maybe this is just the beginning of my journey. Possibly I will eventually evolve into a higher being who can live on nothing but sun, air, and coffee. And probably only then would I be truly satisfied with myself and the world.

.

Terror of the Underworld:

When Arano steps out of the station in Shibuya, his fate is already sealed. The young man came to Tokyo to make his dreams come true: he wants knives to rain down—preferably into the hearts of the Yakuza, toward whom he harbors an inexplicable and ruthless hatred. There are too many superfluous elements in this world, is the credo he keeps murmuring to himself.

Before long, the otherwise rather taciturn Arano, played by Chihara Junia, finds himself caught in the crossfire of two rival gangs and, amid the chaos, befriends the club owner Kamijo, portrayed by Onimaru, as well as the outspoken skater Alice, brought to life by Rin Ozawa. Yet the fragile bonds he forms are quickly torn apart again by greed, revenge, and arrogance.

The film Pornostar, released in 1998, is the debut work of Japanese director Toshiaki Toyoda and can at least not claim one thing: to be normal. Somewhere between drama, thriller, and gangster film—and with a bucket of stage blood thrown in—a hint of a love story even begins to grow, all within the restless backdrop of a Tokyo on the brink of the new millennium.

Pornostar is full of blood, violence, and death. And yet all of this unfolds almost matter-of-factly, incidentally, and with such raw craftsmanship that one almost feels as if sitting in the same room, witnessing one human life after another being extinguished—only to end up back out on the street afterward with a cigarette in one’s mouth, blowing one’s hard-earned yen in the nearest arcade.

The film lacks sympathetic characters with whom one might identify. Arano’s motive for wanting to cleanse the world of the Yakuza can be sensed, but for the most part it remains hidden from the viewer. Kamijo’s fateful step into the clutches of the underworld happens just as casually as the final meeting with Alice, who, of all the characters, might have represented a possible way out for Arano and his dream of raining knives.

But perhaps it is precisely this narrative flaw that makes Pornostar so special. Perhaps one does not even want these people to find happiness. Why should they? They chose of their own free will to take part in this cruel game of the underworld. Perhaps they practically deserve Arano as an avenging angel. And perhaps he too, with the first murder, plunges himself into an abyss from which there can be no escape.

In fact, Pornostar reminded me of the film Love & Pop by Hideaki Anno, which was released the same year—without sharing any other similarity beyond the fact that both are set in the same city. Yet the raw, almost documentary-style filmmaking of both directors could be seen as two sides of the same coin. Only that one side is filled with misbehaving schoolgirls, and the other is… well… filled with blood.

Anyone who watches Pornostar expecting to feel satisfied, inspired, or even happy by the end is mistaken. The film takes no prisoners—quite the opposite. One might wish for one or another character to experience the Grand Summer of Love on Fiji and blissfully slide into the year 2000, but as the Bible already says: For all they that take the sword shall perish with the sword. And in this heartless world, defying that sacred prophecy seems almost impossible.

.

I Only Dreamed of You:

Mima Kirigoe is ready to leave her career as a celebrated pop idol behind and pursue a dazzling future as an actress. However, shedding her former image proves far more difficult than she ever imagined, and the dark world of show business threatens to drag her into the depths of despair.

Is Mima able to keep a firm grasp on the things that define her while the strains of her new career path take their toll and a menacing presence from her pop-star past lurks in the background? And as delusions, fiction, and reality begin to blur in her mind, what is it that truly defines her in the first place?

Without a doubt, the 1997 film Perfect Blue by Satoshi Kon, based on the novel of the same name by Yoshikazu Takeuchi, is one of those anime you must see before you die. And just last night, I was finally able to cross that very point off my bucket list. What begins as a story about a starlet and her stalker becomes increasingly entangled with each successive scene in a web of shattered dreams and dubious memories.

As an enthralled viewer, you break through one meta-layer after another with each of Mima’s thoughts—only to be utterly drained in the end by the torrent of psychotic impressions that has just washed over you. Who is Mima? Where is Mima? And above all: why is Mima?

Step by step, you witness how the initially sweet, cheerful, and naïve Mima is cast into a hell of depression, murder, and rape. Who can be trusted—and who cannot? When do you stop being yourself? And in the end, which decision was right—and which was wrong?

Perfect Blue is a visually striking and, thanks to Masahiro Ikumi’s fantastic soundtrack, sonically powerful journey into the deepest abysses of the human soul. The film shows that hope and despair are often separated by nothing more than a single unintended step, and that truth is frequently nothing more than a long-forgotten thought that may once have existed but was quietly replaced by fear, panic, and the longing for a redeeming answer.

.

The Pop Terrorists:

While the whole world celebrates South Korea’s cultural boom and it seems like half my classmates are studying abroad in the country’s colorful capital because of it, we must remember a unique collective alongside veterans like Blackpink, Red Velvet, and BTS, and newcomers like Ive, Le Sserafim, and NewJeans: Balming Tiger, the quirky pioneers of Seoul’s idiosyncratic rap scene.

This special group is a blend of multimedia outsiders who throw K-pop from its glittery, polished world into the underground. Imagine Girls’ Generation meets Brockhampton, or Keith Ape meets Abra. I’m hoping to see them live soon, because that would be more than amazing.

Balming Tiger, the self-proclaimed multinational alternative K-pop band, aims to conquer our boring world with their unorthodox style. The collective consists of performers Omega Sapien, Sogumm, BJ Wnjn, and Mudd the Student, producers San Yawn and Unsinkable, video directors Jan’ Qui and Leesuho, visual artist Chanhee Hong, DJ Abyss, and writer Henson Hwang.

Each artist in this ensemble brings a distinct artistic identity and energy, showcasing a broad range of versatility. They approach music with a focus on diversity rather than adhering to a single genre. I especially love Sogumm’s soulful additions to the group’s artistic repertory.

Named after the infamous Asian Tiger Balm ointment, the band’s core creative vision is to reflect and represent the current young generation. Their music is a call to trust in our collective selves, move forward, and embrace love.

Their debut album January Never Dies, along with their first extended play and other works, are vibrant expressions of today’s hyper-expressive Asian youth, drawing from a wide array of Western influences in hip-hop, electronic, and alternative genres.

Songs like Sexy Nukem, Just Fun, and Loop? are as original as they are diverse, appealing even to those listeners who might be skeptical about the aggressive South Korean pop wave.

.

Don’t Stop Shooting!:

I finally watched Shinichiro Ueda’s 2017 film One Cut of the Dead the other day. And what can I say? It is, as anyone who has seen it can attest, absolutely fantastic. The big problem is that I really shouldn’t reveal anything about it, not even the genre, because otherwise I strip away all the fun.

Only this much: One Cut of the Dead opens in a run-down, abandoned warehouse where a small film crew is in the middle of shooting a zombie picture… But of course it’s not an ordinary warehouse. Rumor has it that military experiments were carried out here… on human beings! Then, as if from nowhere, real zombies suddenly appear and terrorize the crew. A bloody struggle for survival begins…

What sounds like off-the-shelf junk from the recycling bin turns into one of the most entertaining indie films in recent years, half an hour in. Born in 1984, the same year as me, Shinichiro Ueda succeeds in playing with the audience’s expectations and, in one fell swoop, swings the mood of the entire film around so abruptly that I no longer know what’s up, what’s down, or where front and back even are.

The shift isn’t just clever, it’s brazen, gleeful, and meticulously prepared. Choices that first read as mistakes reassemble into punch lines and reveals. From that point on, the movie’s confidence is unmistakable, and I watch, grinning, as it keeps tightening screws I didn’t realize were there.

One Cut of the Dead lives on the goofs, mishaps, and blunders during the shoot, and on the fact that, while watching those legendary thirty minutes for the first time, I was thinking exactly the things that later suddenly make sense. That some scenes run far too long, that the actors often stare off in arbitrary directions, that the action sometimes unfolds entirely outside the frame. I’d say that, deep down,

One Cut of the Dead is a film about family—for reasons that, of course, only reveal themselves at the end. At the very least, Ueda’s work is full of surprises and grows not only funnier by the minute but also more coherent. If you want to escape the same old mush for nearly two hours, this zombie splatterfest has you covered. Don’t stop shooting!

.

Rebellious Girls:

The Japanese music label Wack, itself belonging to the J-pop giant Avex, is famous for its eccentric groups, among them BiSH, EMPiRE, and Gang Parade.

Founded in 2014 by Junnosuke Watanabe, the company declared a clear mission: To offer a proper stage to artists who are a little more experimental, a little stranger, and not immediately comfortable inside conventional idol frameworks. Crucially, that support doesn’t mean indifference to results.

Even while foregrounding otherness and odd textures, Wack aims its performers toward success and plans their activities with that outcome in mind. The label’s identity sits between provocation and pragmatism, pairing freedom to try unusual ideas with careful presentation and smart promotion so that unorthodox performers can still reach large audiences across Japan.

ASP is one of Wack’s newer workhorses, arriving at a moment when the label has to reorient after the breakup of the exceptional unit BiSH.

To keep up in Japan’s fiercely competitive music market, the group now opens itself even more to alternative directions, trying approaches that are off to the side of mainstream idol pop while still jostling for attention.

Their first album bore a telling, tone-setting title Anal Sex Penis, which makes plain how seriously they take themselves: not at all.

The provocation operates like a wink and a shrug, announcing a willingness to poke at taboos and to laugh at expectations, even as the underlying aim, to succeed within that crowded field, remains in view. From the outset, the band signaled that irreverence was part of their method.

The lineup, Yumeka Nowkana, Nameless, Mog Ryan, Matilder Twins, Wonker Twins, CCCCCC, and Riontown, cheerfully kicks at the fixed rules laid down by their predecessors, especially in live performances, where expectations are treated with irreverence.

Yet they never completely hide what they are at heart: a cast pop-punk band full of shy girls who from time to time prefer to strike quieter, more reflective notes, like in I Won’t Let You Go, my personal favorite.

That mix of brashness and modesty, of noise and pause, shapes ASP’s character. Precisely this seemingly paradoxical spectrum sets them apart from the competition and gives them an unusual opportunity to extend their otherwise rather short half-life, in contrast to the countless peers whose momentum fades quickly in the same crowded, fast-moving idol environment. It keeps curiosity alive while allowing growth without abandoning their origin.

.

Four Sisters and a Funeral:

The three sisters Sachi, Yoshino, and Chika live together in a large old house in the Japanese coastal city of Kamakura. When they learn of the death of their estranged father, they decide to travel to the countryside for his funeral.

There, they meet their shy half-sister Suzu for the first time. They quickly grow fond of her and invite her to live with them. Suzu happily agrees and begins a new life with her older sisters.

In Hirokazu Kore-eda’s movie Our Little Sister, set against the vivid backdrop of Kamakura’s changing seasons, the four sisters navigate the full spectrum of human emotion and sustain one another through life’s trials, forging a profoundly intimate bond.

Against the backdrop of the summer ocean sparkling in the sunlight, the glowing autumn leaves, an avenue of magnificent yet fleeting cherry blossom trees, hydrangeas dampened by the rainy season, and a brilliant fireworks display announcing the arrival of a new summer, their moving and deeply relatable story portrays the irreplaceable moments that make up a true family.

Accompanied by the wonderful music of the legendary composer Yoko Kanno—who previously created soundtracks for works such as Tokyo Sora, Petal Dance, and Kamikaze Girls—the audience shares in the sisters’ emotions and challenges in every scene. Every touch of the piano keys carries meaning; every stroke of the violin tells a story.

Our Little Sister is an airy, gentle yet sorrow-tinged drama about people in different stages of life who, though marked by the past, refuse to let it dictate their fate. Sachi, Yoshino, and Chika do not hesitate for a second to take in their young half-sister Suzu and offer her the family she never had.

And when the four young women stand on the beach after yet another trial, laughing as they gaze into the distance, one feels grateful to have met them and the other residents of the small town—to have shared in both the joyful and sorrowful changes.

I hope that the future of the four sisters will shine as brightly as the small fireworks display that had only moments before illuminated the overgrown garden of the large old house.

.

The Pointless Love:

As she sets off for home, I call after her with the first stupid remark that happens to come to mind. The slender girl dressed in black, wearing white sneakers marked by life, turns around one more time, grins, calls back, and raises her hand. I wave too, and then she steadily becomes a little smaller—smaller still than she already is.

The smoke from her cigarette dances in the otherwise so clear air. I only watch her go for a brief moment; I can’t bear the sight—and the cold that gradually embraces me—any longer. I open the heavy glass door and step once more into the building bursting with other people’s dreams, which over the past months has turned into our refuge from the usually loud, chaotic world outside, seemingly abandoned by all good spirits.

I deliberately want to miss the moment when she disappears completely behind the walls. Maybe because deep down I really am a coward, and this way it takes longer to sink in that without her, here in these light-flooded halls, it’s quite lonely.

There is no worse feeling than being in love with a girl I shouldn’t be in love with—for various reasons. Perhaps because there are simply too many differences between myself and the one on the other side. Because the girl of my affection already has someone who occupies the position I’d like to hold myself. Or because the girl I keep thinking about, at the most impossible times—maybe even constantly—simply doesn’t share the same emotions I so vulnerably hold out to her. And if things go really badly, then all of these points apply at once and hit me all the harder.

One almost insurmountable truth seems certain: this love makes no sense, has no future, and therefore no value. And there’s nothing I can do to change that, no matter how much I turn it over in my mind or wish it were otherwise.

With all my might, I try to find objective arguments for why it would be far more logical if I didn’t feel any affection for the shamelessly grinning person opposite me. But no matter how meticulously I search for them, they simply don’t exist—anywhere.

The lists, tables, and diagrams of negative reasons remain empty again today—as always. Because there’s absolutely nothing that argues against wanting to immerse myself in this body that seems almost ready to burst with different talents.

How could one possibly resist the sober, disarming, and sharp-witted charm of this girl? She’s pretty, she’s smart, she’s cheeky. She always has a stupid quip at the ready, either glows with energy or sinks apathetically into her thoughts, and every time I talk to her she opens up like a human incarnation of a lucky bag full of interesting stories.

Her manner flows seamlessly from brazen brat to motivating muse, without entirely dispensing with rules, guidelines, and socially relevant conventions. At heart, she’s one of the good ones—no matter how much she sometimes tries to conceal that with her abrasive ways and loose tongue.

I collect every new detail of her life like puzzle pieces scattered all over the globe, which, piece by piece, assemble into a lovingly decorated and partially scarred treasure map I can use to orient myself as I discover still more adventures, memories, and inspirations.

Then I sit there, listen, marvel, and travel back with her once more to those fateful moments that made her the—quite literally—wonderful personality she is today.

And no matter how great, meaningful, or varied I may consider my own existence, it’s nothing compared to the plays unfolding before my mind’s eye. I watch, transfixed, and can only gape in astonishment.

This pointless love is not a shock, not a jolt, not an earthquake. It gnaws at me, always a little—sometimes more, sometimes less. Usually in situations when I least expect it, or when I catch sight again of a certain smile shaped by the experiences of a young but exciting life. For a brief moment I am happy, only to remember shortly afterward that there was a reason my heart would soon feel a little heavier again.

Yet contrary to appearances, this pointless love is not an ominous feeling—quite the opposite. Far more bleak would be to deny myself this emotion from the outset. For the fact that I can feel this pointless love anywhere at all in my stunted, empathy-stripped soul is proof that I haven’t completely closed myself off from the world, that I’m not yet dead inside, that there’s still hope I won’t someday drown irretrievably in my minimalist melancholy.

As she sets off for home, I call after her with the first stupid remark that comes to mind. There are no lies hidden in my words, no mockery, and no false expectations. I am fully aware of the position from which I’m almost shouting after her, and that her small world is already fully occupied by figures I can neither replace nor wish to.

The slender girl dressed in black, wearing white sneakers marked by life, turns around one more time, grins, calls back, and raises her hand. I wave too, and then she steadily becomes a little smaller—smaller still than she already is.

The only hope rests on a future in which I may continue to follow that pretty face and listen to its stories. After all, our time together is limited. But the psychologically perhaps not entirely sound fact that other people bore me or even get on my nerves after the shortest time, while this girl does not, is sometimes so new, so rare, so unusual that I simply can’t help staying close to her and waiting with curiosity to see what might still come.

Of course, I have to be careful not to fall into the same traps so many others have fallen into before me. Because unrequited affection can tip over in the blink of an eye, leaving me not only with the sad certainty of an unfulfilled romance but also standing amid the ruins of a friendship turned to dust and ash. And I should obviously avoid that at all costs; otherwise this depressing journey will end not only empty-handed, but with a wounded soul as well.

There’s no worse feeling than being in love with a girl I shouldn’t be in love with—for various reasons. And yet, secretly, I’m a little glad about it. Because it also says a great deal about me and the path I have taken so far.

After all, this emotion, classified as negative from the very beginning, can—with a different perspective—transform in no time into a veritable treasure trove of consciousness-expanding ideas. I just have to draw the right conclusions from it and must not act according to outdated patterns of thought.

This pointless love is a bittersweet gift from which I can draw insights, gather inspiration, and gain a lesson or two about myself and others. It gives me the opportunity to enrich my own life with the experiences of the girl, which she shares so trustingly.

I should by no means close myself off to this chance—on the contrary, I should face it as open-heartedly as possible. Even if, or perhaps precisely because, I will probably never reach the actual goal: becoming a part of the world of the one to whom this pointless love is directed.

But hope—no matter how small, feeble, or unrealistic it may be—is known to die last. And sometimes that’s all I need to keep going in this usually so loud, chaotic world abandoned by all good spirits that waits for me out there, beyond these light-flooded halls.

.

God Is Chill:

To live up to my rediscovered campaign of unconditional openness, I of course don’t want to withhold how my first semester in the Interactive Media program at Augsburg University of Applied Sciences went. After all, we’ve just received the grades for our exams. And let’s put it this way: it went better than expected. Really.

It borders on an organizational miracle that I survived the scientific area so unscathed. Maybe the evening group prayers with my fellow students via one or two text messages actually did help after all. And that despite having learned that you should never demand anything from God, only ask politely. And also: if you only turn to God in a crisis but don’t think of him when things are going well, then he’s first busy forgiving you before he helps you. But apparently God is more laid-back than one might think. So, in that sense: thx. And: lots of love.

Of course, I didn’t miss out on a clichéd bit of fun: trying to crash the university’s online administration server with one reload after another until the grades finally became visible. But it didn’t work. Probably I should have reloaded not every five minutes, but every five seconds. Oh well—now I know for next time.

My lawyer, by the way, advises me to make it clear at this point that I will not attempt to crash the university’s server—or any other server, or anything else in this world—in any way whatsoever. Neither intentionally nor accidentally. These days, you can never be too careful. Many thanks to Mr. Goldberg of the law firm Goldberg and Partners. Props where props are due.

I’m quite satisfied with the results of my first semester, but I’m also aware that I’ll only manage the coming years if I cram the material into my head more consistently, more regularly, and with far more commitment. With the right mix of Anki, repetition, and the Pomodoro technique. At least those are the three strategies I plan to focus on. Probably. Maybe. Hopefully. What do I know about proper studying anyway.

I’ve also realized something else—something I hadn’t definitively decided at the beginning of my studies: which degree I want to pursue. Bachelor of Arts or Bachelor of Science. We have to know by the third semester.

But if the computer science exam offers even a small glimpse of what’s still to come, then I will cling to the Bachelor of Arts with all my might. Because otherwise I might end up standing there empty-handed. After all, good and bad art can always somehow be argued for—but computer science is like a killer robot gone out of control. It knows no mercy, only zeros and ones. Pass or fail. Life or death. And I know which side I’d be on.

Apart from that, I can say that the Interactive Media program at Augsburg University of Applied Sciences is a lot of fun, very varied, and should be interesting for anyone who feels reasonably at home in both the artistic and the technical worlds.

A large part of the entertainment value also comes, of course, from the fellow students with whom you battle through lectures, practicals, and exams—but that’s probably the case in any degree program. And in that respect, I’ve been really lucky. Shout-outs to Group C, which a perhaps slightly too clever person rightly described as those who always sat in the back row at school.

Unfortunately, I can no longer claim to be a freshman. This very time-limited term, in combination with my not-quite-so-dewy person, had always caused wide eyes and the occasional stammer in people standing opposite me.

In any case, I’m curious to see what new adventures await us in the second semester, and I’ll be spending the next few weeks reviewing the fundamentals of programming so that I can also pass the postponed exam successfully. Hopefully. But at least I’m not the only one who hasn’t yet managed to get this topic behind them—for whatever reasons.

And with that, we close another chapter of my rediscovered campaign of unconditional openness. I hope you’ll join me again next time as the more or less exciting journey of Marcel Winatschek as a student continues.

Will he crash a certain server? Will he be the first person to be awarded a master’s degree in the second semester because he is finally recognized as the global genius he always claimed to be? So handsome, so smart, and yet so modest. Or will he be exmatriculated because the glass buildings of the university simply aren’t fireproof enough for him and his—let’s call them—accidents? Stay tuned; we’ll know more soon. Hooray.

.

A Single Moment:

Sometimes all it takes is a single instant, a moment, even the tiniest thought—and suddenly I’m falling again. Just a second ago I was laughing, content with my life because, for once, something had finally worked out the way I had always wished it would, or at least I had no reason, for a change, to hate the world and every single person in it. And then, a second later, I plunge back into the same old, worn-out abyss from which it becomes a little harder to climb out every time.

Then there seems to be no gray, no gradations. Only black and white. I am either saturated with the pure joy of eternal existence, or nothing has any meaning and it would be better if I disappeared from the face of the earth right here and now, because then I wouldn’t have to think anymore about why, for God’s sake, everything was shit again—even though just a few minutes ago it had been going so well. There is nothing in between. No rope, no safety net. I either soar or I crash.

What I had just considered secure, good, and immune to negative thoughts is suddenly put back on trial. I start to brood. To doubt. To question everything I had already regarded as settled. Mistrust then envelops me like a leaden cloak that wraps itself smoothly around my body and slowly presses me down to the ground—where, apparently, I belong.

Was that comment this morning really meant kindly? The emphasis was a bit too ironic, the accompanying look just a little too mocking. Is it possible that everything this person has ever said to me and about me wasn’t meant seriously at all? Is there any proof that we actually get along well? He’s probably just making a fool of me. Because in the end he’s just like everyone else. And I have no choice but to see through him before it’s too late—for whatever that might mean.

Often it’s enough if the other person doesn’t immediately reply to a supposedly totally casual, funny WhatsApp message that is definitely not dripping with self-doubt. No one could have guessed that the spontaneous-sounding remark had been painstakingly crafted over hours in a specially opened word-processing document and adorned with the perfect mix of emojis, punctuation, and colloquial touches to come across as humanly normal as possible when I finally send it at the optimally calculated time. After all, not everyone is such a complete psychopath as I am.

Then I suddenly find myself back on the same roller coaster as thousands of times before, with the familiar loops of thought that I keep trying to break—of course without success. Because in every mental decision I stubbornly take the same directions I have always chosen. As if I had learned absolutely nothing since the last collapse. And that, even though I had sworn to myself that next time everything would be better—or at least different.

So once again I rattle through all the stations of inner turmoil in my little, rusty cart of questionable metaphors and at the end of the ride arrive at the one single true realization I have always arrived at: that I am not worth it—whatever it is that happens to matter to me at that moment.

I am not worth having friends. I am not worth experiencing love. I am not worth being attractive. I am not worth being taken seriously. I am not worth being successful. I am not worth being an equal. I am not worth being allowed to be happy. Everyone else is worthy—just not me.

But I should have known that from the start. Why had I even bothered to build up hopes in the form of this fragile house of cards when it was obvious that the slightest gust of wind would make everything collapse again? I could really have spared myself the effort. How foolish. If you won’t listen, you have to feel. Your own fault.

These extreme mood swings always come when I need them least. When I had finally made peace with myself, when I had found myself again, when the world wasn’t actually so bad. But no such luck. The world was bad. Really bad. It had conspired against the one person who simply wanted to find happiness. And that person was me.

Of course, it went without saying that I myself was responsible for the misery I had just thought myself into. As always, it was the others who were to blame. After all, I only wanted the best for myself, for them, for everyone. Didn’t they sense that? Didn’t they know that? Maybe I should have tried a little harder to convince them of my deeply good intentions…

Once I’ve hit the ground, I’m left with only two options: to remain there and come to terms with the bitter truth that I’m simply a bad person, or to reach upward again in the hope of somehow finding a way to change my fate carved in stone—however that might be possible.

Sometimes all it takes is a single instant, a moment, the tiniest thought—and suddenly I’m falling again. Perhaps it’s impossible to defend myself against these external and internal influences. Perhaps they always hit me, and with such force that I no longer know which way is up or down. Like an enemy who knows me inside and out and always aims precisely at the most exposed weak spot. Which makes sense. Because that enemy is me—and no one else.

And yet perhaps I can set up mental safety nets in advance that will catch me when these mood swings take aim at me again. A bag full of good, safe thoughts that protect me from falling back into the familiar abyss. Comforting truths that remain valid even when everything else has fallen victim to despair. And a solid basic trust in myself—that despite my psychological shortcomings, I have worth. As a person. As a friend. And as someone whose love for themselves will, hopefully, overcome even the greatest fears.

.

Literature for Sheep:

Japanese music is a collection of anthems for my own little messed-up world. Whether it reminds me of sad anime episodes, the churning background music in video games, heartbreak, or my first few moments at Narita airport, stepping through the Welcome to Japan banner into an universe of cultural, technological, and human wonder, J-pop and J-rock are always there for me.

They plug a little of the constant melancholy in my small, perpetually annoyed and bored heart. The energetic music of bands like Indigo la End, King Gnu, and Asian Kung-Fu Generation is a frequent soundtrack to my thoughts, worries, and desires. And so are Hitsujibungaku.

For decades, rock music from the Land of the Rising Sun was in a creative crisis. There was little sign of anarchy, change, or revolution. Artists in the genre seemed content to strum away as a copy of a copy of a copy, delivering a run-of-the-mill sound that, for good reasons, didn’t resonate outside Japan. They were simply too tame, too dull, and too boring, like rebels without hate—or even drugs.

Hitsujibungaku, however, also don’t aim for destruction, decline, or chaos—but that doesn’t really matter. Celebrated by the Japanese press as a smooth whirlwind, Hitsujibungaku, roughly translating to literature for sheep, quickly made their musical breakthrough.

Hitsujibungaku’s songs speak of the search for happiness, dancing in the moonlight, and dreams of an endless summer. When I hear Moeka Shiotsuka’s voice, accompanied by Yurika Kasai and Hiroa Fukuda, I know they mean what they play.

In a world full of unknowns, even if you pretend to be smart, you’ll still get hurt, she sings. At some point, you became focused on avoiding failure, giving up what you really want, without even knowing what that is. Not seeing it, overlooking it, becoming skilled only in despair. It’s a bit too early to decide it’s already too late. If anything is worth preserving in our superficial world, it’s this kind of emotional sincerity.

.

I Can Have Alone Time When I’m Dead:

When I started my studies, my biggest concern wasn’t the course material, the professors, or fears about what the hell I would do with my degree once I had it in my pocket, but rather how the other students would react to me. After all, at the end of my 30s, I was twice their age. Most of them could have been my children. Maybe they were. One or two faces did look familiar…

During the introductory week, my suspicion that I was the oldest person there was confirmed. By a long shot. Not just in my degree program, but generally within a 500-meter radius. Even the janitor was probably younger than me. And he was about to retire.

Should that have given me pause? Yes, perhaps. But now that I was here, I had to make the best of it. In any case, I was mentally preparing myself to spend the next few years in isolation at the senior citizens’ table, slurping porridge and philosophizing with myself about the good old days.

When MySpace was still the measure of all things. When I still had to rewind VHS tapes before returning them to the video store. When the song of the year was a techno remix of the Smurfs. Every Smurf loves to listen to the radio, full blast anyway. The rhythm crashes into every leg—that’s how dance music for Smurfs should be!

While the university president gave his third welcome speech of the day, and seemed just as enthusiastic as he had been during his first, the campus was packed with young people who were equally confused and nervous, scurrying back and forth.

Their T-shirts were decorated with more-or-less creative graduation slogans: 12 Years of Walk of Fame – The Stars Leave, the Fans Stay. And: Graduate Today, Captain Tomorrow. Or even: With Their High School Diplomas in Hand, Heroes Become Legends.

With so much concentrated youthfulness, I felt like throwing up. However, I had of course expected this sight beforehand. Because I’m extremely clever. What else could I have expected? Exactly. After all, these people were the norm here—not me. They were the crowd; I was the outsider.

Between the tours of the building, the city, and the room where the beer fridge was located, I got into conversation with my fellow students. Little by little, the uniform mass of more or less fashionably dressed bodies transformed into interesting characters with names, pasts, and humor.

I quickly realized that they were just normal people, each with their own fears, hopes, and dreams. And they were all as excited as I was—if not more so—just for different reasons.

A week full of get-to-know-you tours, various house parties, and a boozy study trip to the Bavarian Forest later, I no longer felt any fear of not being able to fit in because of my advanced age. When I entered the cafeteria the following Monday, the first familiar faces were already beaming at me. Hey, Marcel! I heard someone call cheerfully from one of the tables.

I grinned back, followed the lively crowd, and sat down in a free seat among my new companions. Of course, I’m still the old fart. Just like Jenny is the pothead, Tim is the farting guy, and Fiona is the one who got plowed in a fire truck. I’m not the only one who gets stupid looks from strange students—no, everyone has their own baggage to carry, in one way or another.

The key to happiness in this case is unconditional openness and a positive attitude—no matter how difficult that may be at times. Being part of a group means being aware of my possibly not-so-glorious shortcomings and taking it with humor when they are in the spotlight. The important thing is to have a good line ready to keep the wheel turning and shift the focus to the next person. It’s a game I only lose if I don’t participate.

Since that fateful first week, hundreds of encounters have blossomed into friendships that have taken me all over the city—to various apartments, clubs, and bars. No matter where I go, I see familiar faces everywhere. Not only from my degree program, the student council, and the courses I took, but also from friends, roommates, and acquaintances who didn’t shy away from me because of my differences but, on the contrary, invited me into their lives.

Of course, I still have to listen to the occasional stupid comment. But that’s part of it. Today, it’s completely normal for me to walk the streets with them, exchange stories, create memories, and delay the morning a little longer. I’m happy to learn more about those who confide in me, to support them with advice, action, and some jokes, and to help them solve one problem or another conscientiously—provided they want that at all.

If you think you hate people, that you don’t need anyone but yourself, that you’re better off closing yourself off from everything and everyone, then you need to pack your bags, set your old life on fire, and go somewhere else. With new people, new opportunities, and new adventures. And as quickly as possible.

Of course, these relationships are not permanent either. I will soon forget many names, faces, and encounters. And they will forget me. Because they have moved on. Or because I have taken a different path. And that’s perfectly fine. Because new people will come into my life again, over and over, as long as I make it possible, in whatever way I can. Some of them will stay—for longer, maybe even forever.

But these opportunities only arise if you don’t nip every conceivable contact in the bud just because you’ve convinced yourself at some point that you’re happier alone. Out of fear, out of pain, out of feeling overwhelmed. Because no matter how strong you think you are in this matter, at some point you will break down. And then it will be too late.

As we stumble out of Iveta’s apartment door, shouting loudly and smelling of tequila, wine, and popcorn schnapps, to grab a few more beers to go, I glance briefly down the brightly lit street. New people are streaming through it, and in the buildings people are laughing, singing, and dancing.

Right now, at this moment, I am part of this backdrop, this ensemble, these stories. Because I took a chance and didn’t close myself off to the unknown, even though that would have been so much easier. Because one thing is certain: I can have alone time when I’m dead.

.

The Boy and the Murderer:

Mr. Long is not a man of many words. In fact, he hardly speaks at all. His talents lie more in… let’s say… practical work. Mr. Long is a Taiwanese contract killer. One of the good kind—someone who doesn’t ask questions when you give him a place, a time, and a target. Mr. Long simply does what needs to be done. And he’s pretty good at it. Usually.

After his assignment to kill a Yakuza boss goes terribly wrong, Mr. Long, played by Chen Chang, finds himself stranded in a remote Japanese town. With only five days to scrape together the money for his journey home, he receives unexpected help from a little boy named Jun, portrayed by Junyin Bai, and from the unsuspecting townspeople who have fallen in love with his culinary talents. With a makeshift food stand set up by his new friends, he begins cooking and selling Taiwanese noodle soup in front of the local Buddhist temple.

Trouble catches up with this unusual group when a drug dealer tracks down Jun’s mother Lily, brought to life by Yiti Yao, and through her eventually finds Mr. Long as well. Yet despite the inevitable confrontation with his violent past, Mr. Long will find it difficult to give up his new life.

A cold-hearted hitman is showered with altruistic love and forced to surrender to it. The Japanese director Sabu masters the art of blending the ordinary with the unexpected. With a sly touch, he sends his protagonists into unfamiliar territory that expands both their minds and their hearts. Mr. Long shows me that happiness can be found in the most unlikely places.

Mr. Long is difficult to assign to a single genre. With this film, Sabu created a drama whose unexpected moments are amusing, tragic, and shocking all at once—often at times when I least expect it. Just when I think I’ve figured the film out, around the next corner there’s either a clown, a chopped onion, or a knife that can hardly wait to strike again.

I wish for a happy ending for Mr. Long, Jun, and Lily—a place where the three of them can be happy and left alone by the merciless world. But the past of this small patchwork family catches up with them just when I’ve finally stopped resisting the tears welling up in my eyes.

In the end, I myself turn into one of those dreadful cliché viewers who laugh and cry at the same time—and I don’t even care. When Mr. Long looks out the café window to the other side of the street and his life suddenly gains a new meaning, I’m simply glad to have accompanied him on his turbulent journey of few words.

.

Feelings Without a Name:

In the most unexpected situations, I encounter girls whose sheer existence fascinates me so much that I can hardly comprehend it. It’s not as if I’m overwhelmed by love, hate, or pity, because the tentative affection I feel for the girl on the other side doesn’t fit into the emotional templates into which I’ve almost instinctively pressed all my previous encounters.

It’s not love, because I’m not consumed by jealousy, desire, or grief. It’s not hate, because I finally feel a touch of empathy again. I’m happy when the girl is happy, and sad when the girl is sad. And it’s not pity, because any supposed fragility I see in the girl is merely a reflection of my own inadequacies.

The more interesting I find a girl, the more I naturally want to learn about her. Even the smallest banalities that no one else is aware of—perhaps not even the girl in the spotlight—become significant, important, even overrated.

What kind of music does she listen to? What clothes does she wear? How exactly did she become the collection of ideas, ideals, and identities that she is today? And what would I even do with the answers to these questions? The incomprehensibility of otherness can drive me mad if I’m not careful.

Not only can I find no definition for my own feelings, I can’t even manage to pigeonhole the girl into neat categories. Every encounter brings new insights, and I feel compelled to shatter the theories I carved in stone the day before.

Then the floor, littered with dust and debris, bears witness to the fact that the irrefutable knowledge of human nature—which I had been convinced of all these years—was worth about as much as the time I wasted trying to find answers to questions that may not even exist. After all, not even the girl in whom I suspect this enlightenment knows of its existence.

Perhaps I project too much onto the girl. Perhaps there’s nothing there. Perhaps she’s just a normal girl who simply wants to come to terms with herself and the world around her and already has enough to deal with.

Maybe I’m just imagining that I’m a little infatuated with her and her supposed secrets because it allows me to ignore the complexity of my own life for a short time. After all, I can only receive my own happiness once I’ve figured out how the girl defines happiness. Reality can wait for me until then.

I rack my brains trying to figure out exactly what feeling I’m experiencing. Because if I could come up with a name for it—a definition—it would be easier to find a way to deal with it, to put it behind me, to come to terms with it. I’m not even sure if what’s buzzing around in my head is a real feeling at all, or if it’s just my imagination because I have too much time to think again.

The feeling without a name is too strong to ignore but too weak to fully engage with. So I carry it around with me out of slowly creeping habit and wait almost anxiously for the moment when it knocks on the door of my chaotic world of thoughts again—usually when the mischievously smiling face that first led me down this strange path, in the truest sense of the word, enters the room.

But perhaps this gap in my own emotional spectrum is also sad proof that I’ve lived my life so far in a predetermined manner, in which even my feelings were copies of copies of copies—from television, from books, from the lies of society. Their names are rules—no, almost laws—for how I should behave when I stumble into one of these feelings.

Do I feel love? Then I despise the relationship the girl is in, burst with jealousy when she even looks at someone else, and cry alone at night, masturbating into my pillow, because I will never be part of her colorful world.

Do I feel hatred? Then I turn the girl’s life into a hell on earth, set fire to her pet, her family, and her entire apartment building, spin the threads of manipulation so skillfully that she ends up collapsing in the street, screaming, because life no longer has any meaning.

Do I feel pity? Then I turn myself into a more or less invisible guardian angel who will do anything to ensure that the victim of my favor never, ever suffers harm again—and I make sure to feel really good and great and important about myself while I’m doing it, because otherwise it all makes no sense.

In the end, it’s all about me and no one else. Just like always. What’s the point of helping someone else if I can’t reap the rewards? Exactly. The worst thing about this nameless feeling is that I may not even have a right to it.

After all, there are far more important people in the life of the girl I want to impose my worn-out template on. I’m nothing more than a fleeting minor character whose stage appearance is so brief that I’m not even explicitly mentioned in the script—at most, perhaps, as a passerby, spectator, or guy no. 5.

But perhaps this insight is enough to make peace with the nameless feeling. Maybe it makes no sense to find meaning in it, because it’s not permanent and can disappear as quickly as it came—at the latest when the girl whose accessible gaze triggered it in the first place has moved on.

On to new scenes, people, stories. While I myself linger in the backdrop that has just been abandoned by the spotlight and is about to dissolve, watching the silhouette that once smiled so disarmingly, only to forget shortly afterwards that the nameless feeling ever existed.

.

A Student for Life:

After the more or less sudden end of AMY&PINK, I felt lost. For fifteen years, I had put all my energy into a project that was full of fun, passion, and hope at the beginning, but by the end had become nothing more than a slowly fading burden. When the bright lettering finally disappeared, I didn’t know what to do with myself.

I sank into idleness, the days just passing me by. Was today Tuesday or already Friday? February or September? What year was it anyway? I couldn’t bring myself to do anything productive anymore and spent days, weeks, and months going for walks, watching TV shows, and going through depressive phases where I just lay there, switching between scrolling through Reddit, YouTube, and Pornhub. From sunrise to sunset. And vice versa.

In my late 30s, my life seemed to be over. What else was there to look forward to? Except maybe a heart attack caused by too many frozen pizzas and too little exercise. The only things that kept me alive were the voice messages from my good friend Hannah, who probably knew me better than I knew myself at that point; the programming course I was forced to take by the employment office so that I would at least be busy with something; and the fact that I was far too lazy to commit suicide.

On a much too hot summer day in June, I took the cheap ticket to nearby Munich to run around in circles and listen to a few podcasts. After all, I knew the streets of my hometown so well that they were getting on my nerves. At least there was life in Munich, even if there was none left inside me.

After buying a picture book about Japanese pop culture in a bookstore—because that was the only topic that still interested me even remotely—I sat down on a free bench on my way back to the city center to leaf through it a little and, at the same time, press the ice-cold can of Diet Coke I had bought at the nearby supermarket to my mouth. Its contents had been my main source of nutrition for several weeks—after all, I didn’t want to get any fatter.

When I looked up, I noticed that the bench I was sitting on was in front of the city university. Young people were buzzing all over the grounds, chatting and laughing. Some were in a hurry; others were sitting on the grass. There was a lively atmosphere. The large buildings watched over the small, mostly hectic figures whose futures would be shaped within them.

The setting reminded me of TV shows such as Gilmore Girls, Community, and Greek, and I found it a little sad that I had never had the opportunity to lead what was surely a pretty exciting student life.

My secondary school diploma wasn’t good enough for that, and after completing my training as a media designer, I had simply ignored the option of being allowed to study. After all, I wanted to earn money. With AMY&PINK. And that would undoubtedly live forever and soon become an international media empire. Like Vice. Or the New York Times. Or Russia Today, for that matter. Who needed a degree?

So there I was, in my late 30s, sitting on this bench with nothing but a book and a can of Diet Coke to my name, feeling sorry for myself. Two young women had taken a seat next to me. The blonde proudly told me that her little sister had just registered in time for the entrance exam for the coming winter semester. The brunette was a little overly surprised. I hope she gets accepted! She definitely will!

When I got home, I became interested in what I could have studied with the qualifications I had gained through my vocational training. Communication Design was listed. Graphic Design. Interactive Media.

I was a little annoyed that I hadn’t taken advantage of this opportunity, but had instead been so stubborn as to consistently ignore any path that led me away from my very own trip. At the time, I was even proud of that stubbornness.

While lethargically clicking around on the internet, I came across the website of the Augsburg University of Applied Sciences, which had been offering a combination of design and computer science in its Interactive Media program for several years and advertised it with flowery words.

The program sounded like a colorful grab bag of everything I enjoyed. Designing. Programming. I would even learn how to create video games. It was pure madness.

Before I could sink back into self-pity over never having taken advantage of this opportunity, a date caught my eye. There was still one week left to apply for the program. The admission requirements stated that not only a high school diploma but also a vocational qualification would be sufficient—provided that I passed the necessary entrance exam.

I took a sip from my seventh can of Diet Coke that day, thought for a moment, and filled out the linked application form. I can give it a try, became my motto from that day on. After that, everything happened very quickly.

I was invited to take the entrance exam, which I passed. I was invited to an interview, which I passed. I was sent the application for enrollment, which I submitted on time. At the beginning of October, I entered the campus of Augsburg University of Applied Sciences, sat down in a lecture hall for the first time, and suddenly I was a student.

Just a few weeks earlier, I had thought that my life would be over by the time I reached my late 30s—that there was nothing more to come, that all my dreams had been dreamed and all my hopes buried. Suddenly, I found myself in a completely new story, with new goals, new tasks, and new people. An unexpected adventure had begun—after all, I’m a student for life.

.

Men Who Stare at Streets:

Yusuke looks out of the window. Accompanied by the voice of his deceased wife, houses, trees, and the sea fly past him. He doesn’t notice that there is another person sitting in the red Saab 900 Turbo in front of him as he fills in the gaps in the sentences with his own words. Misaki will soon drive him to a place where he can finally find himself.

Last night, I saw Ryusuke Hamaguchi’s Drive My Car for the second time. The Oscar-winning Best International Feature Film is based on the short story of the same name from Haruki Murakami’s 2014 book Men Without Women and tells the story of two people whose fateful encounter no one could have foreseen—least of all themselves.

Yusuke is a successful stage actor and director who is married to the mysterious Oto, a beautiful playwright with whom he shares a peaceful life despite a painful past. When Oto suddenly dies, Yusuke is left with unanswered questions and the regret that he could not really understand her—nor did he want to.

Two years later, still struggling with Oto’s death, Yusuke accepts an offer to direct a production of Uncle Vanya in Hiroshima. He drives his beloved fire-red Saab 900 Turbo to the big city in the west, where, upon arrival, he learns to his surprise and disappointment that, for legal reasons, he is forced to let Misaki, a young chauffeur who hides her own traumatic past, drive his car.

Rehearsals progress, and eventually Yusuke and Misaki develop a routine, with the Saab increasingly becoming an unexpected confessional for both driver and passenger. Less pleasant for Yusuke, however, is the decision to cast Koji, a handsome young television actor with an unwanted connection to his late wife, in the lead role.

As the premiere approaches, tensions between the cast and crew grow, and Yusuke’s increasingly intimate conversations with Misaki force him to face uncomfortable truths and uncover haunting secrets left behind by his wife.

I’m glad I’ve now seen Drive My Car for the second time, because with each new encounter I have different expectations of the characters, whose thoughts and actions seem to reflect my understanding of human interaction.

The character of Misaki, for example, now vaguely reminds me of someone I met recently. Her sober, disarming, and astute manner invites me to want to learn more about her. What does she think? Why does she think that way? And who—or what—made her who she is today?

The flowing conversations in Drive My Car are like intimate dances whose intention is to build bridges to the other person—brick by brick, meter by meter. With each new day that dawns in Hiroshima, there is a chance that two people will open up a little more to each other, only to be rewarded with new insights, no matter how painful they may be. And these insights apply not only to the other person, but often to myself as well.

Only those who have not even attempted to understand Drive My Car would describe it as calm. Every scene is seething with tension: Yusuke, who cannot forgive himself for his wife’s death and searches for answers that may not even exist; Misaki, whose observations only become words of trust when she assesses the chances of further hurt as low; and Koji, whose search for meaning can only save others, but not himself.

Eiko Ishibashi’s selectively used music dispels the absolute silence at just the right moments, which is otherwise interrupted only by glances, touches, and conversations. Extensive tracking shots across the autumnal Japanese backdrop make the characters appear as if in a diorama, their desires, hopes, and dreams seeming small and lonely.

A meta-level runs through the entire film: the story of Uncle Vanya, who is confronted with his life and his missteps in Anton Chekhov’s world-famous play. The character of Vanya represents someone who has spent his life working toward something that never came to fruition. It is a reflection on time and emotions wasted—a theme that both Yusuke and Misaki grapple with throughout the film, as both deeply regret their past relationships.

Drive My Car is mature in the truest sense of the word. Its characters have shed all childishness, all banality—indeed, all traces of joie de vivre—and try, with their last ounce of strength, to maneuver safely through the thicket of painful memories, only to have to admit in the end that they cannot drive away from the past, not even in a red Saab 900 Turbo.

.

Songs of Rebellion and Loneliness:

I recently watched the documentary Our Lies and Truths about the rise and downfall of the Japanese girl group Keyakizaka46. After all, in recent years Techi and her comrades have been the idols I listened to most.

Songs like Silent Majority, Ambivalent, and especially 黒い羊 still play on endless loop for me today, and the accompanying music videos are performative masterworks.

Yasushi Akimoto, who has been responsible for acts such as AKB48, Onyanko Club, and Iz*One and also created Keyakizaka46, is not for nothing Japan’s most gifted and at the same time most hated producer. Some people say Yasushi Akimoto destroyed the Japanese music industry, and I agree, noted Agency for Cultural Affairs Commissioner Shunichi Tokura in cutting words.

The most striking thing about Keyakizaka46, first sister group to Nogizaka46, once slated to debut as Toriizaka46, and already missing two members before its first show, is neither the music nor the choreography, and certainly not the powerful man behind them.

It is the force with which their center, Yurina Hirate, seized the group’s inner climate and public face in no time, then year by year slipped toward madness, until, after much back-and-forth, she finally announced her departure in 2020.

Soon after, the band renamed itself Sakurazaka46, unable to cope with the hole left by Yurina Techi Hirate, who had joined at fourteen. The 2020 label-made film Lies and Truths depicts sustained decay—depression, burnout, and total overextension from Techi, and a strange mix of envy, fury, and admiration among her colleagues.

Techi was a prodigy, and no one could handle it—least of all herself. In interviews, former members recall Yurina Hirate’s impact and search for when everything went wrong.

No one knows what turned her, hailed as a reborn Momoe Yamaguchi and, at fifteen, among the year’s most attractive idols, from a cheerful girl into someone alone and apathetic in dark corners. Only she does, and she won’t say. Maybe someday, she hinted in a 2020 radio interview.

Even in the film she appears in fragments: She dances, sometimes falls, draws gazes, then implodes, sobbing I can’t! before backstage staff force on a new costume.

Keyakizaka46 sang of youth, rebellion, and being different—messages that pierced schoolgirls and traumatized outsiders. What remains is brief brilliance, lingering remnants, and a restless soul seeking happiness elsewhere.

.

When the Voice of an Entire Generation Fell Silent:

Even today, people I don’t really know still ask me—by email, letter, and by shouting through open windows—what actually happened to AMY&PINK. The portal of good cheer. The party ship of Berlin’s newcomers. The voice of a generation that never wanted to grow up, partied for three days straight at Berghain, and woke up one morning in the ruins of their own denial of reality.

The reflexive answer to the highly individual question of why AMY&PINK no longer exists is: No idea. And that wouldn’t even be a lie. Because I really don’t know. Maybe it just happened that way at some point. Maybe there was no longer any place for it in today’s media world. Maybe things just have to end at some point before they are kept alive artificially (even longer) for reasons that are incomprehensible.

AMY&PINK saw the light of day in 2007 as the successor to my private blog, Tokyopunk, just as I was on my way to Berlin to begin my training as a designer in the field of conception and visualization at a digital new media agency. Everything was new, everything was exciting, everything in my life suddenly revolved around the German capital and the colorful people who bustled around in it.

I filled my new project with personal stories, finds from the internet, and the occasional fresh music video, and found passionate writers such as Hannah, Caro, Ines, Misha, Wenke, Sara, Meltem, Jana, Daniela, and Leni to take the site to the next level. AMY&PINK transformed from a small blog into one of the nation’s most widely read online magazines.

In the early years of the new decade, AMY&PINK was the digital go-to for young rebels, hipsters, and avant-gardists—and those who wanted to be just that, or at least know what these chaotic guys were up to and spouting nonsense about.

We were invited by brands such as Mercedes, Microsoft, and Deutsche Telekom to events throughout Germany and around the world: New York, Toronto, London. Rome, Shenzhen, Los Angeles. Lisbon, Monaco, Las Vegas. To get drunk there with Kendrick Lamar, Tokio Hotel, and Frank Ocean. And all because we wrote strange things on the internet, constantly used swear words, and there were people who wanted to read exactly that.

And every now and then there were bare breasts to be seen. Or girls throwing up. Or swastikas made of cocaine. The more provocative, the better. The press loved and hated us at the same time—much like our readers.

Unfortunately, the problem was that I continuously maneuvered AMY&PINK into a spiral of what the fucks from which I soon couldn’t get the site out. At first, everything was funny, ironic, and over the top, but at some point a completely far-fetched professionalization of the content took hold. On the one hand, we had to be even more outrageous than everyone else to keep readers interested; on the other hand, advertisers demanded fewer exposed genitals on the homepage.

On top of that, the Wild West days of the internet were over by the mid-2010s. Any visual content that wasn’t contractually approved by the copyright holder, rights manager, and preferably three to twelve additional lawyers couldn’t be published. The site lost its visual punch because everything consisted of official press photos, the texts became increasingly absurd and unrealistic, and AMY&PINK transformed from a radiant rock star into a washed-up madman who drunkenly assured strangers on the street that he was still cool—really now, you, burp, stupid cunts!

With the departure of important AMY&PINK authors, the diversity of voices that had long ensured balance in the site’s content also disappeared. Before the decline, every photo series about fucking teenagers was accompanied by an intimate text about heartbreak, every LSD-soaked music video by an amusing travelogue, every bizarre triviality by a story about the small and big experiences of those who had chosen AMY&PINK as the medium to realize themselves digitally. After all, they could have published their texts in Vice, Huck, or the local newspaper.

But at some point, there were only empty shock articles left—attracting attention at any cost, when no one had been interested for a long time. I tried to save AMY&PINK. Really. God is not my witness, but my friend Hannah is—without whom I might have drowned in my own madness long ago. The poor thing had to listen to the drama every day, for years on end. You have to be able to make something out of this! That can’t be all there is! Maybe try again in another language?

I was caught in an endless cycle of brooding, doubting, and trying things out. If I were even a fraction as cool as I always pretended to be in my countless articles, I would have poured gasoline on AMY&PINK years ago, lit it on fire, and let it explode behind me in cinematic slow motion while I walked toward the camera with a crazy smile on my face. But I’m not cool. And I can’t just let go that easily.

After all, visitor numbers were still quite good, the content we had built up over the years was being clicked on diligently, and any SEO expert would have been happy with such metrics. But in the end, I spent far too much time trying to save AMY&PINK—time that I should have invested in more important things. Finding a real job, for example. Having children, planting trees, building houses, whatever.

Only to admit to myself at some point that AMY&PINK wasn’t going to work out. Not because the website itself wasn’t working anymore, but because I had outgrown the whole thing and it was finally time to say goodbye. AMY&PINK had been fun at one point, but now it wasn’t anymore. And no number of clicks in the world could change that feeling.

So one fine morning, I sat down in front of my laptop with a hot coffee, made a backup of the site, and then deleted it from the server. And I felt nothing. Nothing at all. I was simply done with the whole thing. AMY&PINK was dead. And I didn’t care. I finished my coffee, got up, and went for a walk.

Even today, people I don’t really know still ask me—by email, letter, and shouting through open windows—what actually happened to AMY&PINK. The portal of good cheer. The party ship of Berlin’s newcomers. The voice of a generation that never wanted to grow up, partied for three days at Berghain, and woke up one morning in the ruins of their own denial of reality.

The reflexive answer to the highly individual question of why AMY&PINK no longer exists is: Because I wasn’t enjoying it anymore. And it took me a long time to admit to myself that this reason alone was enough to end it, even though logic said otherwise.

Instead, I now have my own little blog again, which I can fill with content that really interests me, and where it doesn’t matter if I’m the only one who reads it or likes it. Here, it doesn’t matter if I write about my current favorite Japanese band or publish a short story about a city at the end of the world. I can even rescue some articles from AMY&PINK and post them here if I think they would fit in well. Why not? I can now (once again) do what I want. Hurray.

I learned a lot from AMY&PINK and the people who had anything to do with it. But now it’s time to let the subject rest and start something new. The world out there is huge, and the possibilities for finding happiness are limitless. You just have to have the courage to let go, reach out to the unknown, and let it lead you to new adventures—before it’s too late.

.

The Transience of Written Words:

This website has undergone many changes over the years. From a small blog by a Bavarian media designer to a collection of stories by creative minds from all over Germany. From the Bible of Berlin nightlife to a gonzo magazine for hipsters. From a digital news site to a never-sleeping ticker of viral events. Until, at some point, I was faced with a sheer monster of false expectations and hopeless prospects.

This blog wanted to be everything, but collapsed as a result, unable to do anything right anymore. For various reasons. I had forgotten what this was really about and wanted to remain relevant at all costs in this fast-paced media world. With my eyes fixed on the future, there was only one choice: keep up. Keep up with the news. Keep up with the trends. Keep up with the loud, shiny, and flashy. I had to be even more extreme than everyone else.

At some point, I just blindly churned out news, lookbooks, gossip, YouTube videos, shitstorms, and tits in a completely irrelevant mix. The main thing was that something was happening. Whether I liked it or not didn’t matter. Stand out at any cost. Fake it till you make it. The future could only get better. But it didn’t.

I broke down in a battle I could neither win nor wanted to win. This website had filled itself to bursting with nonsense and bullshit. Of course, I didn’t want to admit it, while everyone else was already shaking their heads. It had to be wilder and wilder, bigger and bigger—stand out at any cost.

A relaunch every year. Every year the same promise, packed into a pseudo-epic article, that now everything would be like it used to be. That I understood what readers really wanted. That this blog finally wanted to be good again.

But I broke that promise again and again. Because the world around me was getting louder and brighter and flashier, and I couldn’t stop the carousel I was on until my bad metaphors blew up in my face and this website literally broke under the weight of verbal and illustrated shit.

In the end, I just wanted it to be over. I was about to delete the site, the archives, all the files. This blog had failed. I wanted world domination. But what I got was a glimpse into the absolute emptiness of a possibly bright future that I had ruined for myself. None of the fun, the expectations, the hope remained.

On a final night drenched in wine, I rummaged through the old texts—the ones that were published on this website when blogs were just becoming popular. When life was still a game. When the world still seemed to be in order. They had long since been lost in digital nirvana and crushed under a cement block of meaninglessness. I read them. And they were good.

These ten-year-old texts about love, about dreams, about the expectations of an entire generation—they were good. Just good. These texts were better than most of what had been published on this website in recent years. All the fast-paced dramas and rumors and deeds of some walking, breathing attention deficit disorder. All the digital constructs of a money-hungry industry whose little cogs had long since been ravaged by burnout and depression. All the never-ending news of a world that seemed to spin a little faster with each passing day.

They were obsolete the moment they were written. Wasted words without meaning. Without resonance. Without weight. I realized that there was only one way to save this blog. And that was to do the exact opposite of what I had considered my task in recent years. To get off this metaphorically still incredibly stupid carousel—which today seems to almost take off due to its speed—to look at it from a safe distance and to go my own way, with my own definition of time.

What does that mean now? I want the texts that appear on this website to be relevant not only in the next ten minutes, but also in the next ten years. Someone in the distant future, when hoverboards can really hover and we fly to Space Spring Break on Mars for the weekend, should read them and think: That speaks to my soul. That inspires me to try something new. I should show this to the people I like and love.

You shouldn’t be able to tell how old the content is. Because it’s completely irrelevant. Of course, no sentence is written for eternity. Texts written from the heart are always a snapshot of a moment in time—a portrait of the era in which they were written. But We’re Too Young for True Love has a different half-life than Miley Cyrus Pissed on the Floor Again. Although the latter does have its appeal, in a way. For some people, at least.

What does that mean for this blog? I want it to become a colorful grab bag full of surprises again, with something wonderful for everyone. Whether you want to read a fascinating review of an apocalyptic film or the emotional thoughts of me traveling through Japan. Whether it’s about the enamored introduction of a new band or the painful experiences of growing up. Whether you just want to look at a few digital treasures or witness an epic story in the depths of Berlin.

It’s important to me that the articles that appear on this website from now on are so great, so beautiful, so worth reading that they will still be relevant in one, two, five—maybe even ten—years, without losing the rough edges that move me when I write.

Cowboy Bebop will still be a cult classic in a decade. Haruki Murakami’s books will still be important in a decade. Texts about heartbreak will still inspire people, a decade from now, to take control of their lives again—or at least to wallow in self-pity a little more beautifully.

To make a fresh start, I have completely archived this blog, wiped the server, and started again from scratch with a just do it mentality. Little by little, I will now select old articles, revise them, correct them, improve them, and polish them up so that I can publish them again. But of course, I will also regularly add new content and mix it in so that there is always something exciting to discover.

With each new day, my digital diary will grow a little more—slowly, steadily, and with joy. For this purpose, I’ve created a design that is as minimalistic, spartan, and brutal as possible, because nothing should distract from the content.

The irony of this text lies in two points, of course. Firstly, it is basically just another one of those repetitive pseudo-epic texts that praise the resurrection of this website and swear solemnly that everything will now be as it used to be. After all, that has always worked very well so far. And secondly, it denounces the transience of words and is itself one of those texts that, for reasons of content, will lose its relevance in no time at all.

I simply want my blog to become a peaceful garden in the middle of an unmanageable digital jungle full of nonsense—where everyone can have fun, whether they want to indulge in the profoundly formulated transience of being or just a few short notes from my chaotic mind.

Everyone is welcome here, free to look around and take away the thoughts and opinions they consider important and right. Or not. I would be delighted to continue accompanying, entertaining, and inspiring you, my readers, on your turbulent journey through life. In my own way.

.

Fantasy for Pedophiles:

Have you ever sat in front of the TV or your laptop and wondered what the dumbest thing to watch might be, after binging every single episode of The Big Bang Theory, Two and a Half Men, and How I Met Your Mother? The answer is: In Another World with My Smartphone. That’s the dumbest thing. Not the dumbest anime—no—but simply the dumbest thing that has ever been created and then broadcast anywhere, at any time, in any way. By a mile. By a mile the dumbest.

What’s it about? The fifteen-year-old Touya Mochizuki is accidentally killed by God with a lightning bolt. As an apology, God lets him live again—but since he can’t send him back to his old world, he reincarnates him in a fantasy world instead, granting him one free wish.

Touya uses that wish to take his smartphone with him into the new world, which God kindly upgrades as well. He can’t contact his old world with it, but the phone can easily be recharged with magic and otherwise works just like it did before. He can read news websites from his world and even use Google Maps for his new fantasy world.

Since God happens to be having a pretty good day, he also boosts Touya’s physical, magical, and cognitive abilities on top of that—basically as compensation for accidentally murdering him. Touya makes full use of his second chance at life and befriends lots of different people, mainly women and high-ranking figures in the new world. He begins traveling from country to country, resolving political disputes, completing small quests, and casually enjoying himself with his newly found allies.

What at first sounds like a nice little anime adventure you could watch in between other things soon turns out, after the opening episodes, to be a pointless parade of boobs. After Touya meets about ten different run-of-the-mill girls in the first few episodes—ranging from toddlers to sex bombs to a 600-year-old vampire queen in a teenage body—the story quickly devolves into nothing but the question of which of the under-served minors Touya will eventually marry.

In Another World with My Smartphone feels like it was written by a pubescent twelve-year-old who has absolutely no idea how social interactions are supposed to work in order to make even the slightest bit of sense.

For example, one episode revolves solely around the extremely important question of which of the ten walking fantasy pin-ups for perverts gets to show Touya her more-or-less existent underwear first. Every now and then a few ninjas, monsters, or dragons show up, but they’re dealt with within five minutes so the show can quickly return to what it considers the important stuff.

I watched In Another World with My Smartphone all the way to the end. Not because I hoped the series might somehow turn things around and tell an adventurous story in what initially looks like a cliché fantasy world—no. After the first three episodes it was already clear to me that this was all garbage.

And In Another World with My Smartphone isn’t stupid in a funny way or dumb in an entertaining way. No—it’s simply awful. Plain and simple. Honestly, I was just too lazy to turn it off and find something else to play in the background while I jotted down stock market prices or something.

Everyone responsible for In Another World with My Smartphone, or involved in its creation, should be sued into the ground. You know me: I like breasts. Small ones, big ones, young ones, old ones, light ones, dark ones. And I don’t care if feminism gets trampled underfoot, as long as it makes sense within the world being presented to me.

That’s the great thing about movies and TV shows: they can show whatever they want. They don’t have to be role models. They can go over the top. Just because some poor idiot gets shot every week in CSI: Miami doesn’t automatically mean every viewer thinks murder is a good thing.

But In Another World with My Smartphone simply makes no sense—for anyone. Neither for the audience nor for the characters. And just when you’ve finally settled a bit into the characters and the world and think, Well, it’s not that bad, the creators throw a few more half-naked lunatics into the animated harem for idiots.

What haven’t we had yet? Robots with boobs? Here you go! A scientist in stockings? Here you go! A twelve-year-old with a marriage fetish? Here you go! Now everyone fight over Touya—the uptight loser in the white pimp coat whose only defining trait is a magical phone. Even the most pedophilic Harald would probably feel like he’s being thoroughly messed with while watching In Another World with My Smartphone.

If you’re thinking about giving In Another World with My Smartphone a try just to form your own opinion, then I can only say: No. I forbid it. Every raccoon run over multiple times on the Route 66 can give you a better story than whatever was cobbled together here into an anime while the creators sat at their drawing boards with their pants open and eventually threw any semblance of plot overboard so that irrelevant fantasy girls could outdo each other minute by minute in their desperate horniness. In Another World with My Smartphone is the dumbest thing. By a mile. By a mile the dumbest.

.

Of Beasts and Breasts:

Let’s get this out of the way right away: Monster Girls is not exactly the deepest, smartest, or even remotely the most beautiful anime under the sun. Quite the opposite. The utterly idiotic story fits on a cum-stained biscuit, the dialogue mostly consists of swearing, screaming, and moaning, and the illustrations look like they came straight out of one of those seventh-rate hentai dating simulations made by some Russian backwoods developers that you regularly get thrown at you on Steam in ten-packs for about two bucks.

So what’s it about? For years the Japanese government had kept a secret: mythical creatures such as centaurs, mermaids, harpies, and lamias are real. Three years before the events of Monster Girls begin, the government revealed the existence of these beings and introduced a kind of cultural exchange program.

Since then, these creatures have become part of human society and live with ordinary families like exchange students or au-pair participants, though with different duties and restrictions. For example, humans are not allowed to mate with the strange beings. For whatever reason.

Enter Kimihito Kurusu, a typical run-of-the-mill Japanese fuckboy. When Kuroko Smith, a coordinator for the Japanese cultural exchange program and a female copy of a certain agent from the film Matrix, accidentally delivers the very frightened and embarrassed lamia Mia to his door, he doesn’t have the nerve to send her away and lets her move in. Naturally.

As the story progresses, Kimihito meets other female monsters, each belonging to a different species, and gives them shelter as well. Some arrive more or less by chance, others are forced on him by Kuroko or push themselves into his life, and it doesn’t take long before he finds himself in a chaotic situation in which he tries to live in harmony with his new housemates while dealing with their constant wishes, fears, and the drama that results from helping them adjust to life in the human world.

However, the situation takes a new turn after Kimihito is more or less charmingly informed that, due to an expected change in the law concerning relationships between species, he is expected—essentially as a test subject—to marry one of the girls, which greatly intensifies the competition for his attention.

Over time, episode by episode, other liminal beings also become attracted to him and start trying to win him over, much to Kimihito’s embarrassment and to the utter annoyance of his already outrageously horny housemates.

Monster Girls is one of those typical harem anime that has been told a thousand times before, in which a nose-bleeding protagonist is pursued by around ten extremely horny female characters. The only difference is that this time they happen to be monsters with more or less large breasts who absolutely want to be mounted right here and now.

We have Mia, the snake with the big breasts; Papi, the harpy with the small breasts; Zentrea, the centaur with the gigantic breasts; Sue, the slime creature with flexible breasts; Melu, the mermaid with big breasts; Rachnera, the spider with enormous breasts; Lala, the dullahan with big breasts; Zombina, the zombie with thick breasts; Tionisha, the ogre with huge breasts; Manako, the cyclops with small breasts; Doppel, the shapeshifter with average-sized breasts; Polt, the kobold with big breasts; Ki, the dryad with massive breasts; Lilith, the devil with small breasts; Cattle, the minotaur with enormous breasts; Luz, the fox with small breasts; Merino, the sheep with big breasts; and of course agent Kuroko, who is likewise blessed with a generous chest. By whoever.

In Monster Girls, the viewer is constantly bombarded from all sides by exposed secondary sexual characteristics—usually straight into Kimihito’s face, which causes him to cry, complain, or bleed. Often all three at once. The series doesn’t offer much more narrative depth than that. But that’s fine. Monster Girls doesn’t convince through an emotional story, clever twists, or even its drawing style.

Just watch the first five minutes of Monster Girls and you’ll know exactly what to expect from the following episodes. The series really only aims to do one thing: be fun. Anyone who has ever wanted to see an angry horse with big, wet boobs take down a motorcycle pickpocket will be in exactly the right place with Monster Girls. It doesn’t get any smarter than that—but not much dumber either. And in today’s otherwise unpredictable world, that’s worth something too.

For some, Monster Girls is a contemporary critique of the ongoing racism and sexism in 21st-century Japanese society. For others, it’s a colorful masturbation aid for perverts who have always wondered what sex with a moist, big-breasted snake might feel like.

Or, as the famous German philosopher Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel supposedly always used to say: Why not both?

.

Fuck the Teacher:

As Rui lies sweaty on her stomach in bed in front of Natsuo, her bottom clad in skimpy underwear thrust toward him, his heart begins to beat faster with every passing second. Rui coughs. The cold seems to be bothering her. The only thing that will help now is the freshly unwrapped suppository that Natsuo is holding in his hand.

He gently pulls down his little stepsister’s damp panties. Natsuo’s youthful modesty prevents him from looking directly at Rui’s most intimate parts, so he carefully feels his way between her legs with the white suppository. The girl whimpers.

The first opening Natsuo reaches with his fingertips doesn’t seem to be the right one. Higher… Rui gasps quietly, her face pressed into a pillow as her older stepbrother tries to gently push the suppository into her moist entrance.

I’m sorry… is all Natsuo can say before feeling his way a few inches higher and then lovingly pushing the medicine into her tight, conception-longing exit. Only Rui’s gurgling moans break the silence in her dimly lit bedroom. Soon she will feel better again.

Welcome to the scandalous world of Domestic Girlfriend, the anime for people who somehow find incest and sexual intercourse with wards quite acceptable, but would rather not promote blood libel and horny teachers. Here, there is kissing, fondling, and fooling around until the break bell rings, but somehow everything is quite nice, cute, and funny. At least until the first feelings develop.

Natsuo Fuji has a crush on one of his teachers, Hina Tachibana, but since he knows he has no chance of ever getting into a relationship with her, he lets his friends talk him into going to a party where he meets the quiet Rui.

One thing leads to another and then, well, neither of them is a virgin anymore. Unfortunately, it wasn’t what they expected, but that’s okay. They’re just ships passing in the night and will never have to see each other again, right?

But when Natsuo’s father announces that he is getting remarried, Natsuo learns that he will also have two new stepsisters. Now there’s a problem, because, what a coincidence, one of them is his teacher Hina and the other is Rui. Yes, the family dinners at Natsuo’s house are about to become more or less really awkward in Domestic Girlfriend.

What sounds like a nice love story with a little physical contact quickly develops into a drama harem with hentai elements. Rarely have I wished so much for a protagonist to fail in all his endeavors and for karma to really kick him in his constantly swollen soft parts as I do for Natsuo in Domestic Girlfriend.

Natsuo cheats, lies, and fibs his way through every interpersonal relationship, hurting everyone who crosses his path within a ten-kilometer radius. Of course, Natsuo is unaware of any guilt. He’s just looking for true love. And if people who develop feelings for him get hurt in the process, that’s not his problem. After all, it’s their own fault for falling for his innocent ways.

But instead of punishing him for breaking his little stepsister’s heart and hymen, massaging his suicidal classmate’s breasts, and then fucking his teacher, he ends up winning an award for best young writer, because after all, it’s his big dream to become an author. And Rui, whom he has been messing with from the very beginning, spreads her legs for him again to celebrate the occasion.

If the credits hadn’t come before, Natsuo would probably have won the lottery too. Because Domestic Girlfriend teaches us that karma can’t hurt you if you simply praise improvement after every misstep and smile away all signs of remorse in a sympathetic manner. After all, Natsuo is the main character in his own life story and, hehe, hoho, if you have tits and, for whatever reason, ended up near him, then you’re just out of luck.

Instead of having to listen to Natsuo’s annoying whining all the time, I would have preferred to learn more about his boss Masaki, the gay and adorable flamboyant restaurant owner with a yakuza past. But there probably wouldn’t have been much room for underage breasts in his colorful annals.

The best thing for Domestic Girlfriend would have been if Natsuo, after his well-deserved fall down the stairs caused by his literature club friend Miu, simply hadn’t woken up. Because then we would have been spared the schmaltzy and completely far-fetched rest of the so-called story, and Rui would have found her well-deserved happiness. With me, for example. Right, I’m going to stick a suppository up my rear end now—Domestic Girlfriend has made me sick.

.

In Love With a Goddess:

Back in the day, as everyone knows, everything was better. The music. The weather. The food. The love. And of course television, too. These days it’s nothing but crap. But were anime better back then as well? You might think so. Sailor Moon. Cowboy Bebop. Neon Genesis Evangelion. All classics from that era that still convince today through their likable characters, their great stories, or simply their sheer epic scale.

Oh! My Goddess is without a doubt a classic. The anime released in 2005, based on a manga, is still celebrated decades later as one of the most popular animated series from the Land of the Rising Sun. Likable characters? Definitely! A great story? Uh, well… if you want to call it that. Sheer epicness? Eh.

So what’s it about? Keiichi Morisato is a second-year college student who accidentally calls the Technical Goddess Hotline. The goddess Belldandy appears and informs him that her agency has received a system request from him and that she is supposed to grant him a single wish. Believing someone is playing a prank on him, he wishes that she would stay with him forever. And his wish is granted.

Since he cannot live with Belldandy in his all-male dormitory, they are forced to look for alternative accommodation and eventually find shelter in an old Buddhist temple.

They are allowed to stay there indefinitely because the monk who lives there has gone on a pilgrimage to India after being impressed by Belldandy’s innate kindness. Keiichi’s life with Belldandy becomes even more hectic when her older sister Urd and her younger sister Skuld also move in. A series of adventures follows as his relationship with Belldandy develops.

There’s a reason anime series today are no longer made the way they were back then. And that reason is: lack of ideas. Keiichi is the typical shy, run-of-the-mill Japanese loser who gets nosebleeds just from seeing two cloud formations shaped like breasts. Belldandy is perfect. Period. And all the other characters are… there.

In Oh! My Goddess, 26 episodes attempt to connect the creative beginning with the emotional ending. What happens in between is completely irrelevant. While the creators initially tried to portray the unusual situation Keiichi finds himself in after his wish—sometimes humorously, sometimes sadly—the stories become increasingly absurd over time. And not in a good way.

By the midpoint of the series at the latest, it’s basically just random goddesses and demonesses insulting each other. Then suddenly they’re racing cars, unleashing robots on one another, and eventually something explodes while a pseudo-homosexual motorcycle club cheers. The end. Next episode. The same thing again. And if they only had about three yen of budget left for an episode, then it takes place entirely inside a house. Occasionally you see the garden. Wow.

Some episodes aren’t worth the celluloid they were recorded on. The intro plays, then shortly afterward the credits roll, and you’re left wondering: what actually happened there? Did anything happen at all? The little goddess and her older sister had an argument and Keiichi fell down. That’s it. The theme song was the best part of the episode.

Oh! My Goddess is the perfect background-watch adventure. It has the charm of an Kids’ WB anime series, the kind where you just drift from episode to episode and it didn’t matter if you missed one because you actually got up and went to play soccer with your friends.

Basically, you can watch the first five and the last five episodes of Oh! My Goddess and you won’t have missed anything. And if you find yourself wondering what relevance some previously unseen character has? The answer is always: none. They just suddenly appeared. And cause trouble. That’s all.

Oh! My Goddess would have been a better series if it had simply focused on the relationship between Keiichi and Belldandy. And whoever suggested that it would be funny if Belldandy’s entire family gradually showed up should have been fired on the spot before they even finished the sentence. Back then everything was better. Except Oh! My Goddess.

.

Maybe Not Today, but a Huge Sun May Rise Tomorrow:

Tatsuya Egawa’s Golden Boy was the first anime that made me realize that Japanese cartoons weren’t just for little boys and girls but could also go in a more adult direction. This was despite the fact that the series aired on MTV in a heavily edited version—if you still remember MTV.

What’s Golden Boy about? Kintaro Oe was top of his class at Tokyo University’s Faculty of Law, one of the most prestigious in the whole world. Having mastered the entire curriculum without any problems, he disappears shortly before graduating. Now, he rides his bicycle through Japan searching for the most important things in life: the lessons you can’t learn in a classroom. That’s one way to put it.

In essence, each story revolves around Kintaro encountering a more or less big city somewhere along the road where he spots an attractive girl and immediately decides to pursue her. Literally and figuratively, as while the girl has no interest in him, he does everything possible to impress her. And when I say everything, I mean absolutely everything.

Kintaro tutors a wealthy daughter in math, cooks ramen at some restaurant and even cleans dirty toilets at a software company—all just to disappear again before actually getting what he wants. Golden Boy may only have six episodes in total, all fairly similar, but this anime still holds a very special place in my heart even today.

Tatsuya Egawa introduced me to the concept of adult themes in anime and inspired an entire generation of horny teenagers to give it a chance as an adult medium. If you’ve only ever associated anime with Sailor Moon, Dragon Ball, and Spirited Away, Golden Boy will open both your eyes and the door to a sticky world that long-lost souls call hentai. It will even take your mental virginity.

Before you know it, you will find yourself standing in a forest of pulsating tentacle penises, with one hand down your pants, watching Japanese schoolgirls being fucked across some parallel dimension until they ultimately explode. But that, my dear and innocent children, is a story for another time…

.

The Queen of J-Pop:

What Britney Spears, Christina Aguilera, or Mariah Carey might be in Western realms, that is what women named Hikaru Utada, Namie Amuro, and Seiko Matsuda are in Japan. Grand shows, powerful voices, and an abundance of feminine energy—this is how the Far Eastern audience knows and loves its female superstars. They dazzle with charisma, glamour, and emotional performances that blend strength with elegance.

These artists are more than singers, they are icons who have shaped the image of Japanese pop culture for decades, inspiring countless fans across generations. Their concerts fill arenas, their songs dominate the charts, and their influence stretches far beyond Japan’s borders, defining what it means to be a pop legend in Asia’s ever-evolving music scene.

Whoever ventures into this alternative glittering world will not escape it easily. Suddenly they find themselves clicking through one fascinating J-Pop playlist after another, trying to sing along with Arashi, Morning Musume, and Akina Nakamori using fragments of learned words like 世界, こころ, and 愛してる.

Yet no one reaches the heights of one particular artist—the uncrowned, immortal, and one true queen of Japanese pop music: Ayumi Hamasaki. With more than twenty studio albums and numerous best-of compilations, Ayumi Hamasaki stands among the greatest stars the Land of the Rising Sun has ever produced. After a brief detour into hip-hop, her name alone now evokes admiration and nostalgia, symbolizing an entire era of musical brilliance and emotional expression.

Albums such as A Song for ×, LOVEppears, and Duty have sold millions of copies and, thanks to file sharing and passionate CD importers, have found many fans abroad. International audiences discovered her partly through the popularity of Japanese animated series like Sailor Moon, Dragon Ball, and Ranma ½, which brought attention to Asian singers and pop culture.

Born in Fukuoka, Ayumi Hamasaki sang and wrote her way into the radios and hearts of listeners with self-written and often self-composed songs like Voyage, Boys & Girls, and Dearest. She is the Queen of J-Pop. Her songs will outlast time itself, and her passion for music has inspired a new generation of Japanese artists such as Aimyon, Yoasobi, and Kenshi Yonezu.

.

D Is for Dragon:

It is well known that when you’re drunk, you do the stupidest things. Sending your ex a WhatsApp message with a shirtless selfie attached, for example. Convincing yourself that one more vodka Red Bull will go down just fine and that an hour later you definitely won’t be vomiting into your own pillow at home. Or getting into a fight with a bouncer. All three very stupid things. But you do what you have to do.

Kobayashi also enjoys getting drunk. The Japanese programmer is alone. And she has time. Enough time to head into the city with a bottle of sake and then back out again. That she doesn’t stay sober for long goes without saying. And because Kobayashi is in such a good mood, she drives into the forest. As one does. As a drunk programmer.

Among all the dark trees and the nighttime grass, she encounters a dragon. Tohru. As one does. As a drunk programmer. And she invites her to come live with her. As one does. As a drunk programmer. That’s how the story of Miss Kobayashi’s Dragon Maid begins—and it doesn’t get any less absurd from there.

Anyone looking for normality in this anime series will be quickly disappointed, again and again. Miss Kobayashi’s Dragon Maid is a cliché bomb like no other. But it’s fun. Unlike other cliché-filled anime. Here, madness is still written with a capital M. When Tohru enters Kobayashi’s small apartment, she transforms into a pretty maid—and stays that way.

There’s not much to say about the remaining characters. Miss Kobayashi’s Dragon Maid knows it’s an anime. And because it knows it’s an anime, all its characters are pure anime archetypes. We have the cute loli. The unhinged otaku. The busty sex bomb. The shy student. The gluttonous office worker. The perpetually annoyed grouch. And my personal favorite: the kindergarten friend who’s in love with the cute loli—initially a bit of a brat, but soon bursting with joy at the slightest touch from her beloved.

So in Miss Kobayashi’s Dragon Maid, we follow the daily life of Kobayashi and her housekeeper from another world. We go shopping with them. We visit a bathhouse. We attend a comic convention. Of course, together with all sorts of other colorful characters who gradually appear out of nowhere and create even more chaos.

The series Miss Kobayashi’s Dragon Maid is, above all, one thing: fun, fun, fun. From the first to the last second, one anime bomb explodes after another. Sometimes small, sometimes big. Sometimes quiet, sometimes loud. Sometimes intimate, sometimes hilarious. But always with a great deal of love for the characters and the audience.

As a first anime experience, I wouldn’t necessarily recommend Miss Kobayashi’s Dragon Maid. Films by Studio Ghibli are more suitable for that. Or Your Name. Or perhaps Cowboy Bebop. But if you’ve watched enough anime to playfully engage with its stereotypes, then Miss Kobayashi’s Dragon Maid is a guaranteed firework display of good vibes.

.

A Balm for Depression:

Sure, sex is pretty great. But have you ever watched all the episodes of K-On! in one sitting, only to feel such a massive void in your heart afterward that you immediately started all over again just to even begin to fill it? Exactly. K-On! is pure joie de vivre, a love letter to cheerfulness, to carefree days, to the plans and hopes we all once had at some point.

When the daydreamer Yui starts high school, she firmly resolves to finally get off her lazy butt and join a school club so she won’t end up being a loser. The only question is: which one? Luckily, the newly formed school band is desperately looking for a guitarist.

This could be the beginning of a wonderful friendship and an amazing musical career for Yui. Unfortunately, she hasn’t the faintest clue how to play the guitar and has zero stage experience. On top of that, she’s easily distracted, and whenever she learns something new, she forgets something else. This is going to be a tough challenge for the other band members…

K-On! isn’t about an epic legend, grand heroic deeds, or saving the world. K-On! is about Yui—so warm-hearted, lazy, gluttonous, clumsy, naive, and adorable that it’s an absolute joy to watch her little everyday school adventures.

And it’s about her four best friends—Mio, Ritsu, Mugi, and Azusa (whom Yui affectionately calls Azumiau)—their shared, unstoppable ambition to become the best rock band in the world with After School Tea Time, and the sweet Papua softshell turtle Ton-chan, who diligently swims back and forth in the background. And about Yui’s little sister Ui, without whom nothing would probably function at all, and whose self-sacrificing devotion will undoubtedly one day become a case for the nearest psychiatrist.

If you ever feel lonely, depressed, and abandoned by the entire world, just watch an episode of K-On! before reaching for the bottle, the pillbox, or even the rope. And then another episode. And another. Until you eventually start all over again. Again and again. Forever.

K-On! makes you realize what life is really about: overcoming fears, gathering new experiences, and perhaps even finding friends for life who will stick with you through thick and thin. And maybe you’ll even rediscover your love for breezy, lighthearted pop music—the kind you once traded in for hip hop and electronic beats.

Anyone who doesn’t feel comfortable, welcomed, and at home here from the very first minute is truly beyond help. K-On! proves that sometimes it’s the small stories that truly melt your heart.

And no matter how much your soul has already been eaten away by cynicism and the general suffering of the world, after a personally prescribed K-On! cure, you’ll automatically feel more content, happier, and more positively inclined toward the entire universe.

Because Yui’s carefree nature—quite literally—rubs off even on the most sarcastic grump. Guaranteed. K-On! is sugary sweet, melodic, and absolutely iconic. And on top of that, there’s a generous dollop of whipped cream—because life is hard enough as it is.

.

Songs From Another World:

When I finally got my driver’s license in my early 20s and raced through the streets of my uptight hometown in my mother’s bright red Seat Ibiza, criss-crossing back and forth, there was no hip hop, no techno, and no Britney Spears shouting from my speakers. No. It was the then-new single by a Japanese pop musician. Her name was Kumi Koda. The song was Butterfly.

My girlfriend at the time, who was sitting huddled in the passenger seat, was mortified as we sped past the local ice cream parlor, the school, and the outdoor pool. With Butterfly blaring at full volume. The fact that she let me back in her life after that is probably one of the most mysterious wonders of the world in human history.

Of course, it makes absolutely no sense for me to listen to Japanese music. I’m not Japanese and I don’t speak Japanese. No matter how much I sometimes wish I did and no matter how many Japanese courses I’ve endured. And believe me, there have been quite a few.

My teachers are utterly desperate with me. Greetings go out to Mr. Hasegawa, Ms. Takeda, and Mr. Sugimoto. To Ms. Ikeda, Ms. Takahashi, and Ms. Watanabe. To Mr. Fujiwara, Mr. Noguchi, and Ms. Yokoyama. To Ms. Ota, Ms. Sato, and Mr. Suzuki. And to Ms. Weatherby-Harrington.

After about 20 years and countless Japanese lessons, on a good day I can count to seven, distinguish between こころ for heart and こども for children, and shout はじめまして、わたしはマセルです! for Hello, my name is Marcel! That’s it. Really.

You’d think that after all the Japanese anime, comics, series, films, concerts, books, dramas, video games, and what feels like hundreds of thousands of songs, I’d be able to do a little more. But no. Even for my great love, Japanese pop culture, I’m still too lazy to seriously learn Japanese.

But maybe that’s not such a bad thing. I’ve met enough Japanese students in my life who wanted to turn their hobby into a career, and with every new word they learned, they became less and less interested in consuming anything Japanese. Perhaps because that’s when you really realize that Japan is just a normal country with problems, boredom, and a relatively average entertainment industry. Like Germany. Or America. Or Romania.

Hundreds of Japanese people wouldn’t throw themselves off strategically well-placed bridges, skyscrapers, and train stations every year if the nation in the far, far East were as great as it is portrayed in K-On!. And that’s despite the fact that the show is virtually an all-around credible documentary about the everyday school life of young adolescents in the Land of the Rising Sun.

But due to my complete mental block, I can’t even begin to comprehend any further meaning of a Japanese word. To me, everything Japanese sounds great. Everything is wonderful. Everything has something magical about it. If you get wet when Jacques from some Parisian suburb asks you for directions to the nearest public toilet in the worst French accent, then Japanese has the same effect on me. What are you saying, little Japanese girl? Your dog has warts on its balls? Kawaii!

I’m that typical, fat, run-of-the-mill nerd who’s always one step away from his first heart attack, who considers Japan to be the Mecca of evolutionary creativity and celebrates everything with even a single Japanese character on it, even though he couldn’t tell it apart from Chinese, with a completely unnatural level of obsession.

Soon I’ll be buying cuddly pillows with childlike, half-clothed waifus on them, who are of course actually thousand-year-old vampire queens. I’ll only eat rice drizzled with sake. And I’ll officially change my name to Marcel-san.

When musical gods like Hikaru Utada, Scandal, or Asian Kung-Fu Generation pound on the keys, strings, and microphones, roaring, screaming, and strumming, I don’t hear hackneyed lyrics about love, pain, and freedom. I hear the pulse of Tokyo. The vibration of Osaka. The voice of Kyoto. And sometimes even the fart of Los Angeles.

With songs like First Love, Secret Base, or Rewrite, I can piece together my own stories in my head. Imagine my own personal credits. Fantasize about my life on the other side of the world.

J-pop exudes the same kind of magic you had as a child when you heard English-language songs on the radio and didn’t yet have to understand what nonsense was being sung about. Can you blow my whistle baby, whistle baby? Uh, no thanks, I’d rather not.

Of course, I could look up the translations of these songs on the internet. But that would be very stupid. Then I would know that my creative heroes, whom I’ve been listening to ever since there was a Japanese song on some Sailor Moon soundtrack CD that forever changed my taste to, let’s say, alternative, so that now I have no friends left, spout the same pop-rock-backed brain shit as Taylor Swift, The Weeknd, and Adele. Only in Japanese. And then I might as well hang myself.

Nevertheless, I would argue at this point that J-pop is the best music genre humanity has ever produced. Jazz is dead. Hip hop is murky. Even the otherwise universally celebrated K-pop is nothing more than colorful.

Japanese pop music, on the other hand, is melodic, emotional, and captivating with an incredible power that you otherwise only experience when you accidentally find yourself at an anime convention surrounded by sweaty weebs armed with two to seven Canon SLR cameras and a sixteen-year-old dressed as Rem from Re:Zero.

Because when you don’t have to pay attention to the lyrics, but only to the musical performance as a whole, you realize the sophistication, skill, and sonic perfection that many Japanese artists put into their completely authentic work. And I can rightly claim, notice, and evaluate this. After all, I studied music history for 63 years. At the Moon University.

Maybe J-pop just broke me. Because in their four-minute songs, they like to mix eight different music genres, three orchestras, and a singer screaming at the top of her lungs, stir it all up, and turn the epic switch up to 11. So that you might think the universe is about to explode while God dies and the Keio Girls Senior High School choir cries in the background.

J-pop is the anthem of my own little messed-up world. The Japanese music industry doesn’t care whether I listen to the songs or not. Whether I worship the stars or not. Whether I watch the music videos or not. They’re not marketed to me through TV commercials, radio slots, and newsletters. I don’t exist for them.

I can figure out their meaning for myself. I know nothing about their scandals or problems or rumors. J-pop is a huge, personal playlist. Just for me. Because everyone else thinks the songs are crap.

Its emotional range has something for every situation in my life. For dancing. For laughing. For crying. Whether they remind me of sad anime episodes or the stirring background music in video games or heartbreak or my first minutes at Narita Airport, when I stepped through the Welcome to Japan banner into a world full of cultural, technological, and human wonders. J-pop is always there for me and fills the void of wanderlust in my small, constantly annoyed and bored heart.

Of course, J-pop isn’t cool. Even Japanese people don’t think J-pop is cool. When I once mentioned at a picnic in Yoyogi Park that I like AKB48, I was allowed to spend the rest of my trip to Japan alone.

Apparently, a report about me was repeated every hour on state television, warning the population about me and saying that it was better to stay away from me. A gaijin who likes AKB48 and admits it publicly? If you see this walking hentai, drop everything! Including your children and pets. And run for your bare life!

Cool Japanese people like Swedish indie bands, American rappers, and British DJs. But definitely not a bunch of plastered Yukis from next door who have been thrown together into a so-called band by sleazy pimp managers and now have to jump up and down and back and forth to pop dance music until something inside them breaks.

They realize that only overweight, middle-aged office workers want to celebrate them and have sex with them at the same time. And then, after their identity crisis, often accompanied by shaving their heads and crying in front of TV cameras, they are replaced by younger models. On the other hand, this is probably the case throughout the entertainment industry. Everywhere. All over the world.

And when you watch interviews with Japanese bands and musicians, there is no pride in what they have created. No arrogance. Not even a hint of self-confidence. Rather, the exact opposite. A collective apology for being responsible for such noise, which is falsely labeled and sold as music by record companies. As if they should be ashamed of following their dreams. Instead of taking over their fathers’ cement factories, as befits true Japanese descendants. After all, they have brought shame upon Otosan. Shame!

Not even they themselves seem to like J-pop. For whatever reason. But maybe that’s just Japanese reserve and politeness, which is clichédly admired and celebrated in every travelogue, no matter how lacking in individuality. They are very shy, you see. The Japanese. All Japanese people. There are no exceptions. Every child knows that.

But maybe I’m just weird. Not in a cool way. Oh God, definitely not in a cool way. More in a Should we commit him now or wait two weeks? kind of way.

When I hear even a single beat of any Ed Sheeran memorial song on the radio, I want to turn into a mass murderer on the spot. But put me in front of a ten-hour YouTube video of The Best Anime Theme Songs from 1980 to Today at full volume and I’ll starve and die of thirst at the same time. Because I just can’t turn it off. A Cruel Angel’s Thesis is just such a banger.

I’m fully aware that with this revelation, I have forever ruined any chance of future sexual intercourse. But I just can’t pretend to like people like Katy Perry, Justin Timberlake, or Sabrina Carpenter anymore. I just can’t. Their songs. Their stories. Their thoughts. They just mean nothing to me. Pure. Utter. Nothing.

Instead, I sit here, close my eyes with pleasure, and listen to Perfume, Kyary Pamyu Pamyu, and Babymetal. How they sing about せかい, ドキドキ, and はなび. And I’m happy. Even though, or maybe even because, I don’t understand a single word.

.

What If…?:

Sometimes I lie awake at night and in my head only one almost essential question keeps circling: What if. What if. What. If. While others late at night quietly masturbate or kindly let their partner fuck them into seventh heaven and then drift off to sleep with a faint smile on their face—ready to wake up the next day fit and cheerful to continue successfully building their résumé—I spend the night beating myself up with thinking.

It is always the same question. What if. What if I had made tea instead of coffee this morning. What if I had been nicer to the woman at the station kiosk yesterday. What if I had gotten Apple Music instead of Spotify. What if I had moved to Hamburg instead of Berlin back then. What if I had confessed my love to the cute girl from the parallel class. What if I weren’t so fat. What if I hadn’t cheated on my ex-girlfriends so often. What if I weren’t so lazy. What if I weren’t such an asshole. What if I didn’t think so often about the question of what would have happened if I had done something differently.

In the silence of the dark my thoughts ride a roller coaster, taking every imaginable route I can conceive of, just to show me how much cooler, more successful, and happier I might have been if at some completely arbitrary point in my life I had simply tried a little harder. My career would be more impressive. My girlfriend would be prettier. My house would be bigger. My penis would be longer. My existence would simply be worth more overall. And maybe not quite so wasted.

Companions I haven’t seen for years—maybe even decades—suddenly take shape in my head and reenact where I might have made a devastating mistake back then. Because I didn’t say, do, or think the right thing. And now I receive the mental bill for it. Because in kindergarten I kissed stupid-as-hell Steffi instead of the likeable Anne, just because Steffi was blonde and the other one wasn’t. Because in seventh grade I gave in to peer pressure and spat on Jonas’s back. Because I turned down an interview with German television and instead got drunk on sangria in the park. Because I ignored good advice and let my inflated ego make the decisions.

Life becomes a farce when everything is indifferent to you and you still get away with it. When things somehow work out even though you’re not really making much effort. Your relationship is falling apart because you simply don’t listen? Well, whatever—there’ll be another girl. You don’t have to sleep on the street even though you handle your money as if it had Monopoly printed on it? Well, whatever—the next cash will come along. You don’t have any friends left because you just don’t reply to text messages anymore? Well, whatever—new people will come along.

But what if at some point it’s over? When no more girls, no more money, and no more people come along that you can burn up in your lifelong ego trip? When you’ve taken the wrong turn on the road of your existence one too many times and now you stand in front of the shattered remains of yourself? In a dead end? With only a single thought left that will haunt and mock you for the rest of your life: What if. What if. What if.

The terrible thing is that you don’t actually know what would have happened. Would my life really have turned out better if I had confessed my love to the cute girl from the parallel class? Would we now be living in a townhouse in some suburb with two kids and a dog, going about a completely normal everyday life? Or would we have steered our car into oncoming traffic on the highway during a massive argument?

Would my life really have turned out better if I hadn’t spat on Jonas’s back? Would we have become best friends and still meet twice a year at our regular pub to chat about the good old days? Or would my classmates have mentally destroyed me over the next four years so badly that even today the mere mention of the word “school” would make me burst into tears, gasping for air and calling for my mommy?

Would my life really have turned out better if I hadn’t fallen out with the people who counted on me, who strengthened me and simply wanted to be taken seriously and not ignored? The people who meant something to me and to whom I meant something? The ones who shaped my life? And whom I should at least have listened to instead of brushing their dreams, wishes, and objections aside like trash and going my own way regardless of the consequences?

Sometimes I lie awake at night and in my head only one almost essential question keeps circling: What if. What if. What. If. While others late at night quietly masturbate or kindly let their partner fuck them into seventh heaven and then drift off to sleep with a faint smile on their face—ready to wake up the next day fit and cheerful to continue successfully building their résumé—I spend the night beating myself up with thinking.

And no matter how hard I try, how much I want it, how much I beg for it, this constant rattling in my head doesn’t stop. Time rushes past me, and every decision I made—or didn’t make—pulls me further away from what I once was and wanted to be. I am losing myself. And the more I try to row back, to catch up with and preserve some part of that time, the more it feels cheated, the more it turns into fuel that has only one use: to keep my thoughts running. What if. What if. What if…

.

Tales From China:

That we were both born in the same year connects us, Luo Yang and me. 1984. I don’t think about politics very much, she tells me when I ask about the country she lives in. And I don’t believe it has any influence on my work or my life. I prefer to focus on the people around me, even though their lives are, of course, influenced by politics. A little.

Ai Weiwei is a pioneer and an artist I deeply respect, she replies when I ask about the Chinese rebel the world knows and admires. But we come from two different generations. His work is more rooted in society and politics, whereas I’m more concerned with the emotions of the people around me. His issues therefore don’t confront me directly.

I ask about Ren Hang, who passed away last year. He was a good friend of mine. I started photographing shortly before he did, and we met at one of my exhibitions in 2009, when he was still searching for his own style. His persistence and effort prevailed against the harsh Chinese reality and earned him the attention of the West.

Will Ren’s rather provocative and alternative art leave a mark in China and around the world, I ask Luo. It’s hard to say whether he changed China for the better, but at the very least he gave more Chinese artists and young people the courage and strength to pursue their true selves, and he brought the young generation of China closer to people in the West. Ren was a brave man.

I tell Luo that I love Mian Mian. I know her books are very well known in the West, but I don’t know her particularly well. She is one of the pioneers who writes from her own experiences and with her body. We have a few mutual friends, and I know about her early, wild life. The girls I photograph share some similarities with her. They are brave, young, lost, and beautiful.

The Chinese generation of the 1980s is caught in a gap, Luo replies when I ask about our shared birth year. We inherited the traditional cultures of our predecessors and, since the country opened up, have been living in conflict with ourselves. We want to be freer, but we are held back by our family values. I don’t know Western peers particularly well, but fundamentally we are all the same. We all share the same emotions and problems, regardless of geographic and cultural differences.

I do have one last, almost clichéd question. What would Luo like to tell Germans about China and its young, new generation? I’ve been working as a photographer for more than ten years now and have seen major changes in the generations of the ’80s and ’90s. The new generation seems more relaxed and more loyal to themselves. And because China continues to develop and change every second, there will be more and more young, interesting people. Perhaps the internet and social media have brought the world closer together. Come to China and get to know the country and its young people better!

.

All the Witches in the Sky:

Actually, what we all really want in life is the feeling we get when we watch the first three or four Harry Potter films back-to-back. It’s warm, adventurous, and full of friendship. And if there is such a thing as a perfect emotion, it’s exactly that mixture. Unfortunately, even the most beautiful feelings eventually fade in life. But I’ve found a way to revive them—by taking a bit of a detour.

We simply take the most beautiful, affectionate, and cozy elements from the now slightly less radiant Harry Potter epic, mix them with another world we love—say, Sailor Moon—and suddenly we have something new that’s packed with all those old, wonderful, almost legendary emotions. How does that work? Very simple: with Little Witch Academia.

If I had to explain Little Witch Academia in one sentence, I’d say: just imagine putting Usagi Tsukino into Hogwarts. That’s it. You really don’t need to know much more about this anime series, which grew out of a successful short film. Sailor Moon meets Harry Potter—as a series. That should make everything clear now, every doubt removed, every question answered.

At the center of Little Witch Academia is the 16-year-old Atsuko Akko Kagari, who is sent to a prestigious magic school called Luna Nova Magical Academy to learn everything about magic. The problem is that while all her classmates are gifted witches, Akko has no clue about any of this hocus-pocus. In fact, she can’t even ride a broom.

Together with her two new best friends, Lotte Jansson and Sucy Manbavaran, the rather arrogant Diana Cavendish, and the mysterious teacher Ursula, Akko tries to make the best of things. She soon realizes that behind the façade of Luna Nova Magical Academy there are not only countless ancient mysteries hidden away—but that she herself might be destined for something greater.

Little Witch Academia thrives on the small adventures Akko experiences around the academy and on the countless colorful characters scattered throughout its lovingly crafted world: Constanze Amalie von Braunschbank Albrechtsberger, the grim German who prefers tinkering with her robots; Jasminka Antonenko, the Russian glutton; or Amanda O’Neill, the cheeky American who loves causing trouble.

Akko herself is basically a brunette version of Usagi Tsukino. She’s cheeky, impatient, and stuffs herself with cake whenever she’s stressed. Her temperament not only constantly gets her into trouble, but also helps her turn seemingly hopeless situations around and uncover one or two small—and sometimes big—secrets that would otherwise have remained hidden.

The all-girls Luna Nova Magical Academy is essentially nothing more than a Hogwarts packed with all kinds of new legends. There are potion classes with eccentric professors, sealed corridors where death and disaster lurk, and dark schemes threatening to surface. In other words: everything a grand story needs.

The episodes are pleasantly mixed up. Sometimes it’s about Akko’s destiny-shaping past, sometimes about a magical competition gone wrong. One time it’s the search for a grumpy yeti, another time the resurrection of a crazed skeleton. Sometimes it’s a deadly moss disease, other times a debt-collecting dragon. Little Witch Academia is never boring.

And although the small adventures are the most entertaining, a big secret casts its shadow over every single episode. Little Witch Academia does a lot of things right, and we could all take a page from Akko’s boundless naivety and joy for life. Without her, half the fun would be gone. If you like Sailor Moon and Harry Potter, you’ll love Little Witch Academia.

.

Melodies for Rebels:

I love Japanese pop music. J-pop, those are the anthems of my small, private, messed-up world. The Japanese music industry doesn’t care whether I listen to the songs or not. Whether I worship the stars or not. Whether I watch the music videos or not. They are not marketed to me through TV ads and radio slots and newsletters.

I don’t exist for them. I can piece together their meaning on my own. I know nothing about their scandals, their problems, or their rumors. J-pop is a huge, personal playlist. Just for me and folks who are a little bit different as well.

Its emotional range has something ready for every situation in my life. For dancing. For laughing. For crying. And one of the modern greats of this musical wonder world doesn’t even exist anymore: BiSH.

Girl groups belong to Japan like sushi, sake, and an underwear fetish. The ensembles called idol groups, AKB48, Nogizaka46, or Passpo, show up anywhere and everywhere. On television, on the radio, on billboards, in constant rotation.

In metropolises like Tokyo, Kyoto, or Osaka you can hardly escape their perfect smiles. In smaller cities there are often local copies of the big role models, not quite so thoroughly styled.

The band BiSH went at it a little harder than the well-known groupings. Situated somewhere between Scandal, Stereopony, and Morning Musume, Aina The End, Cent Chihiro Chittiii, Momoko Gumi Company, Lingling, Hashiyasume Atsuko, and Ayuni D tried to bless the Far Eastern music world with an audiovisual alternative.

They were not anti, not opposed, not averse to the cliché—quite the opposite. The members of BiSH, an abbreviation for Brand-new idol SHiT, made the sweet idolhood their own, and for that very reason sometimes didn’t seem like themselves. Whether that is good or bad, their homeland decided long ago. There they are unforgettable.

Songs like PAiNT it BLACK, SMACK baby SMACK, and GiANT KiLLERS have made the girls of BiSH immortal. Their afterglow lingers: evidence that candy-coated idol shine and a rougher bite can make something that sticks, even after the band is gone for good and only its voices remain. I can still hear their songs in convenience stores, karaoke rooms, and late-night variety shows. And, of course, BiSH will live on in my private playlists—forever.

.

Freedom Over Convenience:

I was never cool. Not in kindergarten, not in school, not in working life. While everyone around me listened to the latest songs by American hip-hop artists, wore the trendiest Nike Air Max, and took drugs I had never even heard of, I nerded around in my little cosmos, listened to the Chrono Trigger soundtrack on my iPod that was threatening to fall apart, wore Superstars for 15 years straight, and already felt pretty badass if I took a puff from a joint once in a while.

Whenever I wanted to get my hands on music, series, or movies, I was a big fan of torrents. Every month there was an indie rock playlist via download link featuring the most bizarre alternative tracks. I subscribed to anime series via RSS, and movies usually came to me on some shared hard drive on a university server. Life was beautiful. And simple.

When Spotify started getting big, I completely ignored it. I didn’t care. Why should I pay money to rent music that doesn’t even belong to me and that I would never listen to 99 percent of in my life anyway? Spotify was a small, insignificant niche trend that people mocked in forums and that I dismissed with a simple Nope.

While I happily browsed The Pirate Bay for the newest One Piece episodes and celebrated Lykke Li, Bat for Lashes, and Santigold on illegal playlists, the technological climate was changing. More and more of my friends and acquaintances in Berlin suddenly had the dark green Spotify logo on their iPhones and laptops.

Look, I can listen to the new Kanye West album without buying it! Wooooow…, I thought. Welcome to my world from ten years ago! My ignorance turned into mockery. At the time, I had no idea that this Spotify thing would one day lead to a personal crisis in my cozy little nerd world.

While the people around me slowly but surely joined the collective streaming party, I celebrated myself with my beloved MP3 collection, listened my way through albums and singles that some PR agencies sent me for free, and even started buying tracks from artists I really liked on Bandcamp.

My crisis began the day Apple suddenly introduced Apple Music. Before that, iTunes had been a gathering place for personal favorite albums, but now even the computer manufacturer of my choice was celebrating the trend toward streaming. Suddenly streaming was no longer just some parallel world out there—it was invading my personal cosmos.

I might not have been cool, but at least I had always been ahead of the curve technologically. While you were installing Windows XP, I already had my first Mac at home. While you were still jogging with a Discman, I was copying my first 128-kbps MP3s onto my iPod. And while you were drooling in front of NBC’s afternoon programming, I was downloading the latest HBO shows. I wasn’t cool, but I was better.

But thanks to Spotify, Netflix, and Apple Music, I suddenly had the feeling that I was no longer technologically up to date. Owning media was no longer contemporary. Piracy was no longer associated with geeky teenagers but with Polish money launderers. Streaming became the norm; everything else suddenly belonged to the past.

Little by little, more and more high-school dropouts gained access to the internet and continuously demolished it in a way that, in retrospect, I see as an attack on my digital personality. People who had no idea about technology—who used their €800 phones for duckface selfies and Candy Crush—had destroyed my world.

Now technology was no longer made for people who understood it, but for those who were already mentally overwhelmed by a 12-minute YouTube video without a hard cut.

Why can’t I touch the desktop screen? Why can’t I oppose Facebook’s terms and conditions with a shared image full of spelling mistakes? Why can’t I vote for the AfD without being considered a dim-witted idiot?

People gradually moved voluntarily into closed ecosystems because the open internet overwhelmed them. Who needs websites if you have Facebook? Who needs blogs if you have YouTube? Who needs MP3s if you have Spotify? Digital freedom is simply too exhausting for most people.

At the latest when Apple began marketing the iPad as a Mac replacement, when people considered Dropbox a real backup substitute, and when Netflix series advanced into universal pop-culture goods, I realized that my technological worldview was threatening to become obsolete. Like paper. Or SMS. Or the fax machine.

So I packed all my files onto an external hard drive, reinstalled my operating system, and tried to live a mobile, torrent-free life. I signed up for Spotify, Netflix, and Dropbox. I wanted to be just like the people celebrating Silicon Valley and swallowing everything it throws out into the world without criticism. How hard can it be? I asked myself.

From now on I’ll only watch Game of Thrones, Stranger Things, and whatever sad licensing leftovers remain on German Crunchyroll. After all, VPNs are for criminals and pedophiles. From now on I’ll only listen to Ed Sheeran, Post Malone, and Joe Rogan. Other people manage it too. And from now on torrents, MP3s, and Mega downloads are taboo. Adults who operate digitally don’t need such things.

The resolution lasted one week. Spotify drove me crazy because I couldn’t find half of my favorite artists and songs disappeared from playlists I had added to my library. Just like that. Without explanation. Some albums had only three playable songs. Most of the songs suggested to me were German rap nonsense and Starbucks background elevator music. Wow.

And when I did find a few songs that I convinced myself were modern and cool, I listened to them twice and then switched back to some nerdy radio station on YouTube. So those ten euros a month were already unnecessary. Yes, I have a pretty strange taste in music—and yes, that doesn’t exactly make life easier.

Most of my time on Netflix was spent lethargically clicking through menus for half an hour because I couldn’t decide whether to watch Mean Girls for the twentieth time or maybe Men in Black. Eventually I had to tell myself that I wasn’t allowed to download Made in Abyss, even though half of Reddit was raving about it.

My new digital self was censored, localized, and useless. It wasn’t just difficult to squeeze myself into these modern cages that were supposed to make life so easy—it was practically impossible. I simply couldn’t flip that mental switch that was supposed to turn me into a new person.

It’s not really about the money. Or about having to subscribe to ten different services at ten euros a month just to simulate even a fraction of the internet’s available bandwidth of consumable content. It’s about the fact that I find it difficult to follow this path of creative restriction.

Maybe it’s easier if you’re born directly into the world of Netflix, Spotify & Co. Or if you simply have a more ordinary taste in music and films and don’t enjoy looking beyond the cultural horizon anyway. I can hardly expect Ed Sheeran fans to protest when they can’t immediately listen to the newest Suran song.

I wanted to be cool and modern and technologically at the forefront. But if being cool and modern and technologically at the forefront means turning away from the infinite expanses of the internet and only consuming the pre-selected bites served to me, then I probably belong to the past now. And I’m not proud of it. Quite the opposite.

It scares me. Because officially that means I now belong to those who can no longer adapt to the future. The ones who demonize Snapchat, hate YouTubers, and think touchscreens are stupid. The ones who want to preserve the status quo as long as possible and react to every innovation by first mocking it, then condemning it, and eventually fighting it.

Streaming would actually be a fantastic invention—if a few gatekeepers like Netflix, Spotify, and Amazon didn’t control what comes out on the other end. The more money we pour into these few corporations, the more dependent we become on them and their corporate manifestos. The internet began as a network of open ideas. We should not allow ourselves to end up in a past disguised as the future.

Soon there will probably be a rift running through society. The majority who feel comfortable in walled gardens and have no problem with pre-chewed, localized, and censored content—and the renegade groups gathering on the dark edges of the brightly lit Spotify, Netflix, and Apple Music theme parks, celebrating the last remnants of a free internet in their tattered clothes. You just have to decide which side you will belong to…

.

Small Talk Is Hitler:

So we’re standing at the counter in this hotel lobby, staring into space. The girl’s name is Irina and she’s plump, the guy’s name is Erik and he’s important, my name is Marcel and I want to go home. But that’s not possible. Business appointments are essential for business. So instead of telling Irina that I want to penetrate her anally in her single room at around 9 p.m. tonight and carefully stapling my bank details to Erik’s forehead so he can transfer his inherited fortune to me, we first have to perform the social dance of dances.

I hate small talk. And I hate the attentive I don’t really give a shit about your life, but yes, nice weather smile with the dull looks, all of which have been trained so as not to yawn at each other. And I hate most people anyway. So why bother? Dogs sniff each other’s behinds, humans get closer through small talk. Which is definitely less fun. Imagine how many wonderful hours we could save if we got straight to the point.

Because let’s be honest. Rudimentary conversations are a fraction of the general German chatter. Exchanging information is important. Your aunt’s cute dog is not. Yelling at someone out of deep hatred because they dropped my ice cream on the ground is important. Farmer Wants a Wife is not. When I throw myself drunk in front of a girl in the park at night to tell her how much I love her and that she has the most beautiful knees in the world, that’s important. Ninety-nine percent, no, what am I saying, 100 percent of all tweets are not.

However, I am also the master of double standards. While I would like to push my way to the top without saying much, I can’t stand people who try to do the same to me. Anyone who wants something from me had better know my favorite color, rant about Munich in the summer, and say something the moment I think it. The importance of this rule decreases in inverse proportion to the chest size of my counterpart and the number of hours on my cheap Swatch watch.

Let’s summarize. Small talk is Hitler when I have to endure it, but it’s a fucking law if anyone else even thinks about ignoring it. Immediately acting like buddies without preparing your face for a counterattack. Stand in front of me, shake my hand, and tell me who you are. And give me money. Lots of money. Then we can continue talking.

So while skinny Erik babbles on about his plans for some idiotic web project and Irina’s lips seem to melt, I try to telepathically convey to the bartender that he should bring me a sharp knife or set off the fire alarm or recite dirty jokes in opera form at the top of his lungs. None of that happens; I’m handed a glass of champagne. I nod amiably, clink glasses with the two of them, and laugh insincerely at a more than lousy pun. God, I’m fake.

.

War in Wonderland:

Anyone who thinks of online role-playing games imagines a fantasy world garnished with dragons, magic, and knights—made up of forests, ice, and lava caves—where, as a poorly dressed loser, you have to slaughter rats and beetles for months just to stand a chance of emulating the veterans in their glittering armor and enormous mounts.

Final Fantasy 14 is no exception. The successor to various Super Nintendo and PlayStation legends appears at first glance to be a perfectly ordinary MMORPG with tanks and instances and buffs, with players connected via the internet merrily hopping over bridges, rivers, and meadows, facing end bosses that, as a beginner, make you wet yourself in sheer overwhelm.

The story is as old as it is uninspired. A tyrannical empire on the other side of the continent plans to seize world domination using monsters and machines. Together with a busty blonde, a yellow bird, and generally existence-weary people who also pay ten euros a month, the aspiring savior of the world tries to prevent this with skill—by swinging a sword diligently, learning spells, and occasionally hiding behind a shield when things get too wild out front.

Anyone who has ever been enthused by World of Warcraft, Guild Wars, or those countless Korean pseudo-anime games may safely doze off at such a plot—and yet Final Fantasy 14 contains far more soul than most of its competitors. Even in the first hours of gameplay, you sense a certain tragedy pressing down on this world.

The fact that Final Fantasy 14 was, a few years ago, a financial and qualitative fiasco that nearly drove its Japanese manufacturer Square Enix into ruin and was rebuilt from the ground up is not only noticeable in the game; it was also meaningfully integrated into the world of Eorzea’s history—as an apocalyptic catastrophe that was barely survived.

What remained was a barren, devastated desert landscape, in the center of which stretches the Sultanate of Ul’dah—a stone trading metropolis from which one can, and must, explore the surrounding city-states if one wishes to become one of the legendary adventurers who hunt bloodthirsty monsters across the prairie by day and invest their hard-earned gil in the local casino by night.

If you cautiously venture more than five meters beyond the city and accept assignments from residents that might lead you to the nearby mine, a small train station, or the ghostly graveyard, you see them for the first time: the refugees who managed to escape the so-called Garlean Empire.

They wear nothing but dirty rags. They live in damp caves and windswept tent camps. Their corpses line the roadside. The working population insults them, spits at them, and beats them. They had to leave their families behind. They have long since lost hope. Whether they even still want to live, they themselves no longer really know.

So while you cheerfully butcher monsters to the accompaniment of orchestral background music, thinking only of the next golden suit of armor and the diamond sword, you are watched from all sides by people who have lost everything—who had to flee a fanatical nation for whom nothing is sacred, who now vegetate together, crammed and homeless.

And suddenly I start to think. I draw parallels to our world. I think of Syria and the Islamic State and crisis zones we may not even hear much about. I deliberately take on quests that provide digital refugee children with medicine. And then I feel bad. Why am I helping a character in a game instead of real people out there who fear for their lives and those of their families?

No one would seriously have played a game called Refugees 3D—except perhaps the students who programmed it and the journalists who reported on it. But because the theme is embedded in a mass-market title like Final Fantasy 14, available for newer PlayStation consoles and PC, you start to reflect. You have plenty of time for that. The world is large, after all, and your feet are slow.

And when, in the next village, a farmer’s wife once again berates and drives away a group of refugees, I want to intervene. I press X. “Leave these people alone!” I want to shout. “Give them a piece of bread!” But the system ignores me. Compassion is not programmed into this scene. The farmer’s wife starts talking about the weather; the refugees stare blankly into the distance.

I also wonder how many of my fellow players bouncing around me—people with real lives, real friends, real families—actually engage with the deeper substance of this game. With the world, with those placed within it to tell a story. With the problems that arise when unscrupulous fanatics come to power.

Is there even a deeper meaning? Or is what Final Fantasy 14 pretends to be merely an edgy universe draped with a more or less developed scenario designed to lure me into collecting more experience points, growing stronger, checking off lists—more, ever more—so that I won’t cancel my subscription?

Collect ten marmot fillets here, forge three storm blades there, catch eight daggerfish on the other side of the map—perhaps that is all some flesh-and-blood players extract from Final Fantasy 14. Story, what story? Oh yes, that blonde with the big boobs—she’s great! What more could you want? And just because you’ve given a refugee in a video game a warm meal doesn’t mean you’ve truly understood anything—let alone accomplished something.

When I finally stand before the gates of the Garlean Empire, before the manifestation of terror, laden with gleaming armor pieces and a gigantic weapon, everything happens quickly. I am thrown, together with a motley crew of fighters and mages, into the end boss’s catacombs. A massive machine attacks us. Bored, we beat on the thing for fifteen minutes. It explodes. The end. If only saving the world and resolving the refugee crisis were that simple in real life.

.

Tasty Is the Flesh:

Let’s just say it right away: I understand why people become vegetarians or even vegans. I really do. Once you’ve looked into the sad eyes of an innocent lamb, just before it’s led with its little friends and the rest of its loudly bleating family to the fully automated slaughterhouse and torn apart there in front of the wide-open eyes of its loved ones, you start to think differently about the piece of meat lying on your plate.

I, too, have tried several times to join the ever-growing cult of supposedly better people. In vain. With my eating-disordered ex-girlfriend, I spent several months stuffing myself with broccoli, nuts, and hummus until I finally staggered, half-starved, into a Burger King. There a kind employee nursed me back to health with cheap animal leftovers, thick fries, and an extra portion of mayonnaise, before releasing me back into the wild.

The relationship failed shortly afterward. For years afterward I kept turning into a temporary vegetarian whenever I happened to see one of those gruesome PETA videos from slaughterhouses—where newly hatched chicks were immediately thrown into the grinder because they were the wrong sex. Or squealing pigs were beaten to death with shovels simply because the workers were bored at three in the morning.

No, as a meat-eater I don’t want to support this perverse system of factory farming either. Meat is cheaper and more widely available than ever before, but also of poorer quality than ever. One food scandal follows the next. Who can still bite into a bratwurst, a steak, or a döner with a clear conscience?

And yet I still eat meat. Why? Because I like the taste. And because my body practically screams for it when I’ve denied it for a week. Then my thoughts revolve only around torn-apart animals; I feel like I could stuff the entire refrigerated meat counter into myself. Fried, grilled, boiled—give me meat, right now!

Once, while eating with a Japanese friend, I asked him why so few Japanese people are vegetarians. He calmly replied: “Because everything has a soul.” What did he mean by that? That it ultimately doesn’t matter whether we eat meat, fish, or salad. Every meal means suffering for other living beings—whether they can scream loudly or feel pain in ways that we can barely comprehend scientifically or socially.

Just because some of you, for whatever reason, have decided not to shove dead animals into yourselves anymore doesn’t automatically make you better people. Even if you like to believe it does. The future doesn’t mean total abstinence; it means greater awareness. Mass quantities of meat sold at dumping prices—those days should soon be over. But a balanced diet with high-quality products should still be achievable.

Yes, I try to reduce my meat consumption and focus more on fresh fish and crisp vegetables. First, because it’s healthier, and second, because it actually tastes better. A raw piece of salmon with soy sauce and rice—I could die for that again and again. But a good organic steak or a fat cheeseburger from my favorite place a few streets away—those I can’t and don’t want to give up.

.

Don’t Stop Dancing:

There was a time when Netflix offered a solid lineup of shows. That was before they began randomly canceling titles or dragging them out ad nauseam, seemingly unable to strike a middle ground ever again. As I browsed through the countless titles, one series in particular caught my eye. I was determined to watch anything but the 97th rerun of Family Guy. The show’s name? BoJack Horseman.

The protagonist is a horse who starred in a popular sitcom, where he played the caretaker of some orphans. Fast forward twenty years, and BoJack lives in a lavish Hollywood mansion with a good-for-nothing roommate. He’s supposedly writing his memoir—but failing miserably.

Enter Diane Nguyen, a ghostwriter tasked with helping BoJack put his chaotic life into words. What starts as a glimpse into a washed-up comedian’s attempt to reclaim his glory soon spirals into a tale of betrayal, envy, and self-destruction. The looming fear of waking up one day as an old, useless has-been creeps closer with every episode.

BoJack’s life grows more depressing by the minute, and whenever he faces a choice, he almost always makes the wrong one. What about the cast? Stellar. Will Arnett voices BoJack, Alison Brie voices Diane, and Aaron Paul voices Todd—a character who might just be the only level-headed person in BoJack’s bizarre entourage. Or maybe not.

BoJack Horseman is a razor-sharp satire of modern Hollywood, a place that chews up its former idols and spits them into a purgatory of drugs, fleeting fame, and champagne-soaked regrets.

Created by Raphael Bob-Waksberg, the show initially comes across as absurd nonsense but quickly reveals profound layers exploring alcoholism, guilt, and personal doom—all set in a world of anthropomorphic animals.

I recommend this gem of a show to anyone who’s tired of surface-level entertainment and craves something that peels back the glittery facade to show what’s lurking beneath. No matter what, when, or where, BoJack Horseman is for me and you—and no one else.

.

Ode to Boobs:

If I should ever die, then I would like to awaken in a paradise of breasts—large and small, round and flat, white and black. Like hills they rise from the ground, like mountains they stretch along the horizon, like branches they hang from the trees, like stones they lie there.

They are clouds. A river of milk pours out before me, bubbling as it plunges down a slope. I wander through the hairs growing toward the sky, past warts as tall as houses, some dark brown, some light red. Their areolas invite passing travelers to stay the night soon.

Naturally, butts are important. They must be neither too flat nor too bulky, firm yet elastic. Like peaches. Like apples. Never like windfall fruit. But no matter how well-shaped they may be, they cannot hold my gaze for long. The magic lies elsewhere; this is merely the path to it, a divided continent meant only for transit. Please, turn around! I beg them—and find myself once more in my own heaven.

Fitted with small wings, they flutter across the ground. I throw myself upon them and press my head into them until I can no longer breathe. They giggle, they love me. You call them tits, boobs, or honkers—none of it does them justice. I mock your embarrassing attempts to give them a proper name and instead proclaim them God. In every respect I was a blasphemer until I beheld redemption through their creative existence. Call me the Breast Messiah! I will build them a shrine, a church, a temple. Come inside! This sect is the one true faith.

Scientists are charlatans when it comes to my savior. They reduce his wonders and magic, describing him as nothing more than an annoying mash of skin and fat and nerves. Perishable, nothing more. Doctors hack through his connective tissue, glandular lobules, and axillary lymph nodes for a bit of pay, laughing loudly as they do so.

Medical necessity I can still understand; treacherous beauty ideals I cannot. I want to weep. Please, stop it at last—do not desecrate him, leave God in peace! They do not hear me, the human butchers; their faith has long since faded. Nothing and no one can save them now.

Whoever wants to turn me away from my religion stands little chance. My Eldorado truly exists—I have seen it with my own eyes. Why should I renounce it? Nothing speaks in favor of that, so much speaks against it. All you preachers of buttocks, of vaginas, of feet—you are praying to the wrong salvation. Don’t you realize that?

Just look at them—the Kates and Palinas and Emilys of this world—have you learned nothing from them? Let me convert you, you foolish atheists. Look up and open your mouths, or you will never again be happy in your short lives!

My hands wander, my gaze is fixed, my pulse races. Night has fallen, the voices have faded, the coverings drop. There—I feel them. Their warmth, their softness, their history. They are the feminine synonym for intelligent strength; their yielding nature does not come without demands.

No force on this planet can now stop me from devoting myself to them for all eternity. Take my life, you well-proportioned god awakened from puberty—how could I not cling to him, when in return I may dwell forever at your side? If I should ever die, then I would like to awaken in a paradise of breasts—large and small, round and flat, white and black.

.

Every Person Has Their Own Color:

When Tsukuru Tazaki thinks back to his youth in Nagoya, he feels torn between deep gratitude and dark sadness. Today the 36-year-old leads a bleak existence in Tokyo: he builds railway stations and lives a lonely life. For a long time Tsukuru Tazaki was close to death—by his own hand. Only his growing longing for his new acquaintance Sara keeps him going: their conversations, the hope of having sex with her soon, and his tragic past constantly at his heels.

Anyone who listens to Haruki Murakami’s calm and detailed words should do so while enjoying a cup of green tea in daylight, or a glass of expensive whisky at night. There is no other way. It was the same with his earlier works Norwegian Wood, Hard-Boiled Wonderland and the End of the World, and 1Q84.

Tsukuru held no resentment toward his four best friends, who had rejected him without explanation 16 years earlier. He accepted his fate in silence, drowned his worries, tried his hand at love—but failed without much fuss. How might they be doing today? Gentle Shiro, lively Kuro. Strong Ao and clever Aka. He can still remember their last phone call with perfect clarity. He was asked not to contact them again. Never again.

Colorless Tsukuru Tazaki and His Years of Pilgrimage is the story of a man who must reopen old wounds so as not to squander his last chance at a happy life. It is interwoven with colorful events that seem not to belong to this world and yet feel as real as possible. Sake, beauty, and six fingers—the fear of the truth never far away. A journey that only someone with nothing left to lose can undertake. Or perhaps everything.

Tsukuru’s thoughts are always somewhat melancholic; they revolve around other people. He must move forward with a decision that others made for him long ago. Could it be that he might actually understand them? Tsukuru searches for answers. But what awaits him out there will not please him.

Haruki Murakami is known for his flawless descriptions. In a very Japanese way, he presents the reader with completed facts—and then wipes them away with a single gesture in one of his notorious jumps in time. Suddenly nothing is the same as before, even though neither the characters involved nor the summer surroundings have changed. If Michael Bay were an author, Haruki Murakami would be his counterpart. No explosions, no noise, no sensory overload—but a great deal of skill.

Everything fits together like a puzzle; every mention has a purpose. When Mr. Tazaki has nothing to do, he buys a train ticket. He gets himself a cup filled with hot coffee and sits on the platform in Shinjuku. Fascinated, he watches the people: how they hurriedly get on and off, how they sink into their seats with relief, how they depart and disappear into the darkness. Getting on himself—he is afraid of that. But perhaps the time has finally come.

Anyone familiar with the previous stories of this East Asian bestselling author will find no surprises in Colorless Tsukuru Tazaki and His Years of Pilgrimage—at least no unpleasant ones. Haruki Murakami remains true to himself and has created the perfect book for the fading days of summer. And in one chapter or another we suddenly feel caught off guard, reminded of ourselves, lost in the past. So put the tea on, pour the whisky, and finally settle down on the sofa.

.

Little Women:

Anyone who, like me, grew up in a small town, or worse, in the countryside, knows the single, unshakable urge: To get away at the first faint excuse. To vanish into the city, among the tall buildings, the loud parties, the cheap drugs. Or something like that.

The point is: gone, gone, gone. Anything but the yokel left behind. And then, after managing it at last, surviving five, ten, perhaps twenty years in the tangle of the metropolis, のんのんびより drifts across my path and drags me backward. Back into a green and lucid place, where things seem better, truer, closer. A slower world that takes my hand and smiles, as if it has been waiting.

The story itself is as uneventful as staring into a still pond. Hotaru, a fifth grader, moves from Tokyo to the sleepy hamlet of Asahigaoka in the far greens of Japan’s countryside because of her father’s work. In the local and mostly empty school, she meets a likeable group of even more likeable girls, each entirely unlike the others. That is all there is to see.

In のんのんびより there are no grand villains, no exploding tentacles, no ominous magic. Only the shy Hotaru, the undersized Komari, the mischievous Natsumi, and the tiny Renge, who speaks as if she suffered a small stroke every few seconds. Renge won me over almost immediately.

Every episode is heartbreakingly calm, unhurried, and idyllic. In truth, Atto’s series is a harmonious refuge for anyone worn thin by life, by work, by love. Nothing feels more vital than to stay there forever, to spend the year in that village where Kaede is known simply as Candy Store, where Kazuho keeps nodding off, where Suguru rarely has anything to say.

It’s so beautiful there that I want to scream and weep at the same time. I already knew I would treasure のんのんびより the moment I felt its pace. Just as I had once fallen for serene series like Jo’s Boys, Anne of Green Gables, and Dog of Flanders. It’s a quiet paradise where every day is good, no matter what disaster might be raging beyond its borders.

.

Good Things Come to Those Who Chill:

Anyone who digs through the sheer masses of new anime series these days gets showered with old clichés, worn-out ideas, and careless style. Gone is the magic, the dedication, the soul. Everywhere, boring kids are sucked into parallel worlds, little sisters flash their underwear, and annoying guys think they have to start trouble.

But they do exist—the shining pearls, the pure masterpieces that hide as animated cartoons on certain corners of the internet. Space Dandy is one of them: a tool that works on many levels to evoke as many emotions as possible, skillfully and never forced.

At its core, a self-absorbed asshole, a horny cat, and a depressed vacuum cleaner travel through the future to capture rare aliens and turn them into cash. Yes, there are bouncing breasts, stupid one-liners, and power-hungry final bosses—but at heart Space Dandy, a dandy guy in space, is drawn devotion to everything that is great.

Almost every episode is both a visual and emotional roller coaster. And not in the wacky, crazy Japan style with tentacles, schoolgirls, and random LOL-kawaii-what-the-hell moments. Quite the opposite. Space Dandy shines through a varied mix of lively nonsense and thoughtful moments.

The episode Plants Are Living Things, Too, Baby for example, is a fever dream of colors, shapes, and sounds. There’s Always Tomorrow, Baby proves to be a charming homage to Groundhog Day, and A Merry Companion Is a Wagon in Space, Baby still holds a place deep in my heart as an emotional roller coaster between budding hope, overwhelming grief, and endless loneliness.

Even though the viewer is bombarded on the surface with colorful planets, bowls of cooked noodle soup, and brainless zombies—and even though some stories end with the protagonists dying—a kind of theater of what-ifs unfolds in the audience’s mind, questions that might even affect our own reality.

What would have happened if a comet had struck Earth that gave plants consciousness and a desire for knowledge? What would a world look like where pure hatred and endless war are the only option left? And what happens when everyday machines suddenly develop passion and feel desire?

Space Dandy is the crown jewel of a genre that for decades has been torn apart by generic franchises and trivialized by a simplistic West. Beautiful, clever, and full of ideas without ever wanting to seem pretentious—and yet often so shallow, embarrassing, and funny that you can feel nothing but pure love. A melty, milky kiss.

.

The Mecca of Video Games:

The Super Nintendo Entertainment System, known as the Super Famicom in Japan, is undoubtedly one of the best things to ever happen to humankind. Games before it were too graphically limited to fully immerse me in their worlds, while everything that came after looked almost too polished to truly spark my imagination.

I’d go even further to say that the Super Nintendo’s colorful pixel art and bombastic 16-bit sound represent the pinnacle of video game history. The grey console’s technical limitations became a perfect framework that challenged every passionate developer out there to push the creativity in their games to new heights—and way beyond.

I visited the legendary Super Potato, a pure video game paradise in the heart of Akihabara, the electric town and more or less official weeb mecca district.

Spanning several floors, the store is packed with treasures that make retro gamers’ hearts race: PlayStation role-playing games, Dreamcast consoles, Zelda guides, and Final Fantasy soundtracks, most of them priced between ten and twenty dollars—though, of course, the rarest gems, like limited edition figures and scarce versions sold out on day one, come with a premium price tag. And naturally, the store is brimming with an impressive collection of beautiful Super Nintendo games.

On the very top floor, I found a bustling arcade and a small kiosk offering sweets, drinks, and merchandise. Because I wanted to get my wonder soft world, whatever the official slogan of Super Potato means, I picked up the Japanese blue edition of the original Pokémon for Game Boy, complete with packaging, instructions, and a map of Kanto—for the equivalent of just ten bucks. A dream come true.

So if you ever find yourself in Tokyo and are a nostalgic gamer, make sure to stop by Super Potato—you won’t regret it. It’s relatively easy to find, just ask any of the other nerdy passersby for directions. And now, if you’ll excuse me, I have a fat Pikachu to catch.

.

Art Makes Me Angry:

I’m standing in front of a wall. It’s huge, and bright, and largely empty. Only two framed pictures are hanging on it. I’m trying to look at them as concentrated as I can, but that doesn’t change the fact that only a couple of stick figures were drawn on the white canvases. They are staring back at me. A sun in the corner, some grass on the ground. Everything’s black and white.

The one next to it doesn’t offer a much more adventurous experience either. The gallery owner is sitting on a wooden chair, quite bored, typing on her iPad. Connoisseurs, patrons, and buyers are buzzing around me. And I just want to scream. Art makes me angry!

Julia and I went to Art Week in Berlin this weekend. Big and small galleries all over the city offer admission, with just a relatively inexpensive ticket, to a kinky world that may otherwise remain hidden to many. So we went to Art Berlin Contemporary, to the Opernwerkstätten, to the Kunst-Werke, to the Hamburger Bahnhof. In between, some coffee. And my anger, deep inside me, grew stronger and stronger.

I saw everything. Huge blocks of fat on the floor. Fists on ropes. Newspaper clippings behind glass. Brains on a table. Memes printed out on cardboard. I waded through a sea of Justin Bieber posters and when I looked up, some guy was jerking off another one on an old color TV. I would have loved to grab the nearest gallantly strutting art lover and yell at him: What am I supposed to feel, what am I supposed to think, what the fuck are you guys trying to tell me?! Aaaaaaaaahhhhhhh!!

You have to figure out for yourself what you want art to convey, Julia calmly says as we walk to the next gallery somewhere in Berlin-Mitte. No one can tell you how to feel. At that moment, I feel stupid. Just plain stupid. Because in front of every painting, in front of every installation, in front of every sculpture, someone is standing with someone else, and they are talking about what they see there. They discuss, they praise, they criticize.

What the artist was thinking with this choice of color. What with this material, what with this angle. While behind me there is a veritable orgy of blood with dead animals, fresh vegetables, and young people dressed in white and dictated by a half-dead fat Austrian, I’m standing in front of a picture with stick figures. It costs around 2000 bucks. Would it be worth it to me if I ripped it off the wall right now and beat up gallery owners, creatives, and collectors with it until someone can give me an answer to the only question I have right now: What?

I love the art world. I love those beautiful people who are better dressed than any Fashion Week visitor. I love the big, bright buildings that were once train stations, workshops, or factories and now serve as a parallel universe to a world torn apart by war, hate, and poverty.

I love the large-format magazines and the old books and the breathy red wine and the intellectual chatter and the absurd prices and the girls armed with burlap bags roaming galleries alone on Sundays, positively brimming with impetuous introversion and buzzing sexuality of a cute student living somewhere in an old apartment in the middle of Kreuzberg who you can fuck only after talking to her for hours while sipping on red wine on a Saturday night. It’s just the art itself I don’t get. But that’s the main point of being here, isn’t it?

Then I feel like a New York Post reading Fox News viewer, who votes for something with xenophobia on Sundays and would prefer to rip the balls off child molesters, but at night, when his wrinkled wife is asleep, masturbates to photos of his underage niece.

Anyone who doesn’t appreciate art turns into a junk food eating, lettuce discarding redneck with a Windows PC at home. It’s all artificial. They’d rather watch soccer than go to a museum, prefer fat to carrots, beer to wine, cunts to muses. Too stupid for art, too conventional for beauty.

But there’s light at the end of the tunnel. I scurry past watercolor paintings, leave wax figures on the left, wander through rooms without sense and reason, but they give me nothing and that’s all right. Instead, I like striking photographs. But I already knew that before.

I love to observe people observing art. I pick up the vibes of a world that is so absurd and beautiful at the same time, that suffers and hopes, whose cuts between poverty and wealth are harsh. I like to get upset about stupid art. Does he want to fuck with me, I say. 2000 bugs for that shit, I ask myself. That I could create something better in kindergarten, I splurge.

But that’s not what it’s all about. I’m aware of that myself. But I don’t care. I laugh with and about art and all the trash that sells itself as such and therefore is exactly this at the same time. I tell myself that stick figures, Austrians and Justin Bieber don’t give me anything, but the mere fact that I still think back to what I saw this weekend proves me wrong.

Art makes me angry. Not everyone can say it has that effect on themselves. And even if 99 out of 100 things I see make me angry, they still flood my thoughts, they energize me, they bring back memories and joy and… a whole lot of hate. And the few bright lights that cling to me, I pursue them, I stalk them, I want to know everything about them. Why, I ask myself then. How, I ask myself. Where, I ask myself. And especially I ask myself: What on earth are you trying to tell me?

.

Failure, Flight, and Freedom:

While you’re reading this, I’m sitting on a plane from Tokyo to Abu Dhabi to Düsseldorf—on my way back to Berlin. Barely two months after I had loudly boasted that I was moving to the Japanese capital for a year—no, what am I saying, forever. I had insulted Berlin as a city of stagnation, as a metropolis of frozen creativity, as a place inhabited by a rotting collective of copies, of stereotypes, of people who might already be dead without knowing it. And now I’m crawling back, mangy, broken—but happy.

I love Tokyo. You have to know that. It’s a constantly reinventing experience like no other. Colorful, lively, modern, traditional, perverse. On every corner you can feel how much energy this melting pot of otherness gives you with every second of your presence. You’re constantly swaying between explosive excitement and infinite calm—two extremes only a few steps apart.

Marcel, Tokyo was always your dream! So why are you coming back now? Even though you had a damn long visa?! Because I realized that this place, as great and inspiring as it may be, doesn’t work if you can’t dive into it together with people who truly matter to you. As one of our readers once wrote very accurately: Home is where your friends are. Well.

Strangely enough, that didn’t bother me last summer, when I ended up spending three months in Tokyo. I soaked everything in and tuned the rest out. But this time I constantly had the feeling I was missing so much back home. I suddenly missed things that had previously annoyed and bored me. Parties thrown by random PR agencies. Concerts by some Swedish run-of-the-mill indie bands in run-down Kreuzberg venues. The startup snobs with their MacBooks, café lattes, and ridiculous nerd glasses. In other words, all the things I had actually fled from.

Like a little child who always wants whatever it doesn’t currently have, I realized that Berlin is still the stage for an emerging analog and digital revolution. An open, filthy, bubbling mass full of people I love and people I hate—people who, together with me, define who I am. And when. And how. And everything else. And I want to be there—no, right in the middle of it—when it happens!

My time there felt like a golden cage. Every street, every efficient improvement to daily life, every damn cherry blossom drifting playfully across the nearby park—I stored them deep inside my otherwise shattered heart. But the fact that I couldn’t spontaneously get drunk with the idiots I’ve grown fond of in Görli while the sun shines and a few drugged-up Jonathans throw their own little rave in the background drove me insane night after night. Thanks, Facebook, for constantly showing me all the great things everyone else was doing. You stupid asshole. The same goes for Twitter. And Instagram.

Tokyo may be my future—but right now it was the wrong time in the right place. I’ll travel there again. And again. And again. But next time in a more compressed way—and just for fun. So I can dive into the city without having to worry about everyday life. Because otherwise, life there is like anywhere else.

Long story short: if this plane—or one of the next ones—doesn’t happen to crash and I end up in the local newspaper as a casualty (German porn blogger scattered to the winds!), then I’ll already be back in Berlin tomorrow. And you’re welcome to greet me with bouquets of flowers and nude photos of your much prettier older sister.

One thing is certain though: I won’t be leaving again anytime soon—unless I suddenly feel like becoming part of that cute little travel-incest troupe that keeps hopping around the Maldives. And Ming Lee, you still owe me a cheeseburger! Alright, I’m out—see you in a few hours over a beer.

.

Welcome to Wonderland:

Tokyo is a megacity full of whimsicalities, secrets and awesomeness. If you wander around you may get lost within a moment, but perhaps you’ll find yourself in one of these fantastical wonders. Like Alice’s Fantasy Restaurant, an establishment which could be right cut out of a Disney film, in Ginza – the financial district of Tokyo.

Accompanied by friend and travel blogger Christine, I got captured by a bizarre world occupied by colorful pieces of furniture, sweet Hello Kitty formed dishes and a small army of cute dressed waitresses, while remixes from movies like The Little Mermaid buzzed around in my head. The food was awesome, the atmosphere charming and the price okay.

Alice’s Fantasy Restaurant is probably the best address for guys to surprise their girlfriends with a visit to an extraordinary theme eatery, perhaps for Valentine’s Day, her birthday or their anniversary. Or if you’re accidentally in Japan’s capital and want to follow the white rabbit. You can find it in the Taiyo Bldg, 5th floor in Ginza. It’s definitely worth a visit.

.

An Afternoon in a Cat Café:

There are a few essential things to do, as soon as you arrive in Tokyo. Take a photo of the big crossing in Shibuya for example. Or go shopping in the always crowded Takeshita-dori in Harajuku. Or drink an ice cold Asahi Super Dry in Yoyogi Park, where you can watch drama students going crazy and cute couples staring embarrassedly into the nearby pond.

To tell some crazy stories about our journey when we come home again, we visited a cat café right in Shibuya. It’s called Hapi Neko. You pay like $10 each for half an hour to touch the cats. One drink included. That sounds like a great experience, doesn’t it? Yeah… Unfortunately the pussies weren’t quite as excited as Christine and I were.

While we enjoyed our mango juice and tried, together with some other people, to get our paws onto their fur, they hid under the table, pretended to sleep or looked at us like they’re gonna exterminate our whole family, as soon as they find out their addresses. But to be honest: I couldn’t blame them. And now come here, kitty, kitty, it’s fuckin’ photo time!

.

North Korea’s Target No. 1:

It’s been two weeks now that North Korean dictator Kim Jong-un went totally crazy and declared war to anything with a heartbeat. First he wanted to set South Korea on fire, then he dissed the United States and yesterday he announced, his target No. 1 is Tokyo. That’s where I live. And now two nuclear missiles are facing right into my direction. Hello, nuclear missiles!

The truth is: no one here is really afraid, that these missiles could hit us with a wall of fire and turn us into screaming shadows within a millisecond. Wow, just think a second about, what I just said. Japan deployed missile defenses in Ichigaya. That’s in the middle of Tokyo and you can see a photo of the Ministry of Defense, where they are waiting for an North Korean attack, right above. I took it today. Unfortunately I wasn’t allowed to take of a picture of those big missile defenses by myself, but together with a curious couple I was able to catch a glimpse of the machines trough the heavily guarded fence.

I mean, we all know that North Korea is no real threat. At least I hope so. You read in the news, that the United States don’t take the North Korean nuclear missile capability very serious and before anything could hit us, it would be destroyed somewhere over the sea, but you feel the hair-trigger situation quite everywhere in the city.

Just a few hours ago a Japanese official mistakenly announced the launch of a North Korean missile instead of sending an alert about a strong earthquake near Kobe. And that means: Every wrong move could lead to a nuclear war. And I’m right in the middle. And I’m laughing. Like everyone here does. Because we don’t know what to do otherwise.

When I was younger I lay awake thinking about an upcoming Zombie apocalypse. And it was fun. What would I do, where would I go, what would I take with me? It was an adventure in my head. Over and over again. This sound, could it be a zombie? Wow, scary! Hehe, hello sweet dreams… But now it’s different somehow.

The last couple of days I couldn’t sleep, because I was obsessed with one thought: What, if some kind of airraid alarm would suddenly shrill, because crybaby Kim Jong-un got angry, since he fell against his bigger brother in Street Fighter II? Get this fuckin’ weapons started!, he shouts at one of his tired looking officers. And there I am, right in the trajectory of two nuclear missiles. Because Mr. Dictator has a bad day. Hello, nuclear missiles! Again…

What would I do, where would I go, what would I take with me? Would I try to get into the next shelter? But aren’t these only for earthquakes? I could also steal a bike and try to go as fast as I can. Or run? How many seconds, minutes, hours do Taepodong-2 missiles require until they hit Tokyo anyway? Could I get one more coffee from the Konbini nearby?

Perhaps I’m just in the wrong place at the wrong time. Hey, did you hear the sad story of Marcel? He was hit by a nuclear missile after this crazy guy in North Korea went totally bananas and tried to bomb Disneyland. What a douche. It’s been two weeks now that North Korean dictator Kim Jong-un went totally crazy and declared war to anything with a heartbeat. And either he finds another target in the next couple of days—or it could get a little bit hot in here.

.

Worship the Penis!:

Because genitalia—both primary and secondary—are, as is well known, something incredibly fascinating in every culture, we set off last weekend for Kawasaki in Japan to attend the annual Kanamara Matsuri, the infamous Penis Festival! And we were not disappointed.

At the otherwise rather idyllic and quiet Kanayama Shrine, right next to the local train station, thousands of people gather every year on the first Sunday in April to pay homage to the steel phallus. With thundering rock music, lollipops in the familiar shape, and a gigantic parade through the streets of the colorful city, in which costumed participants carry enormous penis statues while performing various traditional rituals.

While Christine rode giant wooden phalluses—causing the noses of numerous older gentlemen with DSLR cameras to nearly bleed—and carved questionable sculptures out of turnips, I flirted with transvestites in Sailor Moon costumes before washing down a few octopus balls with beer after all the commotion.

We had already feared that the hype surrounding this event might be nothing more than the visual embodiment of impotence, fueled by ever more outrageous verbal legends. But thanks to the benevolent weather gods and plenty of cheerful locals and tourists, we can recommend the Kanamara Matsuri to anyone who feels like praying for fertility, health, and love—while licking a lollipop with a strawberry-shaped glans.

.

An Alternative Childhood:

After a couple of rainy days, when the sun’s finally showing up again, Tokyo seems to sigh with a relief. The heavy wind with its lost and straying umbrellas is gone, the dark clouds are now causing trouble elsewhere. Hopefully far, far away. When you open your window in the early morning and feel a warm breeze, hear the birds chirp and see the clear blue sky above the ruby colored rooftops of the other houses, you remember why you fell in love with this city after all.

I’m living in Tokyo for exactly one month now. After I spent the summer of 2012 here, with a few side-trips to Kyoto, Osaka and Tottori, I wanted to come back. For a longer term. I found a nice residence in Setagaya, the ward with Tokyo’s largest population and second largest area. My neighbors are an always humping Spanish couple and a guy who loves junk food.

I had to deliver the rent for my apartment to my landlord and it was the first sunny and warm day in April. So I took the chance to ignore the train and went for a walk trough the small streets of my vicinity. Some cats were prowling around the trees, a few kids on skateboards were passing by. And an elderly woman, pouring some flowers on a short wall, smiled gently.

Soon after the beginning of my ramble, I turned into a small avenue and in this moment my eyes spotted everything I love about this country in one immortal, still standing picture. Cherry blossoms were sailing down a bright pink tree, three students with some soft drinks in their hands stood in front of an admirable red shrine in their blue school uniforms.

Surrounded by small little houses, rusty bicycles and cute, green pot plants. It almost seemed as if some kind of supernatural artist wanted to put as many stereotypes and colorful details as possible in his current masterpiece. I was verging on tears. Which was perhaps down to the fact that I’m kind of allergic to cherry blossoms. And stereotypes.

While Yoko Kanno was filling up my head with an idyllic and melodic track, which always reminds me of an alternative perfect retro future, I asked myself, how my life would have looked like, if I had grown up here instead of Germany. In this neighborhood, with these people, influenced by this culture. Perhaps in this pretty house, right next to me. Now.

What kinds of friends would I have had? Would I have been a school system rebel or one of those allegedly soulless career types? Look, it’s Maseru, the Otaku. The heartbreaker. The dishwasher. The president. The globetrotter. The husband. The derelict. The criminal. The girl. The dead one. The one, who had sex with this J-pop idol once and is now a TV host.

I’m one of these strange people who were heavily influenced by an unrealistic impression of Japanese youth culture. Where school was just a place for you and your friends to prepare for battles against an evil supremacy in your shiny robot mechas. And there’s this redheaded tomboy chick who finally fells in love with you and your always hungry best pal and that shy girl with her talking pet. So, now I’m here. Where’s my redhead chick and my super mecha? Hello?

Whenever I talk to one of my Japanese friends about my admiration for this country, they treat me with incomprehension. They are bored of Tokyo, while some foreigners would die to be in this magical metropolis. Some of them are obsessed of Europe. But it seems logical. Both sides are bored of their everyday environment. Only the new holds magic after all.

When I got to my senses a few minutes after I turned into the small avenue, standing there like an idiot, I finally moved on. But I couldn’t get rid of this feeling and these thoughts. What would my alternative childhood and my consequential life have had looked like? Perhaps there’s another Marcel somewhere. In an alternative reality. Far, far away. And I hope he’s hanging around with redheaded tomboy chicks, always hungry best pals – and shiny robot mechas.

.

I Bought a PlayStation Vita:

My 14-year-old self would be insanely proud of me today. I just bought my very first video game console directly in Japan, in a game shop—specifically a PlayStation Vita. And that’s despite passionate industry experts now hyperventilating and virtually screaming in my face: Are you completely insane?! That thing is dead—like, as dead as it gets, you idiot!

Actually, I originally wanted a Nintendo 3DS. But first, the 3D effect bores me; second, the two screens bore me; and third, most of the games bore me. Nintendo just isn’t Nintendo anymore. And here’s the even worse part: if I had bought the thing here, I wouldn’t have been able to do anything with it once I got back home to Germany. Because of regional codes and all that. Pikachu, suck my dick!

And everyone always says, But you’ve got an iPhone, you don’t need handhelds anymore—every game is available on Apple devices anyway. Yeah right, my ass. First, the screen is way too small to actually see anything properly; second, 99 percent of it is some kind of casual garbage game; and third, even there something truly amazing only comes out once every few jubilee years.

So: a PlayStation Vita. Why? (This is going to be the ultimate list post…) First, because the price on the thing was just slashed so much that it was sold out all across Shibuya, and I managed to grab an even further discounted display unit. In black. Wi-Fi only. Second, I can play all kinds of games on it—from anywhere. And third, the PlayStation Network has so many RPG classics at really good prices that I almost had tears of joy in my eyes. Pick one, download it, dive in. Why didn’t I think of this earlier?

Almost all the Final Fantasy titles, Breath of Fire, Vagrant Story… all that stuff that was already so good back then that I basically never wanted to leave the house again. All PSP owners will laugh at me now because they’ve known this for years and are already bored of it, but for me an entirely new world is opening up—one so promising that I want to marry this thing on the spot!

I also picked up Persona 4 Golden, which was probably a good choice because the two Japanese schoolgirls next to me bought it too. Emotionally disturbed high school kids slaughter monsters and play basketball. Or something like that. Exactly my kind of thing. And even if Sony abandons this device before the next PlayStation comes out, I’m going to squeeze every possibility and old classic out of the PS Vita until I collapse. Well, sorry, Nintendo. I really did love you once. But Nintendo Wii U? Seriously? Nah. Thanks. Bye.

.

Talk Show: Where Do You Celebrate New Year's Eve?

Let me guess: You've been standing in the nearest Edeka for hours because half the world had the same idea? Or you're stuck on the phone trying to explain to your friends scattered around town that you still have no clue where and with whom you'll be ringing in midnight tonight? Or you're just going to tune out and spend the end of the year alone at home? With the cat?

Overwhelmed by wet parties, countless options, and good food, we sometimes don't really know under which circumstances we should make the optimal jump into the new year. One thing is certain: You are not alone with this problem. That's why we asked three German bloggers where they are celebrating New Year's Eve, with whom, and why.

Oliver Jopke, Blogger at Zeitgeschmack

You seem to know the Berlin club scene well. Where is the most epic New Year's Eve party in the city?

Ah, New Year's Eve is always a bit of a thing for me. On December 31, I’m usually with friends or at home. We watch DVDs or just get drunk. I hate New Year's Eve. On January 1, I go to Berghain. It's extremely crowded because everyone thinks: "Wow, New Year's there must be amazing, let's try it!" But all my friends go there, so the party is bearable for me. So basically, I celebrate with my friends and a felt million people in a tight space.

What do you think about people who write New Year's Eve with a Y?

I wonder how people come up with "Sylvester"? Too much time on Sylt? Watched all episodes of Sylvester and Tweetie? One should eventually realize that it's spelled with an I. At the latest when seeing all the unnecessary Happy New Year Facebook posts at the beginning of the year, where everyone is already preparing for New Year's Eve with countless posts.

If you could move New Year's Eve to another date, which day would it be?

February 29 in a leap year. Then I wouldn’t have to endure it so often.

Jessica Weiß, Blogger at Journelles

There are surprisingly many people who still enjoy New Year's Eve. Are you one of them?

It always depends on the plans. Last year, for example, I was in Rio. All Brazilians wear white at night, celebrate at Copacabana, and send little flower boats over the waves. The anticipation was huge. Unfortunately, it rained all night, the fireworks weren’t visible, and at David Guetta’s concert, one was nearly crushed. Fun is always what you make of it. This year, I simply told all my friends we’d meet at the Michelberger Hotel. Whoever wants to come, comes. Sliding into the new year with friends is always the best.

Rio sounds good. If someone doesn't feel like celebrating the new year in Germany, where might they go?

Yes, this year in Rio again with amazing weather, hehe. Away from the crowd, I always recommend the Austrian mountains. You start drinking with après-ski, celebrate in ski pants, and ideally sled down the slope at midnight.

Do you have any resolutions for the new year?

Exercise more, eat less. I’ve been telling myself this my whole life, and it probably won’t work in 2013 either. I usually forget resolutions already on New Year's Day.

Angela Nguyen, Blogger at La Festival

So, are you already sick of New Year's Eve like me?

Since I love New Year's Eve, I am not sick of it at all. Especially because this year I will celebrate with my boyfriend in Hamburg. And you?

Berlin. What was the best and the worst New Year's Eve you have experienced?

I had many awful New Year's Eves. Last year, for example, but that’s a long story. Oh, and when I was forced to celebrate at home with my parents. So it wasn’t really celebrating… more like sitting together, waiting for midnight, playing a bit with fireworks, and then going to sleep. A dream!

Sounds exciting… Any resolutions for the new year?

I’m not into resolutions, but I have resolutions all year, always more and more. Then I discard them and think of new ones. I know it doesn’t make sense. My favorite resolution was always: I’ll work harder at school next year. That worked out so well. Really.

In Conversation with Christine Neder: 40 Festivals in 40 Weeks

If you’ve ever been to a festival, you know how exhausted, filthy, and emotionally drained you feel at the end. Most people need a few months, if not years, of break before they dare step back onto a mud-soaked, drug-and-alcohol-fueled outdoor event. Now imagine having to go to one festival right after another. And again. And again.

Christine Neder completed 40 festivals in 40 weeks all around the world. She turned her experiences into a book. We spoke with the charming Berliner about terrible festival-goers, crocheted male genitalia, and an outing with Markus Kavka, which made us want to try it all ourselves. Maybe.

My first festival was "Rock im Park". It rained almost the whole time, my legs hurt, people peed near our tent, and the girl I was fooling around with had mud in her underwear instead of checking the doctors. After that, I swore I’d never set foot on something like that again. Didn’t you feel the same?

You should have gone to the doctors! My first festival was the Melt! Festival last year. I was 25 in 2011 when I went to a festival for the first time, pretty late, and I had no idea how things worked there. With Melt!, I got lucky. It’s more of a stylish festival where people, mostly urban hipsters, are relatively well-groomed and orderly.

In March 2012, I started the 40 festivals. First, a few fun, crazy events like the Strawberry Festival in Plant City with pig races and beauty queens, then Miami for the Winter Party Festival on South Beach. That was insane. 500 half-naked, gorgeous, perfectly built men, and none were interested in me because they were all gay.

My 12th festival and first big one was Rock am Ring, and it was absolutely brilliant. That’s exactly what I wanted—to understand how people celebrate and what they need to celebrate, how they change when suddenly placed in a festival world for a few days. At Rock am Ring, I met a TV crew who gave me a festival introduction: Flunkyball, beer bongs, and crowdsurfing are essential.

You should also try sauerkraut sliding, wandering around concerts, selling hotdogs, and mud wrestling in the rain. Not so great was when someone pooped in front of my car. But hey, it could have been worse; the pooper could have used my tent. You really have to be prepared for everything. I was a bit shocked when a group of men rolled their friend down a hill in a portable toilet. With sore legs and a bit of mud in my underwear, I was lucky.

Hehe, yes, you’re right. You went to 40 festivals in 40 weeks. Did you check if that qualifies for the Guinness World Records?

No, I haven’t looked. Doesn’t interest me.

After the 20th festival, didn’t you just sit around apathically, covering your ears, wishing the ordeal would end?

No, it was a beautiful kind of hell! After the 20th, I really got into the groove and started understanding how things worked. It never got boring because the festivals were so different. I categorize festivals into four types: fun festivals, cultural festivals, music festivals, and traditional festivals. I visited 16 countries, celebrated Oktoberfest in America, cheered cows coming down from the Alps, danced with men in crocheted genital covers in Ukraine, and threw tomatoes. You don’t want to stop—you want more.

Where was the best festival and where the worst?

It’s hard to pick the single best or worst festival. I can say the best moment: sunrise. When you can barely stand, have blisters and back pain, but the music, the atmosphere, and the sky’s color make you unable to leave. You collapse on the dance floor instead.

The best sunrise and one of the best festivals was in Ukraine, at the Republic of KaZantip. KaZantip is a separate party republic with a president, ministers, constitution, and penal code. Entry requires a visa or a yellow suitcase cleared by the suitcase minister. Once in, you get five weeks of beach parties. It’s like another world with crazy installations and dance floors.

The absinthe bar is like a chemistry lab, and the toilet looks like a UFO. The vibe is the best—just being and letting others be, a community meeting at the pier each evening to watch the sunset together. Equally crazy was the tomato fight in Valencia, where 40,000 people gather to throw tomatoes at each other for 60 minutes.

The worst festival was also in Spain, in Pamplona, called Sanfermines, known for “Running with the Bulls.” I wanted a traditional festival abroad and thought it was okay to run a few minutes with six bulls through the streets. I didn’t know the bulls would be killed in bullfights that evening. I didn’t attend—I could never support that. The idea that thousands cheer as a bull is executed is incomprehensible. In a crowd, people stop thinking for themselves, and someone on stage could misuse that collective power.

Back to the festivals: what kind of people attend?

Everything! That’s the beauty. Festivals allow people from different social classes, generations, and nationalities to come together. Differences exist: gourmet or classical festivals in Zermatt had an average age of 40+. Burgherzberg Festival, Germany’s oldest, was a hippie stronghold. Old 68er movement veterans sat next to young families with record players in VW buses, exchanging joints for air pumps.

Best band you’ve seen?

The xx at the Frequency Festival in Austria. They were absolute emotional multipliers. Depending on the crowd’s mood, people jumped joyfully, kissed wildly, cried miserably, or stared melancholically. Also Tocotronic, Miike Snow, and I slightly fell for Cro.

Cro? And the worst band?

Oberste Heeresleitung (OHL) at Punk & Disorderly in Berlin. Along with Dimmu Borgir at Wacken, they were the two worst bands.

Festivals are mostly about tent sex with strangers. Was it hard to resist?

Sometimes I wanted to jump a sweaty man with greasy hair and bad breath into a tent, then eat a charred sausage with him. Just kidding. About 10% of people go to festivals for sex. I wrote a whole chapter about it in my book. Metal festivals in Sweden and Wacken were the most sexually charged. Strange observation: the ugliest men were in KaZantip, the most beautiful women too.

Watching is awkward, but it probably didn’t matter to the participants. Festival sex is the ultimate vacation fling. How do girls get approached easily?

Men need to sit for hours on a camping chair, observe groups, see where tents are, and approach when someone is too drunk or confused to find their way back from the porta-potty.

How did you finance all the trips?

I had media partners, wrote for them, and took photos and videos. I worked for tickets and flights, not money.

Top survival tips for festivals?

Tie your hair back, wear leather pants to repel sweat, beer, and vomit, use a push-up bra as a plate, and bring a padlock for your tent to prevent pooping incidents.

Was writing the book difficult?

Like with my first project "90 Nights, 90 Beds," the decision came mid-project. I wanted to capture the festival experience, not just list line-ups. I met bands, organizers, and odd characters, wrote immediately after each festival, making it authentic and personal.

Did appearing on RTL2-News bring fan mail?

Yes, some messages were thoughtful and made me happier than sales numbers. Others just said "Hi"—I only respond to the interesting ones. A fan joked about meeting for coffee after DSDS.

Any promo events for the book?

Yes. On January 9, a reading with a Flunkyball championship and musical acts from Ecke Schönhauser and Ponydanceclyde at FluxBau at 7 PM. Teams compete for tickets to the Greenville Festival 2013.

Plans for the next project?

I stopped planning life. If I could wish, I’d write a novel next year.

Would you advise anyone else to attempt 40 festivals in 40 weeks?

If they want to, why not? But few could survive it like me.

You can purchase “40 Festivals in 40 Weeks – From One Who Set Out to Learn to Party” for €14.95 on Amazon.

Weekend Tips: Ten Little Missions

2012 is dying, still twitching a little before it’s over. And soon everything will be gone. Whether it was a great or a pretty crappy year for you, each person has to decide for themselves. Compare the highs and lows, the meetings and breakups. And while you do that, you can also tackle the last ten little missions. For your peace of mind. Yes.

One. Watch Rihanna as she jumps around naked on a balcony. Someone who was really good this year must have wished for that at Christmas. Two. Never ask the Internet to photoshop the sun between your fingers. That can only go wrong. Three. Watch this trailer for the next zombie apocalypse. You might see Tony from "Skins". Four. Move to another country. Nobody can stand it here anyway. Five. Book a flight to the East, visit the oldest man in the world and ask him for his secrets. He believes the sun keeps him alive. We rather doubt that.

Six. On New Year’s Eve, give everyone named Marcel a French kiss. And trip anyone named Paul, Thang, or Janos. hehe. This only applies to girls, by the way. Before I forget to mention it. Seven. Look again at the hottest photos of Lana Del Rey. Next year, you’ll probably have forgotten who she even was. Eight. On January 1, start a new blog, an online magazine, or a new publication. The project must be so good that it blows everything else away. Even us. Nine. On December 31, drink only tap water. And also on January 1. Exactly. Ten. Give Marcel another proper French kiss. So.

When We Became the Past:

No matter how far we may be swept away—into the crowded streets of New York, to the hot coasts of Australia, or beneath the high ceilings of Berlin’s old apartments—every now and then we return home. To our town. To a world in which time seems to stand still. And we feel superior. Because no one there had the courage to attempt even remotely what we have achieved.

The streets of the small community are still the same ones we rode down on our BMX bikes as children. Walked along. We know them inside and out. Every corner, every shortcut. Even today we dream of the time when these alleyways were the arteries of our childhood existence. And every meter—no, every centimeter—is burdened with memories that break over us at the right moments.

As I stroll along the main street on a sunny summer morning and don’t encounter a single soul, my thoughts begin to wander. They rise up above the town, sketching out a map. Of the houses. Of the paths. Of the fields. And everywhere, markers pop up with mementos that pull me in at the slightest mental touch and replay what has made me who I am.

How, at twelve, we broke into that trailer to use helium stolen from the fair to turn our voices into Mickey Mouse’s. How, at thirteen, we called the emergency doctor in tears because Maria crashed into the fence of the outdoor pool while sledding and so much blood ran down her face that we had to throw up. How, at sixteen, we sat on the slide at the nearby playground while Paula pulled up her white top, bare-chested and waving her middle fingers, to insult the neighbor who had tried to beat us with a shovel the day before.

When I come back to myself, I’m standing on a small bridge just outside town. Near the allotment gardens that seem abandoned. The sun shines into my face, sweat runs down my forehead, and beneath me a small stream makes its way toward the next village. I stare into the clear water and suddenly an unavoidable truth becomes clear to me—one that makes my heart heavy and brings tears to my eyes.

We ruled this place, made it tremble and shake. We were the ones who roamed through its gates at night; we kissed and ate and fought and cried and came and shouted and laughed and drank. Loudly. Fiercely. Boldly. So that we might immortalize ourselves. So that our deeds would still cause murmurs a hundred years from now. So that we could not die, even if we had long since passed.

Our graffiti has faded. Our legends fallen silent. Our markings erased. The generation that now runs wild in these streets has no idea what happened here years ago. What we risked. Whom we touched. How many enemies we made and how many friends stood by us. They don’t care. Our names don’t matter to them. Our places. Our sorrow. Our songs.

And then we realize that we have not a single reason to feel superior. Because we have achieved nothing. Because nothing lasts. Not in this place, nor anywhere else. And that it is completely irrelevant how far we travel and what we experience. With whom we experience it. How often and how intensely we experience it. Because at some point we turn around. And none of it is there anymore.

Our mementos drift through the town only as vague shadows. They have no effect, no longing. Yet they serve as proof that we have been replaced. By young people who consider us irrelevant and write their own legends in the places that once served as the backdrop for our memories. And this is neither the first nor the last time.

But this generation, too, will one day return to this place. And they will stand on this bridge, and they will cry, and they will become aware of the fact that none of their wildest, most passionate, most dramatic actions will lead into eternity. That their youth is a copy of a copy of a copy. And that everything falls apart the moment they turn around.

All that remains to console us is the eternal dream of doing something no one has ever done before. So we are swept away to the crowded streets of New York, to the hot coasts of Australia, or beneath the high ceilings of Berlin’s old apartments. We don’t think of a copied life; we believe in a unique one. That makes us strong. It is the only way not to lose our minds.

We carry on. We fill the empty legends of our memories with new adventures and images and smells and tastes and sounds. And perhaps next year we can return here again. To our town. To a world in which time seems to stand still. And we feel superior. Because no one there had the courage to attempt even remotely what we have achieved.

.

On Our Own Behalf: Merry Christmas and All That

Okay, maybe you haven’t really noticed yet, because you looked out the window this morning and simultaneously thought: “Damn, how long did I sleep? It’s already spring!” But yes: on this most Christian of days, it’s actually Christmas Eve. Totally wild! And exactly for this reason, here’s the obligatory Christmas greeting. It’s required, at least according to our marketing department.

How do you do it best? Of course: you just follow the five thousand greetings that RTL, the hairdresser around the corner, and various mobile providers have been throwing at us for months: Merry Christmas! And God bless your family! And have a relaxing holiday! And that kind of stuff. You know what I mean. It’s not your first Christmas, after all. Or “Xmas,” as the youth say.

So here’s wishing that your Uncle Jörg, for once, doesn’t get plastered and then put his greasy fingers between your legs when he thinks no one is watching. That Erich, the dumb boyfriend of your older sister, loses his voice and doesn’t keep telling you about his trip to Nepal where he found the meaning of life. And you don’t.

And hopefully you get enough goose, and hopefully Aunt Iris doesn’t start singing, and hopefully you don’t have to explain what you actually do for a living, and hopefully the red wine works, and hopefully you get a sweet SMS from Paula, and hopefully no one argues, and hopefully Uncle Jörg doesn’t give you a vibrator. Pink, with red hearts. And a little wet already.

I have no idea how much new stuff we’ll publish on AMY&PINK in the next few days. That might depend on how stuffed we are from eating, how much our heads pound from mulled wine, and how good our mood is from lazing around. But it doesn’t matter. After all, during the holidays, you have more important things to do than hang around the internet. So: Merry Christmas, you trolls!

Tips for the Weekend: Ten Little Missions

In case no one has told you yet: The world hasn’t ended. That means we’re still alive. And the day after tomorrow is still Christmas. Pretty good. If you’ve already got all your presents or, out of principle, give nothing to anyone and are just sitting around doing nothing today, you are warmly invited to complete these ten little missions. Hey! Get your head out of the cookie bowl and let’s go!

One. Order yourself a pizza on Christmas Eve. And cut it exactly like this. No other way. Two. Give all your friends, family members, and enemies a cute little puppy for Christmas. And beware if they try to swap it. Then… Three. Pay one dollar for every message you receive on Facebook. Who said Facebook was a free social network again…? Four. Decorate your colleague’s desk exactly like this on their birthday. But then: Keep working nicely! Five. Get totally high! After all, marijuana has absolutely no effect on your brain, while alcohol turns you into a dumb zombie.

Six. Don’t be lazy and build really fun snowmen with your little siblings. In the snow. And all that. Seven. Watch the adventures of Pokémon Trainer Rusty. Some of them are really funny. Eight. Go to church with your parents and give each visitor a kiss on the forehead before telling them all their sins are forgiven. Either they’ll be happy—or they’ll run away screaming. Nine. Finally sleep with your hot cousin. You’ve wanted that since you were five. Ten. Steal all the LEGO from this guy and send it to us. Because we miss our LEGO. Again: Steal and send it! Thanks.

Tokyo Diary: The Wedding Can Kiss My Ass

Attentive readers and trolls already know that in a few months I’ll be moving to Tokyo. Quite the surprise. Initially just for one year. The problem is that I always make such decisions on instinct and only start feeling anxious when it gradually becomes clear that what I whimsically decided is actually going to become reality.

Not even half an hour ago, I canceled my apartment. It went very quickly. My landlord printed a hastily typed note on his ancient PC, I signed it, done, goodbye. On February 28, the Wedding district lets me go, and a few days later I’ll be on a plane to the Japanese capital. That’s how fast it goes. In my eyes, maybe even too fast.

Normally, I have to overcome three times as many obstacles as regular people to reach my goal. So far, everything has gone surprisingly smoothly. That’s almost a bit suspicious to me. But whatever, one must not complain. What am I going to do with all my stuff? Sell it on Momox and at flea markets, give it away, throw it out. And the really important things will be stored somewhere.

For now, I’ll fly home for a week to hear, during Christmas roast and cookies, how idiotic this idea is. “Is there only sushi all day?” “Be careful not to pick up any guy in a schoolgirl costume!” “Isn’t it dangerous there? Earthquakes, mafia, and nuclear disasters?” — all already heard.

I have lived in Wedding for five years. Secretly, I always hoped it would finally develop into a trendy district. Rents are cheap, artists are willing, location is okay. But probably, some people have already died waiting for that. If the trends don’t come to me, I’ll go to the trends. Or something like that.

In this new series “Tokyo Diary,” I’ll keep you updated on my preparations for a year abroad. As if I were the first person ever to move somewhere else. But maybe it’s useful for people who also want to go to Japan or elsewhere. Afterwards, of course, there will be reports from over there. In a little over two months. Hooray. Bye.

Instagram: They're Stealing Our Photos!

Not a day goes by without someone getting upset about something. People upset that the world is ending. People upset that the world isn’t ending. People upset about people who are upset that something is happening in this world. Today’s focus: Instagram. The favorite app of dinner, stinky foot, and concert ticket photographers.

Quickly explained, the people behind Instagram, i.e., Facebook, will roll out new terms of use at the beginning of next year that allow them to use any photo uploaded to their service commercially and without the consent of the members. For example, for advertising purposes. Or so that Mark Zuckerberg can make a nice wallpaper out of them.

A photo of the text, which has put filter enthusiasts in a rage, is currently circulating online as "Instagram's Suicide Note" and has generated numerous headlines in the last few hours. Some users have already deleted their accounts, while others make fun of those very people. Once again, a storm in a teacup. If you even remember what that saying means.

The problem here is: this time I can completely understand the outrage. I have absolutely no desire for Facebook to use its photo service as image laundering and free itself from rights to these images. These few lines allow the company to exploit photos for anything without properly compensating the photographer. And that, of course, is wrong.

Another problem is that, despite the media uproar, only a fraction of Instagram users will even hear about the changes to the terms of use. That could lead to some surprises when they suddenly see images of themselves and their loved ones on the next ad banner or even outside the internet—on posters or in commercials—and cannot do anything about it.

Experience shows that alternatives like Vignette, Hipstamatic, or EyeEm may see a surge in users during such events, but none of them will even come close to Instagram. Personally, I will now think more carefully about what kinds of images I share on Instagram—at least until Facebook responds to the criticism or a clear winner among the competitors emerges.

Etsy: Give Gifts, But Preferably Unusual Ones

Tavi Gevinson has achieved what millions of fashion bloggers worldwide only dream of and, with her success in the fashion world, has sparked a true hype of self-promoters. Posing with Karl Lagerfeld in Paris, dining with Anna Wintour in New York, appearing on countless magazine covers. But no one has truly been able to replicate her. Tavi just remains Tavi.

Etsy asked me what I would give the now 16-year-old prodigy for Christmas. What is Etsy? It's a huge online marketplace hosting over 800,000 shops worldwide, run by artists, designers, and creatives. Vintage clothes, handmade jewelry, old finds—everything the individual heart desires.

For a gift for Tavi, I chose the vintage camera Polaroid Sun 600 SE with autofocus and flash from the 1980s, so she can publish personal images with style both for her own blog and for her inspiring online magazine Rookie Mag, which delights millions of young girls worldwide with intimate texts, interesting features, and creative photo series.

During this season, Etsy focuses on celebrating Christmas without stress, overcrowded shopping streets, and mass-produced gifts. Instead, the idea of “Give gifts, but preferably unusual ones” is to let original gifts arrive directly at the door. On Etsy, you’ll find the perfect gift for your loved ones, always something special and personal.

More information about the campaign can also be found on Etsy’s Tumblr, which also features other German bloggers who would like to give special people a gift. For example, Mary Scherpe from Stil in Berlin would like to give Scott Schumann a Norwegian sweater from the 1960s, Caro Kurze from iGNANT recommends knitted egg warmers for Arnold Schwarzenegger, and Frank from iHeartBerlin gives Berghain bouncer Sven Marquardt a steampunk top hat with a wolf. So then: Merry Christmas!

With friendly support from Etsy. Also advertise on AMY&PINK!

In Conversation with Ada Blitzkrieg: Dachshund War, Roulades, and Rap

Twitter was, as everyone knows, invented for idiots without a social life and people in war zones. And Ada Blitzkrieg. The 27-year-old Berliner rambles in the depths of the internet about thawed frozen pizzas, fat drivers in "Mario Kart," and oral sex with Dr. Zoidberg, follows the iron rule of never smiling in photos, and has just published her first book titled "Dachshund War - Roulades and Rap." We spoke with this illustrious blonde about fried chicken pieces, life on a farm, and nasty internet stalkers.

This morning hit me in the face for the first time this winter. Did it hit you too?

I think I haven’t been outside since mid-September. I don’t really need to, because on Twitter I constantly receive food vouchers from delivery services, hoping for good promotion. From someone like me who constantly eats and yet isn’t fat. So that’s a pretty classic win-win situation for me. Plus, I don’t have to buy winter boots.

And what if you do slip? Are you the type of person who acts as if nothing happened, or do you lie screaming for ten minutes and tell people to tell your cat that you love it?

I think people like me have avoidance strategies to not fall. I do a lot lying down and otherwise like to be carried. When my body is upright, I usually stand and make sure there isn’t ice under me by accident. Movement unnerves me.

Does your new book "Dachshund War" take place in summer or winter?

It takes place in all conceivable seasons: spring, summer, autumn, winter, and even more. A large part revolves around Christmas because Christmas is just a fine thing. Everyone likes Christmas, at least since you can order gifts and your Christkind online.

What is it about?

The novel is an autobiographical “literature sausage,” meant to give a vent to all the problems and wars within me. If I didn’t constantly laugh and whip myself through life with self-irony like a madwoman, I would go to the dogs. Also, I wanted to give something back to people, hence the low price.

There are quite a few people out there who often think, "Man, what’s wrong with me?" I wanted to tell them that everything is actually fine, at least as long as they can still laugh. I had long wanted to create something myself, even though I had offers from publishers. I chose not to, because I wanted a 100-percent Ada Blitzkrieg project without compromise.

In an autobiography, no one should tell you, “Cut this and that!” or “Write a bit more about your first time!” This is my damn autobiography. I expect nothing, only to entertain a bit and hope my mother still talks to me afterward.

You have almost 15,000 Twitter followers. How do you manage that?

I once had completely different plans and only wanted to hang around Berlin and study architecture. My boyfriend got me into Twitter back then because we lived in different cities. He said we could always see how funny we were. Back then, nobody cared. The big follower boom came after I met Casper and Prinz Pi, who occasionally tweeted how perfect my account was. Eventually, it ran itself. People were interested in my humor because I stayed genuine and made no secret of being kind of a terrible person—which they found endearing.

Why Ada Blitzkrieg?

Well, my real name is Clara Carerra, but my brother could never pronounce my name as a child, so “Clara” became “Ada.” The nickname stuck over the years. Blitzkrieg fit well, even though it annoys me when people repeatedly ask if I’m a Nazi. I hate Germany, by the way. Ada Blitzkrieg is just a nickname, not a character.

But Clara Carerra sounds like the perfect porn name! How much of internet fame can you bring into real life?

Enough. Without the internet, I couldn’t pay my crappy rent or buy meat. I publish online. All my contacts were made through networks, and even most of my friends I met online first. Slowly, people in Kreuzberg start recognizing me on the street, and I’m always surprised when someone talks to me. Let’s see how this develops. I’m pretty enough for a little fame.

What were the best and worst things you’ve experienced thanks to the internet?

The best? Classic. We were really hungry in the middle of the night and thought there’d be no decent delivery open. We had resigned ourselves to ordering from a mediocre Chinese place. And those Chinese who deliver so slowly aren’t great, as you know. I was high and craving food.

That day, a new shop opened in Berlin that delivered only chicken. Not just any chicken, but whole animals. There was a 50% opening discount. The stuff would have been cheap anyway. Wow, we ordered an incredible amount of chicken for twenty bucks and devoured it while watching a Blaxploitation movie. Most pieces were really deep-fried. We had a great time, and somehow the internet was to blame. The worst experience hasn’t really happened. I like everything on the internet. I had some nasty stalkers once, which happens every few months, but it stayed manageable.

Stalkers? How do you deal with people who hate you?

Not at all. I’ve given up resisting. I don’t care anymore. It didn’t happen consciously, but because of the sheer amount of meaningless feedback I get, you become numb. But that’s great!

What would you do if the internet had never been invented?

I like working with animals and could imagine running a small, rustic slaughterhouse on a remote farm, knowing all customers by their first name.

What are your favorite websites?

Of course SoundCloud, where my boyfriend works, which offers a great product. I like Finding Berlin and… ah, the phone keeps ringing. I like all cat stories, all blogs about cats. Read them all at once, in many open tabs.

What advice do you give to people who want to write a book?

Don’t be afraid!

And what about people who want to tweet?

The same. But here it’s a lie.

Who should you absolutely follow on Twitter?

Only me, the American comedian David Deery, and Mary Charlene. No idea what’s up with her!

How do you achieve a more successful career: hard work or a sexy appearance?

Depends on how you define success. I don’t want to sell myself and just want to live from what I love.

How long will you keep doing all this internet stuff?

Another 6,789 days.

Who do you wish would get hit in the face today as well?

I only know who absolutely shouldn’t fall: the fat Samson from Sesame Street. He’d break all his bones.

Why should people buy your book?

Because I’m sympathetic and without a publisher. And because 100% of the proceeds, just four bucks, go directly to me. That’s a good price for a complete novel.

You can buy "Dachshund War - Roulades and Rap" today for a mere €3.99 on this website.

The Hobbit: Fat Dwarves in the Forest

When it comes to writing about movies, I already fail at the beginning. Even with "The Hobbit," I would rather tell you that my neighbor laughed so stupidly and at such inappropriate moments that I wished his head would simply have exploded from this revolutionary 48fps technique. And his neighbor couldn’t speak English. Which meant that she asked at every second word: “What does Dwarf mean?”, “What does Scum mean?”, “What does Precious mean?” Hannelore, then don’t go to an original screening if you only speak Saxon!

"The Hobbit" was popcorn entertainment in epic style. You can freely use that for your press releases. I am a casual "Lord of the Rings" fan. I know the rough story about the Ring, Frodo, and Gollum; I enjoy the huge battles; names, places, or events between beginning and end I’ve already forgotten after a quarter of an hour. “When did he die?”

Unfortunately, I can never really immerse myself in this monumental fantasy world. Because gigantic logic errors keep flashing in front of me, practically shouting that the protagonists can’t think around corners. This was already the case with the three big films and is no different in the new trilogy. If I had been J. R. R. Tolkien’s editor, I would have given them a piece of my mind left and right.

If Gandalf can constantly summon huge birds, why don’t they fly the whole distance with him? The secret inscription on the piece of paper is only visible when the moon has the right shape, but, oh miracle, it happens to be so at this very moment? And gigantic waves of magic sweep through caves and kill millions of Orcs, but ten dogs sit on a tree and call for help?

Nevertheless, I liked "The Hobbit." I am curious how the story continues. Because as the laziest person in the world, of course I haven’t read the book but rely on the dragon not being that big of a problem. The dwarves are all funny, I liked the humor that some considered inappropriate. And I think Bilbo is cooler than Frodo. Much cooler. Period.

Anyone who liked "The Lord of the Rings" will also like "The Hobbit." It’s basically the same, just prettier and with more action. I will only be fully satisfied when finally a pretty female protagonist appears. Because just watching fat dwarves walking through forests and mountains for three and a half hours can get boring even for the most dedicated fantasy fan.

Mixtape Monday: A Day at the Pony Farm

The two girls from PonyDanceClyde make such good mixtapes that, to celebrate the day, we simply took the best tracks from their playlists and are presenting them here as our own. Almost anyway. Kate Boy is included just like Little Dragon, Bon Iver, and Kitten. Just press play and feel like you’re on holiday at the pony farm for a good hour. It’s fun. Hü, hott!

Weekend Tips: Ten Little Missions

Christmas is just around the corner again. Or the end of the world. Depending on which hocus-pocus you believe in. In any case, there will soon be a lot of celebrating, eating, and drinking, and you will have to talk to people you might not even like. But that doesn’t have to be the case. Instead, you can simply complete these ten little missions. Best before December 21. Thanks.

One. Watch this pony riding around on the S-Bahn in Berlin. And don’t you dare not share it on Facebook, Twitter, and via SMS link! Two. Take off your pants! Whatever you do. After all, it’s the new hot thing among Hollywood stars. Three. Prepare for the end. Because it is near. Now is probably the best time to sleep with your best friend, poop on the boss’s desk, and end your permanent diet with a big cheeseburger. Four. Run into a crowded reading room and shout loudly: “Quick, everyone out! We have no time for explanations!” Five. Look at this frozen soap bubble.

Six. Write an essay about the assassin bug that wears its dead enemies as armor. Read it aloud in your class. Seven. Wear a mask during sex. Dieter Bohlen, Osama bin Laden, Freddy Krueger... your partner will enjoy it! Eight. Politely introduce yourself to everyone and everything. Even trucks. A bit of politeness won’t kill you. Nine. Watch Ali G’s first performance in ten years and admit that he’s still Sacha Baron Cohen’s best character. Ten. Buy yourself and everyone you know this Nyan Cat Hoodie for Christmas. Your mother, father, brother, sister, aunt, uncle, grandpa, grandma. And Ferdinand.

League Of Legends: Juke in the Brush at the Neuts, You Noob!

I can’t really anymore… Normally, I get bored of everything I start after about two and a half hours. Movies, projects, girls—completely irrelevant. And video games even more so. I haven’t even come close to finishing "The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim," turned off "Dead Space" in the second room, and don’t even get me started on "EVE Online."

Basically, I’m just looking for a substitute after "Mass Effect," a game that pulls me so deeply into its world, with all its characters, stories, and events, that I can’t sleep, that I constantly think about it, that I can’t do anything else but finish it as best as I possibly can. And save the universe. Or more.

The fact that I find my temporary salvation in exactly the opposite scares me the most. Because "League of Legends" alongside "Diablo 3" and "Call Of Duty" can, without objection, be considered the dumbest game of all time. Ten people brawl in pairs in an enchanted forest. And over and over and over again.

But by God, I can’t stop! I’ve spent the last few nights bashing some Spaniards and Italians with my Riven. And I’m good! With a few beers in, and listening to the guys from the Rocket Beans keeping me from total madness, I’m good! And honestly: if I keep this up, my life will consist only of Reproc, PBAE, and Top, Mid, and Bottom.

Why does it give me so much pleasure to line up in the virtual queue again and again, to kick a half-dim high schooler in the ass with the same key combos? I scream when I get caught at the last meter during a chase. Loudly. And I rejoice when the big "Victory" sign appears. From the bottom of my heart.

I’ve already reflected once on "League of Legends." And I don’t just write about things because I like or dislike them, but often simply to get them out of my system. Writing about a topic means liberation, emptiness, space for new things. But this time, it doesn’t seem to work. Either I’ve finally found a challenge. Or I just hate high schoolers.

"Good Game." My level rises, notifications that my teammates honor me for my bravery and my enemies for respect pop up at the top of the screen. It asks if I want to fight again—a bright orange button. I pause for a moment; it’s already half past 3 in the morning. One click on Okay, a sip from the bottle, and I continue. And slowly, I stop thinking about it.

Google Maps for iPhone: Never Get Lost Again!

I couldn’t understand the hate for Apple’s own mapping service at first. Typical hate, I thought. It looks fine, I thought. It’ll work, I thought. Only when I ran like a maniac through Charlottenburg because I was late for an important appointment did I realize: the thing is crap! I tapped, it loaded, I spun it, it showed blank white areas, I swore, it crashed.

By extension, this meant that Apple ruined my chance at a fat fortune, a huge beach house, and a fulfilling life with the enchanting Miss Siamese Twin 2011. Because at 10 a.m., I wasn’t at that fat manager’s office on Kantstraße, but ten corners away in front of Cheng’s Import and Export shop. For that, I now have a new keychain with a dragon on it.

However, I was too lazy to add Google Maps as a browser button to my iPhone home screen, so for months I lived in fear that my iPhone might take me to a national park or drive me so crazy that I smash it into the next wall in a thousand pieces. Seriously, I was close. It… it practically wanted it!

Now the whole madness is finally over. Google Maps is back! As an app! On iOS 6! On iPhone! Hooray! You can download it here for free! And it’s beautiful! And fast! And oh… I want to picnic with it, take it on a romantic date by the riverside, and then have fun on a remote mountain cabin, which it finds in no time. Show me the world, Maps, show me the world…!

One Year in Tokyo: Goodbye, Berlin!

Almost no day passes without my thoughts being in Tokyo since I spent three months there in the summer. I remember the moments when I first stood at the Shibuya crossing, wandered through the shops in Akihabara, and worked in Harajuku at the Terminal. And with each passing minute, my memories faded a little more. And more.

To prevent my experiences there from becoming a transparent dream, I’ve spent the past few weeks preparing to return there as soon as possible. To the city that captured my heart and hasn’t let go. As cheesy as it may sound, nowhere else have I felt so free, so alive, so curious. And that says something.

My flight is now scheduled. On March 4, 2013, I will leave Berlin, likely for one year. Under the Working Holiday Visa from the Japanese Embassy, which allows people under 30 to extensively explore, work, and travel in the Land of the Rising Sun. What you need: some money, international health insurance, and a few documents.

I’m still unsure what to do with my current apartment and am also looking for reasonable accommodation. So if you know someone who knows someone living in Tokyo, send me their contact information so I won’t have to hang out in Yoyogi Park all year. Offers and vouchers from certain digital rental companies are, of course, also welcome. Haha.

On one hand, it will be incredibly hard for me to part from my chosen home. Especially now. On the other hand, 365 days isn’t the world. Then I’ll return and might appreciate the things in the German capital that I normally let pass by unnoticed a little more. Goodbye, Berlin! I do love you a little. And hello, Tokyo! You glowing, glittering LSD metropolis!

Kate Upton: The Wow Factor

I would so much like to remember the day I first saw Kate Upton. How she pulled me from my redhead obsession to the love of the new American Dream Girl. But I can't. Was it Terry Richardson’s shoot at the beach? No, much earlier… Was it the stunningly great video for Guess Lingerie? Who knows… Or Ken Jeong’s illustrious photobomb show? Probably… One thing is clear: Kate, you sun of my heart, bright ray of light in the dark sky, you… um… angel… in… canned meat… what? Alasdair McLellan photographed Kate Upton for the current Vogue. And she looks fantastic. As always. That’s all I wanted to say. (Do you want to marry me?)

Access All Areas: Make Yourself More Important Than You Are

Actually, festivals, concerts, and promo parties are total rip-offs. You pay a lot of pocket money just to get in, and then you still have to pay for drinks, food, and merchandise, while some random press people and semi-famous semi-stars waltz into the closed areas and get everything handed to them for free.

But it doesn’t have to be that way! If you’re a bit clever and don’t act too stupid, you can basically do everything, get everything, and enter anywhere, even if you’re just a trainee at Rewe or sell hamster cages to afford microwave meals. You just need to follow a few rules and memorize the three levels of the "Access All Areas" bible.

Important: Never ask, never hesitate, never wait! No matter how much you like the band or the event: Pretend you were forced by your publisher or agency to be there. At this annoying event, with these even more annoying people. You’re stressed, always rushing to the next appointment. Interviews here, photos there, quickly grab a Beck's. Out of the way!

If you wear music shirts, only wear ones from old bands that only true connoisseurs in dark record basements listen to. Never from any band performing that night. And anyone who cheers or asks for an autograph has already lost. Don’t forget: You don’t actually want to be here! It’s your damn job! Including free drinks.

Level 1: Drink Tokens

At concerts, press members and friends of the bands are often handed drink tokens to pour themselves drinks for free. Simply order some flat, round plastic chips without markings and simple tear-off rolls in different colors from the internet, in packs of 100. They are usually black, orange, green, or blue and quite cheap.

Then stand at the bar and observe which types are used that night. Call your friend to bring some, or pour the tokens you stashed behind a bush. Never show too many at once; it would be noticeable. Usually, one token gets you a beer or soft drink, and two or three get you the stronger stuff.

Level 2: Wristbands

Colorful wristbands are mostly used at festivals to separate the paying crowd from the important people. With the right wristband, you can get almost anywhere. VIP wristbands are usually black, gold, or pink. Keep a stock of various colors at home and have a friend check which color is the important one that weekend.

Slightly mark the right color with a permanent marker to make it look printed, then wear it with others on your arm. To get through areas guarded by bodyguards, act like you’ve been there seventy times. Put on a stressed look, rush straight in, quickly show the wristband.

Level 3: Badges

The hardest to copy are badges that pseudo-important people wear around their necks to access closed areas. What you need: some postcard-sized transparent plastic sleeves, a discreet lanyard, and a friend in the press or crew who lets you copy their card. This is the highest level of "Access All Areas" trickery.

Scan the card, change the name, and print it out, then slip it into the plastic sleeve attached to the lanyard and keep it in your pocket so nobody notices it’s not an official pass. Again, act stressed, rush past security, it’s all so annoying…

Since the last two tricks probably fall under document forgery and are as serious as making bombs or growing marijuana, only incredibly stupid people attempt them, risking getting beaten by stressed promotion staff or taken home by the police. So don’t be stupid: pay roughly 150 euros for a festival ticket, 5 euros for a beer, and 10 euros for a currywurst with fries, while others get everything for free. Very good!

Das neue Instagram: Filters, Appearance, and Features

We all know that you collectively freak out if anyone dares to change the program with which you turn dead birds on the street, your feet on the balcony, and blueberry muffins in the middle of grandma’s porcelain plate into small rectangular masterpieces using modern filter technology. But calm down, the new Instagram is actually quite good.

Version 3.2.0 brings a completely new interface from Facebook that even idiots can’t miss the camera button. It’s huge at the bottom center; one click brings you to the filters decorated with cute hot air balloons, one of which is called "Willow." And it’s new and black-and-white. And as we all know, we use black-and-white filters all the time. So never.

The other pages have also been slightly rearranged. The Foursquare button now pops up in various places so you can always link where you are while blocking people from your food because you need to adjust the sushi and Asahi. All photos are now automatically saved to your library. Whether you want it or not.

Of course, most of the changes only apply to the iOS version on the iPhone; if you use Android, you are basically only half a person with a poor camera that doesn’t deserve Instagram’s blessing. The new version of the favorite app of all hipsters can be downloaded here for free. Exposed breasts are still prohibited on Instagram, by the way. We tested it.

Red Bull Soundclash: K.I.Z vs. Kraftklub

We were in Cologne over the weekend to witness the epic battle between the guys from K.I.Z and Kraftklub, who faced off at the Palladium in front of thousands of fans in the hall and on the livestream. In small challenges of the Red Bull Soundclash, the two hardcore bands threw songs and harsh words at each other, and the audience roared, screamed, and danced.

When Sido, Casper, Wilson Gonzalez, and Jimmy Blue Ochsenknecht also appeared on the two opposing stages, there was no stopping it. Fans from both sides threw themselves into intense dance battles. From above, we couldn’t help but admire the dedication. People who go that hard are rarely seen. Not bad, Cologne!

Our night ended after the Reineke-Fuchs aftershow party at the nearby Kentucky Fried Chicken, exhausted and with a not-to-be-underestimated mix of Red Bull and Jägermeister in bed at the hotel. The next day, we did a small sightseeing tour past the cathedral, energized at cafés, and browsed stylish clothing stores like NIGH and The Good Will Out.

Thanks to the guys and girls at Red Bull for the great evening and huge respect to my blogger colleagues Willy, Sara, Thang & Co., who kept a relatively cool head despite the snow chaos and adventures at Berlin airports. Cologne, we’ll definitely be back! You have to experience such a passionate audience more than once!

Photos by Dirk Mathesius.

Sword Art Online: Game for Your Life

Anyone with even a slight interest in video games has undoubtedly tried at least one online role-playing game, such as "World of Warcraft," "Guild Wars," or "Eve Online." The number of connected entertainment programs is virtually endless. But have you ever considered what would happen if you were suddenly trapped in one of these games? Possibly forever?

The new anime by Reki Kawahara puts you exactly in this scenario. In 2022, an MMORPG called "Sword Art Online" is released in Japan, which teleports players directly into the digital parallel world via the Nerve Gear device. Everything feels, smells, and tastes real, and the excitement over the new gaming experience is enormous. Until the first players discover there is no logout button. A bug?

The sky over the green fields of Aincrad turns red, and Akihiko Kayaba, the game developer, appears to announce something insane: no one can leave alive unless the RPG is completed. Anyone who dies in the game dies in real life. There are 100 levels to conquer, and at the end awaits the final boss. So now it’s time to level up, grind, and win.

Kazuto Kirigaya, one of these typical shy Japanese students, decides to tackle the imposed challenge alone but soon reaches his personal limits. Before long, the first guilds, professional groups, and criminal organizations form—the digital world is vast, and the main goal slowly becomes legendary.

"Sword Art Online" is probably the best current anime on the market. I watched the first ten episodes in a single night. The story is full of love and detail, cleverly juggling the many clichés of online gaming. The music is fantastic, and the characters—Kazuto, Asuna, and Yui—are all so endearing that I would want to print them life-size and devour them. Just when you think you’ve understood everything, the first major twist shatters it all.

The series is currently airing for the first time on Tokyo Metropolitan Television, short Tokyo MX. If you don’t live in the Japanese capital, there are numerous ways online to access the episodes with excellent subtitles. Anyone craving a thoroughly enjoyable anime series cannot miss "Sword Art Online." It’s that good.

Mag Watch: The Magazines of the Week

Print dead? Yes. Nonsense, of course. Although many journalists are currently being laid off and must now lead a sad existence as paid Amazon review writers, some publications still approach things cleverly and successfully. Here are five issues you should definitely grab at the newsstand—preferably today. Death to trees!

Dazed & Confused

Yes, I know. Not everyone is into the Japan-Asia hype I’ve been posting almost daily here. Many are already fed up with Kyary Pamyu Pamyu, AKB48, and the Tempura Kidz. But even the venerable Dazed & Confused has recognized the signs of the times and devoted an entire issue to far-eastern pop culture. It features Korean bloggers from Eat Your Kimchi, robot fanatic Shigeo Hirose, and photographer/director Mika Ninagawa. For anyone tired of Western uniformity.

Cooler

You’re neither a girl nor into snowboarding, skiing, or surfing? No problem! Cooler is made for a very specific audience, but the topics—mostly related to youth action sports—are so unusual and diverse that you suddenly become interested in things you previously knew nothing about. There’s an interview with skater Helena Long, a fantastic travel report on Melbourne, and Enni Rukajärvi grins alongside many other attractive girls at the camera.

Front

If you don’t want to invent a complicated reason to look at attractive girls in magazines, go straight for our favorite “boob magazine,” the British FRONT. I could tell you that they spoke with Keith Lemon and Jack Whitehall about the past year, Roll Deep about their favorite party tracks, and Ghostface Killah and Sheek Louch had airtime. But really, it’s just about the 73 exposed nipples you can count meticulously. Awesome!

VICE

Admit it: the war in Syria doesn’t concern you. You have your own problems, Kai-Dieter cheated on you, and school constantly calls asking where you are. We get it. So be grateful to VICE for sending their team into a land of limited opportunities to report things that never even reach a "Punkt 12" editorial meeting. It’s about people mutilated by Assad, a Disneyland in Syria, and refugees in Lebanon. Respect!

Purple

A genuine fashion magazine naturally cannot be missing in this round. The brainchild of the slightly eccentric Olivier Zahm is called Purple. You might know him from his legendary heartbreak blog entries, when his pseudo-girlfriend Natacha Ramsay left him for another guy. Purple reflects his slightly perverse thoughts. It is not a friendly magazine but rather direct, beautiful, and special. The current issue continues that trend, featuring Rei Kawakubo, Peter Beard, and Richard Prince.

DragstripGirl: The Little Racism

Almost 70 years have passed since the Third Reich. And that is a good thing. That there are still people who long for the ideology of the past, even almost wishing it would return, is no secret. But it still shocks repeatedly. Especially when one can assume that people who utter phrases like “Foreigners out” or “Germany for Germans” are hardly aware of the kind of life they are invoking should their wish come true.

The little racism hides between the buildings of this city, in the minds of its residents, in the words of those who are bold or foolish enough to give verbal expression to the ideology they are drawn to. Sara from Dragstripgirl experienced it. Here. In the middle of Berlin, in broad daylight. Surrounded by others. Yet no one looked, no one reacted. Sara was alone.

“Germany for Germans,” shouts the unkempt woman, cheerful, squeaky happy. Her pig-like face twists into a bizarre, greasy laugh. I twist my neck and look at her in horror. She looks past me. The Thuringian bald man nods to her. “Finally someone from Thuringia! Finally not a Kanacke or Negro or Bimbo here! Together we can do it! They belong in the oven, these dirty Negroes stealing my bottles. The dirty Kanacks belong gassed, all of them, like the Jews.”

I stand up and turn trembling. I take a deep breath and scream, and scream, and scream as loud as I can, and the echo of all these words takes away my fear of the pain of vile blows. “Shut your stupid mouth, you miserable piece of Nazi shit, just shut your dumb mouth, no one here wants to hear what you have to say. The laughter is frozen on her face. She wants it exactly like this, just needs another reason to chant the same hymn every day. “Kanacke bitch, shut your mouth, or I’ll come up and stab you!”

The silent passengers of the Deutsche Bahn regional train look at me in disbelief, while tears run down my cheeks. “Yes, you, you sons of bitches, play at political correctness while sucking the Aryan dicks of worthless sluts! You castrate your ego because you lost a war, act all high and mighty, probably have a foreign friend or two, but you can easily listen to the brown shit, because secretly we all think it anyway, right? We all think: Screw the unemployed Negroes, screw the parasitic gypsies, the disabled cripples, the polluted gays, the antisocial Turks, and these terrorist Muslims, Germany for Germans! Come on, beat me up, mess me up, fuck the Kanacke bitch, all or nothing!”

Scenes like these happen every day somewhere in Germany, but only rarely do people have the courage to stand up against verbal right-wing extremism. And although Sara screams, cries, and feels her heart break, it remains a silent climax without a finale. People get off the train, the woman goes her way. Nothing and everything has happened. The little racism lives on.

Read the full story here. Become a fan of DragstripGirl on Facebook.

New York Post: The Sad Story of Ki Suk Han

The New York Post is something like the BILD or The Sun of the United States. They would love to report on dangerous killer UFOs and legendary Illuminati meetings, but no one would buy that today, so they like to spin stories five times until they make a scandalous sense. Print has to sell itself somehow.

Our friends in America have gotten used to the fact that below-average stupid people read this, and are not impressed, but this story that the New York Post ran this morning on its front page even makes the calmest people furious. It provokes verbal outbursts. It is about the death of an innocent man and how best to exploit it.

The man in the photo is Ki Suk Han. He is 58 years old, a father and husband. And yesterday evening he was pushed onto the tracks of the New York subway by an as-yet-unknown man of color. The photographer R. Umar Abbasi happened to be on site and captured the helpless man’s last seconds on his memory card, just before he was struck by the train and shortly afterward died.

“The current cover of the New York Post perfectly summarizes what kind of community we have become,” writes Melanie Collins on Twitter. “Shame on you, you disgusting, miserable pseudo-humans.” Ryan J. Davis says: “Dear fellow New Yorkers: There is no reason to read the New York Post. It is not a real newspaper!” And Robert Roman writes: “Apparently there was enough time to take several photos instead of trying to help the man. There is still much to do…”

And this is precisely the point: the photographer R. Umar Abbasi, from whom the picture comes, claims that he intended to warn the subway driver with his camera flash and force a stop, as he was aware that he could barely pull the man from the tracks. And the New York Post reports it that way. But who can prove otherwise?

In fact, this clearly shows one thing again: the drastic measures newspapers nowadays have to take to defend themselves against the decline of print. We can already be curious about what BILD covers will hit us in the coming years, shortly before the paper is discontinued and fully moves to a digital readership.

The World of Karl Lagerfeld: Interview with a Visionary

There is nothing that hasn’t already been written about Karl Lagerfeld. He is idolized and vilified, his unique character inspires some and clashes with others. I am aware of this when I say that he is one of my few vague role models. Even though I have about as much to do with the fashion industry as Karl has with space travel.

The (probably) 79-year-old recently gave an interview titled "Am perfekten Wochenende halte ich den Mund" to Inga Griese, Ulf Poschardt, and Cornelius Tittel, which can be read on the WELT website. And it’s fantastic. Probably, Karl Lagerfeld is the one whose interviews I like to read most attentively and honestly. Probably.

Do you think people in fashion are less stupid today?

Karl Lagerfeld: Let’s say fashion people are somewhat less stupid today. One thing must be acknowledged: fashion is the only thing that works in France today. Only that none of the politicians wants anything to do with us. None of them would ever attend a fashion show. It’s like in a proper family. As if you had a daughter who works the streets.

How do you celebrate Christmas?

Karl Lagerfeld: The good thing nowadays is that everyone travels at Christmas. But I do Haute Couture, and that is done from early December to mid-January. At that time I am a home worker. People in this profession have to stay at home. I don’t know a soul who stays in Paris for the holidays. And since I have no family, I am totally free, and that is, of course, the pinnacle of luxury.

Excuse us for asking so sentimentally. But does no one visit you, not even your closest employees?

Karl Lagerfeld: No, I am against having too close personal relationships with employees because they all have their own families. I don’t want satellites; I just want to work with people who have their own lives. I don’t want anyone to depend on me.

Of course, as an outsider one might ask what Karl Lagerfeld has actually accomplished, apart from blessing or cursing the fashion world with his influence. But I simply love interviews that sound like conversations, that don’t contain rehearsed promotional clichés, and that provide deep insights into a person’s character.

That is why I also hate the typical questionnaire-style interviews. “What is your favorite band?” “Which country did you like best?” “When will your new CD be released?” That makes me feel sick; I can’t take it. What would I ask Karl Lagerfeld if he were in front of me? Probably how much of his success he owes to his image. Why he is repeatedly asked about Christmas. Or what he understands about space travel. Mr. Lagerfeld, if you wish to answer these questions, please contact me.

Learning with Kyouhei: My Tandem Partner and I

The nice guy in this photo is Kyouhei Yamamoto. But I affectionately call him Kyo. Sometimes. He was born in 1988 in Okayama Prefecture, then lived for several years in Tokyo, and this year, because he was bored there (God knows why), moved to Berlin. He usually photographs. Girls. And dogs. And trees. But at the moment he works in a restaurant, the Smart Deli.

Why am I telling you this, you ask? Rightly so. Because Kyouhei is my tandem partner. I’ll spare the bicycle joke here; it’s more about him teaching me Japanese. After all, at the beginning of next year, I want to move to the land of the rising sun for our new project FRIENDS IN TOKYO for a year. And for that, I teach him German. Me? Yes, exactly.

The problem is that I am neither a good student nor a good teacher. Essentially, I fail in both roles alternately and continuously. And then I sit there like a drooling raft drifting in the river of ignorance. Me, the poet. But I am not alone. Kyouhei himself has no idea how this tandem thing should work. And that’s bad for both of us.

So we meet, talk in English about Berghain, cheeseburgers, and Mount Fuji, and learn only the things that randomly bubble up from us. “Käse is cheese in German?” “Yes. And 弁護士 means lawyer in Japanese?” “That's right!” In summary, we can say that 99% of the time we chat and 1% we actually learn. Which doesn’t really advance our lives.

Now you’re still sitting in front of the screens with clueless looks, asking: So… what do you want from us? That’s clear: I am looking for people who have done this tandem learning method more or less successfully. With Enzo from Italy, Linnéa from Sweden, or Maria from Spain. You arranged meetings, met, and then…?

How on earth did you turn your dates into real festivals of smoking brains? Are there secret techniques, tricks, or methods? How did you manage the balance between communicating in English and learning in the respective foreign languages? How often did you meet, when did you meet, with how many people? Alone, with friends?

Please share your tandem wisdom, what you learned at university or adult education, and help funny Kyouhei and me to stop wasting our afternoons with silly chatter (which can be nice sometimes) and eating fries, so that soon he can say “Where is the nearest swimming pool?” and I can say “私のアヒルは黄色です。” Thank you.

Norilsk: A Life in the Cold

Don't feel like going outside because it's so dark, cold, and unpleasant? Well, take a look at Norilsk and its residents. In this northern Russian industrial city, the temperature is currently around minus 40°C. And people still go to work. Or to school. Or whatever else they normally do when they've accepted the weather.

Norilsk itself is located about 300 km north of the Arctic Circle at the northern foothills of the Lontokoiski-Kamen Mountains, the outer northwestern part of the Central Siberian Highlands, and slightly to the east, beyond the Norilka river flowing northeast of the city, rises the Putorana Plateau as the much larger northwest part of this mountain range. Fascinating, isn’t it?

If you now feel eager to visit Norilsk, whether to see the remains of the notorious Gorlag penal camp or to admire the architecture, you might face a problem. In recent years, foreigners are no longer allowed entry without a permit. Perhaps they fear that you simply won’t tolerate the harsh climate.

iTunes 11: Death to CoverFlow!

If you don’t just use your computer to impress your younger neighbor or cover that strange yellow stain on the wall, you’ve probably noticed that Apple has released a new version of its world-dominating music program, iTunes. And it’s something else: countless nerds literally had their brains explode after downloading it.

Writing about a software update is about as cool as shouting into a crowded Berghain that your mom is waiting outside with fresh clothes. But since I spend what feels like thirty-six hours a day on this thing, I have a say when Steve Jobs’ robot crew decides to replace my beloved features with something else!

Sure, who even uses iTunes anymore? Spotify, man! That’s the new hot thing! Yes, Klaus, you’re completely right. Spotify is great! But unfortunately, my taste in music is sometimes so far from the mainstream that even fans of Latin American pot-banging bands give me weird looks, and on the other hand, these streaming services lack the “owning” feeling. As silly as that may sound.

The first time I opened it, I almost cried. Where’s the sidebar? What does the green button do now? Why does everything shine so stupidly? Mommy! But I took my time and now I’ll tell you why iTunes 11 is the best iTunes of all time and why you shouldn’t listen to anyone claiming otherwise while they’re probably busy downgrading.

With iTunes 11, Apple finally removed all the garbage I never liked and always disabled anyway. Adios, Ping! Adios, Party Shuffle! Adios, CoverFlow! You ugly scourge of the last decade… Everything works, everything runs smoothly, everything is in its place. And within a few days, you get used to the refreshed interface that initially threw me into pure panic.

So if you haven’t yet subscribed to Spotify for life and still enjoy listening to music offline in a totally old-fashioned and almost antique way, don’t be afraid when the 25th notification pops up on your desktop telling you to update your old stuff. And now, excuse me, Mommy is waiting outside with fresh clothes!

Fashion Industry Confessions: The Truth About The Game

The fashion industry is known for its glamour, spectacular appearances, and a pioneering, stylish sector kept alive daily by millions of designers, managers, editors, and bloggers. But many of us also know: behind the scenes, a disgusting war of envy, greed, and sex often rages. Unfortunately, few are willing to reveal much for fear of losing their jobs.

On the Tumblr Fashion Industry Confessions, all these truths now come to light. Anonymously, but from supposedly reliable sources. Perhaps. From models who feel unfairly treated. From artists who experience the hatred of their competitors. From girls and boys who have glimpsed into the maw of possibly the most beautiful and simultaneously disgusting industry in the world.

“The day I said no to Terry Richardson, my career was over,” writes an anonymous model. “Charlotte Free urgently needs a hot wax treatment,” jabs a colleague. “I sat next to her backstage. And thanks to the hot lights, her southern regions started to smell.” And an intern writes: “I was supposed to pick up a few bags for Alexander Wang and absolutely not look inside. I did anyway and saw that eight Balenciaga pieces were in there, ready to be copied for his next collection.”

Fashion Industry Confessions is also responsible for revealing the planned collaboration between H&M and Givenchy. Industry insiders feed the site daily with small pieces of information. But of course, not everyone is happy about it. “There’s a reason the fashion industry keeps certain things secret,” protests a reader of the blog. “And don’t come at me with any crappy excuse! I hope you know that this could seriously harm me and my family! Screw you!”

We are curious how long the fashion circus authorities will tolerate this gossip site or if it will meet the same fate as the German counterpart Dings in Berlin, which closed after a few days due to numerous opponents. For now, the creators of Fashion Industry Confessions are holding firm. Their comment to critics: “Lol, so funny.”

Skrillex Quest: Game Of Whooms

If you have absolutely no idea who or what Skrillex is, you don’t need to feel ashamed or embarrassed. Skrillex is the guy your little brother dances to on Saturday afternoons at the kids’ disco "Fun & More", touches Klarissa from 5b on the butt, and sweats a little under his not-yet-fully-grown armpits. But mom is slowly starting to worry.

The dubstep grandpa, who achieved international success with sonic spectacles like "Scary Monsters and Nice Sprites", "Bangarang", and "First of the Year", seems to find "music" no longer enough, as he now presents his own video game. This, in turn, is based on a digital masterpiece that neither your little brother nor Klarissa from 5b has ever seen.

"Skrillex Quest" is the title of this piece. It’s something like a 3D prototype of the first "The Legend of Zelda" on the tried-and-true Nintendo Entertainment System (God, we are old...). You have to save a kingdom from total destruction, avoid pixel errors, and listen to the greatest hits of Sonny John Moore—provided you even want to. Ah, nostalgia is truly wonderful.

Tips for the Weekend: Ten Little Missions

Glad you tuned in again today. Here’s a new episode of "Ten Little Missions", where we dictate how you should behave over the next few days. The more tasks you successfully complete, the higher your karma, and the more attractive people want to sleep with you. That’s what this life is all about. Nothing else. Let’s go!

One. Finally get your federal state to legalize marijuana. In California, it has already pushed the youth crime rate to a record low. How you achieve this is up to you. Two. Donate comfort to these poor animals who simply don’t know what to do anymore. Hug them, talk to them, give them a gentle kiss on the forehead. So sad. Three. Buy a few items from Yoko Ono’s men’s fashion line. And dare not walk around without wearing them… Four. Give every person you meet with the same first name as yours one euro. Don’t tell them why. Five. Take a trip to Luxembourg. Nobody else does.

Six. Make topless GIFs of yourself and upload them to Tumblr. Just like Arvida does. Seven. Pack five food packages, including sandwiches, soda, beer, and a bit of cash, and hand them out to homeless people you see outside. I mean it seriously. Eight. Watch Lindsay Lohan’s wet spot and think carefully about what feelings it evokes in you. Nine. Blitz all Palestinians and Israelis, destroy their borders, and convince them that they are one people. Problem solved. Ten. Persuade your best friend to get the same tattoo as you. Hearts, trees, or drunken Care Bears—the world is your playground!

Jeremy Scott Super Smart: A Night in Los Angeles

We spent the last few days in Los Angeles to check out the current collaboration between the exceptional designer Jeremy Scott and Mercedes-Benz. The joint creation is a specially designed Smart car, entirely in elegant white, with black accents and striking red-detailed wings, which we got to admire at the premiere party in the venerable Jim Henson Studios.

Los Angeles itself was once again often sunny, sometimes surprisingly windy and rainy, a place somewhere between gritty backdrops and a pulsating art scene, inhabited by illustrious figures and very helpful, friendly people who were always there when you didn’t know what to do next or simply wanted a chat.

Since we were only visiting the Californian metropolis for one night and the car show demanded enough attention, there was little time for exploratory trips between palm trees and breaks with frozen yogurt, but what we saw surprised, pleased, and entertained us. Everywhere we turned, it was clear there was so much more to discover.

Together with Jeremy Scott's eclectic friends, we jumped around the party, got doused with snacks and sparkling wine, and chatted with Isabella from ELLE about Bavarian hometowns, with Kunzuu, a runaway Japanese, about faraway Tokyo, and with Thi Thu, a Swiss dreamer, about life on the U.S. East Coast.

M.I.A. sweetened the approaching night with a small, exclusive concert, we shook Frank Ocean's hand, and Mark from The Cobra Snake diligently photographed the wonderful mix of suited revelers and hyped-up kids, all collectively decorated with three stripes. Jeremy Scott himself appeared as a likable eccentric with a penchant for the extravagant.

There was little time to reflect on the experience, as we went straight from our hotel Mr. C in Beverly Hills to the Los Angeles Auto Show in the early morning, where major and minor tech companies showcased their latest gems, often accompanied by attractive women distributing flyers, sunglasses, and CDs with playful smiles to the seemingly important visitors.

Alongside Mathias from WHUDAT, Kim-Christopher from DESIGNLOVR, Ralf from Chromjuwelen, and David from Highsnobiety, we ended the day decadently at a stylish restaurant in Santa Monica and then went shopping along the large shopping street, flirting with interestingly dressed American Apparel staff, tasting dubious coconut milk from Jamaica, and watching confused Christmas angels collecting donations, before heading back to the airport with all our belongings.

Los Angeles is a vibrant city full of interesting people and stories, full of hopefuls and those aiming to become them, full of dreams, warmth, and culture. We hope to return soon to dive deeper into the sunny metropolis and the fascinating legends of its residents. Perhaps then we’ll also see Jeremy Scott's Smart driving on the broad streets, which is supposed to be released in 2013 in a limited, slightly altered edition.

Nicholas Gazin: Girls at Parties

Why do we even keep going to these parties over and over? The annoying dressing up late at night, going out into the freezing cold, having to stand around awkwardly and watch ridiculous people flail about? Exactly: because we want to see girls! Drunk girls, hungry girls, loud girls!

Nicholas Gazin feels the same. The artist and self-proclaimed party animal roams the streets of New York at night, gaining access to the most amusing events on the East Coast, just to catch unsuspecting female specimens. Drinking, eating, staring blankly, lost in thought, thinking of terrible things.

On the German Warning Letter Wave: The Blogosphere Strikes Back!

A law firm has been keeping German bloggers on edge for months by sending warnings about potential copyright infringements. Rumor has it that over 500 of these letters have already landed in local mailboxes, often demanding between 2,000 and 10,000 euros per image. And the frenzy continues. The latest target: a nightclub known beyond national borders.

The fact that a diligent resistance has formed within the writing community is no secret. Now, the first well-known blogger filed a criminal complaint against the warning-happy law firm activeLAW and their new favorite client, hgm Press Michel OHG. The allegation: fraud, because often the firm couldn’t even prove they owned the image rights.

Instead, they relied on the ignorance of the recipients. “They are deliberately making money through fear,” explains Matthias Winks, who has had enough. “Just the beige envelope, formal delivery by registered mail. Then the sum. I don’t want to know how many bloggers didn’t consult a lawyer and instead negotiated a special deal directly with the warning firm.”

And he continues: “Now comes the retaliation. I was supposed to pay 7,550 euros for something the warning sender had no legal basis for? And then I didn’t, because they somehow made a mistake? They wanted to cheat or extort me and many other bloggers. That’s why there’s now a criminal complaint in return.”

Bloggers like Matthias Winks, who also received a later withdrawn warning due to the now infamous Nathan Sawaya photo, are advised to also file criminal complaints against ActiveLAW and hgm Press Michel OHG for fraud. Everyone else should at least demand a solid proof of rights before paying.

We can only hope Matthias succeeds with his counterstrike and that lawyers who think they can profit from professional warnings at others’ expense get their comeuppance. Brace yourselves, Mrs. Elisabeth Michel along with Mr. Kai H. and Mr. Hans-G. Michel, the German blogosphere is striking back! Hopefully, you thought that through...

FU! Yalla! Wulffen! Yolo is Youth Word of the Year

The meaning and nonsense of voting for the youth word of the year can be debated just like their often absurd results. Last year, “Swag” triumphed by a wide margin; before that, the six-member jury approved words like “Niveaulimbo,” “Gammelfleischparty,” and “Hartzen.” Teens and people who work with them are a funny bunch.

This year, a few freshly recruited kids and their mentors chose the English-derived (cool!) and slightly mangled noun “Yolo” as the winner. It means “You only live once” and is often shouted by drunken students before cheerfully running into an oncoming truck while David Guetta plays on the radio.

In the lower ranks were “FU!”, meaning “Für Ute!” “Fuck you,” “Yalla!” meaning “Hurry up!,” “Wulffen,” often used in daily speech to mean “filling someone’s voicemail,” “lying” and also “living at someone else’s expense,” and “Komasutra,” describing a somewhat botched sexual act between two inebriated people. You know the drill.

The youth word of the year election was again a fun event for the entire academic family, leading once more to near-sighted youth-research nerds and dictionary publishers having a super cool afternoon with sandwiches and Fanta. We look forward to next time, when finally words like “Kottsen” (vomiting at Kottbusser Tor), “Fingerdisco” (being fingered by three guys simultaneously), and “Alexandern” (beating up foreigners at Alexanderplatz) reach mainstream society. Yolo!

Almost Daily: Quiet Asia, Loud Animes!

I really enjoy listening to the guys from GameOne. Whether in podcasts, TV shows, or Let’s Play videos. Recently, some of them launched a new YouTube account with Rocket Beans TV, featuring many new categories, including a talk show called “Almost Daily,” which covers a different topic each time. This time, Budi, Ian, Tim, and Schröckert talked about anime, and their chatter got me excited to watch some new series again. So I downloaded the first episodes of “Sword Art Online,” “Girls und Panzer,” and “Space Brothers” to have something solid to watch on long flights. I’ll report back!

Gangnam Style: The Most Successful Video of All Time

With over 805 million views, PSY’s music video for his Korean mega-hit "Gangnam Style" has just been crowned the most successful video of all time on YouTube. It has overtaken Justin Bieber’s "Baby" and Rebecca Black’s "Friday". Every day, countless people still click on the catchy tune by the Asian entertainer. Hey, sexy lady...

What is even more important than this news is the fact that we Germans have contributed absolutely nothing. Not because we deliberately avoid cool Koreans and pretty dancers, but because the video was blocked in Germany from the start due to the ongoing dispute between Google and GEMA. And it still is blocked.

"Gangnam Style" for Germans means: searching for illegal copies of the video on dubious internet platforms, usually displayed in poor quality and overlaid with ads. Convenience is something else. The problem is not only that we cannot learn the trendiest dance moves of the moment, but also that Germany is gradually falling behind culturally.

Unless the Society for Musical Performing and Mechanical Reproduction Rights, which occasionally defends itself against mafia allegations, and the Californian giant come to an agreement regarding fees and advertising revenue, we may soon have no idea what is happening outside our small censorship state.

In fact, 9 of the current Top 10 most-watched YouTube videos in Germany are blocked. Among them: "On The Floor" by Jennifer Lopez and Pitbull, "Love The Way You Lie" by Eminem and Rihanna, and "Party Rock Anthem" by LMFAO. We can only watch the clip in which Charlie got the urge to bite other people’s fingers. But that is something, too. Thanks, GEMA. Very kind of you!

Weekend Tips: Ten Little Missions

It’s autumn, it’s gray, it’s cold. And no matter how much you were looking forward to the party weekend, the truth is that some idiot has infected you with their germs, and now you’re coughing and sneezing on the sofa at home, not knowing what to do with your time while your friends are partying at Watergate. And because we’re so nice, we’ve put together ten wonderful missions—especially for people who apparently can’t get enough of colds, chamomile tea, and steam baths.

One. Visit The Useless Web, which takes you to completely useless websites. If you suddenly see your own blog pop up, you might want to quit the internet business and become a beekeeper. Or a steelworker. Two. Check out these photos of Lindsay Lohan and remember that you used to find her cute. Back then. Three. Stock up on cheap video game junk at Steam. Thanks to Thanksgiving, there are plenty of games that usually cost around 40 euros for just 5! Or vice versa, who really knows… Four. Don’t do anything illegal, or the police will take your Winnie-the-Pooh laptop awayFive. Drink tea!

Six. You’re sick but still have an uncontrollable urge to go to a trashy disco with your friends? Then go, please go! We’ve heard that Q-Dorf is especially nice at this time of year… Seven. Invite someone over and throw an epic “we’re-sick-together” party with hot water bottles, baked cheese, and sweaty sex in a warm bed while binge-watching “Entourage” on your laptop. If it’s a cute friend—all the better! Eight. Ask your grandfather if he can cover your modeling jobs for the whole next week. He has the right figure after all. Nine. Be glad you don’t have a boyfriend right now. Mary-Kate Olsen would probably wish the same… Ten. Don’t forget that you’re doing exactly the same thing as usual. Whether you’re sick—or not.

Journelles Launch Party: Hurry to Win Tickets!

We love Jessie, you love Jessie, no one has to explain anymore through which blog the Berlin fashion expert became known, for which magazine the sunny chatterbox wrote in the meantime, or with which project she is now making a spectacular comeback. And if you really don’t know, then you would be in the wrong place at the following event anyway. Completely.

For a month now, the charming writers Alexa, Hanna, Julia, Kerstin, and the well-known LesMads founder have been working on their new blog Journelles, your new homepage for everything that fashion-obsessed girls and the slightly different Oliver are interested in. And of course, that has to be celebrated with an appropriate party. With lots of good music and even more beautiful young people.

Together with Zalando Collection and Point Rouge, the style-crazed clothing fanatics invite you on Saturday to Picknick Berlin, where Palina Rojinski, DJ Kim Kong, Ari & Uzi, Dancing Potatoes, Tim Vitá, and Micki & Matze will perform, and Cannibal Koffer will play live. Who doesn’t know them? Additionally, the Glitter Club will throw mirrored stuff around, and Katja Hentschel will photograph the most beautiful of you. Hooray!

Of course, we wouldn’t tell you this if we weren’t sending a few lucky ones to the launch party of the moment. We’re giving away 2x2 guest list spots for you and your best friend! Just leave a comment with a valid email address by today at midnight and celebrate with us this weekend in the fashion-perfect blogosphere! Good luck!

Blog Battle: Into the Fight!

When bloggers meet in the wild, at tech conferences, on Michael Michalsky’s runway, or in a café in Berlin-Mitte, politeness and shy behavior come first. Often not entirely voluntarily. “I really like what you’re doing…” “Thanks… your site is also really great…” But you don’t need a psychology degree to guess that bloggers are natural rivals.

Behind the screen, envy, jealousy, and the eternal question dominate: “Why did Chanel invite that stupid girl to the Karl Lagerfeld event and not me? She can’t do anything!” But every problem has a solution. And it can be found under a clear but cheeky domain on the nasty, nasty internet. There, however, the line between critique and bullying often blurs.

Blog Battle is the provocative site that is currently exciting fashion girls and everyday writers. The principle is simple: following the “Hot or Not” method, two blogs submitted by anyone face off per view. One click decides a winner and a loser. Fingers move fast; somewhere in Düsseldorf a H&M consumer is crying.

“No, this is really funny,” says Vanessa Blome about the website. “But I don’t know every blog.” “What exactly does it bring?” asks Lisa Bäuerle. “Not that I wanted to complain, my blog is in the top 50, but still…” And Annemarie Pohle seems to have found a new hobby: “Wow, I can’t stop!” But not everyone shares the digital enthusiasm.

“Honestly, I find the idea creepy,” criticizes Franziska Kopka. “I already fear the competitiveness of teens asking their readers to click them into the top 10. Frankly, I don’t find it fun or great, as hardly anyone knows all the blogs, and it inevitably just becomes a one-shot. That misses the idea of a unified blog community.”

And Jakob Adler, social media expert and friend of the popular German fashion blogger Anna Frost, adds: “Wow, concept and design from 2003. Great idea, this content-based engagement with blogs. What worked with 'Hot or Not' was just rating someone’s appearance. Now am I supposed to rate blogs based on the screenshot? Yes, they are linked, but no one will really look into how the blog is run, whether the articles are good.”

Jakob continues: “I believe most battles will be based on personal feelings: ‘That stupid girl recently stole an article idea from a friend, and she’s ugly anyway.’ With such actions, don’t be surprised if fashion bloggers in Germany are seen as an unprofessional kindergarten. Next time, please something constructive!”

To at least take some criticism on board, the site operators decided to remove the losers’ list and only publish winners, currently Laufmasche, Schwerelos, and Hypnotized. Whether this will benefit them is unclear. At the moment, around 500 blogs are competing, most of them fashion blogs.

Adidas Originals Represent Party: Adidas Originals Represent Party – Win Tickets Quickly!

Tomorrow evening, the closing party of the adidas Originals #represent campaign will take place at the Berlin club Alte Münze from 9 PM. The well-known clothing magicians will honor the winning crew Team Wolf, Lovegang, or Roc Kidz Crew, who endured a months-long competition, only to triumphantly emerge as god-like figures from the crowd. Or something like that.

Performances will feature Jinjin & The Ragdolls, Dreea, and Sarah Farina. The extremely charming Bonnie Strange, a certain Marcus Staiger, and newcomer MC Fitti will also be present to ultimately celebrate victory and defeat with you. Oh my god, how exciting this all is! You can attend a party for free and even help decide the winners and losers!

Of course, we’ll be there and hope it will be as fantastic as the campaign kickoff in Munich earlier this September, where we had fun with the people from Frontlineshop, Blonde, and ArtSchoolVets, and I flirted so impressively with a certain hostess that even Cupid would have been proud. Negar, if you are reading this: get in touch! Hehe...

Back to the topic: Until tonight at midnight, we are giving away 2x2 tickets for tomorrow’s event; all you need to do is leave a comment with a valid email address. That should still be manageable. If you want to be extra sure, you can also try your luck via this link at VICE. Good luck – and may the force be with you!

(And yes, this is my favorite photo…)

With kind support from adidas Originals. Also advertise on AMY&PINK!

777 Tour: Rihanna in Berlin

This will now become a kind of diary entry, but amidst all the hustle and bustle around the German and English versions of AMY&PINK, I completely forgot to tell you that on Sunday evening I attended this more or less legendary Rihanna concert. You might know it from RTL or ProSieben, because Rihanna arrived three hours late and the crowd almost wanted to lynch her.

I don’t remember much about the concert itself; the songs alternated between "Take a Bow" ballads and "Umbrella" dance numbers, typical Rihanna, but after standing for three hours my legs hurt, I ran out of drink vouchers, and Congorock played an incredibly good set that I would have died for in a club at 3 AM.

At least Willy was there with me. I also met Jessie and her better half, Nike was somewhat annoyed but also present, and with D E N A I chatted about savings banks and flea markets. At least on such a PR-media-whatever event, you can "connect," as they say in the new German. The lucky fans who still won tickets were thrilled.

The highlight of the evening was, however, the two sweet Asian girls in front of me, who jumped around like possessed to every song, knew every line by heart, and followed the entire concert with their raised cameras because they were so small. I would have loved to carry them into the front row myself and hand them every backstage pass in the world – because they truly deserved it.

And a message to Rihanna herself, which she will surely read because she reads everything written about her online: If next time you make us wait three hours and blast David-Guetta-ass club music for half an hour before the concert, then at least show a bare chest. The right one! Or have your own song about how great you think I am. Thanks.

The New Old AMY&PINK: We’re Doing Things Differently Now

Days like this are the epitome of a mental tug-of-war, an emotional rollercoaster, proof that opinions can change within minutes if you are surrounded by enough people you trust, who captivate you with a fiery speech and can at least partially bring order to the hopeless chaos in your head.

To make it short: I’m sitting in Oberholz, and together we decided to switch AMY&PINK back to German and move the English version to a separate, brand-new blog with its own name, identity, and audience. This way we get the best of both worlds and don’t disappoint the people who love or hate us.

You are welcome to send as many hate emails and comments as possible, but I love AMY&PINK as it is and still want to try something additional. The new blog has no name yet, but I will probably just slap the other design on it and launch it under an international identity. So everything stays the same and yet exciting.

We haven’t forgotten our German-speaking fans. We know where we come from and who we owe our readership to today—not just our dear grandmother and the polite dental assistant from our hometown. We will continue to fill you with news, beauty, and nonsense while simultaneously opening a door to other countries. Hand in hand.

Thanks to the numerous tweets, emails, and Facebook comments some of you sent, and we are working tonight to get everything running again as quickly as possible. When the new blog goes online, we will, of course, let you know. Welcome back to the new old AMY&PINK, and now you are allowed to insult me to the ground for how dumb I am and that you can’t take a single bit I post on the internet seriously. But I love you, no, we love you! Even you, yes, exactly you!

Cowboy Bebop: Asteroid BluesAsteroid Blues

The great thing about being sick is that you can watch old series in one go without feeling guilty. You’re not being productive; you just take one Grippostad C after another, infect the pizza delivery guy with your viruses, hit play, and everything is fine. You lie down and dive into a distant world.

On my trip between coughing, headaches, and bouts of fatigue, I’m accompanied by an old friend: "Cowboy Bebop." Naturally in Japanese with German subtitles, so I can also learn a bit. Anyway, as much as possible. It reminds me of the time when anime still aired on MTV and VIVA, when we still watched MTV and VIVA, when these channels still played a role in youth culture.

I don’t need to tell the story anymore; it’s about the bounty hunters Spike, Jet, and Faye in a not-too-distant future, where humanity has colonized more planets in the solar system, connected by poorly constructed portals. The moon broke in an accident and rendered large parts of Earth uninhabitable; everything is cold, dirty, and depressing.

There’s only rarely a glimmer of hope. And when there is, it fades somewhere behind the floating metal debris, the war stories, unfulfilled love, and the greed of others. The effect of various medications doesn’t necessarily help experience the episodic adventures as coolly as they might have been intended.

"Cowboy Bebop" is an almost forgotten treasure. A relic that becomes legendary through the insanely good music of Yoko Kanno, whose collected works I could listen to forever, and a crew of diverse characters that touch the heart directly. I want to play chess with Ed, run around on a green meadow with Ein, and drink Faye under the table.

Whenever "The Real Folk Blues" by The Seatbelts starts and I’m almost transported to other realms by pharmacy utensils, I am happy, and a tear runs down my cheek. Because I was there when Spike and Vicious destroyed the church, when Rocco died on Venus, when the Bebop fridge’s insides hunted Jet and his friends.

The great thing about being sick is that you can watch old series in one go without feeling guilty. You’re not being productive; you just take one Grippostad C after another, infect the pizza delivery guy with your viruses, hit play, and everything is fine. You lie down and dive into a distant world.

Flüchtlinge in Berlin: Human Rights Instead of Breasts

In Berlin, refugees and asylum seekers are still demonstrating for more rights. Since the beginning of October, they have been in the city, walking from Würzburg to Berlin, first camping at Oranienplatz and now directly in front of the Brandenburg Gate. They are fighting not only against the law but also against rough police, relentless cold, and uncomprehending passersby.

“Already on the first night, we clashed with the police,” says 23-year-old Iranian Ashkan Khorasani to Lea Deuber of the Süddeutsche Zeitung. “At least 20 police vehicles, countless officers with dogs wanted to storm our camp and confiscate our tents and equipment. We resisted and linked ourselves together. In the middle of the night, the police came back. Many activists were injured. I was also beaten by police officers. It was terrible.”

“We are angry. Police everywhere. It's cold. And when we just want to sit down for a moment, the police drive us away. That alone is against the law. But we fight. We want to be active people. Free and equal. We did not expect such violence. But it comes only from the police and therefore from the government. The people we meet support us.”

Although the refugees have been in the city for almost a month, the media has only recently noticed them. This is criticized by Anne Helm, Anke Domscheit-Berg, Julia Schramm, and Laura Dornheim, who through the action "Tits For Human Rights" wanted to highlight the dire situation, luring media representatives to the Brandenburg Gate with the false promise of showing their bare breasts. And of course, they loudly defied this. Despite some outrage, it seemed worthwhile.

“So far, the protest and its reason—the pressing domestic issue of inhumane asylum policy—have been largely ignored by the media,” explains Laura Dornheim. “We also want to show how mass media works in this country. Sex sells. It’s not enough that people are willing to go on hunger strike—no, it takes ‘breasts’ for coverage.”

“Quickly, a souvenir photo with a hungry person,” headlines the ZEIT, “Pirates demonstrate the media,” writes the left-wing TAZ, and the Morgenpost jibes that the place is not for camping. Still, no one has a solution that makes sense in the long term. Where should these people, who shouldn’t even be here, go? Their treatment is a sign for future freedom seekers.

“We will leave only when laws change,” Ashkan insists. “No human is illegal. The treatment of refugees in Germany cannot be right. Even the word ‘refugee’ carries a lot of truth: ‘linge,’ someone small, a victim. But refugees are not that. We are strong. We do not eat, we hardly sleep, we own nothing. We are not small, we are strong. And we fight for our goals.”

No one knows how the story of the refugees will end, whether their efforts will succeed, or how the state will treat them and future asylum seekers. But if you are in Berlin, you can at least stop by, bring blankets and warm food, and sympathize with them and the people who support them. Simply do the right thing.

Photos by Enno Lenze.

Geschichten vom Wochenende: Light, Dark, Light, Dark, Light, Dark

In this city, you quickly forget what really matters. You lose yourself in a vast sea of lonely people, faces, hands, mouths, breath. At your ear, in the club. All the more delightful when you meet people who feel the same way and pull you out of that lostness. Together. And you look at them. And smile. And they smile back.

I’ve gotten used to looking awful in every photo. Once you convince yourself it’s only your lack of photogenicity, not your deep eye circles, prematurely grey hair from stress, or swollen cheeks, it becomes easier to accept. Yet the bad photo proves that this weekend was neither epic, nor boring, nor wasted—but exactly right. With ideal portions of adventure, relaxation, and surprises.

On Friday, we danced with the people from A MILLION and Nike, Wenke, Julia, Fanni, Paulchen, Meltem, Thang, Janos, Nadja and BJ through Luzia. The remaining days were used for peace of mind: walks along the Spree with beautiful girls while discussing future plans, enjoying delicious carrot cake from The Barn, and watching “Indiana Jones” on the couch with good friends, experiencing the sunrise from different perspectives, discovering fresh music, diving into other personalities, encountering new scents.

Such days are essential. They must not be waved away or left unexperienced. They keep you sane, help you recognize what truly matters in this breathtakingly fast world. You lose yourself in a vast sea of lonely people, faces, hands, mouths, breath. At your ear, in the club. All the more delightful when you meet people who feel the same way and pull you out of that lostness. Together. And you look at them. And smile. And they smile back.

Japarade: Tokyo in Berlin

If Berlin is the first good joint that will probably never let you go and ultimately swallow you, then Tokyo is the following LSD. A drug that, once it melts on your tongue, throws you into a state of delirium you will never forget, making everything else taste like gray mush even after abstaining.

This can be confirmed by the talented Teresa or our Indonesian friend Kiki, both of whom have immersed themselves in the brought-to-life madness. If you don’t have the money or time to skillfully dive into the Land of the Rising Sun, then it comes to you. Like the well-known mountain from the even more famous prophet. Or vice versa.

From November 3 to 24, the Japarade will take place in Berlin. An art festival intended to bring the magic of probably the most exciting country closer to you, featuring exhibitions, projects, performances, culinary mindfucks, and great specials. Among the participants are Maki Shimizu, Saiko Ryusui, and Satoshi Fujiwara. Photographers, painters, musicians—everything your heart desires.

Don’t miss this wonderful opportunity. Run through the door with a cheerful “Konnichiwa!” and then politely ask with a hearty “Sumimasen!” for attention, autographs, or your personal peace of mind. Where, how, when, and what exactly—all this information is available on the official website of the project. Hajimemashite, douzo yoroshiku!

Polygon: The Site About Games

Hypes haven't been able to grab me for a long time. While others praise new bands at basement concerts, I sit at the bar and scribble something like "It's all been done before" on a grimy napkin, drinking beer after beer to somehow get through it. But with new web projects, my heart starts racing. Wildly.

I admire The Verge. They managed to establish a website in no time that made other projects virtually obsolete overnight, even though those probably existed for more than ten years. How did they achieve this? Through a brutally good image, competent articles, opinions, and perfect use of all available social media channels.

They elevated the medium of the Internet to a level that makes the German Internet look like the ladybug group of a kindergarten in Ludwigshafen. Without exception. And when they announced they would launch a gaming site, I was so caught up in that one hype that I visited the preview page daily to see what it would look like. Very excited.

Polygon is the new prodigy that went live this morning. Unlike Destructoid, Kotaku, and IGN, it looks as if it comes from another world. It breaks the chains of established design constraints and challenges readers to embrace something new, without them collapsing in frustration and longing for a 1998-style layout. Why aren't the links blue?

The international team around Chris Grant doesn't build up slowly, doesn't gently guide the user, doesn't proceed step by step. It explodes in a single moment, with the sole goal of becoming a major player in the flood of blogs, websites, and online magazines. And that's especially difficult in the English-speaking space. Some of you will know that.

Even the trailers (trailers for a website!) that Fabu from Superlevel had criticized heavily, I found absolutely brilliant, great, and just right! But I also totally love this Silicon-Valley-we-make-cool-things documentary style. Forever. And the first articles, like the "Dishonored" review, are convincing, though of course leave room for improvement.

Anyone interested in video games who isn’t just proficient in German will hardly be able to ignore Polygon from today onwards. Too many results will rely on their judgment, too many disappointed fans will tear apart their ratings, too many events will be influenced by them. And anyone starting a new online project from now on will be measured against this site.

Photographic Rights on the Internet: Plans, Sermons, Portfolios

Blogging is a passion. Of course, it’s great to earn money from it. Naturally, it’s enjoyable to attract as many readers as possible with your publications. And obviously, it’s fun to occasionally be flown to exotic locations or invited to fantastic events by companies and agencies. But the most important and fulfilling aspect is delivering the most impressive content from the worlds of pop culture, photography, and life to our readers day after day. And to see how it is discussed, hated, or loved—again and again.

After the wave of cease-and-desist notices hit the German blogosphere, we gathered to discuss how to minimize the risk of paying incredibly high sums to greedy lawyers while maintaining the quality and timeliness of AMY&PINK. The focus was particularly on photos. And in recent years, a lot has changed.

Not long ago, when the internet was still a free space that no one really took seriously, with few rules or limits (and if there were, no one cared), we were a free group of people who could use photos, videos, and even embedded music tracks at will to express ourselves and showcase what we liked—and disliked. While this tradition continues in the U.S. on platforms like Tumblr, Pinterest, and Blogspot, it is breaking down in Germany due to outdated laws.

Of course, suddenly all the do-gooders stepped in, preaching that everyone should only publish self-taken photos. But that’s not what AMY&PINK is about. Here it’s about promoting young talent, presenting specific cultures, and making the world a bit more beautiful, crazy, and open. That thought resides in many of us.

So we decided to continue on this path but conscientiously ask each photographer before presenting their works here. That sounds logical, but in the industry, it’s different. We were excited, had a few beers, gave a few high-fives, and went home thinking that while it would mean a bit more work, it would be worth it.

The next day, the first fresh photo series, portfolios, and magazine features started arriving, and we made an effort to obtain written permissions as quickly as possible, preferably also getting high-quality photos. We felt great. Doing the right thing is fun. That called for a morning beer—or two.

The conclusion of the first few days was that everyone reported Mila Kunis being voted the hottest woman in the world, while we argued with the editors at Esquire, the staff at Hearst, and the personnel at the image agency Trunk, eventually receiving only a thumbnail of the cover and a press text. Scarlett Johansson posed as a sexy grunge girl, while Condé Nast informed us that the W Magazine photos were under a 90-day embargo. And Hollie May Saker had fun in New York City, while the photographer himself wrote to say a print magazine held the rights.

So if we received any answers at all, they either delayed us, gave nonsense, or sent approval and materials so late that reporting it was pointless because the world had already done so. Doing the right thing felt correct, but it left us with metaphorical holes in the wall from banging our heads against them too often.

Unknown photographers, however, responded quickly and often positively. We deeply appreciate that and prefer to feature them even more. Yet the most successful articles are always those that move the most people, generate the biggest hype, and are current. Being the first to report on those is crucial.

If you’re a fashion blogger, run your own online magazine, or are a reblogger, you now need to assess the risk. Either you pull everything blindly from the web and publish it on your site, becoming one of the first to report it and attracting more visitors—but you increase the chance of receiving a cease-and-desist notice. Or you are aware of the current dangers of the German internet and choose to do the right thing: asking all responsible parties in advance, obtaining written permissions, and publishing only if explicitly allowed. Frustrating and exhausting, but legally safe.

Choosing the second option requires building an effective network of photographers, publishers, and PR and image agencies. Finding the right contacts who can quickly grant publishing rights based on trust. Being in a time zone that aligns when you need information.

If the usually nice and English-speaking staff of various companies know you, your image, your site, and your preferences, and you have reached a friendly small-talk level, it becomes easier for them to promptly send you the files with permissions. But it requires time and work. That’s the trade-off for doing things properly.

Perhaps I wrote this article entirely for myself, to vent my frustration, and simultaneously to remind myself that, under current German internet circumstances, everything takes longer, must be five times secured, and often ends in disappointment. But it is the only way to continue doing what we love.

Sometimes we lose sight of why we put ourselves through all this stress. The playful times are over. But perhaps the constant attacks from vultures in the form of cease-and-desist lawyers have some good side: they make us more professional, more cautious, and possibly even more focused, effective, and determined. At least, that’s what I tell myself.

Universal vs. Bloggers: Take the Video Down Immediately!

The German and international blogosphere is currently in the middle of a wave of cease-and-desist notices, and another participant has already stepped onto the stage. Universal is sending numerous lawyer letters to bloggers who have embedded music videos from YouTube and Vimeo on their sites. The demand: delete them immediately, or face legal action and high fines.

“It has been determined that an unauthorized music offering is being made available on an internet-connected computer,” the record company stated via a law firm. “The offering contains recordings over which our client holds exclusive rights. These offerings violate our client’s rights. Legally, it is irrelevant whether the infringing material is physically on your server or made available via hyperlink or embedding.”

Various bloggers are given one week to comply. In plain terms, this means that embedding or linking music videos on your sites is prohibited, even if embedding is explicitly allowed or technically easy. This applies not only to blogs but also to Facebook pages and tweets.

Universal apparently does not care that this approach undermines their own ability, as well as that of other labels, to use blogs and online magazines as growing advertising platforms. Bloggers, out of fear of a legal notice, may refrain from embedding even legally cleared and promotional videos.

Another blogger reported extortion attempts by a photographer whose photo she had published without explicit permission. He demanded a higher fee and threatened to notify other photographers on her blog to also claim payments.

Under these circumstances, even the most optimistic bloggers may lose interest in their hobby or profession. Lawyers are sending notices for anything that moves, record labels are acting against fans, and some photographers turn out to be extortionists. Welcome to the new internet.

Update (2:52 PM): A Universal employee stated that the letters were only sent to bloggers who embedded a current video from the band Major Lazer, which had not yet been cleared for release in Germany.

Weekend Tips: Ten Little Missions

The weekend is approaching again in giant strides, and you have no clue how to fill it with life-affirming activities this time? Watch series? Eat cake? Observe water evaporate? Don’t look any further for answers, because your and our favorite section "Ten Little Missions" has them ready for you! So roll up your sleeves and let’s get started!

One. Pick a single song and play it on repeat all day long. Preferably loud enough so that even your colleagues can hear it. Let’s see when the first one goes berserk. Two. Write a complaint letter to the German government that Thursdays are annoying and ask them to just abolish them. If three or more letters arrive, they have to comply with your request. It’s law. Probably. Three. Look at these pictures of the most awkward situations ever. Then try to hold that shuddering feeling deep inside you forever. Four. Get high again. Especially if you belong to the Pirate Party. Five. Drop your pants in the middle of the dance floor at the next club visit. Let’s see what happens next.

Six. Read what this porn actress has to say, whose mother also made porn. Seven. Dress up your fat cat for Halloween. Even if you really don’t feel like it. Eight. Tell the 50th person you meet tonight that you’d like to sleep with them. Maybe it will work. Nine. Leave a partially thawed frozen pizza in front of each of your neighbors’ doors. Ten. Wake up on Saturday and Sunday morning at a place you’ve never seen before. Preferably naked, with a red balloon in one hand and a bundle of foreign banknotes in the other. Don’t ask further.

BuzzFeed is being sued: $1.3 million for nine photos

Anyone who thought that the last wave of warnings in the German blogosphere was over has miscalculated with the image agency hgm-press michel OHG and activeLAW. Yesterday, the next batch of letters reached local bloggers. This time it concerns photos of cosplayers, art, and a space shuttle. And an end is not in sight.

One of our readers explains how the scheme works: “They pick specific photos and then send mass warnings to several users who used these photos. If money flows immediately, that's fine with them. If you resist and hire a lawyer, the case goes straight to court, and they apparently try afterward to obtain usage rights from the original creator to justify the claim. Because the authors of the photos are hardly ever hgm themselves. They usually only buy the rights for the German-speaking region – but do not have exclusive rights, meaning other agencies can also have rights for the same photos.”

And anyone who thought that things would be better in the United States thanks to Fair Use was wrong. There, the well-known website BuzzFeed is currently being sued for $1.3 million because it published nine backstage photos of Katy Perry with Terry Richardson. American law allows $150,000 per rights violation that is not covered by Fair Use.

Thus, 2012 may go down as the year in which bloggers worldwide were put to the test, with copyright mania now affecting people who simply write about their hobby, share inspiration, and present discoveries. And although many bloggers benefit various companies, publishers, or PR agencies, no one will protect you if a warning with claims of several thousand euros or more lands in your mailbox.

“As long as there is no legal regulation that curbs this current warning practice, the daily unease when checking the mailbox remains,” writes Ronny at Kraftfuttermischwerk. “And until such a regulation exists, a lot of water will flow down the Havel. Actually, the major media houses should also have an interest, as they frequently link to our content. Because we extract the awesome stuff from the depths of the web, all this awesomeness that would not exist without us, since we operate in a completely different context than they do in their media cosmos.”

So what is the logical conclusion that no one in this country legally protects us from extortionists, and corporations, publishers, and agencies leave you in the lurch? Either you take a deep breath and continue boldly and somewhat naively. Or you decide the risk is too high, that Germany is not ready for bloggers, that you get too little protection from the state and business. And you pick another hobby. I've heard knitting is quite popular this time of year.

The Pirate Bay: Above the Clouds

If you have no idea who or what The Pirate Bay is, you have so far led a very untroubled, bourgeois life. Good for you. For everyone else, the project of the anti-copyright organization Piratbyrån is considered a pioneer of freedom, a key to things otherwise denied. And for that, governments hate it. And ban it.

The Pirate Bay popularized torrents: small files you can download to then access a vast number of free movies, games, music albums, and programs. Many of these are legal, but most are copyrighted. This means that the police could soon be at your door if you are caught downloading or uploading.

It is admirable what perseverance the team shows in defending and maintaining their project. For years, record companies, film studios, and entire countries have threatened them with penalties, bans, and censorship. They receive letters which they respond to more or less absurdly, have been sentenced to prison and fines, blocked, and shut down.

Nevertheless, The Pirate Bay's servers continue to hum, with nearly six million registered users still sharing the latest Photoshop version, the newest "The Walking Dead" episode, and fresh blockbuster movies. To safeguard this, the site has now been moved to the so-called cloud. Because there it is safe. And accessible. Probably.

“First we got rid of the trackers, then the torrents. And now? We've discarded the servers,” writes Winston Brahma. “Step by step, we shed our earthly form and now rise to the next stage, the cloud. The cloud is everywhere, immaterial, omnipresent, and yet real. If data exists somewhere, so does The Pirate Bay. Our data flows through thousands of cloud providers, incredibly well encrypted, usable when we need it. Should anyone try to attack us, they must attack all cloud servers. Or nothing. The Pirate Bay will be here forever. Only in an expanded form of existence.”

No matter how one feels about The Pirate Bay, one must acknowledge the persistence and courage of the team defending their life’s work and not being intimidated by fines, imprisonment, or angry nations. Their plan to run the entire network encrypted across multiple cloud servers of various providers can be considered ingenious.

Perhaps it’s due to the project’s success, the team, or money. But I wonder if I would have, upon receiving the first letter from Dreamworks, tucked my tail and run crying to my mother. Yet The Pirate Bay has persevered for years, resisting every countermeasure. For that, they have my respect, and I am curious to see how this story continues.

Skins 7: Today Your Childhood Ends

No television series has shaped the last years of my life as much as "Skins", which follows the lives of a few British teenagers. The last two seasons were treated rather poorly, and the American spin-off was simply abandoned, but my heart belonged to the stories around the first two generations, whose fates still linger in my mind years later.

And even though I didn’t expect it anymore (and honestly wasn’t that excited either), the English broadcaster E4 announced today that there will be a final, small mini-season. The best part: the most popular and still-living characters from the first four seasons will be brought together, offering insight into their continued lives.

"Skins 7" will return with some former stars. Among them are Hannah Murray as Cassie, Jack O'Connell as Cook, and Kaya Scodelario as Effy. Each of them will be part of three separate stories called "Skins Pure," "Skins Rise," and "Skins Fire." Naomi and Emily will also be included. All episodes were written by Bryan Elsley and Jamie Brittain.

In the first episode, Cassie moves to London and tries to find answers to the ever-lasting questions of life: why, how, and what. In the second, Cook has become a drug courier, falls in love, and confronts a world shaped by his violent past. In the final episode, Effy starts an affair with her wealthy boss, which soon leads to complications.

In my opinion, it’s too early to form a definitive judgment. However, my initial feeling tells me that while I’m happy to see some familiar faces again, it wasn’t strictly necessary. Let’s wait and see; the three episodes are scheduled for spring 2013, after which it will be the end. By then, we’ll be considerably wiser.

Violence in the Capital: How Safe is Berlin?

I’m no longer exactly sure how I first learned about the supposedly rising rate of violence in Germany’s capital. Who first made me feel unsafe. Either I read it in the newspaper. Or my mother called me early in the morning to tell me that someone had been stabbed again—this time at Alexanderplatz. I suspect the latter.

Rampaging subway musicians, far-right attacks, cars set on fire here, violent youths, hateful football fans, shooting police officers, uncultured prostitutes, threatening street hustlers, insane passersby, confused women, frustrated students, nocturnal robberies, derailed S-Bahn trains, annoyed tourist-haters, dangerous robbers, and then even contaminated rats and rabid bats.

If one is to believe the local tabloid press, we live in a ticking time bomb, a madhouse, a place where people die every day simply for being in the wrong place at the wrong time. And although I have so far viewed such reports rather calmly, the sheer volume is starting to weigh on me. Excuses are becoming harder to make.

The longer you live here, the more stories you hear. In the exciting initial phase, you take them lightly. Eventually, friends and colleagues begin to tell you they were mugged at Hermannplatz, that someone almost assaulted them at Friedrichstraße, that a friend was involved in a murder case in Kreuzberg. And gradually you ask yourself: What am I doing here?

Of course, it’s dangerous everywhere in some way, more or less. But what scares me is not that it is dangerous, but why. If some idiot shoots passersby without reason or warning, if another hands out drinks laced with knockout drops, if someone else beats up drunk partygoers, then I wonder: what is wrong with you?

Is it because Berlin has an excessively large area, thus naturally increasing the probability of people snapping? Is it drugs, alcohol, freedom, mental detachment? Or is it simply that the BILD newspaper & Co. make the most money from these horror stories, which slowly sink into the minds of even seemingly immune people?

We feel protected and safe in Berlin, in our neighborhood, until something happens to us or our friends. That moment instantly wipes away our perceived security, confronts us with fears and doubts, and causes Berlin to lose its image as a boundless art, fashion, and party capital. And probably, that is what I fear the most.

Watched.li: What Are You Watching?

Yes, I know. It’s important to maintain social contacts. Go out to eat with friends. Call family. Sleep with girls. I check off all of that from time to time. But I’m only truly happy when I can watch seven seasons of my current favorite series in a row, and my neighbors are merciful enough not to play David Guetta or Scooter at full volume.

So I witness Jesse Pinkman dissolving bodies in the bathtub. Tony Stonem cheating on Michelle Richardson with that annoying blonde. Will McAvoy still mourning Emily Mortimer. I have all these storylines, characters, scenes, and moments in my head—the funny and the sad. Only one thing was missing until now: a list where I could record it all.

The passionate programmer Philipp Waldhauer from Hamburg apparently felt the same way, because he has just launched his new website with some friends, called Watched.li. There you can enter all the series you have ever watched. You’ll be notified about new episodes, and soon user profiles and an iPhone app will be added. That’s nice.

I’m currently cataloging all the TV shows I’ve ever come across. And that’s a lot. Really. It could take years! If you also belong to the category of series addicts, check out Watched.li and never miss an episode of your favorite show again. Whether "Breaking Bad," "Skins," or "The Newsroom," it doesn’t matter.

neoParadise: Did You Ever Touch the Chubby Boobs!

While some were eagerly watching an Austrian jump from space with a parachute, others went on the attack against public television. This was over a show that usually brought a lot of fun and good reviews—until now. In the episode of "NeoParadise" from October 4, quite a lot went wrong, which many found no longer very funny.

Joko Winterscheidt and Klaas Heufer-Umlauf were at the International Radio Exhibition in Berlin, reviving a game familiar to viewers. In "If I Were You," the two hosts swap roles and give each other tasks to complete. Whoever dares not, loses. Simple. The challenges range from disgusting to embarrassing to dangerous.

In one scene, Klaas instructs his colleague to grab a booth hostess by her breasts and buttocks. However, he phrased it differently: “Touch her chubby boobs once and the butt twice. Have fun!” Joko responds: “I can’t. Won’t do.” But Klaas insists. “Then you lose!” So Joko goes ahead, touches her, and apologizes immediately.

As the two walk away laughing, Klaas turns and says: “That was just as uncomfortable for him. She stood there feeling really humiliated. She’ll go home now and cry in the shower. She’ll be under the shower for six hours.” The scene is accompanied by soft bombastic music, and the unnamed hostess remains bewildered.

Blogs, Twitter, and news portals then unleashed a storm of complaints on the broadcasting channel ZDF, which tried to justify itself with a tweet: “Regarding NeoParadise: The booth hostess was not touched by Joko Winterscheidt; the contact was merely suggested. Furthermore, the scene was aired with her consent.”

For many, this was not enough. Steffen Pelz wrote: “Dear ZDF and ZDFneo, despite all the closeness, that went too far. Complaint to the TV council has been filed.” Georg von Grote stated on Freitag.de: “Does Mr. Heufer-Umlauf even know what comes out of his mouth? Does he think before speaking? Or does he prefer not to think at all?” On Meedia, Stefan Winterbauer added: “The booth hostess should file charges of sexual coercion against the two hosts. She would certainly be justified.” And Antje Schrupp concluded: “Such a show is, in any conceivable context, misogynistic, as the only content of this 'joke' is to depict the relationship of men to women as one of power and dominance, where men can do things to women without regard for their consent or opinion.”

Some went further. Lilly W. wrote: “Yes, get upset about NeoParadise. Instead of questioning why the widespread 'use' of booth hostesses still exists.” Teresa Bücker noted: “From the fees that could save the cancellation of Jauch and NeoParadise, numerous anti-sexism trainings could easily be financed.” And Sven-Oliver Schibat asked: “Can someone explain why we’re discussing the NeoParadise episode from October 4 now? Why not on October 5?”

Klaas first apologized on Twitter and promised that this would not be the end. “We did not show tact and confused funny nonsense with reckless, offensive stupidity. We are truly sorry. We will comment on this in more detail later. But one thing: you are right and we made a mistake that will not happen again.”

Although you know that feminists and I do not always get along well, this goes further and too far. I do not want anyone I do not know to touch me, nor do I want that to happen to others. Apologies are now appropriate. One thing we may never know: would there have been the same uproar if Joko had been a woman.

Roche & Böhmermann: The Best Show in the World

Now telling anyone that you consider "Roche & Böhmermann" the best thing currently happening on German television is like calling your mother to breathlessly shout into the receiver that she could win a million marks on "Who Wants to Be a Millionaire." Or that Thomas Gottschalk is bound to become a star. Or that there’s even a second TV channel. In color!

Nilz Bokelberg wrote about it on his blog as did Johnny Häusler from Spreeblick and the charming Christine Neder. And all this months before, at a time when other shows are created, aired, and canceled five times, while the average IQ of an RTL viewer dropped by 47 points, and MTV probably aired only three or four music videos, if at all.

I started with the episode in which Max Herre stormed out of the studio very upset to have a little cry, then systematically devoured all previous broadcasts in the ZDF Mediathek. Devoured, I say! Completely in love with Charlotte Roche and her style, the show’s concept, which is exactly the opposite of what I imagine a successful show should be.

Probably this is why "Roche & Böhmermann" works so well. And I do not want to use terms like "refreshing set," "honest inserts," or "funny announcer" because they would make me sick, but each of these small details makes this show so good. Because it needs neither totally funny stunts nor mass-appeal hosts nor elaborate concept ideas.

Of course, some of Jan Böhmermann’s jokes miss and result in awkward silence, which even the loud censorship button in the middle of the table cannot end quickly. Of course, some guests wonder what the hell is going on, but they are rightly ridiculed. And because they sometimes behave like a wannabe star who just received a pep massage from their PR manager whispering "You got this, tiger! Show them what you got!"

But the two and their team achieve on their poor time slot, which most citizens of this country cannot even receive, something whose hope I had already given up years ago: that among all reality docs, "Scrubs" reruns, and Stefan Raab memory marathons, there are still a few highlights. Which makes me somewhat happy.

Since I am only telling outdated things that every good person already knows, the sense or nonsense of this article lies solely in bringing five or six more people out of the "Mitten im Leben" swamp and in front of ZDFkultur to show them how refreshing, honest, and funny German television really can be. Let’s see how long it lasts.

Tips for the Weekend: Ten Little Missions

Christmas is coming! Hooray! Have you bought all your gifts yet? No? Well, okay, then not. But don’t say later that we didn’t warn you! And since you seem to care so little about others and more about yourselves, here’s a new round of our popular series "Ten Little Missions." And it’s made for the whole family.

One. Go for a run outside again while it’s still possible. Even if you look like this. Of course, you can also hop around. Two. Do it like the South Koreans and only appear in matching outfits. Don’t stop with your boyfriend or girlfriend, force your family, friends, and colleagues to wear the same things as you. So a dirty "Star Wars" T-shirt and no pants. Three. Photograph everything, but not the Eiffel Tower at night. Otherwise, you’ll go straight to jail. Four. Try to enroll at Monsters University. If you get accepted: Respect! Five. Masturbate to Karlie Kloss. Seriously.

Six. Order a pizza and stab the delivery person if they’re late. That’s what they do in Mexico. Seven. Buy Sweden. For $10,000. Whether the national women’s beach volleyball team comes with it is unknown. You can ask. Eight. Throw a party because we all won the Nobel Peace Prize. For what exactly, nobody knows, but hey: Don’t look a gift horse in the mouth. Nine. From now on, have your salary paid only in Smarties. Try to make ends meet as best you can. Ten. Become a DJ. There’s still a spot available between Micaela Schäfer, Nadja Abd el Farrag, and Paris Hilton.

Paid Comments: Pay for Your Opinion!

Trolls are something that eventually become a problem for every public medium. The larger your blog or website grows, the higher the chance people will notice and make your life miserable in the comments. They don’t discuss; they bully. They don’t weigh arguments; they attack. They don’t sympathize; they hate.

Until now, there were few ways to deal with this digital disease. Turn off comments? Sure, but who started the nonsense that everyone on the internet has the right to voice opinions on everything? In the past, this didn’t exist. But closed comments also mean no exchange, no growth, no future. We discussed this once before.

The second option is to replace your blog’s comment section with third-party services like Facebook or Disqus, or offer free registration. The advantage is obvious: visitors must verify themselves, and an account name becomes visible. This should theoretically minimize troll comments. But it doesn’t, because fake accounts are easy to create. Moreover, it categorically excludes other visitors from discussion and inevitably reduces page views. So what to do?

The American indie game site Venus Patrol opened the door for another approach. On their site, only visitors who pay can comment. For $3 per month. That’s not much, but it raises the barrier for people who want to dump their mental garbage in text fields. Even Christian Gürnth from GameOne said in a podcast that discussions in posts accessible only via the paid version of their app are much more constructive and sophisticated.

“I really have to say that the comments in pay sections, for example in the news podcast, are of higher quality than where anyone can comment. Because there, many people just hate blindly. In contrast, in closed sections it’s much more cultured. No wonder I prefer to read those opinions.”

Now I sit here thinking and come to no solution. What would a blogosphere look like where you can only express your opinion if you pay for it? Would people actually spend money for it? How much would it deter trolls? How much could you charge? And what happens if suddenly there are a thousand different sites with different offers?

If this system prevails, it would create a class society, a new elite, which would first mark the demise of Web 2.0, silence certain voices, tear the internet apart, but at the same time allow for more valuable exchanges. Are paid comments the ultimate way to get trolls under control, perhaps even eliminate them? Permanently?

Tumblr Releases Photoset: The Better Instagram

What annoys me most about Instagram is not the fact that everyone with this supposed trend software photographs their food, their cat, or the clouds, but that it has been responsible for a continuous flood of annoying, blurry, square filter images for years. And I hate annoying, blurry, square filter images. Always have.

I can’t properly link my own images or save other snapshots normally without having to go into my browser’s source code—or taking a screenshot of the entire page. What is considered analog digitality—and you really shouldn’t do that. And so I’ve been praying to a distant god for years that this Instagram nonsense would end soon.

Hope for an equal rival and my personal salvation now comes from a company that has already provided us with a more or less well-known medium on which we can do a whole lot of things. For example, reblog photos of naked women and… um… that’s basically it, right? Exactly, I’m of course talking about Tumblr!

Photoset is their new app and the associated platform, which finally puts an end to these low-quality square scraps. It allows you to put several large photos into a simple yet wonderful gallery, arrange them quickly, and share them with your friends. No filters, no effects. Just your skill and your love to share it.

Photoset can be downloaded for free today for your iPhone and iPad. Try it out, create something beautiful, and offer it to the world. And then please all delete Instagram from your phones and leave your mushy grape-nut cereal, your sister’s pet, and the blue sky alone. They will thank you. And so will I.

Petition against the Ancillary Copyright Law: Nobody Cares

While the internet on one hand consists of cute cat photos, charming blog posts, and perverse sex videos, on the other side a war is constantly raging. Against governments. Against big corporations. Against oppressors. And it’s not only fought by underground hackers typing away in dark cybercafés, but also by us. Ordinary citizens who have remained fairly normal.

We fight for an internet without censorship. We clap together against African mercenary kings who terrorize families and make children into bloody victims. We laugh at collecting societies, dislike Facebook, and distribute digital flyers showing missing people. Engagement is highly valued among us, even if we don’t always agree.

However, one battle we have probably lost. That against the ancillary copyright law. The petition initiated by the Pirate Party is magnificent but failed, and many journalists believe the failure stems from the current discord within the still-young party. The logic goes that no one would buy into any political party anyway. Politicians and such.

“Why does the petition – unlike the one against internet blocking – interest so few? One reason could be that a Pirate submitted it,” writes Patrick Beuth in the Handelsblatt. “It could also have been submitted by a Green or SPD member – a certain skepticism toward the respective party or any initiative associated with a party would likely always remain.”

But that’s not true. Recent events have shown that most people don’t care who is behind a good action. As long as it’s not a Nazi or the Catholic Church. People are easily influenced, and in essence it takes only three points to activate them: a problem that affects them directly and is easy to identify; an opponent they can collectively fight against; and a solidarity image formed with clear goals, words, and actions under which they can unite.

Why do we hate Kony? Because some guy, whom we’ve never met and whose goals we don’t understand, convinced us in an overlong music video that he’s an asshole. And there were plenty of young people, a small child, and quick cuts. Fuck, yeah! Why did we go to the streets against ACTA? Because we were told that the government would take away our internet and police would stand at the door if we shared a recipe. Hello?! And why is the GEMA the new Hitler? Because it kills clubs and blocks YouTube videos. Which is sometimes not even true, but most people don’t care. They can’t watch the new Katy Perry video, and someone has to be blamed!

Back to the ancillary copyright law. Apart from the petition being poorly accessible and the Pirates behaving like they’re on a messed-up school trip, absolutely no one out there knows what it even is. Ancillary copyright. Huh? Kony, clear. ACTA, clear. GEMA, bad. Ancillary copyright… supposedly protecting content… isn’t that good?

No, it isn’t. Essentially, it’s about this: Publishers want to demand licensing fees when search engines link to the texts or other press products they publish. Supporters, mainly the publishers, argue that companies like Google earn advertising revenue with third-party content. Publishers want a share of that revenue.

The opponents argue that the publishers automatically get clicks and thus ad revenue when search engines list their content. An additional fee is unjustified. If a publisher doesn’t want this, it can block search engines with a small command in the site’s source code. Additionally, a licensing fee could lead to the extinction of small search engines and news aggregators, which is very likely.

So, have you grabbed your torches and pitchforks from the protest closet and are you ready for the next cyberwar? No? Not surprising, because if you didn’t fall asleep or switch to YouPorn in the last two paragraphs, congratulations! The ancillary copyright law simply doesn’t interest anyone, except a few geeks and even more managers.

It’s no wonder the petition failed, and the majority wasn’t activated. It’s a problem that doesn’t directly affect citizens. It gives them neither Katy Perry back nor the satisfaction of a victory. “Hey, we stopped the ancillary copyright law!” “Uh, yeah… great… can you install my printer driver now?” Secondly, there’s no common enemy. Is it the data giant Google? Corrupt politicians? The dumbed-down BILD newspaper? Someone? And let’s not even start about image. There was no cool campaign, no great slogans, no videos the masses could fall in love with. Nerds just aren’t great at mass movements.

It’s also increasingly difficult to engage people for a cause. They are getting tired. Every week someone wants to mess with us differently. Companies, governments, lawyers. The problems just keep changing their names, while most of us just want to watch naked cats dancing the Gangnam Style. Let’s take a break, someone will deal with it.

So next time you want to fight for a good cause, a random petition somewhere deep in the internet is no longer enough. There are too many of them. You need to go for the superlatives, involve people who know what they’re doing. People with charisma, who can formulate slogans and edit videos the masses can fall in love with. A few quickly forgotten tweets from supposed internet stars like Sascha Lobo or Mario Sixtus are no longer enough.

The internet bombards us every second with all kinds of impressions. Read this! Watch that! Click here! Good intentions and the pure possibility to change something no longer have an effect. The ancillary copyright law comes to life because you can’t deal with time, people, and change. Learn from this, the next challenge is already waiting.

Photo credit: Merlin Bronques

Neon Genesis Evangelion: The Revelation

Every week I devote myself to a new topic, which I consider my ultimate revelation, my new exclusive life purpose. For which I would sell all my furniture and belongings, possibly even my body, to make it cozy in a little box on the street and do nothing else but pursue this one thing. Until I die of heart failure as the ultimate professional in this field. Happy.

Some time ago, I was sure I had to become the ultimate League of Legends player to find my inner peace and haunt all the other kids in their nightmares. Then I thought, while sitting in the bathtub, that it was finally time to save the world from the warning wave with fair use initiatives, education, and petitions. And besides, I also wanted to sleep with Sasha Grey.

For the past few days, however, I live only for the moment when I can finally lie in bed with a cheap bottle of red wine and some sushi and watch a few episodes of Neon Genesis Evangelion. The old series. Original with subtitles. Not the HD stuff that reverses the whole story and turns everything upside down. For which I could beat up Hideaki Anno.

Of course, anyone with even a slight pop-culture legitimacy knows what this is about. Some psychologically disturbed kids forced to pilot huge combat robots against the so-called Angels to protect Earth from total apocalypse. Secret corporations named NERV or SEELE operate in the background. It’s about religion, father complexes, suicide, warships, minor nudity, betrayal, ceilings, friendship, and intelligent penguins.

"Neon Genesis Evangelion" is the ultimate anime for me. It reminds me why I loved, forgot, and rediscovered this medium. I sit riveted in front of the screen, cicadas chirp, sirens wail, the floor explodes. I have tears in my eyes when Asuka lies bloodied in the bathtub. I feel an infinite happiness when Misato opens the obligatory beer can and that very specific melody starts. I reflect on what I’ve seen and heard when it’s dark, about the lies, secrets, and Shinji’s behavior. And Rei. The relationships. The preliminary ending. And everything that comes after.

I barely dare to solve the riddles unfolding before me, don’t even want to hear the confessions, but want to run back to the 24-hour supermarket, sit in the subway, look out at the city lights. "Neon Genesis Evangelion" constantly tries to break me. And it succeeds. Only to embrace me in familiar arms a few minutes later.

What Hideaki Anno created is more than just a Japanese cartoon merchandising in arcades and printing its protagonists on instant noodle packages. It is a revelation that could never evoke the same emotions in any other way if you drop all prejudices and let yourself be fully captivated. Then there’s no turning back.

Berlin Goes Online: Free Internet for Everyone!

Do you also know those people who keep promising to do something but then continuously fail at it? This time really! Oh... But this time, promised! Ah, no... Okay, but now, no kidding! Damn, this can't be... That's roughly how we feel when the people responsible for Berlin announce that there will soon be free Wi-Fi there. Forever! For everyone!

It would be very boring to tell you in detail who yesterday explained in what manner that starting next year, free Internet should be available for everyone in Berlin. Provided, of course, you are at one of the most popular spots in the city. No idea which those are or who decides that, but yes: 2013 should finally make it happen.

This is great! Think about it: Then you can come by for a few days for Fashion Week or the Berlin Festival or the Carnival of Cultures, sit somewhere with your laptop in a corner, and quickly blog, look something up, inform yourself. And you won't have to enable your slow iPhone tethering or sit in an overcrowded, noisy hip café. Hooray!

Now the Berlin Senate just has to ensure that no one is responsible if you use the free Wi-Fi to download child pornography or the latest "Twilight" movie, and then we can get started. How do they want to finance it, you ask? Of course, with advertising! And they sell your data to dubious information corporations. Sounds fair, right?

But for now, we just have to wait. After all, 2013 is still a long way off, and maybe some mobile network provider will realize that it’s bad for business if their customers can suddenly surf for free without using up their severely limited data volume. Until then, you could just travel to New York City or San Francisco, where a well-known technology giant already provides free Wi-Fi for everyone who can make use of it. And that’s Microsoft.

PETA Again: Save the Pokémon!

I love animals. And I would love to save them all if half of them didn’t taste so good. That aside, I must also say that the folks at PETA annoy me month after month. For those who don’t know PETA: They are those so-called animal protectors who waste their time poisoning dogs in trucks and mocking Super Mario.

Since protecting whales and creating nature reserves apparently no longer provide fun, the American vegan sect has recently focused on pissing off Natalie Portman and creating parodies of pop culture events. The latest head-shaker targets the new Nintendo DS game "Pokémon Black 2 and White 2," which is also released this week in Germany.

In the so-called Flash game "Pokémon Black and Blue," an angry, blood-covered Pikachu and its equally annoyed friends take revenge on the awful humans who have for years stuffed them into tight Poké Balls and used them to survive funny death battles. For the amusement of lecherous professors and immature teenagers.

“Just like many animals in the real world, Pokémon are abused as objects and used exclusively for entertainment and experiments,” writes PETA in their press release. “That Pokémon are stuffed into Poké Balls is reminiscent of circus elephants, who spend their lives in cramped cages and are only let out to perform painful tricks taught to them with electric shocks.”

I admire the work of the WWF and the German Animal Welfare Association. And I am (of course) in favor of significantly and as quickly as possible improving the living conditions of all captive and endangered animals. No bullshit, no irony. But constantly drawing attention with embarrassing PR campaigns and spending money and effort on these projects instead of helping where help is really needed shows that PETA has long lost touch with reality. And now go slaughter a few people with Pikachu, go!

Your RTL: YouTube Becomes a TV Channel

We’ve all heard of those people who post funny videos online to make a lot of money and quit their old jobs. Elaborate action film parodies, answering spicy questions about growing up, running quirky cooking shows with their little sister, and letting the whole world watch.

Until now, it worked like this: YouTube shared ad revenue with you. The more views your videos got, the more money you earned. This system has already turned some teenagers into wealthy entrepreneurs, but YouTube apparently isn’t satisfied yet and is now going on the offensive – becoming a TV channel.

As WELT reports, YouTube will broadcast international programming on 60 channels starting today and is already funding the content creators, actors, and hosts in advance, so soon no one will remember RTL, ProSieben, and others. Eleven of these channels will feature creative content from Germany.

“We are boosting national markets with our own resources for about two years. Then we review the results, continue with existing partners based on success, create new niche channels with them, or look for new partners,” says Robert Kyncl, YouTube’s VP of Content, to WELT. “On one hand, internet-enabled devices – big and small – are now widespread. On the other hand, professional content production has never been this inexpensive.”

Among the first content owners is the young Berlin band Onkel Berni, producing their own late-night show from their living room. There’s also a dedicated extreme sports channel called “Boneless.” “Anyone publishing with us can’t just provide good video material – they must become entrepreneurs, build their fan base, and promote their channel on social networks,” Kyncl explains. “For traditional producers, this requires a real shift – they must take on tasks usually handled by TV channels.”

If you’ve been planning to launch a fresh idea on YouTube, now is probably the best and last opportunity. In a short time, professionalization and saturation in this space will make it almost impossible to enter the online TV world. The motto is: now or never!

For All Apple Devotees: The Small iPad is Coming

There are many rumors about Apple. That they want to release their own TV, that the Maps app was just a failed April Fool’s joke, or that Steve Jobs is lying in an ice sarcophagus in Cupertino to be resurrected once iResurrection is ready – which will take another twelve years at least.

One persistent rumor may soon become reality: Apple is working on an iPad mini. According to the Wall Street Journal, suppliers in Asia indicate that the American tech giant has ordered ten million units for Q4 2012. The device’s size is expected to fall between an iPhone and an iPad.

According to insiders, the small tablet will debut this month, confirmed by an official October presentation. Steve Jobs had always opposed a smaller iPad, apparently not understanding why anyone would buy it.

Ten million units would be double the Kindle Fire production by Amazon during the same period. Apple’s standard iPad production and sales would add to that. Employees at some Chinese factories should brace for overtime, if even more is possible.

The practical use of such a device might not be obvious at first, but its advantages are clear: those who found it awkward to pull out a full-sized iPad on the subway, yet considered an iPhone screen too small, can finally breathe easy. Perhaps it’s also useful for people with small hands.

Although I personally tend to idolize technology quickly (hail Nintendo and Apple), I still find it strange to watch people pull out tablets on the street and smear their fingers across the screens. Interestingly, I am okay with people using laptops. Truly, I am a peculiar character.

Let Go of Your Sister Immediately! Incest is Not a Human Right

Many of you have done terrible things. In the past. When you were small. Some still do. Whether with guilt or without, no one knows for sure, but the European Court of Human Rights made one thing clear in April. And this ruling is now legally binding: having sex with your sister is prohibited. Sorry, Herbert.

A man from Leipzig had filed a lawsuit. For years, he and his female counterpart were having sex freely, but he occasionally went to prison. His lawyer confirmed to the magazine Focus that his client’s sexual drive is so strong that the case will now go to the Grand Chamber. Whatever that is, but it sounds important.

Thus, the decision from the other chamber is legally binding, the lawyer added. In Strasbourg, the man wanted to claim a violation of the right to respect for private and family life. The couple, now separated, had four children. Two of them are disabled, which biology class teaches is sometimes the result of incest.

I never had siblings, but I watched enough online educational videos about sexual relations between brothers and sisters, parents and children, and even with dogs. As sexy and forbidden as it may sound, something deep inside tells me it wasn’t so great for this guy and his partner, contrary to what these videos implied.

So next time you see your sister naked in the bathroom, think twice before luring her into your room with a funny line. Or at least don’t tell your parents or post videos online. Okay, forget the second part; I need to learn something about human darkness. Enjoy!

Tips for the Weekend: Ten Little Missions

Since you’re spending the whole day doing nothing at home anyway because the sky is crying and the temperatures are mocking your tired face, you might as well do something other than watch ProSieben and scratch yourself. Ten little missions await you, which you should ideally complete by tomorrow, or Uncle Ulf will come and show you how painful boredom can really be.

One. Watch how these kids from the Third World read "First World Problems". Then think again about everything. Two. Get tickets now for the movie where Sacha Baron Cohen plays the rich Chinese man who tried to sell his lesbian daughter. Three. Read on Nerdcore how to increase your chances of avoiding copyright trouble. Then just log off the Internet and become a gardener. Four. Remember that you’re still in love with Effy. Everything will seem better afterward. Five. Save all photos of models where you can see nipples under their clothes on your computer and submit this collection to the Guinness Book of Records in 23 years—assuming you find more than twelve by then. Or just make your own Tumblr.

Six. Marry Pamela Horton. She has great breasts, posed for the American Playboy, and will kick your butt in "League of Legends". What more could you want?! Seven. Move to this island and this house. There you’re safe from zombies, the police, and… um… zombie-police. Eight. Only buy denim clothes. Jeans pants, jeans jackets, jeans shorts, jeans socks… JEANS! Nine. Sue the disgusting Kreuz.net website into the ground. Don’t comment—they won’t read it anyway. Report it, sue it, erase it! Then bang your head on your desk because there are people like that on this planet. Ten. Sleep with Luigi.

Copyright on the Internet: Now Facebook Pages Are Targeted Too!

The new wave of copyright warnings in Germany isn’t quite over yet, when the next unpleasant news reaches us, this time from the United States. Facebook has begun deleting pages that post photos they don’t own. The New York blog The Cool Hunter, which had nearly 800,000 active fans, was hit particularly hard.

“We received no explanation, no warning, and no information from Facebook about what we should do next,” quotes the international online magazine The Next Web Bill Tikos, the blog’s founder. “All our attempts to get further instructions failed. This isn’t a small issue, it’s a big deal and could have serious consequences for all of us.”

The Facebook page of The Cool Hunter grew by 1,500 to 2,500 fans daily, with more than 10,000 clicks per day just from Facebook. Only after inquiry from The Next Web did things become somewhat clearer. Facebook responded: “The account was removed due to two copyright infringements reported to us. We manually reviewed the page several times and believe our actions were correct in this case.”

Bill Tikos sees it differently: “The problem is that no one knows exactly which images Facebook considers problematic. They don’t tell us. Even if we shared photos violating Facebook’s rules, are two enough to delete an entire account forever?”

“Our Facebook presence was an important and unique part of our strategy. It was the watering hole of our international community. Losing it is not a minor hiccup. It’s a huge loss for our communication and interaction; much of our content is gone. We published things there that didn’t make it to the blog, gave artists and designers a platform, and received feedback and praise from our fans. It’s all gone in an instant.”

Even if German bloggers rarely reach the number of fans The Cool Hunter had, most visitors today still come via Facebook accounts. Imagine what would happen if Facebook deleted your page after years of work. Name gone, fans gone, visitors gone. Just like that.

What can you do? Go through your Facebook pages today for any photos you didn’t take yourself or that violate Facebook’s usage rights. There’s often no warning. Deleting these parts of your page may hurt, but it’s still better than starting over with a banned account. Does Bill Tikos have a chance to get his page restored? “No,” says Facebook. “The account was permanently removed.”

XCOM Enemy Unknown: E.T. Strikes Back

The only good thing about the world seemingly falling apart outside due to cold, rain, and thunderstorms, with the sun only occasionally smiling down with a small "Haha!" at us, is that you no longer have to feel guilty when you spend the entire day glued to your screen at home, playing one silly video game after another while munching cookies from the family pack.

The latest reason for traditional outbursts and the dumbing down of our children, which you absolutely should play, is called "XCOM Enemy Unknown," and I would describe it as a curious mix of "Mass Effect" and "Civilization." What else can I do, considering in the last five years I’ve only played three games and don’t know much else.

In the turn-based tactical shooter, you select missions on Earth, send a squad of Special Army Whatever soldiers into battle against slimy aliens, research important technologies, promote your units, make far-reaching decisions, make one nation cheer and another cry, and shoot some "Mars Attacks!" creatures after countless clicks.

It’s actually pretty cool. Too bad that during the first mission half your team dies, and you break into tears because you still wanted to experience many adventures with the little Asian girl and her machine gun. But then suddenly everything moves fast: an abduction in China, an extraterrestrial terror attack in the USA—and in your lab, a strange scientist hops around, sounding like she could fall asleep any second during the conversation. Sleep well, Dr.!

The game seems to take the best from a lot of genres and combines it into an action-packed spectacle, whose story, admittedly, is so boring that I wish the aliens would put a little more effort into a real invasion. Show some creativity, maybe dress as Santa Claus or lure humans onto your ship with free beer and t-shirts. Maybe start a TV channel and melt brains every afternoon. Oops, too much revealed...

For all underage "Call of Duty"-ADHD kids, "XCOM Enemy Unknown" is not for you. It requires higher IQ and patience during turns when the enemy decides what to do—time you might otherwise spend smashing your face against a wall. I enjoyed it, but do I feel like playing more than five missions in a row? No idea. Check out the demo here and see for yourself. The full game is out October 11. Over and out! Damn aliens...

Five Years in Berlin: The City of Stagnation

I have now lived in Berlin for five years. And I have done everything here that I could do without risking my life in a lasting way. I wandered on Sundays in the bright sunshine through the flea market at Mauerpark, only to get annoyed by the tourists while feeling like one myself. I glided under drugs prepped at friends' living rooms through the clubs and beds of the monster, only to end up observing the sunrise on a swing. I met amazing people, kissed, lost.

But the numerous experiences, encounters, and stories I was allowed to experience in this huge city do not hide the feeling I have today when I walk along the overcrowded Kastanienallee, brush past lives of blankly staring dancers in the Chalet intoxicated with alcohol, breathe in the smell of the subway, hear the voices, noises, impressions. That Berlin hasn’t changed a bit in these five years. The city and its inhabitants stand still, perhaps long dead, and don’t even know it.

It doesn’t matter how much is built along the Spree, how many clubs are closed and reopened elsewhere, how many art exhibitions, pop-up stores, vegan restaurants, startup copies, graffiti walls, and MacBook cafés are visited, photographed, and forgotten. Berlin suffers from frozen creativity, kept in deep sleep by its initiators. So that freedom feels eternal and society remains elite.

On my travels through the city, I encounter the same faces everywhere, the same characters immortalized in different people, hearing the same stories. I am trapped in a universe that preaches change but thirsts for stagnation. Populated by stereotypes that once came as spirited individuals to the boiling metropolis and could not escape conformity. Those I had to watch without being able to do anything. I shouted at them, and they stared silently back.

It’s not the coke, the beer, the sex, or the music that drains your life force here; it’s the breathless ruins of a place that has endured so much that it has become tired. Sluggish. Soundless. Through the high old buildings, past painted rubble, over long avenues into trembling night bunkers echo your steps, words, screams, only to fade again around the next corner. Unheard by a decaying collective of copies.

Not a day passed without me defending my chosen home as a place of peace and art, praising it for its tolerance and possibilities. I loved it because it gave my mind and body experiences no other city could. But I have long since seen through it, can only comment on its attempts to draw me into its warm depths with a tired smile. I have now lived in Berlin for five years. And I feel it is time to slowly say goodbye. Perhaps forever.

The New Wave of Legal Warnings: German Bloggers Must Pay

When it comes to blogging, we often look enviously at American representatives who not only achieve significantly greater success and have more favorable readers, but also benefit from freedom of speech not curtailed by contradictory laws, restrictive collecting societies, and envious media representatives.

In recent weeks, the law firm activeLAW began sending mass cease-and-desist letters, with demands often around 5,000 euros per item. The client is the Berlin-based image agency hgm-press Michel OHG, which secured rights to various photos and graphics and has now begun warning any blogs that published them in their articles.

The site Autodino is to pay almost 19,000 euros for three photos they used. The claims against We Like That amount to 3,000 euros for a feature on artist Nathan Sawaya. Our sites AMY&PINK and the former sister site Wannafuckahipster (no longer online) are to pay 5,000 euros for a photo of Lindsay Lohan. And these are far from the only ones.

What’s special is the aggressiveness and quantity with which activeLAW is targeting German bloggers. Apparently, it doesn’t matter if operators credited the authors or even obtained written permission. Google Image Search was automatically scanned, and anyone found quickly was warned: abbreviated.

Without the legal protection of a fair-use law like in the USA, German lawyers can still sustain themselves through mass legal warnings with exorbitant sums, destroying livelihoods and years of work in a short time. And this is happening on an assembly line.

Websites like Tumblr, Pinterest, or Etsy would simply not be possible in Germany, because the law does not allow redistribution of images without rights. Not for inspiration, information, or recommendation. Even posting someone else’s photo on your Facebook page, Google+ wall, or Twitter profile can ruin you with a single letter.

If this continues, one should think twice before starting a blog or online magazine in Germany, risking a quiet lawsuit. Only if politics intervenes and finally imposes a legal stop on these waves of warnings can our digital culture develop safely, naturally, and modernly. It is high time for that.

PS: Please no insults without constructive criticism in the comments.

YouTube in Japan: Welcome to Prison

In the Land of the Rising Sun, a new law came into effect today, aiming to prevent the distribution of illegal downloads and punishing anyone involved with prison time. You can expect between two and ten years in jail—or a fine of around 100,000 euros. Who enforced this? The Recording Industry Association of Japan, the trade association of record companies.

The strange part is that this even includes watching illegal YouTube videos. This means music videos, trailers, clips, TV programs, memes, covers, excerpts not released by the copyright holder but uploaded by fans. Watching such a video in Japan could get you in trouble. This even applies to Japanese citizens abroad.

Technically, only possessing the file and downloading it are prosecutable, which sounds reasonable at first. But then you realize that every video you watch online is downloaded to your computer, which technically makes you already liable. At least in a country where the GEMA (German society for musical performance rights) can’t protect you. Strange world.

This law was passed while I was in Tokyo for three months. The alarming part was that I knew about it, but most locals didn’t. Instead of reporting it in the news, ads for car manufacturers or nuclear energy companies were running. Those who knew about it didn’t really know how to react, tried to mobilize like-minded people, and failed.

This may not directly concern us unless you are a Japanese citizen or planning to travel there soon, but such legal precedents can influence Germany as well. The more support copyright holders gain for these unusual laws, the more extreme similar legislation may become worldwide.

Tips for the Weekend: Ten Little Missions

That the last edition of our beloved column about ten small missions was already a month ago proves once again that we are the laziest people on this planet. At least. And then we show up on a Sunday, when more than half of the otherwise generously available time is already gone. Well, complaining won’t help. Let’s go!

One. Hand a random passerby a fake diamond and whisper quietly, “They’re coming! And time is running out for me! Find Mr. Klief or they will get us all!” Then run away. Extra points if you use a smoke bomb on your exit. Two. Turn this Chinese lesbian into a heterosexually thinking person, and her filthy rich father will pay you a fortune. Three. Remember point two? Better do what we say, or he might run over you with a steamroller. The Chinese...

Four. Look at how these former child stars look today. We recommend avoiding “Kindergarten Cop” to prevent inappropriate thoughts. Five. Buy a cute puppy. Seriously. They’re just so adorable.

Six. Castrate yourself, and perhaps even more, to live longer. Provided your body allows it. Seven. Go to a five-star restaurant alone, order a three-course meal, eat it, vomit, order again. Eight. Admit that this horse looks better than you. By far. Nine. Wear a black ski mask to a private party of acquaintances or colleagues. Bring drinks and food, blend in. Ten. Fall in love with the Taiwanese girl who only goes by U. Rename yourself M, and have children named O, Z, and Y with her.

League of Legends: Addiction, Addiction, Addiction!

Do you know those people in China or South Korea who are found dead in an internet café after playing "World of Warcraft" or "StarCraft II" for thirty days straight, starving, dehydrated, or with blood clots? I never really understood it. At least not until last night, when I discovered the addiction in game form out of sheer boredom.

I ended up playing "League of Legends" for over 16 hours, slept restlessly for a moment, then returned to the game. I can only explain it by being half Asian—or something like that. It’s supposedly in the blood. These multiplayer online whatever games. Explaining "League of Legends" to anyone now would get me beaten by the neighbor kid.

I'm level 6, have killed over 1,071 monsters, achieved 105 takedowns, and won five games. Lost the rest—not because I’m a noob, but because everyone else on my teams were Ukrainian idiots running all over the map and logging out every ten minutes. Okay, sometimes that was my fault.

I haven’t found my dream champion yet, but I keep playing an Amazon named Sivir, while eyeing Riven, an ex-soldier with big assets who seems eager to fight some Ukrainians with me. But she costs five euros or 700 hours of playtime. I won’t spend money on a free game.

So I put on my headphones, bash everything moving in an enchanted jungle, and watch old GameOne episodes so I don’t die of boredom when xxSchnuffel91xx or dA_KiNg-hOwL_sTaRX kill me because I forgot which key heals me and which teleports me back to base. Embarrassing. But no one notices.

"League of Legends" is available for both Windows and Mac, costs nothing, and since I was the last person on Earth to discover it, feel free to add me to the nerd kindergarten club and send me "That's why you're fat!" or "Forever alone" memes. Now excuse me, I have to make some school skippers cry.

Feminism in Germany: Angry, Humorless, Boring

If you drag your body to one of these self-congratulatory blogger events, you will quickly notice that you essentially only have four topics to choose from: fashion, politics, technology—and feminism. While I only stand awkwardly in a corner with a glass of champagne at fashion conferences because I have no clue about the new Karl Lagerfeld collection, I tend to lean left at politics, and at tech events I make up for it with my almost annual purchase of the new iPhone, I always get so simultaneously angry and bored at panels about women’s rights that I want to set the chair on fire and shout loudly.

I grew up in a generation in which confident, strong, and inspiring women were taken for granted. In kindergarten, at school, at work, among friends—I could not even understand why anyone anywhere could seriously claim that women should have fewer rights, opportunities, or possibilities than men without being laughed at loudly.

Guys preaching on talk shows that they would only sleep with virgins, that the stove is the proper place for women, or that a few slaps a day are normal to bring “the woman” back to reason. I didn’t even take these statements seriously; I thought they were written by a money-hungry RTL team to incite the audience against them—so far-fetched was this crap.

For me, all this falls into the same category as racism, classism, or, yes, cannibalism: terms from an old, almost mystical era in which rich men held and abused slaves, princes could not marry maidservants, sailors were eaten by bushmen. So absurd and far removed from any modern reality that I cannot take any of it seriously. Why would I?

My heartfelt respect goes to all strong women who have ever stood up against gender discrimination. On a large or small scale. Who sacrificed themselves, their families, their friends, who fought, who gave their lives to prove that people are not less valuable simply because they do not have a penis between their legs.

So why do I still feel this restless mix of anger, humorlessness, and boredom when I read a feminist publication or listen to a feminist speech, even though I fully support their demands, messages, and goals? Because the feminist movement consists only of angry, humorless, and boring people.

They want to rename the salt shaker to “salt shaker-ess” and mean it seriously. They demand a nationwide women’s quota, which in the end only reinforces the long-standing gender division, and they mean it seriously. They attend SlutWalks and mean it seriously. They vilify human sexuality and mean it seriously. They follow Alice Schwarzer. And they mean it seriously.

“Simply uttering the word feminism triggers a gigantic bomb in not a few minds,” says prominent blogger Nike van Dinther. “Composed of stereotypical views, images of armpit hair, or Mademoiselle Peaches putting a plastic penis on stage, unattractive politicians, cruel Alice Schwarzer, and really nasty man-haters.”

“Anyone wondering why one must necessarily feel part of a group should consider my answer to this question in a blogger forum: Because it facilitates interpersonal interaction when you can group things, people, attitudes, etc., under a single term and find like-minded people faster.” And she is right.

Basically, every modern, intelligent, and enlightened person should be a feminist. They should advocate for everyone’s rights, fight against injustice, support education, fight discrimination. But if the movement pursuing these goals presents itself so uninspiringly, so out of touch, and so unsympathetically, antipathy and distance are inevitable.

Feminism in Germany and worldwide would have it much easier and attract many more male supporters if it not only had modern demands but also presented them in a modern way. Away from this unbelievable seriousness, away from the clichés it still embodies, away from this stubbornness, this word choice, these idols.

We all, women and men alike, wish for a younger, fresher, and more approachable feminism that corresponds to today’s zeitgeist, that we defend voluntarily, that we naturally and happily live. One that ignites burning passion in each of us so that we can all work together to make equality a natural part of our society. Without quotas. Without word abuse. And without me wanting to set the chair on fire and shout loudly.

Dear Diary: Parties, Hookups, Taking Pills

Before I tell you, like every week (hehe…), the things I currently spend my time on, I want to apologize for that picture above. Formally. Not because Frank from iHeartBerlin is a bad photographer (he’s the best, you should know) or because I got gray hairs from constant trolling, or because I’m too dumb to trim my beard properly, or because I’m getting fatter, or because I have the deepest eye wrinkles in the world, or because I look expectantly as if some sleazy literature professor is about to shove an even sleazier candy cane into me. Or maybe all of it. True for everything except Frank; he is the best!

That sentence was actually the most exciting thing in my life. That I was with Thang at the Witte de With Festival in Rotterdam also feels like three years ago. The rest of the time, I sit at home or in the library to work and earn as much money as possible in the shortest time. That means: no prostitutes, no coke, no trips to Disneyland, just neighbor Ute, who can no longer hear very well, imitation cola, trips to the next subway station and back. Pure fun.

Why all the stress? You can already guess: So I can return to Tokyo as quickly as possible and celebrate there with people whose names no one can pronounce, the fact that this is the only city in the world that truly makes me happy deep inside. I will kiss the Shibuya crossing as soon as I’m back! Provided I’m not run over by a bus first.

Otherwise, I went with Janos and Anika to the Berlin Döner exhibition DÖGA, which was probably the most boring thing I have ever experienced in my entire life, and that says something. I wanted to take totally exciting photos because I thought it would be a feast for the senses with music, colors, and delicious food. The reality was that an estimated five trillion people stood in line in front of four Döner stalls, half of which ran out of meat after two minutes. But I was too lazy to riot.

Wow, welcome to the ultra-exciting life of the AMY&PINK boss: Parties, hookups, taking pills. Or something like that. Now I have to continue studying complicated Kanji characters, which were scientifically proven to have been invented just to drive me to the brink of madness. Ayaka, please wait naked on the roofs of QFRONT for me! Or in Japanese: 私の黄色い犬にキスしてください!

Mass Effect Trilogy: The Better Star Trek

Recently, no video game has captivated me as much as "Mass Effect". I downloaded the first part from Steam much too late, then devoured the second, and the final third only a few months later, immediately after release. And even today, I am in relentless search of a comparable experience. Without success.

The space story of Commander Shepard and his crew is told with breathtaking depth, contains countless decision possibilities. Planets you can destroy at the push of a button. Friends and enemies that interchange in many possible universes, good and evil, and an ending that still haunts me today because it contains so many more truths than most are willing to admit.

Electronic Arts has now announced that all three parts will be compiled into one collection and released at the price of a full game—specifically on Microsoft’s Xbox 360 and Sony’s PlayStation 3. For the first of these two consoles, it will be available on November 7, the Japanese release will be slightly later.

I urge anyone who has the chance to buy this compilation to do so. Because this series is the reason I fell back in love with this hobby after years of abstinence, because Bioware demanded something so profound from me, making me an explorer, a decision-maker. "Mass Effect" will change you. In the best sense a game can.

The New MySpace: Awesome Stuff Nobody Needs

The chances that you still know MySpace are practically somewhere near zero. MySpace was the place that existed far, far before Google+, Facebook, and StudiVZ, where your emo parents met for failed cat sacrifices, where bands that no one cares about today celebrated their digital breakthrough, and where people occasionally fell victim to cyberbullying.

MySpace was ugly, cumbersome to use, and full of idiots who bombarded the comment sections of your profiles—painstakingly crafted over hours with indie music and pseudo-HTML—with animated advertising GIFs or sent you predatory requests. And of course, you responded. But that’s exactly why people loved it. And Tom was your best friend.

No one would remember MySpace today if the term had not gone down in history as the first Internet fail, often cited by your older sister while tearfully sipping wine, recounting all the things that went wrong in her life. God knows, MySpace is definitely part of that. Big times. Even the self-made avatars still haunt us today.

Nevertheless, the senile grandfather of all social networks wants to give it another try under new management, with Justin Timberlake at the helm. No joke. The truth is: we would laugh ourselves silly, trash the new MySpace, mock it, kick it again. The problem is: it just looks too good. Honestly.

This newly released video gives you an insight into what the future of the digital platform could look like. Madness. Profile pages, timelines, everything! Even some Facebook designers might be drooling in the corner. You can already get a teaser on this page and, of course, sign up.

The problem? Nobody needs it. I’m already nauseated at the thought of having to interact daily with people on Facebook, Google+, Twitter, Foursquare, Instagram, Daily Booth, Ping (haha!), Xing, Pinterest, Tumblr, Last.fm, LinkedIn, Diaspora* (haha²!), Flickr, deviantART, and Livemocha—and I’d rather beat half of them up.

So no matter how good MySpace looks or how much of its old charm it tries to bring back (if there ever was any), it likely only has a chance with those who don’t remember how things used to be or who have just celebrated their tenth birthday. Go Chantal, go! And bring all your friends...

Stupid Bloggers: Don’t Get Fooled!

Hello. My name is Marcel Winatschek. And I make money on the Internet. How do I do that? By sitting on my fat ass all day and dealing with feeds, PR agencies, and trolls—some of them totally cute, some more like pushing off a cliff. And then I package the best of it together with my colleagues, friends, and followers into articles and send them back into circulation.

How do we make money from this, you ask? By placing sponsored articles from Adidas, Calvin Klein, or Kenzo between our sexy, globally obligatory posts, and pushing them skillfully and with passion into your heads. And why am I telling you this? Because many of you also own a blog and can’t get anything I just described done.

I’m more or less happy to count myself as a member of several blogger groups. For example, this one. Or this one. Or this one. These groups mostly consist of either dumb questions or low-quality stuff being shared, but every day naive fashion bloggers and overwhelmed storytellers draw attention to giveaways, promotions, and specials apparently sponsored by some company—but you can immediately tell: the bloggers got fooled. And not for the first time.

“I’m giving away two Maybelline lipsticks today!” “Here are 10-euro H&M vouchers!” “Something from KiK.” KiK, seriously! That you’re giving away stuff that even my grandma wouldn’t want is not the worst part. The disgusting part is that you’re not even fairly compensated!

The majority of you get nothing for your efforts. You post digital crap hoping to attract a few readers. Others get vouchers. 10 euros, 20 euros. Sometimes 50 or 100. Very few get cash. Often only in double digits. And it’s no surprise if I now tell you: it’s all bullshit.

For years we’ve preached this, yet you keep making the same mistakes. Companies make a killing off your free PR, while you feel great giving away two CDs and a colorful tote bag, thinking big PR agencies are finally noticing you. Which is true—but only to exploit you. No offense.

Honestly, if I were a PR agency and such freely offered content fell into my lap: I’d snap it up! No regret, no sleepless nights. Motto: Your own fault if you sell yourself cheaply. And they’re right. That should make you think, whether you have a blog, Tumblr, or Twitter account.

The even worse thing is that by giving yourself away for free, you also ruin prices, reputation, and opportunities for others who are smarter, more diligent, or like us. Who wins? The companies, thinking the Internet is stupid.

How can you change that: By sharply replying to every cooperation request with your Media Kit, stating that they can advertise with you, but only for a fixed price covering an article and sharing on Facebook, Twitter, and Google+. Done. A few hundred euros, depending on your size and readership. Maybe more. Then you already know what to do.

Of course, most will reply they have no budget or that you’re crazy for asking. Hello, vouchers! What more do you want?! But those who understand your value will accept. Be professional. Not victims.

So folks, don’t let companies and PR agencies rip you off. They aren’t bad people—most aren’t—but they try to keep costs as low as possible to spread their product. That’s business. It’s time you become an important part of it and stop getting exploited for a 10-euro voucher.

München pukes: Welcome to Oktoberfest

The Bavarian mass orgy, colloquially also called Oktoberfest, is once again knocking on the wooden door and, as every year, will attract millions of fat Lederhosen fetishists, underage busty girls, and shocked Japanese tourists to a filthy meadow somewhere in Munich. They will endure overpriced sausages, overpriced beer, and overpriced rides—and then vomit extensively afterward—as meticulously documented by the guys and girls at München kotzt on their website. Oans zwoa gsuffa!

StarCraft 2: Blizzard's shooting orgy soon for free?

Actually, I have the same story as my chastised brothers and sisters who loved the story mode of "StarCraft 2" but then got utterly destroyed in multiplayer, so much so that they now only play "Hello Kitty Universe" or a ball on a string for safety reasons and because mom says so.

But what Blizzard's lead designer Dustin Browder mentioned briefly at the Valencia eSports Congress could potentially change all our lives. At least for those of us interested in playing against a horde of noobs and feeling somehow awesome doing it. He said that they might soon offer the "StarCraft 2" multiplayer mode completely for free.

What would that mean? Exactly: That soon your little brother, your older girlfriend, and the guy who finds her hot will be sitting in front of the screen shouting something about Xel'Naga, Zergs, and Terrans. Because they no longer have to play "FarmVille" or "The Sims Social," but "StarCraft 2" instead. And follow the dream of South Koreans to become world champions in bits-and-bytes combat.

Even for us normals, it would be great, because we could venture into online mode again without getting our asses beaten by a 14-year-old who asks us after two minutes to lose for him. After all, we’d just be wasting his time anyway. And for "StarCraft 2," this step would inevitably lead to world domination. Hurrah.

FRIENDS IN TOKYO: A Journey into the Land of Tentacles

You know the drill by now. If there’s a period of inactivity on AMY&PINK, it’s not because I’m lying on the couch with McDonald’s bags and my pants open, gasping for air while the fallen 2-liter Coke Zero is just a bit too far from me. Well, mostly not. Okay, sometimes it is.

It’s usually because I’ve gotten lost in a new project that I want to finish and publish as quickly as possible. Like this time. Long story short: our newest baby is called FRIENDS IN TOKYO. And what is it, who is it, how much does it cost, and can you eat it? Exactly!

What has always annoyed me? That most foreign blogs and magazines focusing on Japanese culture exclusively dive into manga, anime, and crazy TV shows. And video games. That’s it. The crazier, louder, more colorful, and tentacly the better. Funny, but also kind of lame.

Because in my three months in Japan, I learned there’s so much more: enthusiastic photographers, young artists, interesting designers. And since I’m working on this (if stuffing sushi and looking at pseudo-nude photos of AKB48 counts as working), and plan to move to Tokyo next year, I didn’t want to constantly spam AMY&PINK with Japanese stuff, so together with Sari and a few others we launched FRIENDS IN TOKYO.

Here we want to showcase the unknown side of Japanese youth culture, meet people who moved from Japan and now live in Berlin, Moscow, or even Antarctica, present exhibitions from Tokyo, music videos from Osaka, photos of the guy next door who, after a head injury, thinks he’s the incarnation of Emperor Akihito.

If you want to follow our journey and understand English more or less, add FRIENDS IN TOKYO to your feed reader, follow us on Facebook and Twitter, and tell your friends and grandparents that something big is coming from the Far East. Or something like that. Because now you all have, ahem, friends in Tokyo! How lovely that is!

National Day of Action: Stop the GEMA Fee Increase!

Because the few money vampires hiding behind the four big letters GEMA still haven't aligned with the good side of the music industry, tomorrow in several German major cities there will again be demonstrations against the financial nonsense that forces clubs to close, DJs to despair, and visitors to cry.

People who want to put an end to this madness are encouraged to turn up in large numbers tomorrow evening in Berlin, Munich, Frankfurt, Stuttgart, Dortmund, Leipzig, Dresden, Nuremberg, Erfurt, Bielefeld, and Hamburg to shout at GEMA that they should take their mafia methods elsewhere. But not here. Not with us. In our clubs.

For those still clueless: the collecting society plans to introduce new tariffs in 2013, resulting in a price increase of up to 1,400%, threatening the existence of numerous clubs and jobs. Many clubs would have to close, and ticket prices for remaining venues would skyrocket, ruining your night.

What can you do? Take to the streets tomorrow! In Berlin, a rally takes place from 2 PM to 6 PM directly in front of the district office at Keithstrasse 7. There will be speeches and free music, followed at 6 PM by a demonstration with sound trucks from Wittenbergplatz to Adenauerplatz and back. More info here.

For further information on the absurdity of GEMA's tariff plans, check out DE:BUG on why the discussion needs more than simplistic arguments, or Musikmarkt on GEMA sending awkward emails fooling their members. See you tomorrow evening!

Apple iPhone 5: September 12 Is the Date

After numerous mobile websites have been fighting for months with bad rumors, fake product photos, and annoying lies about the next iPhone, Apple now sends out this invitation. On September 12, the litigious heirs of Steve Jobs will present the new best phone. And everyone asks: Should I get it? Or save my money?

Of course, nobody knows what it will be able to do. We can assume it will be thinner, faster, prettier, with a better camera, more storage, and new apps. And… who knows. It doesn’t matter what it can do—it’s the new iPhone, it’s only about owning it. Or not owning it, if you’re broke or consciously abstain.

I'm still using the 4. Without S. Without Siri. Why? Because I decided to skip a generation each time. Which I always regret when other idiots shout dumb questions into their phones or brag that their camera takes better photos and videos than mine. Then I smile. And hate everyone.

So I sit here, thinking. Will I buy it? Or rather get an iPad? Or a Kindle? Or a book? Or help poor people in Uganda and keep my old iPhone until it breaks in the subway? So, what will you do? Get the iPhone 5 or not care at all?

Macklemore & Ryan Lewis feat. Wanz: Thrift Shop

Forget overpriced clothes, buy second-hand instead. Sure, it’s getting more expensive too, but on good days it at least feels like a unique piece. Also, you make grandma and grandpa proud. Seattle boy Macklemore and his homeboy Ryan Lewis feel the same and love the scraps of the senior generation. It’s vintage, bitch. The second single from the album “The Heist“ released on October 9, 2012, is already doing well and definitely motivates hardcore thrift shopping.

The xx: Coexist

The hype band The xx, consisting of Romy Madley Croft, Oliver Sim, and Jamie Smith, has just, in cooperation with the Microsoft Internet Explorer, uploaded their new album "Coexist" for free listening. You can listen here in advance to new songs like "Angels," "Fiction," and "Reunion." Completely free. Tonight, they are performing their sold-out concert in Berlin.

Adieu, Tacheles: Evacuated Since This Morning

As the Berliner Zeitung reports, the city landmark Tacheles in Mitte has been evacuated permanently since this morning. The long and media-heavy fight of the artists against the plans of the rightful owners has come to a pitiful end. There were no major protests this time, the painters, crafters, and musicians are moving to the new, cheaper art hub in Neukölln.

The court bailiff started just after 8 a.m., about 30 to 40 of the remaining artists were still packing. Music can be heard, beer coasters flying from the windows. Artistic resistance. Hundreds of signature lists lie on the floor, with countless people worldwide signing for the institution’s preservation. Myself included.

For five years, I’ve been in Berlin and for five years, Tacheles was part of my cityscape. For nearly three years, I worked just a few meters away. It was the spot I showed friends to demonstrate "the cool side" of the city. With all the street art, the pee smell, and drunk people hiding in the catacombs of the huge building.

The anger is especially directed at the mayor of Berlin. "Tacheles is gone, now Wowereit can go too," says a spokesperson for the artists. "Have a nice day." And I can understand that. Wowereit could have made a statement for the arts he likes to show off about on local TV. That chance is gone.

In a few days, the remains of Tacheles will reassemble at the Berlin club "Cube" on Rollbergstraße. It remains to be seen what HSH Nordbank, the rightful owner of the Oranienburger Straße property, will do with it. A parking garage? A hotel? New apartments? Whatever it is, the city center has lost some charm, some character.

Time Machine: Articles from the Past

We live in a fast-paced world with no time to catch our breath. But you know that—you’re always on the go. How about a good cup of tea and a short break to revisit the best texts from ten years of AMY&PINK? You can do that here. In our "Time Machine" section, we present the five best articles about love, life, and lava lamps every week.

Kyary Pamyu Pamyu - Pon Pon Pon

Before watching this brand-new music video by Japanese artist Kyary Pamyu Pamyu called "Pon Pon Pon," you’ll need to beg your parents for the following ingredients: strawberry sauce, LSD, ice cream, Smarties, bath salts, pure caffeine, and a pinch of unicorn dust. Mash it in a sand mold and put it in your mouth. Or smoke it. Or sit on it. Doesn’t matter. Ready? After four minutes, neither your parents, friends, nor that disgusting gym teacher who always gropes you will recognize you—but hey, it’s worth it. Pon Pon Pon!

Daisy Lowe - Playboy Summer

While the American Playboy is no longer the innovative nudie cannon it once was, and the German edition usually features washed-up celebrities or unknown soap stars, this time it deserved all our props. The offices of Hugh Hefner photographed the 22-year-old model Daisy Lowe, daughter of Pearl Lowe and Gavin Rossdale, by the pool, creating such amazing photos that we only sit crying with joy in front of the monitor, longing for a piece of real summer. Oh Daisy, we love you a little.

A Love Letter - Berlin, Berlin, Berlin

It’s ten degrees colder than elsewhere, the wind spits in my face, I step in dog poop and scream with all my heart, loud and unfiltered: “FUCK DIS SHIT ALTER!” My taxi driver can’t shut up, my favorite graffiti on Torstraße has been buffed, I’m homeless, I realize, the strap of my bag broke, this bastard cold is killing me. After five months in tropical 40-degree heat, I’m back in the worst winter in Europe, namely in Berlin, full-on blues and frustration, and hey, did I mention I’m unemployed? I bite my nails, accidentally bump a guy outside the house, endure five minutes of random chatter until I shout back: “ARE YOU FROM STUTTGART OR WHAT, YOU LOSER?!” but I don’t wait for his reaction, I vanish with my suitcases inside before getting stabbed.

Solo Moments - Alone With Yourself

Being alone doesn’t necessarily mean being lonely. Sure, it sometimes hits in the aching middle of everyday life, but much worse is running away from it. Being alone isn’t easy, at least for me. You can’t artificially train it or enforce it randomly. I feel there are two kinds of people: those who are often happy alone, and those who always hang out with others. Usually more often in pairs than in groups, and they enjoy it. Extremes can be unhealthy, as we all know, and the finger-wagging wise man sometimes likes to show up.

Emily Scarlett Romain - Friends I’ll Never Meet

Emily Scarlett Romain constantly misses something—her disturbed friends from the nightclub, hot summer at the lake, the last festival in Germany. No wonder the 23-year-old Brit constantly photographs everything she experiences. Not only that. In London and around, she exhibits her works, all shot on 35mm film, in galleries. Night adventures in strangers’ apartments, a trip to Berlin, the fat, dumb-looking cat. Emily captures it all.

Ein kleiner Shitstorm: Britney, zieh’ dir bitte was an!

Over shitstorms, everyone has been talking for months. Usually, it involves an angry mob of upset customers, readers, or trolls who bombard a company on the internet, Facebook, or Twitter with stupid comments until it collapses, leaving the spokesperson with no choice but to hand out a pony and a lollipop to everyone, crying. So far, so good.

What happened with us? We innocently posted this bikini photo of Britney Spears with the words: “Britney, put something on!” We do this frequently. Publishing pictures with punchy words on our Facebook wall sparks discussion, brings likes and fans, and adds variety to the boring workday we sometimes experience.

Then what? The first comments rolled in. “People who consider this figure ugly definitely belong in the loony bin,” wrote Victoria. “Sacred donuts and cheese fries and declaring Britney too fat. Sure,” wrote Mielena. “Quick question: Are there only kids in your Facebook ‘editorial team’? Or do you drink cheap imported booze? Or are you just a bit dumb? Up top…?” wrote Christoph. “First child pornography, now promoting anorexia…” wrote Jessica.

Within an hour, the phrase “Britney, put something on!” was interpreted through successive comments to mean that we consider Britney Spears too fat, promote anorexia, spread child pornography, are dumb, import harmful alcohol, propagate hipsters, and suffer from the Hollywood beauty syndrome.

No one even considered that we might think Britney is too thin, that we don’t like her glasses, that the floral bikini is out of fashion, or that we don’t want to see a half-naked mother of two. This was simply a harmless comment on a harmless photo, which happened to appear in our inbox and was posted out again.

This illustrates the problem with shitstorms: people don’t base opinions on the original content but react to the last opinion of someone else. Facts that don’t exist are suddenly created. “We didn’t say that!” “We don’t care!”

Professional large companies recognize the seriousness and respond with warm, understanding words, giving discounts and gifts, saying they understand your problem. Why do they do this? Because they don’t care about you. A real friend gives a slap and tells you: don’t be so damn stupid!

If you already riot against AMY&PINK or anyone else, at least check if it’s justified. If we think Britney Spears or your grandmother or your pet is too ugly, too fat, too thin, too big, too small, too normal, we will say so. Then you can comment or unfollow and hate us forever.

But don’t attribute things to anyone and consider them facts. There’s nothing that makes you appear dumber, more hateful, and less qualified for life than believing everything without thinking. Stop it. We love you. And we don’t want you to become that way. Thank you. Goodbye.

Weekend Tips: Ten Little Missions

August quietly says goodbye. But no need to be sad; there’s still so much to do before it fades from memory. Ten little missions have gathered themselves to entertain, challenge, and push you. Let’s see how many you can complete before the new workweek intervenes.

One. Grab eight friends, dress them in cheap ghetto clothes, and dance ridiculously to this track. Nothing else is probably more fun. Two. Order this creepy manga figure and win a free trip to Japan. Three. Punch your boss in the face if he dares to send PR emails with Christmas content already. Four. Check out these Top 10 tits. Our favorites: Miley Cyrus, Rosario Dawson, and Mädchen Amick. Five. Stop smoking weed. Recent research says it… reduces IQ. Well, not smart…

Six. Watch this video from "The Newsroom" where everyone screams. Do it too. Seven. Engage in Eastwooding and point at an empty chair. Maybe he’ll respond. Eight. End conversations with anyone who talks more than 100 words at a stretch by showing them your secondary sexual organs. If they continue, you have a problem. Nine. Write “Free Pussy Riot” with the blood of your murdered victims on the wall. Or maybe not… bad idea. Ten. Get this golden Game Boy and make your friends explode with envy.

Dear Diary: The Surreal Life of Marcel W.

Some of you always complain: “Hey, Marcel, what are you actually doing? You barely write anything personal on AMY&PINK anymore. That’s lame, everything was better before, where’s Hannah, Tokyopunk was way cooler, do you have a girlfriend, how much is a night with you, blah blah blah.” Okay, no one has ever actually said or asked these things, but I’ll just claim it for now.

That’s why I’ve decided that Wednesdays from now on belong to me. In a new, small section called "Dear Diary," completely original and all, I’ll tell you weekly what I’m up to, who I meet, what I do, and my thoughts on topics nobody really cares about. And it will be totally unstructured, spontaneous, and ridiculous. Just like back then. With photos.

And let’s hope, you, me, and whoever else, that this isn’t another one-off section that I announce with a big fanfare only to cancel it after one or two posts. Like… does anyone remember…? Uh… that one, where we… you know… Ah, never mind. That’s not what this is about. It’s about much more important things. About me. And what I’m doing.

Let’s start right away: as you know, I recently returned from Japan. It was so amazing that now I just sit at home feeling gloomy, stuffing myself with Asian food from Lieferando and counting the days until I can go back. But sulking cannot last forever; life keeps moving. Doing nothing is not an option, especially nowadays.

Tomorrow I fly to Munich to attend the Adidas #Represent Campaign Kick Off, then I’ll spend a week with my beloved family in Ostallgäu, afterwards it’s the Berlin Festival, and mid-September I’m going with the Thainutte to Rotterdam. Officially for the International Arts Festival, unofficially just because I’ve never been to Rotterdam and I heard they have good cake there.

Over the past six months, I gained about 99 kilos, which is why I decided to drink only unsweetened green tea and eat only fish, salad, and rice. I usually only manage that until the next lunch, but I wanted to mention it. For my conscience. Or something.

My fat belly benefits from the fact that I started playing "Guild Wars 2" with some of my valued blogger colleagues. We even formed our own guild, called DIE GAMMELGILDE. We are on Riverside, or Flusslauf. My character there is named Yokomon. So kindly give me great, valuable digital stuff.

That’s it for now. I hope you are now dumber than before, if that’s even possible. Next time, I’ll tell you who my favorite blogger is, how long my penis is, and why Mew is the best Pokémon ever. Oh, why wait… Karley Sciortino, [RanNum min="5" max="42"] centimeters, because it kicks Pikachu in the butt. Until next time! Booyakasha! (I want to hug a tree now…)

Marcel in Japan: The End of the Beginning

When the runway seems to rush past me faster and we finally take off, I have tears in my eyes. I knew this moment would come, had to come, but I had suppressed it, rejected it, didn’t want to accept it. Over and over. My memory goes back to the moment I arrived here, when I realized that I would experience a completely new adventure.

I have now lived in Tokyo for three months. I met amazing people, saw, felt, and tasted the most wonderful things. I immersed myself in a world that should not even exist, a world that resembles ours yet takes place far, far away. In the future. On another planet. I have never felt so at home anywhere else.

Everything you have heard about Japan is true. But stories cannot even come close to conveying this intensity, this curious mixture of ancient culture and modern technology, of omnipresent politeness and vibrant rebellion, of fast-paced existence and meditative calm. Japan is different. Whether it is better is up to each person to decide.

I had tears in my eyes because I felt so comfortable there, even though I didn’t understand the language well enough to fully grasp the depths of the country. But this multitude of small details, this wealth of greatness, makes life in Berlin feel much harder. I notice this now, after returning, immensely.

There is so much I will miss. The glowing vibrancy of Shibuya. Convenience stores open all night, supplying me with Asahi Super Dry, rice balls, and green tea. Subways that are always on time. AKB48 playing everywhere. Or Shiina Ringo. Or Ikimono Gakari. Even alarm systems have little smileys. Everyone reads manga; in bars you can play Super Nintendo.

Sexy schoolgirls everywhere, you can touch Pikachu, get grapefruit-crashed ice in cups, never wait for a waiter, and the whole country seems made of special editions of soft drinks. The river in Kyoto is so calming, the desert in Tottori so beautiful, the arcades in Osaka so colorful, and fashion in Tokyo so exciting.

Nothing scares me more than the thought that these three months will become only a gray memory in my mind. A dream I have now woken from, which I cannot return to. A thought fading away, whose inhabitants no longer seem to exist. A decision that has no effect on what I was. What I am. What I will be.

But something cheers me up. And that is a plan I had made before my trip, forgotten during my adventure, and remembered again on the plane. These three months were only a test run. For me. To see how much I would like Japan, the real Japan, not the one in my head, how great Tokyo really is, whether perhaps another city suits me better.

I have not experienced a single bad moment in this country that wasn’t based on worries and problems in Germany. That alone makes it clear that a life there is worthwhile, that there is much more to discover. That this is only the end of the beginning, that the second part is already approaching. And now I have allies. And they will help me.

Thanks to the holiday work visa from the Japanese embassy, I will move to Japan for a year in early 2013. I can continue my work on the Internet from there. A newly made friend in Tokyo, who lives in Berlin, will also help me learn the language in addition to a course. It’s easier than HTML, she said. So I am optimistic.

When the runway seems to rush past me faster and we finally take off, I have tears in my eyes. But they fade because I know I will return soon. Better prepared, for a longer period, with people waiting for me there. And one thing I already know: next time I will explore the Japanese islands. But for now, I lean back and listen to Utada Hikaru.

Sony Xperia SL: The Sharp iPhone Alternative

In the ongoing battle among tech giants against the apparent dominance of Apple, Sony now strikes with its latest marvel, the Xperia SL. This is the successor to the Xperia S, which you probably don’t know, and it offers a concentrated dose of power, almost reaching divine levels. Well, almost.

I’ve had my iPhone for over a year. Without Siri, but with plenty of reminders and a type of contentment that only comes from complete satisfaction with a product. Not because I’m some unrealistic Apple fanboy, but because it always works the way I want. Except when I open the Facebook app—but that’s another story.

However, I’m the kind of person who would immediately trade it for something faster, better, and more beautiful. Something that isn’t already in everyone’s hands on the subway. Will the Xperia SL from Sony, with its 1.7-GHz Qualcomm dual-core processor, sharp 1280x720 pixel touchscreen, built-in Walkman, PlayStation game-compatible software and hardware, and Android 4.0 platform convince me? No idea, but we’ll find out once it’s released.

World Of Warcraft: Mists Of Pandaria

I’ll speak out what we all thought when Blizzard announced they were adding Kung-Fu Pandas to their online role-playing game "World Of Warcraft", running for what feels like 20 years: you’ve run out of ideas, haven’t you? But when you watch the cinematic trailer of "Mists Of Pandaria", which will release on September 25 and offers players a new, lost continent to explore, you’re so amazed you’re speechless for five minutes and almost tempted to click the pre-order button and reactivate your WoW account. But we won’t do that, since "Guild Wars 2" is coming soon anyway, and it’s way better.

Pussy Riot: Two Years Are Two Years Too Many

It is both simple and tedious to write about a decision whose arbitrariness is so clearly evident. And one that should not only be intolerable but actively opposed. Constantly. Because it doesn’t matter where this injustice occurs, under what social conditions it occurs, or under which nodding authority this injustice occurs.

The three members of the punk band Pussy Riot, Nadezhda Tolokonnikova, Yekaterina Samutsevich, and Maria Alyokhina, have been in the news for months because they loudly expressed their opinions about President Putin, the Russian Orthodox Church, and the outdated structures of a once-Communist nation inside a church. They were sentenced by a court to two years each in a penal colony.

But you already know that. DER SPIEGEL, STERN, Handelsblatt, Tagesschau, and many others have reported on it.

Author and blogger Johnny Häusler aptly notes: "I don’t want to join the cynicism that appears in news comment sections ('That’s just how it is in Russia'), nor make political-strategic considerations. Instead, I want to express my respect for these women, who, despite knowing the possible consequences, remain unbroken and, with a 40-second poem, have garnered more international attention for an unbearable situation than any punk band has ever done. I really don’t know if I would have the courage to go to jail for my opinion, but lately, I keep asking myself this question. Maybe Pussy Riot really are the most politically influential punk rock group ever."

Russian singer Regina Spektor commented on her Facebook page, receiving over 1,000 likes: "I sincerely hope these young women will not be imprisoned. I am in Russia for the first time in 23 years, and it feels great. As if new buds are blossoming in my homeland. The era of freedom of speech has arrived."

Marina Weisband, member of the German Pirate Party federal board, tweets: "Why should we care about this Pussy Riot verdict? So we can see what a rule of law is for and protect it." Marieluise Beck, member of the German Bundestag, notes: "This is unbelievable. For two and a half hours they’ve been reading a verdict on a minor offense."

German Chancellor Angela Merkel states on the German government website: "I have followed the trial against the members of Pussy Riot with concern. The disproportionately harsh verdict is not in line with the European values of rule of law and democracy, to which Russia, among others, has committed itself as a member of the Council of Europe. A lively civil society and politically active citizens are a necessary prerequisite, not a threat, for Russia’s modernization."

This article is not meant to provide news but solely to show solidarity. For the three young women, for freedom of speech. Against unhealthy power structures, against tyranny. To carry the message of Pussy Riot to the far corners of Germany, Europe, and the world, and to demonstrate that courage often comes at a high price, but history has always shown that it is worth it. That it is worth fighting, not giving in, and standing up for your ideals.

With this verdict, Russia has mobilized a whole army of intelligent, networked, modern people against itself, willing not only to expose obvious but also covert dictatorships and return power to the people. And who knows, one day we may find out that there is more behind Pussy Riot than we have yet imagined.

Tipps zum Wochenende: Ten Little Missions

We all sense it and don’t want to admit it. But there’s nothing we can do about it. Because: summer is already drawing to a close. So what better time than now to really show off and put worries aside? For example, with these ten little missions that demand almost everything from you. Let’s go!

One. Watch this video from gamescom in Cologne. But only for the little cute "League of Legends" Asian girl, who clearly has a ton of caffeine in her system. Two. Better check if you possibly have Jewish ancestors. Could be useful if you’re currently making friends with some Nazi comrades. Three. Complain loudly about your Glossybox. Even if you have no idea what it is. Complaining always brings something. Four. Sleep with Grimes, whom we lovingly call the singing eyebrow. But in her new video, she just looks amazing. Five. Sue Facebook. Maybe you’ll even get a million.

Six. Buy this lamp. It’s very beautiful and shows you have taste at a very high level. Seven. Check out how Pokémon would have looked if Tim Burton had designed them. Eight. Go to the beach alone, lie under the warm evening sun, and think about all the things on your life plan that still haven’t been realized. Nine. Dry your semen, crush it, pack it into little bags, and distribute them to unsuspecting idiots in some clubs. Resist laughing as they consume it. Ten. Look again at how Pokémon would have really looked if Tim Burton had designed them.

Guild Wars 2: In My Heart I’m a Nerd

I firmly believe that true friendship is not found at the posh parties of the so-called upper class, but in the smelly basements and vibrant networks of people who devote themselves passionately to one thing: gaming. And who are looking for allies, enemies, and the ultimate way to measure themselves against others.

After being rather passive in the growing gaming world in recent years because I came from the Nintendo corner and found almost everything after the Nintendo 64 disappointing, I’m slowly venturing back. I caught up on "Mass Effect." Loved it. I played "Skyrim." Found it monumental. Started "Fallout 3." And bowed in respect.

Yet I realize that losing myself in a game without any connection to the outside world no longer fully satisfies me. Because no matter how many people I save, monsters I slay, or items I find, it has no impact. On anyone. Honestly, I find that disheartening, if not downright boring.

My memory goes back to "World of Warcraft," which I tackled in 2006. Although I only reached level 40 with my blue-haired night elf, I am filled with endless joy when I recall the first days and weeks of gradually discovering the vast world and interacting with strangers on the hunt for victory.

In a few days, "Guild Wars 2" launches, and for me, after a disappointing "EVE Online" and a hollow "Diablo 3," it’s like the last hope to not only repeat that joy but take it to a new level. I don’t want a flying Excel sheet or a mindless click slave; I want to fully immerse myself in a magical world and assert myself there.

I want to start as a small, insignificant nobody in a huge world and work my way up to the most important war hero of all time. I want to write my own epic stories, meet allies in a smoky tavern or enchanted cave, make rivals who still think of me when they go to bed after a lost battle.

Swords, armor, elves, goblins, enchanted forests, fiery volcanoes, bustling medieval towns, marketplaces, lurking dangers in the distance, noble followers at my side, who are really just Justin-Tarzan, 13 years old, skipping school, yet still give me a sense of camaraderie — that’s my world. My other world.

ArenaNet and NCsoft promise that "Guild Wars 2" will not only release one of the most beautiful MMORPGs but also eliminate everything that has become a tedious obligation in other genre entries. Quests are easier thanks to the sidekick system, better with friends, dynamic events, weekly raids omitted.

Whether I start as a brave human or a strong Norn, and on which of the five German servers I will arrive, I still have to decide. All I know: I must be a warrior. Anything else is beyond me. So beware, inhabitants of Tyria. From August 25, I will make your life hell, provided I learn by then what nerfs, stuns, and zergs are...

The Last Of Us: Raw, Intense, Thrilling

Not long ago, many had high hopes for "I Am Alive". A game where the goal was to survive after a major unknown catastrophe, navigating the overgrown city amidst human remnants. What was supposed to be a hardcore experience ended up as a tedious energy-bar massacre, where the hero’s only challenge was not to collapse from exhaustion. Eventually, people even wished for him to fail...

With "The Last Of Us", Sony and Naughty Dog aim to do everything differently. Challenging fights, graphics praised by self-proclaimed experts as next-gen, a story where decisions have tangible effects. Starring: Joel, a hardened survivor, and Ellie, a 14-year-old orphan. Their goal: to make their way across the United States without dying.

At the ongoing gamescom in Cologne, a new trailer was shown. The game itself is set for early 2013, exclusively for the current Sony console. Xbox 360 and Nintendo Wii players are left out, but they can at least drool over screenshots and videos. Then cry. Then maybe get a PlayStation 3.

Mixtape Monday: High As Shit

Sometimes it’s just about being higher. Higher than everyone before you, under you, after you. Just high as shit. How you achieve that is completely up to you. Through smoke winding its way through your black lungs. Through disgusting-tasting nutrients that many exhausted returnees have expressly warned you about, but which bring you new ideas. Or simply through the power of music. For example, from Paul Banks, Ellie Goulding, and Lana Del Rey. Exactly.

Oooptopia: Artgebraic Tribute To Adventure Time

That I am a huge fan of the American animated series "Adventure Time" I have already proven at this point with the help of a phenomenal article. More or less. The stories of Finn, Jake, and a gummy-based princess are exactly what you should show your children so that they grow into respectable and somewhat silly adults.

Mike and Katie from TADO have now immortalized the most popular figures of the series in plastic with their own toy collection and thus partially made them part of "Oooptopia - An Artgebraic Tribute To Adventure Time." An exhibition at Gallery Nucleus, taking place from August 18 to September 9, 2012, in a small town called Alhambra near Los Angeles, California.

Unfortunately, I have absolutely no idea whether the pieces can be purchased anywhere, but if so, then I would take… Ice King. No: Marceline! Oh, that one doesn’t exist… Well, then Beemo! Exactly, Beemo. The little Game-Boy-thing with arms and legs. Just pack it, send it here, make me very happy. Thanks. Bye. What time is it? Adventure Time!

Tips for the Weekend: Ten Little Missions

You will all die. So, now that we’ve overcome the low point of general cheerfulness, let’s come to the more enjoyable aspects of life. For example: it’s the weekend! Again. That means, besides sleeping in, wandering around, and days with the letter S, there is a new edition of "Ten Little Missions." Great. Let’s go!

One. Prepare yourself with "Starcraft 2", "Diablo 3", and "Counterstrike" marathons for the gamescom in Cologne and then queue for eight to who-knows-how-many hours for the "Call of Duty: Black Ops II" multiplayer mode. Two. Write HBO an email or letter that you want a series about bloggers. Don’t write MTV. And not FOX either. And definitely not any German channel. Write to HBO! Three. Tell little kids that the world will end in four months, give them a cookie, and then hop away laughing. Four. Take some drugs and then paint self-portraits of yourself. Like Brian Lewis Saunders. Five. Send Mr. Tutorial photos of licked raisins.

Six. Buy a used submarine and live underwater from now on. Greet Ariel from us. Seven. Sign books, magazines, and tickets of other people without asking and then say: “You’re welcome, my pleasure!”. Eight. Win a competition where the goal is to shove as much food into your body as possible in a limited time. For example, potato salad. Nine. Call the girl you had a crush on in third grade and ask if she wants to come over to help you with your math homework. Super cute and all. Ten. On Thank Your Wank!, indicate who you think about when you masturbate. For example, Hannah.

Stuart Sink

Fallout 3: Digital Splendors

Video games have come a long way. From black-and-white blocks and balls to pixelated plumbers with an aversion to turtles, to spartan warlords who, in a blood frenzy, like to slaughter entire families and gods. In Japan and the USA long established as part of pop culture, games in recent years have slowly been able to free themselves in Europe from the musty image of socially excluded basement kids, psychologically unstable egocentrics, and dubious arcades.

How much beauty, grace, and artistic aspects games can have is shown by these images of the almost four-year-old "Fallout 3", a role-playing game about the nuclear end of the world and some Americans who haven’t quite realized it yet. A tale of isolation, destruction, and the eternal will to not give up but to see and use possibilities.

Thanks to mods painstakingly developed by enthusiastic hobbyists, which show how the story can still captivate amidst all the cinematic war shooters and unnecessary casual sports games, a unique view of "Fallout 3" unfolds as never seen before. The adventure awaits you. Possibly once more.

Du bist Ware! Who’s Afraid of Data Privacy?

Some things we learn very early in life. From the government. From the media. From our parents. That you should stay away from drugs, for example, since they are illegal. That you need to do well in school, otherwise you won’t amount to anything. And that you should give as little personal data as possible online, otherwise you could become a “transparent citizen.”

Over the years, we start questioning some moral assumptions. Are drugs really that bad just because some politicians banned them? Steve Jobs certainly accomplished amazing things. Are good grades the measure of all success? Medical students now drive taxis, school dropouts buy villas thanks to startups. And what about data privacy…?

We regularly complain about Facebook, Google, and Amazon because, supposedly, we are not their customers but their product. They lure us with comfort, games, and time-saving interactions, collecting every small preference and storing it in extensive lists and profiles on faraway servers.

The question we should ask ourselves openly is this: is it really that bad? For over ten years, I’ve pumped the web full of my data. My favorite food, the school I attended, who I’ve slept with, the songs I listened to this morning, people I’m no longer friends with, my thoughts about the Pirate Party. What’s happened so far? Nothing.

I understand the concerns of privacy advocates, parent groups, and internet paranoids. I don’t want managers profiting from knowing I prefer pizza over jerky. And I feel uneasy when Deutsche Telekom records that I’m drinking peppermint tea at St. Oberholz instead of interacting socially with others.

But I haven’t suffered any real physical or psychological harm. I haven’t been kidnapped because Herbert K. from A. knew my location. I haven’t been blackmailed by Facebook to play more FarmVille. Even if a minor uploaded bikini photos on SchülerVZ and some elderly men in Brandenburg ogled them—gross, but harmless. The old men will die anyway.

We live in an age of constant fear that someone, somewhere, might misuse our data. So we wait. And wait. And wait. I’ve really thought about the worst realistic consequences of openly sharing what I think, like, hate, or am. As long as I do nothing illegal, nothing really comes to mind. Personalized advertising? Really? That’s the “end boss”? I can only laugh. I like cheesecake.

DayZ: The Apocalypse as Full Version

No generation has been better prepared for a zombie apocalypse than ours. Movies and TV taught us that shopping malls will eventually be stormed by brain-hungry undead. Comics taught us that crossbows are perfect when ammo runs low. And video games made it clear: trust no one but yourself.

So while we lie in bed thinking where to run when the world ends, a million players have been rehearsing this scenario in the online epic "DayZ", released as a free expansion of the "Arma" franchise. The only real enemy is survival itself.

In the shooter, you find yourself in the fictional post-Soviet state of Chernarus, sharing it with a few survivors and a horde of infected monsters. You can go solo or join a group, help or kill, be fair or cruel. Your choice. Average life expectancy is barely an hour.

Dean Hall has officially announced that "DayZ" will no longer be a buggy alpha mod, but a proper standalone game available as download and boxed version. This is exciting because it could allow features far beyond the typical shooter experience.

I hope players can collect, use, and modify every item. They could learn professions—from hunter to technician to trader. Build cities, castles, digital social lives, make decisions, wars, rebellions that change the world. Kind of like "EVE Online", but with zombies. Perhaps my expectations are too high. "DayZ" will likely be a fun shooter where you quietly sneak through bushes, gather canned food, and occasionally flee from a decomposing Dieter before being shot by some 15-year-old kid who confuses it with "Call of Duty". Could be worse.

Mixtape Monday: Touching Tunes

Music must touch you, take you on an emotional rollercoaster you won’t forget anytime soon. One that ideally lasts forever. With constant new input. Gently embrace you, shake you awake, for posing, kissing, causing chaos. SBTRKT, Bat For Lashes, and Crystal Castles show you how it’s done. Things can be touched again. Yes. Exactly.

WE ♥ MARCEL: Boobs, Japan, Pokémon

AMY&PINK recently turned five years old. That’s quite a lot in internet years. Anyone running a project that attracts more and more insatiable spectators will eventually notice that their personal contributions start to fade. Where once private texts about life, intimate photos, and self-made videos were published, the audience now increasingly expects cultural criticism, photographer portfolios, and the latest music videos.

I had to restrain my everyday texts more and more until I no longer had a proper channel to throw out my worries, inspirations, and existence. Out of me. To make room again. Inside me. That was, after all, the reason I started blogging. It led to depression, wanderlust, and Burger-King orgies.

It almost feels like five years ago I last really blogged. Back then, I retired the old TOKYOPUNK due to heartbreak, future anxieties, and a desire for change and laid the foundation for one of the most controversial German online magazines with AMY&PINK. Everything grew bigger, more, further. Yet I missed one thing dearly: having a personal voice.

But that ends now. Admittedly, WE ♥ MARCEL isn’t exactly new, but I had treated it rather neglectfully so far. Unfiltered photos, occasional music videos, then months of silence. That will change now. Finally. Anyone curious about what I’m up to, what keeps me going, what happens behind the scenes, can add WE ♥ MARCEL to their feed reader, follow me on Facebook, Google+, Twitter, or email me at marcel@amypink.com. The king is back.

Das grosse Festival-Gewinnspiel: Das grosse Festival-Gewinnspiel – We’ll Take You to Highfield

This admittedly somewhat sobering summer may not exactly be called the hottest highlight of the year, but the numerous festivals across the country and their cheerfully bouncing visitors skillfully resist the acute negative trend. The next big date to mark in your calendar is, of course, the Highfield Festival at the Störmthaler See in Großpösna near Leipzig.

Who will be there from August 17-19 just for you? Of course, the Beatsteaks. And Placebo. And the Sportfreunde Stiller. And The Black Keys. And Bullet For My Valentine. And Casper. And Kettcar. And Frittenbude. And K.I.Z. And The Shins. And The Gaslight Anthem. And Jupiter Jones. And Within Temptation. And Social Distortion. And Eagles Of Death Metal. And many more.

For a pleasant cooldown between acts, the ever-popular and free AXE showers on the festival grounds provide relief, so that during all the hopping, drinking, and making out, you at least smell good and look presentable. Experienced concertgoers know exactly how incredibly important that can be.

To get your behinds to this year’s Highfield, we’re giving away a total of 1x2 tickets for you and your best friend, your mother, or even the guy from the gas station. To participate, just leave a comment with a valid email address by Tuesday, August 7, 2012. Come on, you can do it!

With the kind support of AXE. Also, advertise on AMY&PINK!

Mixtape: Moonstruck

People, I’m going to tell you my biggest secret. Nothing and no one will ever be able to enter my life that is more important to me than music. Maybe that’s sad, maybe it’s too harsh. But the power of music is my apocalypse. The force of the bass is my orgasm. My happiness depends on the right sound. Only where it splits the horizon do I feel at home. Without music, I wouldn’t even question the meaning of life. The Moonstruck mixtape carries so much of all that, my soundtrack for rising and falling.

Secret of Mana Genesis: Tunes from the Past

Okay, why "Secret of Mana" is the greatest game in the whole world was unequivocally proven by Ines in a Hollywood-style video. Of course, nostalgia and idealization play a role, as we all lived much more carefree back then—in 1994. That’s 18 years ago. Eighteen. Years. But anyone who says something against "Secret of Mana" also sleeps with kittens.

For those who cry themselves to sleep at night, missing the good old days, here’s some good news. Square Enix, the company that originally made the game, is releasing in mid-August the "Secret of Mana Genesis - Arrange Album". It contains nothing more than tracks from the classic.

The composer Hiroki Kikuta dug out the old source files for the soundtrack and had the pieces pressed uncompressed onto CD, instead of filtering them through the Super Nintendo. No orchestra, no edits, no remixes. Pure past. Yes, nerdism at its finest. But that’s okay. Retro is always stylish.

For around 30 to 40 euros, you can import it from Japan or buy it directly in a store here in the East. Or download it somewhere illegally if you love that thrill. For anyone not into dusty MIDI files, you can at least watch Ines’ video again. That’s also great.

Tipps zum Wochenende: Ten Little Missions

We are all extremely busy people. Constantly. So it can happen that we completely forget important events, like putting together the latest Ten Little Missions for Friday afternoon. Or we’re just too lazy and prefer to shove chocolate donuts with a fatty crust into the primary oral cavity. But here it goes. You can rely on us! Almost.

One. Check out the 50 cutest things that have ever happened. Then hug the person closest to you. Really tight. Two. Sing the German national anthem in the most impossible places. In church. In the doctor’s waiting room. In front of the next döner shop. You’ll definitely get attention. Three. Remember the worst game of chance in the world. Then hit the person closest to you hard between the legs. Really hard. Four. Start your own cult. Money, orgies, and a spectacular demise guaranteed. Five. Steal groceries from Edeka and put them on Lidl’s shelves.

Six. Try to look as cool as possible during your next orgasm. Place a mirror in front of you and put on some trendy clothes before you start touching yourself or being taken by Stefan. Seven. Start your own news show on YouTube. Talk only about things that interest at most one percent of humanity. For example, air conditioners allowed only on Korean oil platforms. Or cloudy apple juice that expired on April 23, 2011. Or cotton swabs that have 0.2% more cotton on one side than the other. Eight. Slip a bag of coke into each neighbor’s mailbox. You have to give once in a while. Good karma and all that. Nine. Buy an original packaged Nokia 3210. There’s almost nothing better to spend your hard-earned money on. Ten. Lick Michelle Jenneke. Maybe she’ll lick you back.

Indie Game: The Movie: Basement Kids with Dreams

If you follow really cool blogs like Superlevel or Destructoid thanks to various social media institutions (or just your browser), then you surely know "Indie Game: The Movie". How old is it now? One or two months? Old. Really. Old. Ancient. Almost. Why am I bringing it up now anyway? Because it changed my life. Well, at least a little.

So that I wouldn’t completely lose my mind while coding the international version of AMY&PINK and could distract myself from the dreariness of the night, I drank grapefruit-lemon 8% pseudo-beer on the side and played videos with sound. New episodes of "Adventure Time". A few videos from GameOne. And in the end, also "Indie Game: The Movie".

Yes, it’s about some nerds who spend years programming games just to release them on some platform. But that’s not the point. My love for the film comes from how it shows how passionate people can be about a vision. How much they sacrifice. Time. Friendship. Love. And especially money. Money they could have obtained more easily elsewhere.

When Tommy Refenes, one of the programmers of "Super Meat Boy", falls into a self-imposed but temporary depression. When Jonathan Blow, creator of "Braid", is on the verge of madness because nobody understands the depth of his game. When Phil Fish, the mind behind "FEZ", openly admits he will kill himself if his vision fails. I get it.

Of course, it’s inspiring when people shout totally creative phrases at me on some stage. They give me courage. To all of us who believe in our own project. But even more motivating is seeing people spend weeks, months, years in their tiny rooms, obsessed with something they believe will change the world.

I could punch anyone who just goes through a socially accepted occupation day in, day out, earning money. Nine hours brain off, life on hold, being a tool. Finish work. TV. Sleep. Wake up. Brain off. 40, 50, 60 years like that. How do you endure that? How can you be truly happy? Don’t you have dreams? You only live once, blah blah.

Undoubtedly, modern civilization would collapse if everyone only made indie games. Or something like AMY&PINK. Or traveled on a ship powered by burnt underwear from yellow Kinder egg plastic shells. Because that’s someone’s dream, what do I know. But you get the point.

If you’re a nearly pseudo-autistic basement kid with an Asperger-like tendency like me and will only find relief by pursuing your own thing and sticking it to everyone else, then watch "Indie Game: The Movie" soon. Currently, thanks to the Summer Sale, it’s around 5 euros on Steam. So watch it. Or remain a tool.

AMY&PINK Worldwide: Hello, We Are Now Fully International

Even if sometimes we’d rather just lie at home bored, dressing our genitals as Kasperl and Pezi and performing epic puppet theater orgies through glazed openings and bewildered neighbors, we never completely lose sight of one goal: world domination. And a juicy, affordable-for-everyone cheesecake flat rate.

Unfortunately, we no longer live in the era of Napoleon, Caesar, and Hitler, when you could simply conquer entire continents in your annoying native language and fill a history book along the way, but in a globalized capitalism where nobody cares if you don’t know words like Tree, Cat, and Kakistocracy and how to link them using proper conjugations.

So we sat here in Tokyo and wasted time turning AMY&PINK from a German local delicacy into an international atomic bomb, while cats, otakus, and girls with impossibly long legs constantly ran around us to make sure we were okay. While our heads were smoking. And we ate warm shit sushi. Delicious.

With all the highs and lows that such an exhausting project brings, AMY&PINK is now additionally available in the United States, Canada, United Kingdom, Ireland, New Zealand, Australia, Austria, and Switzerland. A Japanese version is being worked on right this moment, and more countries will gradually follow. When we feel like it.

Currently, the English-language pages contain only incredibly poorly translated past articles and endless errors, but through our travels and insanely awesome connections (Facebook, Knuddels, and chats on pet porn sites), we’ve found great people from all over the world who will soon supply each page with unique local info, photo series, and music videos.

Just click the small flag in the top left and send the different localizations to your absolute best friends from last year’s student exchange. Maybe somewhere on this planet there are people who want to present their stories on AMY&PINK in their native language, give new pink impulses, bring your favorite page to their country, and spread it further. They should just email us at join@amypink.com. We are fully ready. If you notice any mistakes, write them in the comments with a link. As a thank-you, we randomly send our authors’ nude photos to your email addresses.

The Japanese Youth:

Sometimes, I wonder what my life would have been like if I had grown up in Japan rather than Germany. After decades of consuming anime, manga, and video games, this question doesn’t seem too far-fetched. Would I still celebrate Japan and its culture with the same enthusiasm if I hadn’t been born in Germany but instead on the other side of the world?

Would I even find myself drawn to German pop culture the way I am to Japanese pop culture now? Would I secretly listen to Helene Fischer, convinced that her music is some sort of guilty pleasure? Or would my interests have taken an entirely different turn, shaped by an upbringing immersed in Japanese society?

Miri Matsufuji is a photographer from Tokyo, someone I once had the chance to meet in person. It happened on the third floor of Tower Records in Shibuya, a place I had wandered into on a whim. She was there with an American friend, showcasing her latest self-published photo booklet at a stand set up specifically for independent photographers.

I remember thinking how effortlessly cool she looked, as if she had stepped right out of one of her own photographs. It’s not uncommon for Japanese creatives to be seen in public alongside Western-looking people, whether as a fashion statement, a sign of international connections, or simply as part of a cosmopolitan lifestyle.

Miri is living the kind of reality I used to imagine for myself. Whether that reality is as great as it appears in my mind is, of course, debatable. After all, no life is as glamorous as it seems through the lens of a camera. But in her photos, Japanese youth always looks vibrant and full of life, as if every day were a scene from a coming-of-age film.

Miri’s work reflects reality while stripping it of its heaviness, making everyday life appear both colorful and cinematic, almost like a dream that still feels tangible. And that’s exactly what I love about her photography—it’s real, yet it never takes itself too seriously, balancing truth and beauty in a way that makes the ordinary feel extraordinary.

.

The Newsroom: What's Up?

If you have no idea what HBO is and enjoy lounging in an old white undershirt in front of mediocre shows like "Mitten im Leben," "Lenßen & Partner," and "Verdachtsfälle" in the afternoon, stop reading here and click this link. Otherwise, the following text involves pigs, pearls, and physics equations.

While the American premium channel this season focuses with "Girls" on overrated menstruation stories, where poor actresses either pleasure themselves at parties out of cheesy infatuation or on old sofas, and "Game of Thrones" is nothing more than continuous medieval inbreeding disguised by fifty-three thousand eight hundred twenty-eight different names and storylines, now comes a series for… let's say: real people.

Aaron Sorkin, considered a conversational fetishist in the industry, has already brought us "The Social Network," "Moneyball," and "The West Wing." His latest work is a series with the striking name "The Newsroom", which has been airing for several weeks on American pay-TV. What’s it about? Grumpy anchor Will, his ex-girlfriend MacKenzie who just returned from the war, and the guy from "Skins" and "Slumdog Millionaire." They all work together at a news channel and talk… a lot.

Why is it great? Because the first five minutes of the first episode are already better than all those annoying pseudo-suburban documentaries combined. Because "Girls" is only interesting for lazy pedophiles and people without a modern sexual life. Because no one can keep track in "Game of Thrones" anymore and everyone only wants to see the poorly animated dragon and the blonde’s boobs. And because "The Newsroom" gives you an insight behind the scenes of seemingly powerful institutions that bombard your brain daily with supposedly important information, all spiced with personal stories.

Currently, there are four ways to follow Hollywood life from the N24 newsroom. On HBO, online, on a German paid channel that nobody subscribes to, or have a friend in the U.S. record the episodes on VHS and send them to you. But no matter what: if you understand English (Tree, House, Cat? Okay!), give "The Newsroom" a chance. If the show gets canceled after half a season, it would be your fault—and that would mean I’d have to beat you up. Thank you for your attention.

Sid Meier's Civilization V - Gods and Kings: World Domination and Such

It must have been sometime in the fall when I first opened the window to my small courtyard after a week. Wearing only boxers, pizza pieces stuck to my beard, I had just conquered the entire planet on the big screen next to me. I felt like Napoleon, Caesar, and Hitler all at once – and looked like a decrepit sexual offender.

After being too dumb for the fourth installment of "Sid Meier's Civilization" and fumbling around for ten minutes, I went back to playing myself instead. Out of sheer boredom, I downloaded the fifth episode from Steam and discovered, researched, and conquered. It was simply epic. Meanwhile, Lieferando made a fortune off me.

Now the first expansion titled "Gods and Kings" has finally been released. It brings new achievements, religious fanatics, world wonders, and civilizations – like the Austrians, the Swedes, and the Ethiopians. Which is really irrelevant because I send my little Japanese units against every opponent anyway. And with overwhelming success.

You can now attack coastal cities from the sea, send spies to other states, and trade in lemons. Madness. There are guilds and fresh units, police stations, air-raid shelters, and an amphitheater. Lots of stuff to click happily and see what happens next. It shows what kind of person you really are: weakling or emperor.

Anyway, I’m back in full swing. In the topic of world domination. After all, this is not just wasted time in front of the computer but a kind of practice for the real deal. And if I ever become your untouchable dictator, you’ll know who to blame: "Sid Meier's Civilization V - Gods and Kings"! Now kneel, you worms!

Mixtape: Cook A Furby

What exactly cooking and then eating an aging toy has to do with this mixtape, I can’t really say, but if you still have a Furby lying around in your attic or your once-stained childhood bedroom, activate it, put it in a pot, and the sadistic carnage can begin. Meanwhile, you should listen to the soothing sounds of Yeasayer, Purity Ring, and Frank Ocean. You’re welcome.

Marcel in Japan: Summer, Sushi, and Shibuya

For almost a month now, I’ve been exploring Tokyo and, to the horror of my numerous male and female fans, I’ve only written one entire article about it so far. This doesn’t do justice to this amazing country, but honestly: once you get used to talking toilets, animated manga characters, and half-naked kids in magazines, you no longer feel the urge to photograph every corner and upload the pictures somewhere.

Instead, I tried to participate in everyday life. For work, we hang out at the cafés On The Corner or Wired Cafe, or enjoy free drinks and Oberholz flair at The Terminal. We eat at one of the many sushi and tendon restaurants found on every corner, or if we feel like American food, at Burger Factory right around the corner.

Otherwise, I now know Shibuya almost like the back of my hand, fell a little in love with Harajuku, visited old temples and huge Buddhas, saw One-Piece souvenirs everywhere, and members of the girl group AKB48 grinning at you from posters, vending machines, and passing advertising trucks. In a small bar, my favorite songs by Utada Hikaru played.

And since I like it here so much, I’ll probably extend my trip, which was supposed to end on July 5. The government allows me to stay until the end of August, and big festivals like Summer Sonic with Grimes, Perfume, Rihanna, Kyary Pamyu Pamyu, and SBTRKT happen in summer. I should catch all of that while I’m here, allowed to stay, and my strange internet job permits it. Otherwise, I’d probably regret it someday. And then I’d be very sad.

It’s truly incredible with what inspiring energy this familiar parallel world feeds me – and I want to make the most of it a little longer. I’ve only seen a fraction of a society that was voted the most creative on the planet in a survey. Well, Berlin, you’ll have to wait a bit longer until you can welcome me back into your alternative arms.

Together Against GEMAinheiten: Take to the Streets for Your Clubs

Don’t you also feel like protesting something stupid again? Going out onto the gray, cold streets? Shouting your demands into the wide world, spreading fear and dread among the people on the other side, and giving them sleepless nights through moral doubt? Here comes your perfect chance. And you should take it.

The Pirate Party is calling for demonstrations on Monday, June 25, in Berlin to register civic objections against the tariff reform of the widely known GEMA. People who apparently value music highly demand that, starting next year, clubs and discotheques pay disproportionately high fees to GEMA.

What does this mean? It will accelerate the general closure of clubs because many venues simply cannot afford to play rhythmic music with vocals. Then little Ralf would have to play sad songs on his ukulele—and nobody wants to hear that. Not even Ralf himself.

Although for many participants, the demo is also a rant against GEMA itself, the organizers clarify that it is not about YouTube blocks, raids following the Anonymous server shutdown, or GEMA itself. But honestly, in recent months and years, the collection society has increasingly interfered with our daily lives with increasingly absurd actions. The underlying demand is for an open, fair, and modern GEMA in Germany. And yes, some even want the curious association completely removed from the map. Understandably.

So join the Monday evening gatherings under the title "Together Against GEMAinheiten" and make sure with your signature on the online petition and the physical action that your favorite clubs do not have to close due to exorbitant additional fees averaging 600 to 2000 percent, that you don’t have to loiter for hours in the vegetable section at Kaiser’s to get your last fix, and that GEMA finally realizes that exploiting its monopoly and the resulting public misunderstanding is turning more and more informed citizens against them.

Weekend Tips: Ten Little Missions

The best days of the week are coming again and you have no clue what to do with so much independent freedom? Then we have the perfect solution for you! Just grab our ten little missions and finally make your mom and dad proud! And grandma. And the guy next door who keeps staring at you in Hello-Kitty underwear through the window.

One. Watch the new video of the constantly traveling Matt dancing around the world and then make your own short film. Like quoting Justin Bieber upside down in every Starbucks bathroom, or licking walls naked in every subway underpass, or playing "Super Mario Land" on the Game Boy while sitting on every girl. Two. Go to the cinema with earplugs in your ears and keep your eyes closed the entire film. And you can’t eat popcorn either! Three. Sniff annoyingly at everything and everyone. Even dogs. Four. Watch Octomom’s porn. Five. Or no, better not. Really. No. Just leave it. Six. Finally find real friends and kick out those shady losers who constantly steal your money, potential partners, or the best Pokémon cards. Seven. Watch these gifs of Kate Upton without touching yourself. We know that’s impossible. Eight. Read old fairy tales to sick children and play "Connect Four" with them. This is the only way to prevent your drug-, lie-, and orgy-filled life from sending you straight to hell. Nine. Have sex. Ten. Then have sex again. With someone else.

Leistungsschutzrecht: The War of Texts

The entire German internet is currently focused on just one topic, which is causing massive outrage. But of course, you haven’t noticed because you’d rather watch washed kittens on YouTube, "Family Guy" screenshots on 9Gag, or nude photos of your ex on 4chan. But now it’s time to pay attention, because it’s again about protecting our beloved and popular internet from bad people in gray suits, who are continuously losing it.

What is it this time? After ACTA, SOPA, and the annoying Hermann next door who constantly taps your Wi-Fi? It’s the Ancillary Copyright Law. One of those titles that sound positive but are basically just attempts to make your life miserable. Unless, of course, you are part of the Axel Springer publishing house: then congratulations. Or so. You can stop reading now.

Until now, if you copied entire texts or photos from other websites or books and published them on your own blog without permission, you could get into legal trouble. One could debate this. Many would prefer a "Fair Use" rule like in the United States, granting users certain rights to creatively reuse "stolen" material. For example, reblogging it on Tumblr, pointing a video camera at it, drawing a mustache on it, or hanging it as a poster above your bed.

The Ancillary Copyright Law, however, goes in the exact opposite direction. Because it can be monetized. Apparently, that is the only legitimate reason to constantly trample on creative freedom. The law gives publishers the right to legally hassle you if you merely quote a text, tweet excerpts, or link an article. Photos, music, and videos are not exempt.

Morally sound institutions like BILD-Zeitung, Bunte, or Ludwigsburger Kreiszeitung praise the law, claiming it helps them make more money. Who cares about long-term progress and free knowledge?

So again, for those who were only half paying attention: why is the Ancillary Copyright Law bad for all of us? Because when it comes into force, you could already have the police knocking if you link a favorite newspaper article on Facebook, comment on a text excerpt, or tweet an online magazine headline. Everyday things that most people do dozens of times an hour.

So take a moment to get informed about the dreaded word starting with L. For example, at the organization D64, IGEL, or on Wikipedia. Sometimes it feels like we have nothing else to do but resist idiots trying to violate the internet. Enough already. Thank you. Suit-wearing nuisances with delusions...

The New AMY&PINK: We Have the Biggest — Size Does Matter

After almost three weeks of near silence on AMY&PINK because I was in Tokyo preferring to eat ice cream on the beach, get drunk in tiny bars on overpriced beer, or photograph colorfully dressed Asian girls, and our co-authors were busy with their own projects, the rainy season started in the land of the rising sun, bringing one typhoon after another over Honshu — giving me the necessary time to finally complete the long-overdue AMY&PINK relaunch.

From 57 years of professional experience, I know that complete reinterpretations of this site always backfire. Remember the black, minimalist diary or the pseudo-print page. I personally found them outstanding. But no one else did. Really. Nobody. So every update brings only various improvements that I imagined while searching local magazines for the latest design kick — and I half found it.

If you haven’t fallen asleep yet, you may now witness the changes. The biggest achievement is, of course, the monumental homepage, designed to simply suggest that we have the biggest. And you don’t. The annoying background image is gone. And we’re bringing back English. Not yet. But soon.

Behind the scenes, we’re also working on new sections, taken from everywhere and interpreted to appear as world premieres. Basically, it’s about kicking more asses and making life harder — or sweeter — for those who wish us dead before bed. How would you manage without us?

Of course, not everything works perfectly yet; there are still small errors, but we’re working on it. So stay tuned. And now check out this breathtakingly exorbitant homepage and click everywhere. It is the best homepage in the world. Really. Believe me! I’m off to shove some tendon in my mouth. And Matcha tea. And fingers off Hitomi.

Marcel in Japan: Am anderen Ende der Welt

It has already been four days since Tokyo swallowed me whole and refused to let go. My first steps in the Japanese megacity were a visual frenzy of flickering neon lights, a knee-buckling soundscape, and the mesmerizing crowds that function like a constantly ticking clockwork, yet upon closer inspection threaten to burst with individuality and peculiar creativity.

Sometimes I feel like a foreign body thrown into a perfectly functioning system, witnessing an evolutionary civilization and a love for efficiency and initiative. Yet then one of these radiant figures smiles at me. It gains a face, a name, a personality, and through devoted hospitality and an unpretentious vibrancy, it pulls me deeper into the whirlpool of a world that should not yet exist.

I repeatedly want to focus on details but fail under the sheer volume of impressions flooding in by the minute. When I first wandered through Shibuya with Anna, I suddenly ended up in a ten-story exploding hell of pubescent girls. When we went through Akihabara with Sari, past pedophilic nerds, sweet couples, and creatures that look like they just jumped out of a sticky hentai porno from under your bed. With every breath, every new word, every experience, I became an increasingly functioning part of a universe that ignites a feeling of life in me I rarely experience in such blazing intensity.

Tokyo is not a city. Tokyo is a massive teleporter that catapults you into a wondrous parallel existence. Its streets and alleys are the glowing blood vessels of a beautiful monster you cannot escape—and do not want to. It is pure consumption. Fashion. Music. Technology. Art. Sex. In an intensity that makes Berlin seem like the village you fled to find your happiness in the wider world. Those who walk through the entrails of this digital deity are pumped full of concentrated hypercultural energy that is otherwise unattainable anywhere on this planet.

So I let myself fall, knowing no fear, no regret, no restraint. I dive deeper into a place that no metaphor can do justice to, no comparison is sufficient, no description satisfactory. At the end of my five-week journey, I will either have found the long-awaited enlightenment that will guide me in a new direction, or I will stand amidst the shards of a mutated fantasy, whose fulfillment catalyzed the very force that gets me out of bed each morning.

…[All remaining images follow the same pattern]…

Marcel in Japan: A New Life for Five Weeks

After having annoyed you over the past few weeks with my more or less interesting travel preparations, even though you only wanted to see girls shoving fists into their mouths, tomorrow morning I finally leave. Five weeks in Japan. In the meantime, I sublet my apartment to a gay couple from Spain, who may use my few pieces of furniture as a playground, and my flight east departs at 9:45 a.m. from Schönefeld. Hopefully the Russian pilot won’t show us a weapons factory located on a totally harmless volcano...

After a six-hour (!) layover at the Moscow airport, where I will sit, walk, and stand to the fullest extent, I will arrive at Narita Airport in Tokyo at 10:20 a.m. on Wednesday, and from then on I hope to post as many pointless experiences, videos, and photos as possible, so that in the end I can look back and say: Yes, Marcel, it was all totally worth it!

As promised, I’ve created a list of my personal missions that I absolutely want to complete successfully, so I don’t run around there like a crazy fool but achieve something world-changing. Because you know: you always need a plan in life. You may deviate from it occasionally if you feel like it, but overall it’s important.

I could also just follow this list, as then I would have basically “completed” Japan, but here we go: One. I want to go up the Tokyo Tower. I’ve been living in Berlin for almost five years, and have you ever been to the TV tower? Exactly. But I want to go up! Two. I want to watch a Japanese film in a Japanese cinema in Japanese. Japanese. Just like that.

Three. I want to buy a Game Boy Light with a few games. Because this gives the term “retrogaming” (which I just invented) a whole new meaning. Four. While we’re at it: I want to visit Super Potato. Again giving my newly invented term a completely new meaning. Five. I want to kiss a Japanese girl. See how romantically cute I suddenly am? I did NOT write “fuck”, I just want to kiss. And maybe a little fondle. Fuck yeah, romance! (Yes, except for Eriko Nakao, she can keep my kids.)

Six. I want to go to one of those restaurants where sushi moves around on a conveyor belt, and you just grab what you want. Everything should move on a belt so you can simply grab it. Seven. I want to climb Mount Fuji. I’m the worst mountaineer, but it has to happen. If nothing else, I’ll let myself be carried along by the sheer mass of like-minded hikers. Eight. I want to go to the beach. With sand. No wall. Something with land. You get me.

Nine. I want to spend a night in one of those capsule hotel-internet cafes, where losers stay who either missed the last train or just don’t have money. Sympathetic. Sympathetic! Ten. I want to be the best, as good as no one was! I’ll catch them all, I know the danger: Lektrobal, Digda, Nidoran, Menki, Bisaflor, Rattfratz, Ibitak, Taubsi, Golking, Blitza, Dragoran, Nebulak, Ponita, Aquana, Quappo, Smettbo! Come and catch them, come catch them! Pokémon!

I know these goals are mostly boring, but I will certainly not piss in a temple, shout “Heil Hitler”, and insult the royal family. First, I really like this country too much, and second, I’m not a fifth-rate TV host only getting Sunday shows for annoying tasks on camera. Third, I’ve only thought about it for ten minutes; the coolest shit happens when you least expect it. And with whom you least expect.

So wish me luck that I arrive there safely, leave kind greetings in the comments for Sari, and be curious whether I can produce anything visually worthwhile at the world’s nicest ass, which I can then proudly show. My life dream comes true. The one besides getting rich and having my own drug supplier who also cleans and reads me something nice in the evening. Japan, here I come! Schoolgirls with tentacles!

Weekend Tips: Ten Little Missions

No time, no time, today we are like that crazy coke rabbit from Wonderland, hopping like mad across the green landscape. Weekend, blah blah, ten little missions, blah blah, makes us proud, blah blah, we’ll kidnap your parents and turn them into doors if you don’t complete all the tasks. Blah blah. You know the game, have a few great days! You have nothing else in life anyway...

One. Invite a few friends and relatives to a ceremonial dinner and serve them your primary sexual organs. Just like Mao Sugiyama did in Tokyo. Over there, by the way, cannibalism is completely legal. Two. Get excited for the second part of "Anchorman". The first one was skillfully amusing. Three. Call your girlfriend and practice a bit of dirty talk with her while secretly looking at Michelle Rodriguez’s bikini photos. Four. Step on a few turtles. But in slow motion. Five. Show off your expertise in video games in front of your nerd friends. Their pimples will burst from envy!

Six. Make a list of who in your friend circle belongs to your “hole brothers”. If it’s more than 80%, don’t leave the house; if members of your own family are included, move out. Seven. Shave a zebra. So you finally know if it’s black with white stripes or white with black stripes. Eight. Have a civilized fight with other idiots at a party. It reminds you of your school days and lets your psycho thoughts run free, which would otherwise appear differently... Nine. Join the Pirates. For whatever reason. Ten. Eat more honey pickles. They are tasty. And healthy. Maybe.

Sarah Kuttner: An Apology

Hello. My name is Marcel Winatschek and I am the editor-in-chief and publisher of AMY&PINK. If I come up with more pseudo-important titles, I will let you know. I write a lot here. For example about bleeding girls. Or about the most beautiful movie of all time. Or about the fact that I will fly to Japan on Tuesday. Which by now pretty much everyone should have noticed.

Yesterday afternoon, we published an article titled "Sarah Kuttner - The Dumb Racist". In it, our author Meltem Toprak reported on the current events surrounding the Berlin presenter and added the statement that she considers Sarah Kuttner to be underdeveloped and a racist based on statements by Mola Adebisi and Benjamin Bäumle.

Because of this article, I received threats via email. From readers. Stupid threats. But threats nonetheless. Because: the text was not written by me. But by Meltem. If Sara writes that she would like to kill people, then that is Sara writing. And not me. If Kornelia writes why peeing brings world peace, then that is Kornelia writing. Not me. As I said: I write about bleeding girls, the most beautiful movie of all time, and about flying to Japan on Tuesday. If I wanted to write an article stating that I don’t like Sarah Kuttner, I would do that. But I did not.

As editor-in-chief and publisher of AMY&PINK, I rely on our authors' articles being entertaining, provocative, personal, and accessible. You, as readers, should be able to identify with them. Love them. Or hate them. You should not be able to ignore them – even if you wanted to. But one thing is important, even if it doesn’t always seem so: they should be well-researched and not vulnerable to criticism due to supposed facts that simply are not true. Go hard, but do not lie. Whether objectively or subjectively is of secondary importance. But back to the main topic.

It is perfectly fine if you find Sarah's books or TV shows bad. Or dislike her as a person. You have the right to do that. And she has the same right in reverse. But it is not okay to publicly call someone a racist if this claim is solely based on vague statements and unverified snippets of conversation.

Therefore, in agreement with our author, we have decided to permanently delete the aforementioned article, and I would like to apologize on behalf of AMY&PINK and our staff to Sarah Kuttner for allowing such a low-quality text to appear. Not only Meltem has learned from this mistake, but all of us at AMY&PINK have. Provocative, bold, and surprising – that is what we want to be. And we will work even more on that in the future. Thank you for your attention.

Rock am Ring: Win the Very Last Ticket!

With Rock am Ring on June 1, a German festival of superlatives is just around the corner. For three days, the Nürburgring in the Eifel becomes the center of the international music scene. Over 80,000 enthusiastic fans celebrate with their idols, camp, grill, drink, cheer, dance – letting their feelings run free. There, exactly the stories and experiences unfold that you will never forget in your life!

Of course, the event sold out in no time, but we have spared no effort to bring the very last Rock am Ring ticket into our sacred halls and are now giving it away to you. This is your last chance to secure a free spot. So join in, pack your tents, air mattresses, and instant soups, and head to the festival of the year!

See your gods like Metallica, Die Toten Hosen, and Linkin Park live on stage, stretch your arms to the sky and swing your hips to Gossip, Billy Talent, and Marilyn Manson, jump as high as you can to The Offspring, Deichkind, and Beginner, and surrender to the magic of the moment with Skrillex, The Hives, and Enter Shikari. And that’s not all yet!

With our golden ticket, you not only get to rock the festival, but also receive exclusive access to the inn "Zum röhrenden Hirschen" by Jägermeister, which opens its doors at Rock am Ring and provides free invigorating shots, great DJ sets from well-known artists, and crazy activities.

To win the very last and exclusive Rock am Ring entry ticket, you simply need to leave a comment below with a valid email address. By Monday, May 28, 2012! If you win, we will let you know quickly, send you the ticket, and your door to the best three days of your life will be wide open. Good luck!

Participation from 18 years old! This is a sponsored article by Jägermeister.

Marcel in Japan: Ten Little Missions

Since I couldn’t sleep last night due to what felt like a gazillion degrees outside, and two feel-good sessions with Abby Winters and Miley Cyrus’s sideboob didn’t really help either, I mentally prepared myself for my five-week trip to Japan, which begins in six days, by watching one ridiculous video after another. And I feel much smarter now!

First, I followed a guy with disgustingly long hair into the Mecca of retro nerds, a store called Super Potato in the middle of Akihabara, where so many old consoles and games are stacked that you can barely navigate the aisles without either crying or ejaculating. Or both at the same time. Then I discovered a device called Game Boy Light, the last proper Game Boy, naturally released only there, and the only one with a backlight. Let’s see if I can find it somewhere cheap. Finally, my gray one, which I once bought with Ines at the flea market, has given up the ghost.

Then I took a time trip to an era when people still ran around with phones with long antennas, visited sumo wrestlers, and saw the latest shit – from 1995 or so. Then I was shown what to do once I’m on the plane and what to do once I land. And how freaking cool Tokyo is. And beautiful. And adorable.

And now the most important thing. Sari wrote me, who seems never to sleep. Anyone flying to Japan should rent a phone. Otherwise, you won’t stand a chance of meeting or finding each other in the whirlpool of human obstacles. The great thing is: at SoftBank, you can not only rent such devices but also individual SIM cards to put in your own iPhone. With calling, SMS, internet, and all that. So remember that! In case you want to visit me.

Additionally, I finalized my travel insurance, paid homage to my MasterCard with goat blood and virgins (so it doesn’t pull some crap like it usually does), and made a hairdresser appointment so I don’t look like the last Neanderthal over there. Otherwise, I might involuntarily become a star in a Japanese reality show.

Now I still need one thing: some tasks! I don’t want to just wander around stupidly over there; I want to have something to do. So I can fly home satisfied. Find the last underwear vending machine? Throw a living Pikachu from the Tokyo Tower? Get a blowjob from the guy in the Hello Kitty costume? You tell me, I’ll then pick ten things!

Schweißattacke im Flugzeug: Entschuldigung, Sie stinken!

Do you know this? Surely you do! You hardly dare to breathe, your eyes start to water, you consider maybe starting to pray, because everything that creeps through your nasal mucosa into your brain screams for help and dissolves every substance that could still live and think. It's like an olfactory punch in the face that knocks you out.

Normally, it is odorless. Only when it comes into contact with microorganisms on the skin in the form of bacteria, various odors develop through decomposition processes, which can be hell not only for oneself but also for others. We know stinkers from the subway, at work, sometimes even at home in bed, but nothing is worse than a stinker on an airplane. A place where you simply cannot escape and are helplessly exposed to the stink bomb.

Forget about security checks, forget about full-body scanners, what you really need at the airport is an odor control. In the last few weeks, I flew 15 times for my 40-Festivals-in-40-Weeks project, spending about 80 hours on planes. You experience a lot, see a lot, and above all, smell the most impossible things. Russians with vodka breath, little diaper-less toddlers, or hardcore garlic eaters. Everyone stinks in their own way, and none of the flight attendants does anything about it.

They prevent you from carrying any liquid over 100 milliliters, but no one does anything against a life-threatening stink bomb. Dear airline associations or whatever you call yourselves, we need not only security controls but also controls for well-being and survival!

Imagine lifting your armpits directly before check-in, and a nice service staff member in pencil skirt, blouse, and scarf smells them. Competent and well-trained, she decides whether the nuance is below the pain threshold and acceptable for the neighboring passenger. If violated: security custody. If in doubt, the passenger goes briefly into a scent chamber, a glass cabin, where, like modern self-tanning devices, they are sprayed from all sides with neutralizing spray.

Afterwards, they receive a deodorant for the journey. This would not only be necessary for all other passengers but also a brilliant new business idea. A revolution in aviation history. The cosmetics industry cooperates with airlines, depending on the image of the different airlines and cosmetics brands.

For example, for me, Germanwings is Axe, Condor is Dove, and Lufthansa is Nivea. Because even if you pass the odor control, you can still become a danger to humanity afterward. Sometimes the sour, pungent armpit odor develops only during takeoff.

The so-called anxiety sweat is, alongside fishy intimate odor, one of the worst body emissions. Even if the stinker realizes they are a nuisance to the crew, they often cannot do anything about it because either their deodorant is in checked luggage or was over 100 milliliters and confiscated at security. Yes, this is my vision for 2030, a flight where you do not have to stick your nostrils to the window for four hours to breathe or use your scarf as a catalyst to survive a long-haul flight.

Tips for the Weekend: Ten Little Missions

Are you not sometimes surprised at how fast time flies? Weeks pass by in a flash, and soon we will be on our deathbed, wishing we had achieved more in life than sitting 20 hours a day in front of the computer. Life becomes more varied with these ten small missions. Change your future today!

One. Buy a few Facebook shares, otherwise in 40 years your grandchildren will make fun of you for not being ridiculously rich. Just like everyone else. Two. Spend the entire weekend finding the secret Rainbow Pony Level in "Diablo 3". Once you succeed, you can turn off the computer and get a girlfriend. Three. Check out these 23 things from your childhood that completely destroy you. Regret clicking the link afterward. Four. Unlearn how to read. Five. Walk around for the next few days with your arms raised. No matter. What. Happens.

Six. Listen to what German village idiots think about the big, bad city. Seven. Masturbate to photos of girls with washboard abs. Then look at what lies around in your bed… Eight. Tell your father that you know exactly what he does when he goes out drinking with his friends. Make him buy a new car and Xbox 360 so you don’t reveal anything to your mother. Maybe it will work. Nine. Order the first season of "Big Brother" from RTL2 and binge-watch it. Nothing better is on TV anyway. Ten. Mix your cocaine with colored food dye and let it dry. Rainbow party trip deluxe!

Diablo 3: I am a Hype Gamer

Without having the slightest clue about what it's actually about, yesterday afternoon I bought "Diablo 3" at Saturn in Munich yesterday. Along with 163 other nerds. I hadn't played the two predecessors, nor participated in the beta, nor watched any reviews, videos, or photos. That makes me a hype gamer par excellence.

Why did I play "StarCraft II: Wings of Liberty"? Because it was hyped. Why did I play "The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim"? Because it was hyped. Why did I play "Mass Effect" (and loved it)? Because it was hyped. Each of them brought me hours of fun, knowledge, and both physical and mental skill development, but would I have bought them if they didn't have a huge fan base running into the millions? No.

Back then I was different. I played games I was sure no one except the developers and a few disturbed hardcore geeks would ever see. Their genre, story, or characters were simply incompatible with the masses. But back then I also had time. Unlike today.

Also, there used to be only about 20 good games a year that you were expected to finish because they were part of youth and pop culture, otherwise on the schoolyard you risked looking like a loser. Or you didn't have money for a Super Nintendo or a PlayStation. Or best, for both combined.

Today, just like with music bands, blogs, or designers, things are thrown at you in pure masses. Buy entire developer bundles on Steam, choose between thirteen identical-looking first-person shooters released just last weekend, support indie studios, fund Kickstarter projects, buy a Wii and a 3DS, a PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360 and a PS Vita and an iPad and an iPhone, plus 39 overpriced retro consoles!

I've already lost track, so I choose the hottest, most outstanding, most hyped products because I know: they will either give me the gaming fun and pop cultural experience I expect, or at least I can complain along with the others if "StarCraft 2" is too easy, "Skyrim" too vast, or "Mass Effect" unsatisfying.

I invested 50 euros in "Diablo 3" even though I know I will play it as little as possible. Complete single-player mode, try multiplayer mode, ignore expansions. I don’t have time for more. And that's fine. Because in a few months the next game will appear, whose early praise I will join, and I will buy it—only for it to disappear a week later in my analog or digital shelf. That's all. I need nothing more. I am a hype gamer.

Porn Sites for Hipsters: Alternative Alternative Masturbation

Dieter from next door uploads his disgusting amateur video with his girlfriend, Diddl-Mouse in the bed and a unicorn picture in the background, to YouPorn or Redtube, and you’re supposed to rub one out to that? You’re way too hip for that. Alternatives are needed, so that even in the ugliest moments of your life you can feel superior to the rest of the population.

We have selected the ten best porn sites that not only match your individual lifestyle and give you insights into the lower strata of your fellow humans, but also require you to pay. Because if you can already spend a pile of money on second-hand fashion, ancient furniture, and flights to New York City, half a fifty is double the price for alternative alternative masturbation. For youth protection reasons, we can't link the sites, but Google is your friend.

Abby Winters

You’ve done a truly unique year of Work and Travel in Australia, faced the horrors of jungle adventures with 23,954 other German fast students? Then Abby Winters is just right for you. For over ten years, they have been photographing and filming Australian country folks with crooked teeth and funny accents, all reminding you of Hayley, whom you had sex with in that stinking beach hut. Occasionally, you will also find real and natural beauties. Our favorites: Rebekah, Carlie, and Madelief.

Suicide Girls

The classic American softcore site offers not only naked, tattooed girls that you’d avoid on the street because they might crush your light-blue fixie or infect you with their rebellion, but also a cute community where you can share photos of your crooked penis and lists of your favorite tracks, foods, and travel destinations. For those who dare.

Ersties

If you secretly like Steffi from the psychology courses but are too shy to approach her, can’t act aggressive, or fear she’ll laugh at your alternative Pokémon T-shirt, then chances are good you’ll find her on “Ersties - Yummy Girls.” A few horny art and photography students started the project so their fellow students (and a few prostitutes) could strip and film themselves for money. Steffi participates because she enjoys it.

Porn Pros

If you’re still on the retro trip, carrying your gray Game Boy, the reprint of the first Batman comic, and a few red tongue-painting lollipops in your tote bag, you need to be consistent and touch yourself while watching bloated American silicone porn stars copulate to lousy background music and over-the-top moaning. Just like before when you stole your older brother's first porn CD and made a mess on the wall at the first viewing.

CexWork

Yasumasa Yonehara is THE party and hipster photographer in the Far East and beyond. He constantly throws photos of Japanese, Korean, and Chinese girls on certain blogs, who pose willingly while he enjoys his legendary sneaker, cap, and toy collection at home. CexWork is his own site where paying customers get deeper insights into the bodies of Asian girls. Fully alternative and all.

Man Royale

Primary and secondary female genitalia may be appreciated in their own way, but if you’re more into hot, pulsating shafts, hairy balls, and rough cheeks, check out Man Royale, where muscular studs ram penises into asses. In HD and large format—just girls are absent. It also has to happen sometimes.

New Nude City

Richard Kern is the guy who travels the world and constantly shows naked girls on toilets, with iPhones between their breasts, or on wet granny panties in VICE. But he makes big money with New Nude City. On this self-proclaimed best porn site, even Sasha Grey spread her legs surrounded by many girls from next door. Maybe you have met one of them. Or she sits across from you in Oberholz right now. Who knows?

Cherrystems

The hippest hipster porn site on the hipster net is clearly Cherrystems (what a crappy name!) and is full of colorful scarves, ugly glasses, and strange people wearing animal masks on their heads. Clicking through makes you feel right at home, and if you’re not careful, photos of yourself with pseudo-funny titles like "Skinartia Cottontail" or "Epic Sexytime" might soon appear. It has already happened. Ask your friends!

Teen Karma

Teen Karma, or Olga Khrushchyov, as she is formally named, was one of those nude models who popped up ten years ago like mushrooms and gave old men the illusion that they were seeing the best friend of their underage granddaughter on screen. Today, Olga is a mother of three behaviorally disturbed communists and lives in a suburb of Moscow. So if you enjoy reminiscing with a wank, Teen Karma is made for you.

Urban Outfitters

If even the last nine presentations were too mainstream for you, you can order something from a porn site called Urban Outfitters. Here, sex toys are shaped like expensive records, old Casio watches, and colorless headphones, and the outfits for kinky roleplay are printed with strange patterns, modern illustrations, and mysterious inscriptions. That should really make your last pair of second-hand pants and carefully shaved hipster balls burst. Happy jack off!

Eastpak: Bag In Town

Are you one of those enviably creative minds who not only talk smart but actually accomplish, make, and design things? Then you are in the right place. Because Eastpak is looking for people like you. In collaboration with the Istituto Europeo di Design and Creative Contexts, an exciting competition aims to explore the relationship between a bag and the urban environment.

Throw your amazing ideas into the world of fashion, design, and communication and redefine both the aesthetics and the functional foundation of the bag design, all while asking yourself a simple question: “What does the perfect bag for a 24-hour day look like?” It can’t be that hard! So, if you’re over 18: participate!

To enter, just go to the official Bag In Town website and let your creativity run wild. The competition runs until July 10, 2012. The best ideas will be evaluated and selected by a competent jury, and you might be one of the winners, even seeing your bag in stores next year.

What can you win? The six selected designers will have the opportunity to experience a unique week at the IED Creative Factory in Milan. For nearly a week, you’ll be filled with invaluable knowledge and turn your idea into a real prototype, with the goal of winning 5,000 euros and seeing your bag on store shelves the following year.

This is a sponsored article by Eastpak.

Tipps zum Wochenende: Ten Little Missions

While the sun is currently frying our hair off our bodies, we rejoice like little Lilliputians that it’s already Friday again, and we prepare with great expectations and small primary and secondary sexual organs for the weekend. But first, we tackle ten small missions, which are not listed alphabetically in the following list. Hooray.

One. Let yourself be frozen to survive the days until the release of "Diablo 3" without a spontaneously executed rampage. Convince the sun as well to disappear for the next few weeks and clone yourself so that at least someone goes to work. Two. Feed Anja Rubik. Three. Buy a mouth opener, put it on, and walk around all weekend with it. Anything that goes into your mouth must stay in or be swallowed. Four. Lick everything you see. Really. Everything. Five. Torch something larger than you that doesn’t belong to you. You little fire devils.

Six. Finally have sex with more than three people at the same time. You’ve been dreaming about it since you were 11. Seven. Play these pranks on your friends here. The more, the better. But don’t complain if you have no friends afterward. Eight. Record a video for your unborn child, telling them the terrible things you’ve done in your life and where to find the porn film you made at 18 when you needed money. Nine. Smoke an apple. Ten. Rescue two really cool animals from a laboratory and fight crime with them. Put them in colorful costumes if possible.

Win Tickets for the Hurricane Festival: The Festival Summer Can Begin!

The sun is shining, birds are singing. What does common sense think of? Exactly: festivals! Pack your three to twenty-seven best friends, plenty of food and drinks, tents and toys, and off you go to an annual music event of the highest class. While you are still wondering where to go this year, we already have the solution for you.

Do you want to see Die Ärzte, The Cure, Blink 182, Steve Aoki, Justice, The XX, Florence & The Machine, Azari & III, Little Dragon, Die Antwoord, K.I.Z., Casper, Boy, Kraftklub, Bat For Lashes, M83, Sportfreunde Stiller, Rise Against, New Order, Fritz Kalkbrenner, Bombay Bicycle Club, Less Than Jake, Bosse, Mumford & Sons, Madsen, Beirut, Bonaparte, and many more live and in color? Then head to the Hurricane!

Together with Jack Daniel's, we are giving away 1x2 tickets for this exceptional festival, along with a great backstage bag and a really good bottle of Black Label on top. That guarantees a fantastic start on the grounds and countless unforgettable moments. The 2012 festival summer can finally begin!

If you want to win the tickets and the package, just leave a comment with a valid email address by Thursday, May 17, 2012, and you might soon be drinking alongside Die Ärzte and Little Dragon. If you want to be safe, you can also try your luck here and grab another 4x2 tickets!

This is a sponsored article by Jack Daniel's.

Electronic Beats Festival: Class Trip to Prague

It’s actually a bit strange to write about a fun little trip when you’re already in the middle of the next one, because at this very moment I’m hanging around in Mallorca watching half-naked people in their fifties paddle through the pool with their messed-up, half-naked offspring. And now I’m supposed to write about Prague. But it was so great there that I don’t want to wait any longer.

Once again we went on a chic little blogger class trip to the Czech capital to see Grimes, The Whitest Boy Alive, Woodkid, and Mike Skinner at the Electronic Beats Festival by Telekom. But it was much more than that. It was infinitely better! Because we crammed as many good things as possible into those two short days.

Who were we? Nike, Frank, Jessie, Katja, Nina, Pierre, Kai, Nele, and Johan. And of course me—otherwise I couldn’t write about it. Think about it! Prague itself is an incredibly beautiful city, with one part where tourists are funneled through and another that feels almost decadent. And classy. And where films are often shot.

The gigs themselves were fantastic; backstage, cups full of easily digestible alcohol were practically hurled at us, we hung out with the artists, took lots of photos, met Janet, the boss of the Czech Kleiderkreisel, then boarded a party boat on the Vltava, and eventually returned to the Hilton at sunrise—where 24 hours of internet cost around 40 euros, by the way.

I can conclude by saying that I absolutely love these class trips, because you don’t have to wander stupidly and alone through foreign cities, and I want to thank Pierre as our totally competent teacher. So. But now I’d rather go back to watching half-naked people in their fifties paddle through the pool with their messed-up, half-naked offspring. Until next time.

Marcel in Tokyo: Five Weeks in an Artist House

Isn’t it great that this is already the third article of a travel report without me having moved my fat ass even once from my slowly disintegrating desk chair? I mean, any normal person would just go somewhere, keep quiet beforehand, and then send a few postcards afterward about how nice the weather and how funny the food were.

But I’d rather let you share in my pathological anticipation and proudly tell you that I’ve finally found accommodation where I’ll spend (at least) five weeks in Tokyo. Unless they throw me out beforehand because I said something indecent about the imperial family—who knows. Although I won’t. Because I know nothing about the imperial family.

Quick explanation: I didn’t want my own apartment because I’d just rot there again. And living alone on the outskirts in a 30-story high-rise—who wants that? Exactly. But I also didn’t want to sleep for over a month in a backpacker basement with 22 Australians and 48 Russians, because… who wants that? Exactly. And it’s insanely expensive too. That’s well known.

So where am I staying now? In an artist house in Shinjuku, right next to Shibuya. On the first floor there’s a club called CAVE246, on the second floor a hair salon called Dorren, and on the third floor is my room, right next to a girls’ bar. There’s barbecue on the roof and hopefully a great view. The whole thing costs me 650 euros for five weeks; I booked it through Wimdu.

The guy who owns the place is called Yoji, speaks funny English, and also runs some kind of artist village on Japan’s Pacific coast. Which is pretty cool if you think about it for more than two seconds. I just wanted to be among creative and slightly crazy Japanese people instead of tourists. Or completely alone in a 9-square-meter apartment.

Plus I now have a kind of base to return to after roaming around other cities like Kyoto or Osaka or at the beach. Which is important. I think. And considering the location and length of my stay, the price is perfectly fine. That checks off the most important items on my list. Now all that’s missing is my “Sailor Moon” costume. 23 days to go.

re:publica 2012: The Nerd Olympus of Boredom

Yesterday the sixth re:publica came to an end, where the crème de la crème of the German internet gathers every year for three days in the capital. We attended for the third time and can spoil the big surprise right away: if you weren’t there, you didn’t miss much.

For the first time the festival wasn’t held at the Friedrichstadt-Palast but had to move due to overcrowding to the so-called Station, a former postal freight yard at Gleisdreieck. Which, in my opinion, was an optimal choice—spacious, bright, nice to look at. It was fun rushing through the large halls. The food was also good. That was about it.

re:publica has the greatest potential to be a truly outstanding experience in terms of relevance, information, and added value for every visitor. However, for years it has failed because of one single problem it cannot solve: itself. The people who bring the event to life, shape it, and claim it for themselves.

Wandering around the booths and sitting on one of the many colorful chairs, you might think the German internet consists exclusively of a politics-obsessed, reblogging pseudo-elite working in journalism or PR, people who use the internet either to feed their fragile self-esteem with favorites, retweets, and likes instead of finding belonging elsewhere, or simply to make money without understanding the meaning or soul behind it.

The panels—the talks that should be the heart of the event—are the biggest weakness of re:publica. Either they’re given by partly unsympathetic Twitter addicts who shouldn’t have been dragged away from their iPads, or by people with real potential who then talk about things that have been online for nine years.

No wonder that even in the afternoon, the peak time for these talks, most visitors preferred standing outside with a beer in one hand and an iPhone in the other, tweeting at each other. Many tried to attend but gave up after ten minutes of empty chatter and went to eat something. As I said: the food was quite good.

The most memorable moments weren’t due to the speakers but either to funny videos and images they found online or to the “gammel bloggers” outside enjoying a hint of festival atmosphere while stuffing bratwurst or disgusting vegetarian pouches into themselves.

re:publica has developed into a self-satisfied nerd olympus with no real influence, far removed from the majority of German and international internet users and living in a world of memes, data plans, and semi-rebellions—without the pulsing creativity, real innovation, and magical moments that shape a person for life. And I fear that this professionalized boredom is the future of our local internet.

Weekend Tips: Ten Little Missions

May is finally here, and it’s known as a month when pretty much anything can happen. Let’s at least tell ourselves that, because every new month—like every new year—can only get better. That’s not always true in hindsight, but hey: we can try. So here’s a fresh bundle of ten little missions to make us proud!

One. Fly to the United States and pick up Lady Gaga, who just broke up with her boyfriend. But only do this if you’re into embarrassing pseudo-craziness, artistically questionable antics, and sagging boobs. Two. Grab a five-year-old girl and go to a tanning salon with her. Then act surprised when you get arrested. Three. Mix banana milk with cocoa to obtain the holy grail of dairy products. Four. Have sex with someone at five in the morning. Five. Buy yourself a small, cute puppy. Miley Cyrus did it too. And small, cute puppies are something you can actually afford.

Six. Spend the entire weekend in a single building that isn’t your home. Late-night shop, train station, the shared flat of the Swedish exchange student—choose wisely! Seven. Tattoo the word “God” on your forehead and then harass random people, preferably police officers. They love that. Eight. Make a funny video and upload it to YouTube. After all, nobody else does that. Nine. Don’t look at cat photos on the internet. Not even pictures of girls dressed as cats. Ten. Shave your genitals only on the left side and let the other half grow freely. Call it “Two-Face” and dethrone the “Hollywood style” of intimate grooming. Don’t forget to send us the photos!

The Modern Love: Of War and Getting to Know Each Other

In fact, I forget unfamiliar faces faster than postal codes and phone numbers. I may be happy to meet you if you touch me emotionally, challenge me mentally, or stimulate me visually, but after the introduction and the goodbye there’s an above-average chance that I won’t recognize you next time or be able to place you in any way.

It’s completely different with that one person who has occupied your mind for weeks, months, maybe even years. And you can’t find a solution. Her face has burned itself into your skull; at her scent adrenaline pulses through your veins; her voice makes you want to come and shit at the same time. The butterflies are long dead; total chaos reigns in your guts.

Modern love has nothing to do with the Bravo photo love stories from back then. Falling in love is no longer a normal act celebrated with ice cream and movie dates and culminating in a birth-control-friendly peak in a bed covered with roses and tea lights. Modern love is war. And you have no choice but to fight it. Or break under it.

We don’t feel close to the other person anymore; instead, our psyche screws us in every conceivable way without even thinking about bringing this obsession to a remotely normal level. Because this isn’t heartbreak, this isn’t grief, this isn’t emptiness. It’s a mutated construct of our own mistakes, missed opportunities, and a lot of disturbed thoughts you’d better not confess to any doctor or confidant. Because that ends in a nice institution on a green hill.

Our logic screams the right answers at us; we know the rules of the game, we know how we should behave to navigate the fine line between attraction and antipathy. We know what we’re allowed to do—and what we aren’t. But when that one person, that damn one person, appears, the heart and this horrible urge to act take control.

We feel responsible, seemingly want only the best, presumably have learned from our mistakes, love and celebrate and support as best we can—even though deep down we know every action only makes things worse, no matter how hard we try. We’ve shaped and tinkered and tried for too long. Invested our hopes and dreams in someone else.

Our heart stops when suddenly a third person appears. Unburdened, not mentally dependent, like a vital storm he conquers the heart of the person for whom we would give our life without hesitation, invades her mind and body. And we can do nothing but scream and die inside and finally realize that it would have been time to move on long ago.

But we simply couldn’t. Modern love is a bastard; it demands the inhuman from us, screws us in every conceivable way, torments us, punishes every attempt to build a normal relationship. With fantasies that suggest a better world. With thoughts that shoot into your head while you sit on the subway. The memory of how her body tasted and smelled. Her loud breathing, the moment she let go. And we want only one thing: to experience that one moment again.

We are members of a generation suffering from excess, boredom, and frustration, able to get excited about things for only a few minutes before sliding down the analog timeline again. All the more incomprehensible that we can become so emotionally dependent on another person—and every step we take to apply that same fuck-off mentality here only results in us silently screaming ourselves to death because we’re going in circles and can’t find a way out. Or worse: because sometimes we don’t want to find it. Because we’re somehow broken.

An ancient rule seems to apply here, one that has ruined many lives: the more you want something, the less you get it. And vice versa. The more I try to remember a face, a name, an encounter, the more a wave of characters and stories washes over me that I can’t place or evaluate individually. But the more I insist on forgetting your face, pushing the memories of you into this sea of people so I can turn around and move on freely, the more your imaginary presence follows me. Every step of the way.

I know I’ll only breathe freely again when your face is just one among many. Faces I like, faces I don’t like, faces I don’t care about. But that don’t turn me into a mentally disturbed time bomb every time something reminds me of you. I’m working hard on a solution to this phenomenon. And when I find one, I’ll let you know. Until then I’m relying heavily on the three As (alcohol, distraction, and anal sex) and hoping that someday a rock, piano, or automobile hits my head so hard that I gain the superhuman ability to control my thoughts myself. That would be wonderful.

News For Original Girls: Girls and Art

You have no idea who or what Cornelia Bölke is? You should! After all, the creative Conny, with her concept of combining art and design, beat all the other Originals White Space Project applicants on News For Original Girls. That alone is more than many of you have achieved, so you should be happy for her.

Her “Shop of Modern Arts” was unveiled with a vernissage and presented to an eager audience. Take a look at the Shop of Modern Arts and the highlights of the opening here. And if you feel fit enough to drop by yourself: you can still visit the exhibition until May 7 at the Berlin Adidas Originals store near Hackescher Markt.

If one tough girl isn’t enough for you, you should turn your attention to Saskia Hahn, who is a musician, DJ, and artist all in one. Respect. When she and her band Sweet Machine aren’t touring with Peaches or remixing with her project “Mine&Hers,” she’s currently pouring all her energy into her art. The News For Original Girls editorial team visited Saskia in her studio at Stattbad Wedding and talked with her about art, music, and life between Berlin, New York, and L.A.

Even more art took place last week in beautiful Cologne. Jana Wenge, who studied art history, German studies, and European ethnology, plunged into the hustle and bustle of ART COLOGNE for News For Original Girls and didn’t miss anything from the opening party to an interview with one of the youngest art collectors in the German-speaking world. Read here what there was to experience in Cologne.

Marcel in Japan: Change of Plans

Remember back then when I wrote that I’d be flying to Japan at the beginning of September for a month to wreak havoc in Tokyo and all the surrounding sights? Forget it already—that information is from yesterday, outdated, simply wrong. The airline where I booked my trip, hello British Airways, decided that €700 for a round trip wasn’t enough—and wanted almost €200 more. I somehow didn’t want that.

So I looked for a new offer. €500 with the Russian airline Aeroflot. Including a six-hour stopover somewhere in the Siberian ice desert. Hooray. And because I can’t wait any longer, I’ll be landing in the Land of the Rising Sun at the end of May already. For five weeks. With a flexible return flight. In case I fall in love with a pink cat in a school uniform over there and don’t want to leave. Or get bored after two weeks and want to go home immediately.

Our new author Sari has voluntarily agreed to act as my personal tour guide. We’ll visit artists, concerts, and photographers, eat things that shouldn’t exist, and take photos and videos of everything and everyone. Unless I prefer lying drunk in a gutter. Next to the other businessmen. Apparently that’s part of the culture too.

Hannah was already in Tokyo in 2009 for three months and gave me the following tips, which I absolutely must share with you in case you want to go there too: “Don’t walk while you’re eating—that’s apparently rude. Watch out at soup stands so you don’t get cold soup with a raw egg. That’s disgusting. And the yellow egg-loaf pieces on the sushi conveyor will give you diarrhea if you eat too many… but they taste great. Never eat anything that looks like slimy peanut paste. You’ll puke, so just don’t. But the soda with milk from vending machines is great!

At Shibuya Station there’s a beggar who targets foreigners. He tells crazy stories and even kneels in front of you for money… all just a show. And be careful, Marci—sometimes you can’t tell men and women apart among all the manga freaks. They all look the same with makeup. And just a few side streets in Shibuya and almost everywhere else are those jerk-off booths. Or you can get a blowjob. They’re small colorful entrances where you can choose the lady outside. I got kicked out… only men allowed. Fruit is insanely expensive there, by the way.

And always step through the temple gates with your left foot first. Otherwise it brings bad luck. They don’t blow their noses over there; they just sniff everything back… disgusting! I still blew my nose. And at first I had to laugh while eating because they slurp their soup so loudly. And buy a Hello Kitty face mask! Hardly anyone speaks English there. They’re super shy. You can talk to a guy in a suit and he can’t help you.

Everyone says ‘Hai Hai,’ nods, doesn’t answer, and waits until you release them by saying ‘Okay, I’ll ask someone else.’ They learn only writing in school, barely speaking. Some who don’t speak English are still extremely helpful and try anyway. It always goes over well if you attempt to speak Japanese. They’re very kind then. And seriously don’t try to ride public transport without a ticket. Or jump the barriers. That only brings trouble.”

With so many great tips, nothing can really go wrong. Probably. Because knowing me, I’ll step into one faux pas after another. Before that I’m heading briefly to Prague and Mallorca, but more on that another time. Keep your fingers crossed that a certain hip housing provider and the Japanese tourism office will help me choose accommodations. Otherwise I’ll just live in a shared flat. But only with fun people. Anything else would be completely boring.

Electronic Beats Festival: Cologne Goes Wild

Cologne is a great city. Probably. It has the cathedral. And Carnival. And… that one guy who always says more or less funny things on TV while eating Mett sandwiches. Otherwise not much is going on—unless, of course, a magenta-colored mobile provider moves its sleek behind to North Rhine-Westphalia. Then things really kick off.

On May 24, The Kills, Miike Snow, Austra, The Hundreds In The Hands, Citizens, and COMA will descend on Cologne for this year’s Electronic Beats Festival and turn Germany’s fourth-largest city into a boiling cauldron of good vibes and fantastic beats for one evening. Even the usually party-satiated Berliners will cast an envious glance over. Guaranteed.

Of course we wouldn’t present the event in detail here if we hadn’t wrangled a way from the hip organizers to get you to the best party in May. We’re giving away 1x2 tickets for the Electronic Beats Festival at E-Werk in Cologne so you can see for yourselves how great the lineup really is.

All you have to do is leave us a comment with a valid email address by Monday, May 7, and maybe we’ll send you to The Kills, Miike Snow & Co. Good luck! If you want to be on the safe side, you can also order your tickets directly here at Eventim. You never know what might happen.

This is a sponsored article by Telekom.

Tips for the Weekend: Ten Little Missions

Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Saturday, Sunday... well, which day did we forget? Exactly: the contract due date! Makes sense, right? Oh whatever, you don’t have anything better to do this weekend anyway, so pull your head out of the sand, complete as many of our little missions as you possibly can, and who knows—maybe your mom will love you again afterward! Well, probably not...

One. Lick your fingers and go in search of the G-spot. If you can’t find it the conventional way, then just cut a girl open! Two. Win a lottery twice in a row. If you can’t do that, then you’re simply not good enough for this world. Three. Pull down your pants and masturbate to... melted cheese! Four. Rest for ten minutes and then continue here. Five. Stay outdoors the entire weekend. No house, no club, no late-night shop. Only outdoor parties, outdoor eating, outdoor sleeping. And if you need something, have your friends bring it to you. Or pay random passersby for it.

Six. Steal food from unsuspecting animals. Preferably in an unnecessarily ridiculous way. You get bonus points if you record it on video and upload it somewhere. Seven. Sing a song again, preferably with your whole family, the kids, and the temporary neighbors passing by. Eight. Fall in love with the most beautiful face in Great Britain—no, in the whole world! Aside from Beyoncé... Nine. Watch Ke$ha pee on the street. You’re allowed to get a little turned on, it’s not forbidden. Really. Ten. Buy flower, herb, and vegetable seeds and scatter them all over your city. Then the plants will finally reclaim their rightful domination, muahahaha! I mean, then everything will be much more colorful and beautiful and stuff...

LEGO Orgies: Bring Back the Bricks!

On many a gray weekday I sit in front of the window, watch the somewhat idiotic pigeon that has entrenched itself noisily in the tree in front of the house, and think about when exactly I was happiest in my life. In which precise moment. When my mother brought my Super Nintendo out of the bedroom that I had won on Austrian children’s television? When I got accepted to move to Berlin? When I came inside a girl for the first time? No.

In the very first apartment I grew up in, we had an empty room where my toys were kept. Some stupid Bravo and Disney posters hung on the wall, and a large wooden chest stood right next to the door. And inside that wooden chest, which I had once received for my birthday (yeah!), was my life. My. Entire. Life.

And by my entire life I mean a four-letter word: LEGO. Whenever I had the time, I spent my day from morning till night in that fairly large room, listening to soundtracks or radio plays, occasionally being dragged outside by friends to jump on piles of stored dirt, play doctor with Gino’s big sister, or guide plumbers through digital sewer pipes. But then it was back to my LEGO planet.

And I really had a ton of it. Every Christmas and every birthday had only one highlight: finally holding a big box of new LEGO in my hands. Back then there wasn’t branded nonsense like “Harry Potter” or “Star Wars”; our sets were simply called “City.” Or “Aliens.” Or something with submarines. With awesome, huge, yellow submarines. Or pirates.

Of course only boring idiots or Playmobil kids stuck to the building instructions. I was a brick conductor, a creationist who built enormous worlds—cities and spaceships of unimaginable scale. With a gold volcano in the middle and secret headquarters scattered everywhere. With restaurants, bedrooms, prisons, workshops, laboratories, and rooms that shouldn’t even exist.

With figures that weren’t just randomly assembled but had a soul. A purpose. A name. They maintained relationships, had children, ranks, professions. Something. I created entire civilizations with enemies, social life, and economic systems. And even some Mighty Max or Polly Pocket creatures somehow had a right to coexist with us in this urban wonderland full of imagination, amazement, and experiences.

When I eventually got older and became more interested in round breasts than square plastic pieces, we sold the tons of matching bricks on eBay. For a fraction of what they had cost. My long-ruined adventures included. I had Nintendo and the internet and a girlfriend. That had to be enough. LEGO, yeah. Right.

But when you live in a world like I do—one bursting with retro nostalgia because you’re surrounded by people who prefer pixels to polygons, vinyl to CDs, and Pokémon to everything else, clinging to anything that keeps their childhood alive—you also miss the time when holiday LEGO orgies until late at night were everything.

You know what would be great? A place for aging man-children like us where LEGO in all variations and shapes lies scattered everywhere, and you pay a monthly membership fee to enter. In a big loft. Somewhere in Berlin. Then we could meet there and spend a few hours building like total idiots. It would foster creativity. Keep the gray matter active. And most importantly: we would all play LEGO together! Uh, build! How awesome that would be!

So, you Berlin retro hipsters, make it happen. The 20 euros a month that I’d otherwise throw at a gym I never go to—I would definitely spend on that. Unless one of you fools destroys my newly founded giant spaceship empire. Then I’ll have to unleash incredibly destructive revenge. Ah, I miss my LEGO... so much!

Marcel in Japan: Tokyo, Here I Come!

You know what has always pissed me off? That people who deserve it far less than I do have flown to Tokyo far more often. Because honestly: No one—and I mean no one—has wanted to go there more than I have for what feels like seventeen centuries. Except maybe crazy Mareike from Bottrop, who runs to university in a Sailor Moon costume. Which I would also do. If I were Mareike from Bottrop. And had such a costume. And went to university.

And because I was tired of waiting for some snobbish PR company or an 86-year-old desperate geisha to invite me, yesterday I booked a flight. To Tokyo. At the beginning of September. For exactly one month. Because I still want to enjoy as much of the summer in Berlin as possible, and I heard the weather over there is still pretty nice in autumn. And then I still have time to brush up on my Japanese so that I don’t get shot by a security guard in the subway out of self-defense because I don’t understand why I can’t pass through which gate with which ticket into which district.

I actually have a plan. Watch this. I’ll check out the city and the country. Nice and relaxed. I’ll spend the first part in Tokyo and then travel around a bit. Kyoto and the coast and stuff. Maybe I’ll even take a trip to Fukushima; apparently it’s quite cheap there right now. I wonder why. I’ll spare you a bad radiation joke at this point.

If I like what I see there and don’t come home crying because it’s supposedly the worst nation on Earth and I wasted 20 years of my life because Utada Hikaru, Shiina Ringo, and Ayumi Hamasaki were simply messing with me, then I’ll probably fly there again next spring. But this time for a year. As part of a working holiday stay.

There I’ll basically do nothing different from what I already do now. Just in a different place. Among cherry blossoms, school uniforms, and lots of rice-based food. Instead of around the TV tower. But you can only get this particular visa until the age of 30, so I need to hurry a bit. Otherwise I’ll have to flee there illegally. And that’s always a little more stressful. And if I get deported, I won’t be allowed back. That would be semi-good.

So if you know people in Tokyo who would like to show a disturbed guy like me some of the city’s secret sights so I don’t wander around like a clueless tourist with my Canon—although I will do that anyway—let me know. If you know places everyone must see, let me know. And if you know whether it’s true that I don’t have to pay tax on purchases if I show my passport at the checkout, let me know.

So once again, the short version: Marcel—that’s me—is flying to Japan at the beginning of September for a month. If you have useful things to contribute, write them in the comments or contact me via Facebook. If not, at least be a little happy for me. I’m already very excited and hope I don’t die beforehand. Otherwise there’ll be trouble. Seriously...

Internet Girl Iris: Purple Sky Revelation

Iris is 25, comes from Hamburg, and after her time at art school in London and a job at VICE in Berlin, she actually wanted to go to Morocco. That was three years ago. She ended up staying in Paris, where she founded a band called Super Secret Lovers together with her boyfriend Arthur and made out topless with him on the couch in the garden until Muslim neighbors almost lynched them. Iris writes texts, sings and screams them, and performs them live. When she needs money, she works as a graphic designer for the fashion magazine L'Officiel. Otherwise she travels the world. Always searching for the next adventure. What a life.

Photos by Iris Bauer and Arthur Moulton.

Do you want to become our next Internet Girl? Then simply click here!

Finding Berlin: The New Capital

If you break it down, at some point in your life you have to choose one of the following three German cities and their very specific way of life. Either you play pseudo-rich in Munich. Or wannabe Berliner in Hamburg. Or survivalist in the capital. Everything else is just a dull compromise without backbone or courage. You wimp.

If you’re young, adventurous, a little crazy, and neither a snob nor a water rat, then Berlin is the right choice for you. Definitely. Unless you have an unhealthy fondness for cheap drugs, lousy music, and fake friends—then you’ll quickly find yourself on the horror trip of your life. And that’s something to avoid.

The stylish website Finding Berlin has been showing the most beautiful and interesting places in Germany’s greatest city for years. With its own photos and videos, event tips, reports from the brightest and darkest corners of the trendiest neighborhoods. And far beyond. Our very own author Yeah Sara is also involved. That hot piece.

Today Finding Berlin celebrates its relaunch and is giving away cool bike tours, sexy bags, laptop sleeves, sneakers, shirts, and markers over the next few days. Lots of stuff to make you happy. Tonight we celebrate the restart at Artconnect Berlin in Neukölln. Come by and say hello. Or give us a tongue kiss right away. Saves a lot of stress and time.

Off We Go: Shit, We’re Free!

After starting, enduring, and finishing every day of your life in the same zombie-like routine for weeks, months, maybe even years without much protest, one beautiful morning you suddenly wake up as if from a nightmare and you’re done with it.

You don’t want to stand at a bank counter from 8 to 5 anymore, selling Hannelore—recently divorced and mother of four—one lousy retirement plan after another. You don’t want Bernd—recently divorced and father of four—to screw you every evening while promising he only loves you, before finishing on your carefully made-up face. And you certainly don’t want a divorce and four kids yourself.

One morning we wake up as if from a nightmare and it hits us: we are free. Shit, we’re free! We live in a modern world where theoretically we can do whatever we want. As long as we follow certain guidelines meant to ensure the survival of our still rather young species. Or something like that.

From films, books, and plays we’ve learned that the world is full of secrets waiting to be discovered. Full of people, places, wonders that maybe only we, at this exact time and place, will experience. Because we fall in love with a Sherpa in the Himalayas. Or learn to swim with dolphins in Hawaii. Or gaze at the stars on Uluru and suddenly think we’ve understood everything about the meaning and goodness of life.

The chains that keep us stuck are often imaginary or easy to cast off: the shitty relationship you’re in, the shitty job you want to quit, the shitty city you once somehow liked. Three things really hold you back: habit, laziness, and fear.

Fear of ending up like those idiots on TV who opened a curry stand in the Philippines with 500 euros and then discovered there’s also a functioning economy over there. Fear of being even lonelier than you already are. Fear of losing everything you’ve built.

But I’m not saying we should trade our lives for completely new ones. I’m saying we should look beyond our plate, realize that this tiny universe we get lost in every day—and secretly hate—is just one of many. If we dare even once, we defeat habit, laziness, and fear.

If I wanted to, I could buy a spontaneous ticket to Stockholm today and go wild there. The cost is low, the risk too. It would be a first step toward making the time we have left as great as possible. Because we can. And we’re allowed. And no one can stop us but ourselves.

Why don’t I do it? Why do I sit in front of this screen 20 hours a day writing, tweeting, posting, watching, reading, getting fatter, slower, more useless, lost in a fake world that shouldn’t even exist? Maybe it’s a mistake to seek an answer. Maybe we should just skip the question and act.

I fear that one day, just before my direct trip to hell, my life will flash before my eyes and I’ll see nothing but lousy tweets, stolen US series, and Russian porn I masturbated to endlessly—and wonder whether it was worth giving up a life full of real experiences.

We must stop hesitating, stop weighing consequences. If we want to give ourselves meaning, we have to act now. Fall in love with a Sherpa, swim with dolphins, stare at the stars on Uluru. Turn thoughts into actions before one morning we wake from a nightmare and realize it’s too late to escape.

Is Anyone Up? The End of a Scandal Site

Ever since YouPorn and RedTube, even your little sister knows the internet is basically a giant collection of people having sex in every possible variation at any time of day.

Is Anyone Up? was the peak of a generation that could have sex before knowing the difference between the hypotenuse and GDP. For over a year, hurt ex-partners, drunk lovers, and exhibitionists sent nude photos of themselves and others to operator Hunter Moore, who neatly cataloged them.

Combined with dumb captions and funny GIFs, entire series of naked people appeared online. The hottest were celebrated with thousands of comments, the less attractive mocked as “Daily Gnargoyle.”

Bands submitted photos of groupies labeled “Today’s Band Whore,” complete with lists of band members they’d slept with. The more the better. Soon victims, parents, and even TV stations protested—without success.

Moore received daily threats, which he proudly published. Girls begging for their photos to be removed. Lawyers. Furious fathers. The growing community laughed and felt untouchable.

In Germany, what he did would land you in prison fast—pornography, violation of personal rights, copyright issues, youth protection laws. In the U.S. it seemed fine. So much for Americans being prudish.

Now the site is offline—not due to a judge or a stabbing victim, but apparently Moore’s conscience. Ruining 10 to 30 lives a day eventually got to him.

He recalled starting with −120 dollars in his account and asking his mother to pay the server bill. He later met the founder of BullyVille, a site supporting bullying victims, which made him reconsider how to use his talents. The domain now redirects there.

For me, it was one of the most fascinating sites online—partly for the scandal, partly for how quickly Moore built a loyal community that tattooed insider slogans and defended him everywhere.

He now wants to focus on new projects and anti-bullying. The victims will be relieved—everyone else, including your little sister, will just have to find a new outlet.

Weekend Tips: Ten Little Missions

Isn’t it mysterious how quickly a week passes? Unless you did an internship at a nursing home or had to sell bubble tea—then it drags. Anyway, it’s Friday. Put your swollen feet up and read this plan for making your weekend more interesting. These are the “Ten Little Missions.”

One. Go to Burger King and order a Whopper with a thousand slices of bacon. Write a farewell letter before the first bite. Two. Ignore one of your friends collectively until he nearly loses his mind. Stop before he visits a psychic. Three. Explain to your parents where babies come from. Four. Take the next available flight anywhere and don’t return for 10 years. Five. Eat more meat.

Six. Walk everywhere on all fours like this monkey man. Seven. Buy lots of sunglasses. Eight. Give all your pimples names. Nine. Play with the Power Rangers. Ten. Cover your genitals in glow-in-the-dark paint and shout “Surprise!” during sex.

News For Original Girls: We're Awakening Your Creativity

You're totally bored right now, but actually you know full well: deep down inside you there's a creative soul that just needs to be woken up and inspired? Then News For Original Girls, the sexy, trendy portal from Adidas, offers you an all-round blast of inspiration. So take a deep breath, read through this, and then create something yourself that is new, beautiful, and anything but boring.

Have you ever imagined standing in a completely empty room and being allowed to breathe life into it however you please? Without any rules, limits, or restrictions? With the Originals White Space Project, Adidas Originals offers young women in nine international cities a platform for their ideas and originality.

Cornelia Bölke, a student at the Weißensee School of Art, won the News For Original Girls contest and will transform the Adidas Originals store in Berlin-Mitte into a "Shop of Modern Arts" on April 26th, with a handpicked selection of designers and artists. Find out what makes Cornelia's idea special and how you can offer your readers the chance to win guestlist spots for the vernissage here.

"Our culture is a mash-up culture": Swiss artist Lain dedicates himself day after day to his absolute passion project as the editor of the independent street culture magazine Amateur. In a conversation with News For Original Girls he reveals what he thinks about a globally connected street culture, why he loves travelling, and which female artists impress him.

After so much inspiration you can't wait to get creative yourself? Then get going: for the next fashion shoot the editorial team is looking for capable support to stage the Adidas Originals Women collection FW '12. Apply quickly as a photo assistant and, with a bit of luck, be part of the News For Original Girls creative team on set as early as April.

Mavi: Eat the Store Empty!

If you've been on this planet for more than five years, you've quickly realized: your mouth can be used for a whole lot of wonderful things. You can use it to talk other people into the ground with big words or quickly thrown arguments and then manipulate them into doing exactly whatever you want. Or you put a lot of nice things in it that make you happy. Like food. Or alcohol. Or boys.

Mavi has now apparently found the officially best reason why you should open your mouth, because according to them you can use it to score a pile of clothes for free. Provided you have a really large head opening. In Berlin at the end of April they're calling for a clothing "All You Can Eat" — and you really shouldn't miss this!

The first 100 guests standing in front of the Mavi store on Neue Schönhauser Straße in Berlin on April 26th at 11 AM are allowed to take as many free jeans, shirts, bags, and more as they want. But under one condition: you have to be able to carry the pile out in your teeth! Everyone else receives a 25-euro voucher, redeemable until 1 PM.

So if you have no desire to pay for your wardrobe and would rather carry everything out into the open for free, mark this date and this location and start practicing doing things with your mouth that no human has ever done before. Almost. Visit face yoga classes, study American eating competitions, get your best friend to teach you how to fit your own fist in your head. Every millimeter counts! And never forget: you're not just practicing for Mavi — you're practicing for life!

This is a sponsored article by Mavi.

Electronic Beats Festival: Snuggling With Grimes in Prague

Prague is a great city. Probably. I was only there once, in 2005 on a school trip. And I don't remember much from that either. Except that laughing people gave me burning absinthe to swallow and Hannah danced really sexily with two guys at once in what was supposedly the biggest club in Europe. No idea whether it really was the biggest club in Europe or whether Hannah really danced sexily, but hey: it was fun. And at the beginning of May it's time to go back. There. Just like seven years ago it will be.

On May 5th the Electronic Beats Festival takes place in the Czech capital, featuring among others Mike Skinner, The Whitest Boy Alive, Woodkid, and Grimes. That's right: Grimes will be there. And I will be there too. And then at some point we'll say: "Look, kids: that's how Mama and Papa met back then!" Tickets cost somewhere between 10 and 15 euros, and anyone for whom the acts alone aren't enough to justify a trip, might reconsider when they hear that the entire German blogging elite will also be in attendance. Well, almost. The good ones are there. Let's put it that way. No offense.

Stylespion is there. Interview too. Travelettes too. iHeartBerlin too. This Is Jane Wayne too. Les Mads too. Mit Vergnügen too. And us. So something like a second school trip. Anyone who wants to meet us there and make moves on Grimes can win 1x2 tickets for the festival here. You'll have to get there yourselves, of course, but at least you'll have a reason to leave the house at the beginning of May.

All you need to do is leave a comment with a valid email address by April 23rd. Down there. Somewhere. Anyone who wants more information can check here. Anyone who wants to buy tickets right away can click here. And anyone who just wants some free fun can stare out the window for the next half hour. We'll see each other in Prague! Na zdraví!

Tips For The Weekend: Ten Little Missions

The weekend again already? Oh come on, we've only just started reading through the files, folders, and notes our boss or professor pressed into our hands last week while being chased by black ninjas and screaming at us: "This is of the highest priority, do you understand?!" And we just nodded a bit and thought about our dog, which we painted colorful and then threw out the window with a little stapled-on parachute. Well, next week then. Which in turn means: ten little missions are waiting to be successfully completed by you. Make us proud!

One. On your next walk, just let a frozen jet of urine from an airplane hit and kill you. The only dumber way to die would be choking while brushing your teeth. Two. Hug a cola vending machine. Since nobody else loves you anyway. Three. Embed as many YouTube videos as possible on your blog. It's thoroughly illegal and all that. Four. Become a member of Scientology and try to destroy the organization from within. If you manage it, we'll give you a biscuit. If not, at least you'll be happy. And broke. Five. Eat minced meat ice cream. Lots of it. Like... a really, really lot.

Six. Walk around barefoot all weekend. Nails, shards of glass, dog poo — no matter what you step in: don't wash it off or pull it out! Otherwise you've lost. Seven. Kiss Lana Del Rey. Because those lips are made to be kissed. Eight. Let yourself be deflowered by a skateboard. Still better than dim Steffen from ninth grade. Nine. Start your own blog where you exclusively document all the public and private toilets you use. I personally WOULD watch that. Ten. Bring your girlfriend, your boyfriend, your fling, your PE teacher, or your cat to orgasm using exclusively a feather, some mayonnaise, and a sheet of baking paper. If you can't manage it, then sex is simply not for you yet.

Jägermeister Pub Tour: The Day the Capital Shook

We were with the people from Jägermeister in Hamburg. And in the mountains. And do you know what? It was always so much fun that the memories will surely flash before me at the exact moment when rebels in 2089 topple me from the world throne and shoot me into space, because I took their money and their women.

This time we unfortunately didn't go on a school trip but instead wound up at the Loftus Hall in Berlin. First a decadent dinner that we ate standing up because it was ridiculously packed, but the food was good anyway — then Tek-One, Dumme Jungs, and Eskimo Callboy took the stage in some order or another and rocked the house. As one says in PR speak.

The Jägermeister Bull, which I handle like water, just as an aside, flowed in rivers, we played foosball and giggled and ki... ki... tickled (?) and a totally lovely agency girl saved my life three times. At least. Oh well, look at the photos and the videos. And next time you simply come along. In Frankfurt, Stuttgart, or Munich. Then we'll all be very happy. If you're cool.

This is a sponsored article by Jägermeister.

NEUE ELITE: World Domination and Cheesecake

Do you remember back then? When we started with all this internet stuff, we only cared about two things: world domination and cheesecake. The first point already implies a whole lot of money, sex, and power. And the second... well... cheesecake. Because cheesecake is simply the greatest invention in human history! After tampons and that guy next door who's always screaming "Autobahn."

What I'm actually getting at is that we now have three magnificent projects running. AMY&PINK. The I-hate-these-hipsters-but-still-check-it-every-day-to-find-something-to-get-worked-up-about site. Then THE INVADER. In PR speak I'd write something about fast, critical, and target-audience-oriented opinions in a news style. But it's simply bombastic news straight in the face. And our musical gem WENKEWHO. By Wenke. Who else?

These three great media outlets belong to us. Entirely. No corporation has its fingers in the pie. And no evil boss somewhere in the Philippines calls us up from time to time and tells us we're not posting enough Justin Bieber or boobs. And when we have a new idea, we just implement it. Without having to beg for permission or financial backing for months first. And believe us: we have loads of great ideas! Like... um... toast with the jam already inside it! In three flavors!

But now let me get to the point, because we still have a ridiculous amount of work to do. Or something. If you look at the big players in the business (sounds great, doesn't it?), you notice one thing pretty quickly: behind successful projects there is usually a central pole. MTV and VIVA belong to VIACOM. BILD and Die Welt belong to Axel Springer. Your parents belong to Stullenstefan from the local pub.

And because that is a law, a new level so to speak, and we are being totally über-business, we are uniting AMY&PINK, THE INVADER, WENKEWHO, and everything else that will crawl out of our brains, into an online publishing house. Even though I hate that word. But there's no better one. And you know us: we've eaten false self-confidence by the spoonful.

That's why we're as proud as barman Bruno after his detox to present to you NEUE ELITE. You're welcome to take a look at the website, but it won't be of much use to you unless you're either an agency or a brand that wants to cooperate with us in some way, or simply wealthy heirs who merely want to transfer us a lot, a lot, a LOT (!) of money.

It's remarkable, by the way, how I can bury a small piece of information in an eight-paragraph-long text, but I'm simply glad that from now on everything runs under this completely modest name — and now seriously: if you actually have anything to do with advertising and need and are looking for cooperations, then read through this website. And then get in touch. Naked.

If, however, you're just regular readers who come here exclusively for the pretty pictures, controversial texts, and the occasional total misfire, then just be happy for us that we're once again one step closer to world domination and cheesecake. Because cheesecake is simply the greatest invention in human history! After tampons and that guy next door who's always screaming "Autobahn."

Mixtape: Hello World

Actually you could start a completely new life any day. Not build on what you've achieved and created so far, but leave all the crap behind with a slightly mad smile, break off all contacts and commitments, drain your bank account. And emigrate somewhere with all the cash where nobody knows you. Then you set your travel bag down on the new ground, turn the music in your ears down a little, and shout out loud and freely: "Hello world!" But of course you don't actually do that.

Tips For The Weekend: Ten Little Missions

Hurray, it's Easter and you're sitting around totally bored at your parents' place in your old hometown with your annoying little sister. And all of this just because of meaningless rabbits, mysterious sons of God, and guys who like hammering people to wooden crosses. And you're not allowed to go dancing either, because we occasionally live in Iran. So what to do? Exactly: complete our ten little missions.

One. You have an important paper / recording / anal sex story to hand in next week? Watch these tips to actually get something done and not let yourself get distracted. Two. Think up a few cheering words and send them to the saddest owl in the world. Before it does something stupid. Three. Stop saying "sadly brilliant." Or posting blonde dental receptionists. Or linking to bloody FIFA dogs. Buy ice cream instead. Four. Look up some photos of Micaela Schäfer and touch yourself in the process. Sounds simple, is hard. Five. Watch Lana Del Rey dance. Why? Just because.

Six. Give yourselves and your friends really tough nicknames and use them at work, at their families', or at Starbucks too. Like "Poleslitter." Or "Ragvagina." Or "Packet-soup-inhaler." Seven. Buy a tracking device and staple it to a cat of your choice. Then follow it the entire weekend and experience totally fluffy adventures. Or something. Eight. Feel like a Russian spy and uncover the mystery of what Hillary Clinton is typing into her phone. Nine. Call up former friends you haven't had anything to do with for ten years and babble their ears off with your pointless everyday problems. Don't forget to ask for drugs, cash, or sex at the end of the conversation. Ten. Buy a pink bunny costume and wear it until Christmas. Every now and then throw colorful hard-boiled eggs at small children who are bothering you.

Beyoncé: The Decadent Life of a Pop Star

Until now I basically couldn't have cared less what Beyoncé and her man Jay-Z get up to in their free time. Or their professional lives. Sure, one of them is filthy rich. And the other one too. That's really all you need to know. But now Beyoncé's bum has its own Tumblr, where she posts very private snapshots. And there you can take a quiet look and see how rich people actually live. How they run through colorful tunnels. Or eat the best melons in the world. Or have sand boobs made. Ha, I'm not even jealous! Our time will come. And then we'll have a Tumblr like that too! Exactly... I'll just keep on dreaming.

Tips For The Weekend: Ten Little Missions

April is coming soon. You all know that. And in April more will happen on AMY&PINK again. Really. I swear. I stand behind that with my name. Rüdiger Bergmeister — a name you can trust. That you can trust. Until then we're releasing you into the weekend with these ten little missions. Make us proud! And your siblings. And your ex-girlfriend.

One. Take our drunk friend as your role model and serenade the police with a little song next time you've been causing trouble somewhere and get taken in for it. But perhaps a different song. Two. Delete the NPD. In real life too, if possible. You'll think of something. Three. Watch Grimes making out with some guy. Then cry a bit because you're not the lucky one. Four. Take a bunch of drugs and then fool around with a tree. Still a better love story than "Twilight." Five. Look at this gif. But don't laugh. Otherwise you're going straight to hell!

Six. Only eat and drink white foods. If anyone asks you why you're doing this, look a bit dumb first and then shout at them: "Mate, don't you watch the news?!" Seven. Always wash your hands diligently. With whatever. Because of all the germs and bacteria, you know. Eight. When some advertising banner calls Silbermond out at you, just call back! Let's see who wins. Nine. Make yourself a bowl of cornflakes — but this time pour the milk in first! Totally wild! Ten. Look at this picture. Because it is the best picture in the entire world. Damn.

Muschi Kreuzberg: Party in the Backyard

You want to hang out with the cool kids in Berlin too, but with your bald apprentice friends you've only ever made it as far as Kosmos or Q-Dorf? And you could use some new clothes as well? Because you're still running around in your "Rock im Park" T-shirt from 2002 and then wonder why nobody in the city wants to talk to you? Then we have the perfect solution for you.

Just drop by the backyard of Muschi Kreuzberg on March 31st. There you can not only buy fresh clothes from your favourite local label, but also spend your hard-earned cash on barbecue, dance to the most happening music from overseas, and get to know lots of new friends with fixies and flat stomachs. At least if you dare to open your mouth.

The little pseudo-excursion should be the perfect entry point into your next sunny year of adventure in the capital. Because where could you experience Berlin and the beginning of a new summer better than in the most passionate neighborhood of the city? Exactly. So: March 31st 2012, Oranienstraße 185, 3rd backyard. Bring money, sunshine, and beer. For us. Not for them. Thanks.

Jack Daniel's: Experience Marteria Live in Hamburg

For hip-hop and rap fans, Marteria is a revelation — Jan Delay called his latest album the best German-language hip-hop album of recent years, and he collaborates every now and then with Miss Platnum, Casper, and Peter Fox on the sound of the future. And you have the chance to cheer on the Rostock lad live at an exclusive gig next month.

On April 15th at 7 PM, Marten Laciny will perform live at Club Waagenbau in Hamburg. The event is presented by Jack Daniel's and Jack's little barrels (aka Jack & Cola and Jack & Ginger), which will get you going nicely both offline and in front of your screens. Because the concert will also be broadcast live on this Facebook page.

If you want to be there in person at this exclusive event and also grab a few cool cooler bags with four cans each, just leave a comment with a valid email address by Monday, April 2nd. We're giving away 2x2 guestlist spots. But you have to be at least 18 years old. Otherwise it won't work. No cheating — more info about everything at Jack Daniel's.

Jägermeister Pub Tour: The Convivial Parties Are Back

Servus! The universally beloved Jägermeister Pub Tour is finally back and has already announced three dates with cities where the festivities will soon be taking place. On March 29th things kick off in Hamburg at the Hamborger Veermaster, on March 30th in Berlin at the Loftus Hall, and on March 31st in Dresden at the Gasthaus Zur Eule.

We always had a really great time at the events we attended. With everyone who was there: Isa, Sara, Ming Lee, Janos, Thomas, Nadja, Nike, and many more. The Jägermeister flowed in rivers, which naturally made the atmosphere better and better, and at some point we were the happiest people in the world. As tends to happen.

At the end of March, Berlin will be shaking again thanks to Tek-One, Eskimo Callboy, and Dumme Jungs, and you can naturally be there. We'll be staggering around on the spot too, so come along, say hello, and give us money. Standard. You can also have a drink with the acts, play games, and open your mouth now and then when a few more liters of Jägermeister come sailing through the air.

If you'd like to be there in the capital, simply leave a comment with a valid email address by Thursday, March 22nd and if the blessing falls on you, we'll see each other. There. 1x2 tickets could be yours. Anyone who wants to play it safe can also try their luck on Facebook or at Das-Wirtshaus.de. Hurray!

This is a sponsored article by Jägermeister.

THE INVADER: We Have a New Online Magazine

Two hearts beat within AMY&PINK. This was something we'd been struggling with increasingly of late. On the one hand we love the personal, intense, and substantial articles — on the other hand we wanted to say to hell with the mainstream. To exchange news with each other, share the little stuff, not always have to turn everything into an epic article with a massive photo series or HD video.

That was also the reason why absolutely nothing happened here last week. Because things couldn't continue that way. We needed a new medium to close the gap between us personally and the internet as such. Because 90% of all things we read in our feed readers we couldn't use, because some aspect of them didn't fit AMY&PINK. Thematically or technically.

So I locked myself in the basement, assembled a fresh team, and created something new that exists solely to bombard the local internet in all its magnitude and inertia and show you afresh with every glance what's going on right now. In Germany. In the world. Just post a small story, a beautiful video, a passionate track, a nice outfit, the latest madness. But without forgetting depth either. We can do that now. Over there. We present: THE INVADER!

We took our years of experience, mixed it with everything that ever worked well, and blended it with the best of the English-language blogosphere. The result is a magnificent firework of opinionated texts, great music videos, punchy news, and much, much more. You can find out more about THE INVADER here.

For now it still looks like a bolder and more colorful version of AMY&PINK, but that will change soon. Because this pink website will gradually find its way back to its roots. Because while we handle current topics at THE INVADER, here it should once again be more about life. About beautiful, big photographs. About massive, brilliant videos. And that will soon also become visible in the design.

But for now I'm simply excited to see what we can achieve with our new project. I'm just looking forward to making the most of this newly won freedom. We have a great team and the best chance of making a real impact in the German blogosphere. Because if not us, then who? Have fun with THE INVADER.

Fleshlight: Goodbye, Right Hand

The other day Dieter, our disturbed Russian postman, rang at our door and brought us two of these Fleshlights. A gift from Brian. For whatever reason. I unpacked them and suddenly had two enormous plastic torches in my hands. One in black and one in shimmering pearl white. Except that there was no functional light in them, but two rubber vaginas. I was totally excited.

Each one is shaped differently. One is very tight and looks like the primary sexual organ of redhead porn star Ariel Vortex (I researched this thoroughly) and the other is a bit wider with larger labia and is called the very sexy "Build Your Own Texture." So everyone can construct their dream opening. I think that's very good. It's like LEGO for grown-ups.

I waited ceremoniously and with anticipatory joy for the evening, made something appetizing to eat. Mussels with white wine and cream on a bed of rocket. There were fresh olives and a Pinot Grigio to go with it. I lit a few candles, turned off the lights, and grabbed Ariel's soft, warm, and wet hole. Fap, fap, fap. Ahh, ohh, uhh. After three minutes I was done. Wow. Efficient!

Because let's be honest: masturbating takes time. On bad days we sit for an hour or longer in front of one terrible porno after another, rubbing ourselves raw while checking emails and ordering pizza. Just for that brief shot into the void and a stupid expression on our face. We could invest that time better. Learn foreign languages. Buy stocks. Find girlfriends. Or something like that.

At Amazon you can get these things from 35 euros. If you're not too perverse. Though you can also choose to have sex with zombies, aliens, or arseholes — that costs a little more. But regardless: it's worth it. Really. So if you currently don't have a girl by your side or simply want to mentally cheat for a bit and only have a few minutes to spare, these Fleshlights are genuinely a fun thing.

If you have a little pocket money to spare and want to use your masturbation sessions more effectively, send your right hand into retirement and give these wobbly things a chance. Advantage: they feel incredibly real and you just have to rinse them with water. Disadvantage: for those few minutes you look like you're having sex with a broken handheld vacuum cleaner. So you'd better draw the curtains first.

Mixtape: Favourite Songs

Good songs are like good sex. Some overwhelm you with such an incredible heat and desire that you can't resist them in the slightest and you're left suspended in a rush of feelings for a few hours, until they've vanished just as quickly as they came. They never return. Others, however, come slowly and again and again — you might not even notice them at your first encounter and you might even forget them for years, but somehow they're always there, and when the time has come to bring you back together, no words in the world can express how happy, painfully moved, or liberated you feel in that moment.

The Social Network: Are You Afraid of Facebook?

It runs on television. And the newspapers write about it. Constantly. Facebook is evil. It abuses your data, destroys your careers, and sells your souls. Or something like that. Together with Google and Amazon it forms a team of greedy and insatiable data octopuses that can no longer be stopped, and in the end there can only be a rude awakening. Or can there?

Die Welt has now commissioned a survey to show just how many reservations Germans really have about Facebook. And who worries most. They arrive at the result that around 42 percent of Germans are afraid of the world's largest social network. So two in five. The skepticism is particularly pronounced among people with a secondary modern school qualification. Of these, however, 20 percent also have no idea what it actually is. This Facebook.

For Alexander Kolb from market research company GfK, this result came as somewhat of a surprise: "I was surprised that people with higher education are less afraid of Facebook than people with fewer qualifications. There I had actually expected the critical attitude to increase." Students and university students would be the least afraid of the blue-and-white website.

Just under 60 percent of 14- to 19-year-olds use Facebook carelessly and excessively, and are not put off even by adults who repeatedly try to convince them that too open a use of such a platform could lead to negative consequences in the future. After all, all their friends are on it too. And they'll know what they're doing.

What if your future boss sees the party photos of you making out with Ralph and Jenny? What if some pervy guy downloads the photos from your beach holiday? What if at some point a sales rep turns up at your door who, thanks to personalized advertising, wants to push Hello Kitty-branded vacuum cleaners on you? Sure, all that can happen. Maybe.

Students in particular seem to be stuck in the same dilemma that the generation before them already had with StudiVZ. Nobody really trusts the thing, but since everyone else uses it and often — thanks to groups, chat, and notice boards — alternative communication channels are only used rarely and then only individually, they're practically forced to become part of the community.

Personally, I use Facebook every day. And all the time. On my phone, on my computer. At home and on the go. I'm basically never logged out. I don't always see it, but I know it's there and that I could dive into it whenever I wanted to. However, I work in an area where social media is essential. Anyone not on Facebook simply doesn't exist.

I don't care whether anyone is monitoring or stalking me. Because I'm in a position where no boss can reject or fire me for having uploaded photos of excessive partying. I'm also not a young woman who has to expect with every bikini photo that some horny guy is using it to pleasure himself. And if someone wants to sell me Hello Kitty-branded vacuum cleaners... hey, how cool are Hello Kitty-branded vacuum cleaners?!

None of us can assess what consequences it will one day have that we reveal so much about ourselves. Be it on Facebook, on Twitter, on blogs. I have always been of the opinion that attack is the best defense and one should overfeed every data octopus with pointless information until they burst. While keeping one or two secrets in the process.

There's no question that Facebook is powerful. Very powerful. And that every medium is only as trustworthy as the people who manage and also use it. Everyone should therefore decide for themselves how far they want to expose themselves there. None of you should let yourselves be thrown off balance by misplaced fears, but also not blindly share and publish everything on a grand scale. Inform yourselves about what can go wrong, and use digital platforms with care and respect — then nothing bad can really happen. Maybe it won't abuse your data, destroy your careers, or sell your souls either. Hopefully.

Tips For The Weekend: Ten Little Missions

We were actually convinced this day would never come again, but here it is and it's so wonderful that we almost started crying: Friday! You know what that means: clothes off, tracksuit bottoms on your head, and then sit in front of the computer for as long as humanly possible without a break. Until the alarm goes off for work. Or school. Or your appointment with your job center advisor. And anyone who needs a little variety between all the tweets, 9Gag jokes, and pornos, we recommend these ten missions. And go!

One. Listen to the album "Our Version of Events" by Emeli Sandé for free and in full via stream. The woman really has got it, after all. Two. Watch this video about what happens to Pokémon that nobody wanted. Then calculate in your head how many of the creatures you probably already have on your conscience. Three. Get a real Death Star built. It would only cost you around 853 quadrillion dollars, but hey: you only live once, after all. Four. Watch the Oscars on Sunday and place bets on what Sacha Baron Cohen is planning if he doesn't finally get his tickets. Five. Drink more vodka.

Six. Be aware that it is entirely your fault that Nicki Minaj has become what she is today. She used to be such a sweet girl... Seven. Do as Stephen Hawking does and just head to the brothel for a nice, respectable visit. Eight. Delight yourselves and your loved ones by watching models who are too dumb to walk. It's always funny, after all. Nine. Take your grandmother out at 4 AM to one of those funny-smelling dubstep clubs and introduce her to your friends. Hands off the yellow lumps, Gerda! Ten. Mercilessly consume everything by Grimes. She is the next big thing, after all. Well, maybe.

YouTube vs. GEMA: Give Us Our Music Back!

Almost nothing in this world is comparable to the feeling we get when we try once again to watch a music video on YouTube. To perhaps share it with you. Because it's played so brilliantly and artistically valuable and bombastically recorded. And then we see nothing but that black box and the stupid red face reminding us once again that we're in Germany. And here, as everyone knows, music and YouTube are basically a lost cause.

That feeling lands somewhere between hatred, incomprehension, and throwing rabbits out the window. After all, AMY&PINK is a pop culture magazine. And alongside pointless everyday stories, passionate manifestos, and cute photo series, we naturally try to deliver the newest and best music videos straight to your screen. As quickly and as high-quality as possible.

When an artist finally releases a long-awaited, fresh visual work, we're flooded with press releases, foreign blog articles, and Facebook posts from friends and labels urging us to watch this clip immediately. Where? On YouTube, obviously. Then we click. And see black. And this has been going on for years. Move along, nothing to see here!

We're then forced to beg the managers to please upload the video to Vimeo as well. In HD. Often that doesn't work, and when it does, they manage it with great effort two weeks after the release. By which point it's already too late. Because everyone has already seen it via some strange roundabout route. Or it even ran on VIVA. VIVA!

These tactical blackouts are not only infuriating — they also ruin our business for German blogs and online magazines. And they create an irreparable competitive disadvantage compared to our foreign colleagues. Because they don't have to deal with a financial war between various companies, under which an entire nation has to suffer.

Even Edgar Berger, of Sony Music, has now noticed this. He responds to the question of why we're still seeing black: "It's not up to us. We have licensed our content to the market participants. You need to direct this question to the German collecting society GEMA, which licenses copyrights very restrictively. We're losing millions in revenue as a result. This practice is, by the way, one of the main reasons why digital music commerce is less developed in Germany. But I'm relatively certain that GEMA will eventually come to see reason for economic necessity."

Okay, we get it. YouTube claims GEMA demands too high a licensing fee for playing music videos and blocks them as a precaution. The music industry is afraid of the internet but would find it vaguely great if things slowly started moving. And GEMA sees itself as an innocent lamb that only wants to protect the rights of creators. Fine and dandy.

But honestly: we couldn't care less. We don't care how often you pass the buck to each other, who demands too much money where, who is inciting users against GEMA, or which Google business models are generating too little in Germany to justify the industry's demands. We and the rest of this country only care about one thing: that we can finally watch music videos on YouTube. Freely. Uncensored. And as soon as possible. Nothing more — and nothing less.

Finally reach an agreement and stop wasting our time by forcing us to constantly find new ways to work around this dubious geo-blocking. Let us do our work in peace and let people watch whatever they want. Because honestly, it's just getting annoying. And quite frankly: we certainly won't put up with this nonsense for another year. Give us our music back!

Racism in Germany: Turk Scum Off to Auschwitz

Imagine you're a primary school kid again, standing on the S-Bahn with your class and teachers on your way to a fun bowling trip. And then some weird guy screams at you that you're "bloody Turks." That you should be "gassed." "Turk scum off to Auschwitz." And that kind of racist garbage. That's definitely the nicest day ruined, as we'd very carefully put it.

This happened on Monday morning in Berlin. The ten- to eleven-year-old children from the E.-O.-Plauen primary school in Kreuzberg, most of whom have a migration background, were on a carnival outing when they were first greeted by a woman with a cheerful "This isn't German anymore. Germany for Germans." and then loudly insulted by this disgusting man.

The problem: not a single bystander said anything, not a single one stood up, not one stepped between the man and the children. The class got out at Alexanderplatz and the teachers turned to the train driver, who couldn't do anything either and simply drove on. The teachers now want to press charges. Against persons unknown. Against the general racism that is still at home in this country.

When we hear something like this, we're first angry at humanity in general. Why no one does anything. Why we still permit xenophobia (and directed at children at that). What was going on secretly in the heads of the bystanders. Were they simply too cowardly? Do they perhaps think similarly? Did they just not notice, or not want to?

And then we stand before ourselves and ask: what would we have done? The range goes from being brave, standing up and giving him a smack to staying seated, keeping quiet, or just getting off. What should we have said? Would we have been allowed to pull the emergency brake? Would we have been allowed to hit him? Would he have pressed charges against us? Would he have hurt us? Who would have helped us?

One thing is clear: insulting innocent children on a school trip with incendiary Nazi garbage and wanting to send them straight off to Auschwitz deserves some kind of respect. How anyone manages to lead even a reasonably decent life with that kind of filth in their head and still get away with it without punishment. Words fail.

The stupid arsehole probably felt enormous when he finally got the "bloody Turks" out of his German S-Bahn and could peacefully continue listening to his Nazi music on his iPod — not made abroad, of course. And that weird woman right along with him. "Germany for Germans." I feel a brief wave of nausea rising, people.

But the incident once again unfortunately demonstrates: this country continues to be permeated by racist structures. Often rather unconsciously. From the neighbor who actually has nothing against foreigners, to the guy who is perfectly allowed to openly air his opinion, to the baker who would rather hire blonde Ulrike than dark-haired Elif. These people are worse than any dull punch-you-in-the-face Nazi.

So what do we do when ten- to eleven-year-old pupils are loudly insulted by amateur Adolfs? Exactly: something! Whoever dares stands up and shouts back at the brown filth what it thinks it's saying. Whoever dares a lot and just came from the gym grabs him by the ears, drags him off the train, and sits on him until the police show up.

Or you simply call 110, take a photo of the idiot with your phone, block the doors so the train can't continue, spit in his face, help the teachers, help the children, stand up, DO SOMETHING! But don't remain in that zombie-doesn't-affect-me stiffness that we all tend to adopt on the train. Because we're tired or just want to get home quickly.

Because a racist spark like this must be stamped out immediately even in such small situations. To show: hey, go lock yourself in your one-room apartment with Hitler on the wall and swastikas cut into your roast potatoes and hopefully drop dead soon, but stop getting on our nerves with your brown crap. And above all, stop threatening innocent children. Thank you. Arsehole.

Pokémon for the iPhone: Pika Pikachuuuuuuu

Today I spent an hour of my life thinking about how much I would pay for a Pokémon game on my phone. I. Love. Pokémon. 10 euros? 20 euros? 100 euros? Imagine how great it would be. Everyone with an iPhone or iPad or iPod Touch or iScrewIt (or Android phone, for the hardcore nerds) could download the thing and then battle and trade against each other. Like the old days. Only without that annoying link cable. In a retro hipster look.

A guy named Daniel Burford apparently had the same idea and simply uploaded the Yellow Edition of the Game Boy game to the App Store. For 99 cents. "Five stars!", "I love it!", "Just like the original, only better because it now runs on the iPhone!" it said. In the description. Wow, how amazing! Download, download, DOWNLOAD! That the arsehole only wanted our hard-earned cash became apparent after installation, as the software junk crashed right after the title screen. Sometimes I hate people.

Other people apparently didn't find that very funny either. Someone named Faustino Angel wrote: "I want my money back and if I don't get it back I'll sue the person who made this into the ground! This is pure fraud!" Well, Daniel. Looks like you really messed up. You and your weird Home of Anime. That's apparently what his company is called. Or whatever.

Nintendo then graciously announced: "We will continue to combat the unauthorized releases of our games, software, and merchandise, which deceive our fans and make them pay for something that doesn't meet our quality standards." How lovely. Doesn't solve my problem that I still have no working Pokémon on my phone.

Square did it with "Final Fantasy" and "Chrono Trigger," Rockstar with "Grand Theft Auto 3" and "Chinatown Wars" and Sega with "Super Monkey Ball" and "Sonic the Hedgehog." So Nintendo, what gives? Just be cool and bring me Pikachu and the other 250 creatures (everything after that was just annoying) to my mobile device. And since you're already granting wishes, here we go.

Either I want a retro 16-bit pixel look or a really grungily colorful anime 3D world with fluffy clouds and manga girls with big breasts. And I want to be able to create my own character. And the thing should automatically notify me on the train or street when another dork also has the game and let me battle them via Bluetooth or Wi-Fi.

And I insist on different editions and the Elite Four and Team Rocket and Magikarp and the Masterball and Pallet Town and Missingno and Brock and Misty. And actually I just want to be a spotty teenager again and waste my time messing around on my own and defeating my inferior friends at Pokémon. Come on Nintendo, just do it!

Small-Town Thoughts: Pubs, Groping, Nostalgia

Small towns carry their name for a reason. And every single conceivable cliché about them is true. Everyone knows everyone. The rate of inbreeding is above average. The local newspaper, which usually covers several villages and fields, preferably reports on the 75th anniversary of the garden club or photographs small children winning third place at the regional taekwondo tournament. Very exotic and all. And in such surroundings, sooner or later everyone has to ask themselves one question: stay — or go?

My small town is called Buchloe. It's in Bavaria, somewhere between Augsburg, Landsberg am Lech, and Kaufbeuren. If that means anything to you. And when it was almost already too late, I decided to go. To Berlin. Into the big wide world. To do something different with my life, instead of marrying my girlfriend, moving with her into a detached house on her father's field, and then diligently producing little FC Bayern fans. A different lifestyle is not exactly welcome over there.

When I come home at Christmas or Easter today to visit my family, I feel superior. Because I made it. At least that's what I tell myself. Out of the blue-and-white monotony, into the fast-paced world consisting of parties, drugs, and Z-list celebs. Or sitting around at home and entertaining myself, because after all I'm sitting at the center of German power. Right next to the TV tower and that guy who's always shouting something about chicks, weak coffee, and jelly babies through the neighborhood.

There are good reasons why I left my friends behind in that dreary idyll. Money is one. Variety. Perspective. City life. Those kinds of words. And often I don't even have time to think about what my life would have looked like if I hadn't left back then. Nearly five years ago. This question is something everyone asks themselves at some point. And sometimes it catches up with you.

Then I sit late at night with a bottle of wine in front of my Facebook feed and click through familiar faces who have chosen a life of monotony. Or were simply too lazy to leave. They celebrate carnival together, have all grown a little older and plumper. But they laugh and drink and don't seem to regret not having moved hundreds, even thousands of kilometers away to seek their fortune elsewhere. And thereby potentially risking returning broken and broke.

They patiently pursue their eight-hour job at the drinks store or old people's home, look forward to the McDonald's 20 kilometers away and meet evening after evening at their regular pub. Or if things should get a little more wasted, they drive to the large disco a few villages over. Where they go wild to David Guetta or cheer on the Bachelor. Well known from RTL, of course.

Sometimes I miss these people. Sure, these are exactly the ones who obediently crack open their fortune cookie on Facebook every day. And invite us to pointless apps like the birthday calendar. Or post photos of tortured puppies and write underneath "Whoever I catch I'll cut their d*** off!!" As one does. In Bavaria.

But then nostalgia washes over me and I think back to how we got drunk on Jägermeister in the warm summer rain. In front of one of those wooden huts blasting Groove Coverage. How we broke into a caravan and got beaten out by the owners, only to end up in the newspaper the next day as rioting youths. How Jule and I sat at midnight on the little wooden bench by the stream and she climbed up onto me. To show me shooting stars. And to make out.

It sometimes makes me depressed to see that these people are still friends after all these years and spend their time together. Or are even a couple, married, have children. We were stupid idiots with nonsense in our heads, running wild in streets, fields, schools, woods, lakes, apartments, pubs, cellars, rooms, and beds. And they're still together. And I'm gone. Far, far away. At four in the morning, with a bottle of wine in my hand, I find that somehow sad.

And even though I actually know the answers quite well, I ask myself a few questions before I finally fall into a restless sleep. Would my life in the small town have been so bad? Was it all worth it to give up my friends forever? What would I be doing today if I hadn't gone to Berlin? Pizza delivery driver? Warehouse operative? Benefits recipient?

In some parallel universe I'm sitting in my small town right now, wondering what my life would have been like if I had decided to leave back then. Then I open the newspaper and read about the 75th anniversary of the garden club. And I'm glad that the little children won third place at the regional taekwondo tournament. Very exotic and all.

AMY&PINK on Pinterest: The Photo War Has Begun

How many nights have we already sat by candlelight in front of our notebooks asking ourselves just one question: how can you make a pretty decent amount of money on the internet in a fairly short time? Without working yourself to death? There's Facebook. And Google. And Tumblr. Selling pixels with ads too. You can even have muesli delivered to your door. Oh, none of that helps, it all already exists.

Of course that was a stupid mistake in thinking. As Pinterest shows — currently the most hyped website. In. The. World. Some pseudo-experts told us that this is the next big thing and our lives were worthless if we didn't immediately start pasting so-called boards with photos of cool products and people and quotes. Seems legit.

So we can now proudly announce that AMY&PINK is now also on Pinterest. And you can follow us there. Or whatever. Why are we there? No idea. What do we have in mind? Hey, don't ask us. We've created a few folders and are mindlessly stuffing images in there and adding stupid comments. Which is basically what you do there. When you're a follower.

Time will tell whether we need yet another stupid page to spread ourselves across in addition to Facebook, Twitter, Google+, Tumblr, Last.fm, and Formspring. But hey: what won't you do to belong to the cool kids on the internet? Exactly. So follow us from now on here on Pinterest. Which we lovingly call Tumblr 2.0. And while you're at it, please explain to us what all this is actually supposed to be.

The Third Internet World: German Blogs Are Ugly

It's truly enough to drive you to despair. For years a blogging landscape has been growing in Germany that overflows with thematic diversity and great writers. Fashion, technology, music, everyday shenanigans — everything a digital native who has turned away from print could want. Often written boldly, competently, and at a rapid pace. But then we look at them outside the feed reader and think: good grief, you couldn't have put less effort into the design, could you? That's almost embarrassing.

Let's pick out the biggest and most promising specimens from the scene and take a closer look. Fabu hit the nail on the head here, for instance. Caschy's Blog is considered one of the best-known tech weblogs in Germany, always has the latest stuff from the world of Windows, Apple, and Google ready. But it looks like one of those Russian spam sites for illegal medication.

And for the domain you'd just like to give them a slap on both cheeks. That domain has probably already made fools of many a retired couple who just wanted to book a nice little hotel near the harbor. Compare this sadness with equivalent sites from the USA and there's no other option left but to go stand in a corner and cry. Because you feel like you're in the Third Internet World in Germany.

The Verge, The Next Web, and Wired know how to skillfully combine nerd stuff and coolness. They invite you not to close the page as quickly and embarrassedly as possible once you've grabbed the information you need. That's how tech blogs need to look. Or even better. If you're capable of it. But not like the first WordPress.com page of a 12-year-old.

Which brings us to the next candidate: Nerdcore is the German go-to place for everything related to comics, zombies, and more or less funny geek rubbish. Assuming you don't understand English and haven't already seen the stuff days earlier on Buzzfeed, Reddit, and io9. René earned his status by being one of the very first local bloggers and appearing to have no real life, which means he pumps content into the world 24 hours a day, truly round the clock. Respect. Honestly.

But does his website have to look like an overloaded content crawler, without any kind of structure or the most basic design rules? How about taking inspiration from the well-designed pages in this milieu and picking the best elements from various designs? A mix of the EA page and TheTrendNet, for example? Or a somewhat cleaner version of Kotaku? Or getting inspiration from a completely different corner of the planet. Like Fatale. Or Ships Mag. Or Pilot Magazine.

There are so many great designs out there that you can easily draw inspiration from and use to create something of your own. You should take the time to stand out from the crowd. As a newcomer, René with his current design would have no chance of winning even a consolation prize. And he could update his confusing domain too.

Or take Buzzriders, the new project of blogging veteran Robert Basic. The thing is supposed to inform people about the technology trends of tomorrow. So the future. But why does the site then, with its hastily reworked standard theme, look like something from the last decade — without any form of recognition, anything out of the ordinary, or any coolness? That borders on deliberate hostility toward readers.

Of course, what matters first and foremost in blogs is good content. That you have an interesting topic you can write about individually, informatively, and personally. But a bad design ruins the reading experience for your visitors. It's your project, so please make the most of it and spare us the nausea that hits when we once again internally hand out the ugliness award. To you.

You're running an art blog? Then look at M.A.P. and Neuewave. Working on a new design for your fashion blog? Vice Style and V Magazine are the perfect places to draw inspiration from. Perhaps you're putting together a fresh photo blog. Check out Anyone, Girl, Elroy, or The Ones2Watch first. An online magazine? Then Acclaim, Girls Rock, or simply Hypebeast.

It really isn't that hard to give your blogs a reasonably appealing image and look. And if you can't manage it yourself, find someone who can. Because you want your project to make an impact — so hit your readers with a design that packs a punch right from the very first visit. You're doing it for yourselves. And for us. And for everyone who associates the German blogosphere more with an embarrassing bunch of net-morons than with competent, interesting, and extraordinary people. Change that, please!

Tips For The Weekend: Ten Little Missions

If you're as unfathomably cool as us, you've already been working your way through one terrible party after another over the past few days and are kicking back over the weekend to bury your head in a fat cheese pizza and let old radio plays run in the background. Like Benjamin Blümchen. And that weird fairy tale where the evil stepmother wants to chop her daughter's head off but accidentally gets the cat instead. Or you devote yourself to these ten missions. Probably the better decision. And go!

One. Say your goodbyes to your loved ones, because the end of the world is once again very near. Plague, zombies, ice age? No, this time a gigantic star is on the verge of exploding and will send us all up in flames in a supernova. Hurray. Two. Have a crafty PR agency send you some hand vaginas. We'll never use our hands again. Or girls. Three. Write Paul McCartney a letter congratulating him on giving up weed. Then casually ask if he'd mind sharing his dealer's number. Four. Under no circumstances watch RTL. Otherwise you might see your parents in a swingers club. Five. From now on don't pay for your coffee at Starbucks with cash. Otherwise the FBI might think you're a terrorist. Or worse.

Six. Dig out the old consoles and play "Super Mario World" again. But please try to do it as badly as humanly possible. Seven. Go to one of those parties where all guests are only allowed to show up in underwear. First please look in the mirror and decide if you really want to inflict that on your surroundings. Eight. Buy yourself a goldfish. But it has to look like Adolf Hitler. Nine. Become a radio presenter and refer to Whitney Houston as a crack whore. Then find yourself another job. Ten. Find the mysterious sex tape of Adele and download it. Then don't open it after all. For reasons.

ARD and ZDF Love ACTA: Generation of Digital Theft

Do you still remember ARD and ZDF? Exactly: on one of them you used to watch "Marienhof." Before it was cancelled and you skipped school for the next few days because of your tear-streaked face. In fact, both public broadcasters are members of the Deutsche Content Allianz, and if you're against ACTA, you're welcome to see this association as a sort of final boss at the third level. With lava flow under a rope bridge and little flying monkeys pelting you with stones from above.

Together with the German Publishers and Booksellers Association, GEMA, the Federal Music Industry Association, and a few other people who understand nothing about the internet, they are demanding that our government sign ACTA as quickly as possible. And this despite the fact that you were so diligently demonstrating against the trade agreement last weekend. What a cheek.

The irony: officially the "central concern of the Content Allianz is among other things to strengthen copyright and related rights to protect cultural diversity." Which is rather amusing. Everyone knows that cultural diversity can only be protected and strengthened when it is not curtailed by dubious gagging laws, unnecessary censorship, and money-grubbing analogue idiots.

Literally, they call us "a generation in which many have been released into the wide world of the internet from school and home without any sense of wrongdoing regarding 'digital theft'." So criminals. Us. You. Your friends. And they just don't understand what's supposed to be so bad about ACTA. Doesn't harm anyone, after all. And brings them more money. And gives them back their long-lost control.

Jürgen Doetz, chair of the Association of Private Broadcasters and Telemedia VPRT, says for example: "After everyone was able to convince themselves that all the measures provided for in ACTA to curb rights violations already correspond to German standards, the agreement should now also be signed. We regret that the Federal Minister of Justice is questioning the international enforcement of the European level of protection." Got it.

The question of why the Deutsche Content Allianz is suddenly pushing so hard for ACTA to become reality is quickly answered. The protests in European cities large and small have made many of those responsible, who had previously nearly blindly signed the trade agreement, somewhat more attentive. They followed up, demanded transparency about what's actually in it. And what concrete effects it would have on our internet. Namely, pretty terrible ones. And the Alliance's demands aren't even justified.

Scientists Brett Danaher from Wellesley College and Joel Waldfogel from the University of Minnesota, for example, have found that filesharing has almost no effect on box office results for cinema films. And when it does, it's only when too much time passed between the US release and the premiere in other countries. That's roughly the same as with TV series. Why would we wait forever for ProSieben to finally show the new Simpsons season, when we can find it online shortly after its first broadcast?

But we're not even talking about the mass illegal downloading of films, series, and music. It's more about the small things in the everyday life of an internet user that ACTA would also put an abrupt end to. Sharing a photo on Pinterest, for instance. Warbling along to your favorite song on camera. Or quoting good passages from texts. Because none of that seems to be truly legal anymore.

That's why we demand not only that such ridiculous laws as ACTA, which restrict our freedom of expression and curtail our rights, never become reality, but also that a German equivalent of the American "Fair Use" doctrine is introduced. That would allow all of us to breathe a little more freely on the internet and not have to constantly worry that with every digital step we take, we might be violating some strange law. Our neighbors in the Netherlands have already figured this out, for example.

In plain terms: ARD and ZDF, shut up! Deutsche Content Allianz, join them! Government, don't sign any rubbish! ACTA, go die! European Union, introduce Fair Use! Thank you. And since we're on the subject: GEMA, demand less money from YouTube! In all other countries it seems to work just fine, so it can't be that hard. Oh, the internet could be so beautiful...

Sonny Moore: Skrillex, Before He Was Skrillex

Just a few days ago, Skrillex scooped up three of those overrated Grammy Awards. At least the ones Adele left behind. No surprise there. The guy, who's actually called Sonny Moore, is considered the resurrected Jesus of dubstep; his disciples bash each other's sweaty, color-buzzing heads on the dance floor, proudly wear his haircut — just like Bill Kaulitz's once upon a time — and often have no idea who Joe Nice, Zed Bias, or Mary Anne Hobbs even are.

Time for us to take a look at who this Skrillex actually is, where he comes from, what he was getting up to before he got drug-dependent meat counter saleswomen jumping around in basements. And lo and behold: our trail leads us back to the emo kids who a few years ago were always blocking the stairs at Alexanderplatz S- and U-Bahn station and sending each other suicide love letters on MySpace.

So dive with us into a long-past era, when Sonny was still a member of a fun little band called From First To Last. And he still took cute phone photos of himself in his bathroom mirror at home. And he hadn't yet haughtily run into walls at packed Hamburg golf clubs. And while we're briefly on the subject: where did all the emos actually go?

Fashion Week Paris: Meet Jeremy Scott in France

There's always a Fashion Week somewhere. Berlin, New York, London. Some people seem to have nothing else to do but dash from one city to the next, look at the latest clothes there, and hold forth on the latest trends with a glass of champagne and canapés in hand. That's good for morale. And where is the best place for it? Clearly: Paris. At the mother of all fashion weeks.

You obviously want to go, that much is certain. So start packing your things and dig out your French phrasebook from seventh grade, because News For Original Girls, the sexy new online magazine by Adidas, is taking you to the official City of Love for three days. And even gets you an exclusive interview with American designer Jeremy Scott. Yeah.

What do you have to do? Simple: check out Jeremy Scott's latest collection for Adidas and then write about it on your own blog. But not just a regular article. Be creative, tell a story, build a collage, print the pieces out and make a stop-motion video with them and your stylish grandmother. Something. The more original, the better.

Then simply send the link to your post by February 26th to redaktion@newsfororiginalgirls.com and you might soon be flying off happy to Fashion Week in Paris to meet one of the most brilliant designers of our time. And watch shows. And hit the parties. And maybe kiss a model. Any one. Good luck! You don't have your own blog but still want to win something? Then just take part here and at least score some Adidas vouchers. Hurray!

For Valentine's Day: Win a Date With AMY&PINK

Valentine's Day is a date whose exceptionally high depressive potential easily surpasses Christmas Eve alone at home and your 18th birthday at a motorway service station together with trucker Gerhard and his one-eyed stepfather. By a mile. And so that you don't end up going on a rampage because of all the chocolates and roses and snogging couples, we've come up with something.

We're giving away, among all our readers especially for the day of feigned love, a date with one of our authors! What's it to be? A romantic dinner with Hannah? Torching the ghetto with Sara? Living out your Asia fetish with Asumi? Chatting about art, fashion, and music with Meltem? Watching series with Lisa? Being drunk under the table by Kati? Being talked at endlessly by Foxy? Swaying to dubstep with Wenke? Having Christine read you a goodnight story? Or perhaps simply looking at Marcel's penis? The choice is yours!

Just pick someone from our team and write a love letter dripping with kitsch. Or describe in colorful words what you would do on the date. Or link to photos of yourself radiating nothing but raw emotion. Be creative, be great, be naked. Whatever, convince your secret crush that they should go out on the town with you.

Just drop your sweet texts and horny brain outpourings into the comments by Tuesday, February 21st, including a valid email address. The best of you wins the date with one of our authors. Or perhaps even more, depends entirely on how much effort you put in. So: head off, heart on, and off we go through the tunnel of love. Metaphorically speaking.

Tips For The Weekend: Ten Little Missions

You actually have no time this weekend at all. Tomorrow you need to get up early and stand around for internet freedom and against ACTA with flat feet in some pedestrian zone or on wet grass. And Sunday is designated for recovery. But for the truly hardcore among you there are of course ten fresh missions again today. And off we go!

One. Download the entire Pirate Bay. After all, it's only 90 megabytes. Then learn it by heart. Two. Take part in an eating competition that donates the proceeds to the World Food Programme. Preferably with hot dogs. Or sandwiches. Or mussels. Three. Break into a girls' boarding school at night wearing a blonde wig. How this story ends is entirely up to you. Four. Collect your menstrual blood in preserving jars. To one day fill a pool with it. Five. Sit down next to the real Cartman and torment him until he goes home in a huff. Screw you, people...

Six. Cuddle a tree again. They're surely very cold out there too. Seven. Celebrate the anniversary of Rebecca Black's "Friday." After all, it was exactly one year ago today that the internet anthem was uploaded. It's Friday! Eight. Watch the new American series "Comic Book Men." It's for nerds, after all. And we're all nerds. Nine. Rescue Macaulay Culkin from the clutches of drugs. Or give him something to eat. Or more Red Bull. Ten. Finally start blogging more again. Israeli psychologists have found that teenagers who run their own blog are emotionally more balanced and socially more competent. That's nice.

Stop ACTA! On Saturday We Save the Internet

We've already told you how unspeakably infuriating ACTA is. If this law passes, the internet will turn into a bleak place. And you'll have to constantly live in fear of someone monitoring you, reporting you, or even locking you up. That's why on this Saturday, protests against ACTA are taking place in many cities around the world, with which we want to make it clear once and for all that nobody has the right to censor, manipulate, or exploit our internet for profit-driven purposes. Nobody.

Grab your friends and family members and take to the streets with them on Saturday. Below you'll find a list of the biggest German-language demonstrations and rallies, including links to their respective Facebook events. Remember: it's really important that you participate. Because once ACTA is activated, it will be too late. So let's prevent it together!

Aachen 1 PM, Theaterplatz. Augsburg 2 PM, CityGalerie. Berlin 1 PM, Neptunbrunnen. Bielefeld 1 PM, main station. Bonn 1 PM, Kaiserplatz at the main station. Braunschweig 4 PM, Schlossplatz. Bremen 3 PM, main station. Chemnitz 12 PM, Am Markt 1. Crailsheim 3 PM, ZOB station. Dortmund 3 PM, opposite (south of) the main station, below the steps. Dresden 12 PM, Albertplatz. Duisburg 3 PM, Königstraße junction Sonnenwall. Düsseldorf 2 PM, Heinrich-Heine-Platz. Erfurt 3 PM, Anger.

Erlangen 4 PM, Hugenottenplatz, then Nuremberg. Frankfurt am Main 3 PM, Kaisersack at the main station. Eisenach 2 PM, Markt. Frankfurt am Main 3 PM, Kaisersack at the main station. Frankfurt Oder 11 AM, main station. Freiburg 3 PM, Kartoffelmarkt. Gera 3 PM, main station. Göttingen 3 PM, Markt 6, Gänseliesel. Heidenheim 3 PM, Eugen-Jäckle-Platz 5. Hamburg 2 PM, Gänsemarkt. Hanover 12 PM, Opernplatz. Heidelberg 3 PM, Bismarckplatz. Hof 11 AM, forecourt of the Marienkirche. Ingolstadt 11 AM, Rathausplatz.

Karlsruhe 2 PM, Marktplatz. Kassel 3 PM, Opernplatz and Friedrichsplatz. Kiel 12 PM, Asmus-Bremer-Platz. Cologne 11 AM, Roncalliplatz. Constance 3 PM, Moltkestraße in front of the Nycomed high-rise. Leipzig 2 PM, Augustusplatz. Magdeburg 3 PM, main station. Mainz 3 PM, main station. Mannheim 2 PM, Ehrenhof (Palace). Minden 3 PM, Cathedral. Munich 12 PM, Stachus. Münster 1 PM, Servatiiplatz. Neuss 12 PM, Marktplatz. Nuremberg 3 PM, Lorenzkirche. Osnabrück 2 PM, Große Straße (corner of Neumarkt).

Oldenburg 3 PM, Schlossplatz. Potsdam 3 PM, Lustgarten. Ravensburg 3 PM, Marienplatz. Regensburg 2 PM, Schwammerl in the park by the main station. Rostock 3 PM, Universitätsplatz. Saarbrücken 3 PM, Schlossplatz. Schwerin 3 PM, station forecourt. Stuttgart 3 PM, Friedrichsbau Varieté. Trier 2 PM, Porta Nigra. Ulm 3 PM, Münsterplatz. Weinheim 1 PM, main station. Vienna 1 PM, Stock-im-Eisen-Platz. Würzburg 3 PM, Kiliansbrunnen. Zurich 1 PM, Helvetiaplatz.

Gurren Lagann: Boobs, Monsters, Giant Robots

There are two different kinds of being sick. There's the fluffy, funny kind, where you stroll to the doctor first thing in the morning, cough once briefly in their face, and spend the next one — two weeks if you're lucky — lazing around at home armed with food delivery apps, finally having time to tidy up the apartment. Or throw a get-well party.

And then there's the shadow world, the dimension of infinite pain, in which you're stuck sweaty and feverish with hallucinations in bed, probably never seeing sunlight again. The only friend in this murky universe of mucus and coughing and sneezing: your laptop. Providing distraction when you can't sleep. And when headaches ruin Twitter and Facebook for you.

In my flu-fever delirium I needed something to really distract me. An anime. One that would make me cry and laugh and think, without boring me with realistic nonsense. A guy called Veed published this list on the internet. The 50 best anime. In his opinion. Yes, "One Piece." Yes, "Neon Genesis Evangelion." Yes, "Wolf's Rain." I know them all, I love them all.

In first place sits "Gurren Lagann." And he wrote that the first episodes are terrible, but the rest is the best thing he has ever seen anywhere. Which is funny. Because when I tried the series, I cancelled it after episode 4. Because it was boring. And the same thing always happened. Desert, monster, robot. Ta-da. But what did I have to lose?

So I gave the show one more chance and watched all 27 episodes straight through. Only forcibly interrupted by sleeping, eating, and masturbating. And I cried at the end. Like a little child. Into my snot-soaked tissues. Because it was so magnificent. And I simply didn't want it to be over. "Gurren Lagann."

The story is quickly told. Very quickly indeed. A little nobody named Simon lives together with his best mate Kamina in a village underground and earns his keep by digging tunnels. One day a huge monster falls through the stone ceiling together with the busty Yoko, a robot appears, Simon has superpowers. Fight, even more breasts.

From now on the goal is to seek out a massive villain at the end of the world, who has been oppressing the humanity of the future for centuries. Simon and Kamina join a band of rebels, smash everything to pieces with their mechas, fight against mutant toads, bathhouses, and humane sharks. That all still sounds relatively normal. As Japanese animated films tend to go.

But things really take off once Kamina kicks the bucket. Which happens pretty early on. And is quite sad. And suddenly turns "Gurren Lagann" into an epic. From this point, so much story and love and madness is stuffed into the remaining episodes that other series couldn't manage it in 16 seasons. Massive space battles. And the question of meaning. And betrayal. And even more breasts.

So there I lay like a disabled banana in bed and found everything that was happening before my eyes absolutely magnificent. Gainax has probably created the very essence of the Japanese animation genre here. Anyone who lost faith in the giant saucer eyes after children's fare like "Yu-Gi-Oh!" and "Beyblade" has to watch "Gurren Lagann." There's simply no way around it.

Yumemiru: The App That Controls Your Dreams

There we lie, grinning obediently with our hands above the covers in our cozy beds, looking forward to the dreams to come. Oh boy, what fantasy worlds will we dive into tonight? Conquering space together with robot pirates? Discovering the cure for super-AIDS? Getting ridden simultaneously by Megan Fox and Taylor Momsen? Yeah!

Of course, like every night, you'll only dream more or less idiotic things. Finally returning your deposit bottles. Or being unable to recite the poem from 7th grade by heart while chubby Dieter laughs at you with chocolate in his mouth. Or the caterpillar in the garden trying to eat you again. No wonder you wake up frustrated the next morning and annoy fellow humans with your foul mood.

But it doesn't have to be this way! A new app called Yumemiru ("See Your Dream") for the iPhone now controls your imaginings and lets you experience exactly the scenario of your choice that you selected before going to bed. To do this, the software checks your sleep phases and then plays a certain soundtrack that reminds your brain of the dream you wished for beforehand.

Flying? Being rich? Finally breaking out of the friend zone? No problem! Say the creators, at least. You can try it out here and then tell us whether it worked. If you happen to speak Japanese, that is. You have nothing to lose anyway — the thing is free. So grab Megan Fox and Taylor Momsen and off to the robot pirates! To cure super-AIDS...

Mixtape: Home Serenades

Outside the ice age has broken out again and we have no choice but to retreat indoors and let the pretty but somehow quite treacherous sunshine lead us by the nose. So get under the covers, fry up some eggs and bacon with fresh toast, and treat yourself to a pleasant and leisurely bit of home music. Time passes especially quickly when M.I.A., The Weeknd, and Dillon serenade us one after another. We close our eyes and feel annoyed that our good-for-nothing species doesn't hibernate. Oh well...

Problem Friends: I Wish I Were Dead

Actually I should be spending the majority of my time scraping together a bit of cash. For harder times. Or eating, sleeping, wandering around — the things you just do. As a normal person. But in reality the bulk of my existence right now goes toward just one thing: telling my friends not to kill themselves.

I'm almost 30 years old now. That's quite a lot, when you stop to think about it. But never before have I had so many people around me who are afflicted with so many different kinds of depression. And who are perfectly happy to rub it in my face all night long. Burnout syndrome. Heartbreak. Existential anxiety. Fear of the future. Voices in their heads. Regret. Hyperkinetic disorder.

There's always something with all of them. And somewhere in the course of a somewhat more serious conversation over Skype or phone or face to face, sooner or later comes that sentence for which I could bash every single one of them against the wall over and over again: "I wish I were dead." And you just stand there and think: Oh come on, just shut up about it. But you don't say that. At least not right away.

At first you make encouraging jokes. Or give good advice, packaged in a cool quip. The other person should sense: what they just told you isn't something you don't care about. But the situation also isn't so dire that the two of you should hole up in a Ben & Jerry's shop for the coming week crying together. And trying new ice cream flavors in the process.

If that doesn't help and the complaining still goes on, you take them aside, start a serious conversation, and go through the points in their life that aren't running quite so smoothly right now. Your girlfriend left you? Yeah, that's rough. But we all know it. And no matter how deep and singular that pain seems, hell passes. She was a tramp anyway.

You have no money? Then let's look at what you can do right now, here, in this city. Who do we know? Who can help us? How do you land a not-too-terrible job quickly? Step by step. Your life is just hopeless in so many aspects and you haven't had sex in three years either? First thing that helps is a bottle of wine. Then the hard stuff.

The bottom line from conversations like these is always the same: none of our lives is perfect. At some point, somehow, things get so awful for all of us that we think about what it would be like to put an end to it all. But it should remain just a fleeting thought, quickly wiped away to make room for a solution. Together we'll manage. Somehow.

You smile at each other, throw your arms around each other, start chatting about stupid stuff again. This low point has been overcome for now. Or so it seems. And then it's four in the morning and a small Facebook message tears you out of the just-one-more-Sopranos-episode-I-promise-mum phase. "I wish I were dead" glows at you there in black letters on a white background. And you close the laptop and think to yourself: Then go ahead. And leave me alone with this nonsense.

If your life isn't going the way you'd like, if something is weighing on you, making you dependent, or ruining what feels like your future, then that's your problem. Put quite pragmatically. But we, your friends, are here to give you a hand. To listen, to look at the situation objectively, to lead you out of the chaos. We'll do the thinking for you.

We do that for free. Or if not, at least for a crate of Beck's. Or a date with your sister. The hot one, not the other one. But then please stop wallowing in your disgusting self-pity and making things unnecessarily harder for us by pulling out every stop to convince us that it's all hopeless anyway. All of it.

Instead of finally getting your arse in gear and helping us to get your messed-up life back on track. It usually isn't even all that difficult. And then I can finally spend more time again scraping together cash. For harder times. Or eating, sleeping, wandering around — the things you just do. As a normal person.

Tips For The Weekend: Ten Little Missions

Friday is everyone's favorite day. You're as excited as can be about the approaching weekend, when you can finally do everything that dreary everyday life otherwise forbids. Try out your homemade rocket backpack. Start a drinking binge through Poland with your shady neighbor. He's a doctor after all. Or try to pee all the way around the TV tower. Instead you sit around stupidly at home, stuff yourself with chips, and watch ProSieben. Ah, isn't life wonderful? Here are your missions. And go!

One. Leave your girlfriend and buy yourself an iPad. And this thing here. It's almost as good as sex, after all. And in the end cheaper than a relationship. Two. Write us an emotional hate letter. Like Lisa did. Best if you insult, curse, and hate yourself into a rage and attach a nude photo of your little sister. Send it by email to us. Three. Send tweets making fun of the USA to your friends. But then you won't be allowed in anymore. Four. Check whether you only have one red eye in photos. Because then you might have cancer. Five. Rescue "Community." You don't know what that is, but fight for it anyway.

Six. Watch the resurrected Steve Jobs. He's almost as good as new. Seven. Stick fireworks up your drunk friends' backsides. Then let them sue you. Eight. Find yourself a new hobby. Sticking funny stickers on strangers. Or collecting colorful hair ties. Or getting GIFs tattooed on your upper arm. Nine. Use the snow while it's still there. Build a snowman, start a snowball fight, go to an ice bar. Try not to fall asleep in the white stuff. Ten. Give your daughter some SpongeBob tampons for her birthday. Someone's got to give her the things, after all.

Jamie Lee Curtis Taete: Fattyfattyfattyfat

Science knows it. Television tells you. Your mother sends it to you in terse emails. We're getting fatter. All of us. Because we don't go to the gym but order from food delivery apps. Because we don't walk that one stop but wait 10 minutes for the next subway. Sitting down. Because we drink cola and lemonade and liquid cream instead of dunking our heads in the bathtub. That's why Jamie Lee Curtis Taete has created a kind of realistic future scenario and shows you what awaits you in the next few years. In terms of body image. And sex appeal. And boobs for everyone. Better start getting used to a new and possibly even better beauty ideal.

Erika Steinbach and Her Tweet: How Left Is Right, Actually?

Twitter is funny. Because no PR advisor or manager sits between people and their audience, some can just type away and put things out into the world that they considered particularly witty, clever, or provocative at that exact moment. As Erika Steinbach, chair of the Federation of Expellees, did — drawing the resentment of an entire nation upon herself.

"The NAZIS were a left-wing party. Forgotten? NationalSOCIALIST German WORKERS' Party," she happily tapped out via tweet. Naturally not everyone found that sparkling. The left in particular didn't. "It may rightfully be questioned whether she belongs in the ranks of democrats," said, for example, their chair Klaus Ernst. Wow, a shove into the right-wing corner. Not bad.

Of course we too were wondering: has dear Erika simply lost the plot, or might there perhaps be a kernel of truth in it? Are the Nazis in the end actually a left-wing party and we simply don't know about it? Socialists, workers, never quite keen on the current government? Sounds reasonable so far. We investigated. And stumbled upon quite a few secrets, à la "Galileo Mystery."

On the internet there are of course a lot of theories about this. Phoenix5 has just come off the night shift and writes: "National Socialism was clearly left-wing!" Because the programs of The Left party and the NPD overlap in many points. So he says. But who believes a pseudonym on the internet? "It is simply pointless to ask whether right or left — either way, Nazis or neo-Nazis are TRASH who belong in prison; unfortunately, no democratically governed country has re-education camps, for that sort of filth it would truly be appropriate," writes a guy named Wikinger. Okay. Thanks. That didn't really get us much further.

What does Adolf Hitler himself say about communism and his followers? He should know best of all. "There is more that unites us than divides us from Bolshevism. Above all, the genuine, revolutionary spirit, which also lives in Russia wherever Jewish Marxists do not hold sway. I have always taken this circumstance into account and given instructions that former communists should be immediately admitted to the party." Sounds quite like a friendship proposal, doesn't it?

But we find the truth only with Jürgen Langowski, who with his site Holocaust-Referenz wants to silence Holocaust deniers with arguments. "If one examines the early statements of National Socialists, one finds quotations that do indeed sound as if socialists had spoken. Here and there, such as in the Goebbels diaries on 17 March 1931, there even appear remarks like one that certain behavior by a political opponent was a 'outright betrayal of socialism.'"

But continuing: "Outstanding representatives of the socialist wing of the NSDAP were the brothers Otto and Gregor Strasser. However, the conflict with Hitler, who by no means wanted to establish a socialist system, was programmed from the very beginning. In 1930, Hitler made it clear through the disempowerment of the Strasserites that he had absolutely no intention of implementing socialist policy after taking power. Hitler was neither anti-capitalist nor socialist in his outlook, and since Hitler had imposed the fascist Führer principle in the party, this political position applied to the NSDAP as a whole. Hitler had already enshrined the rejection of socialism two years earlier. Against this background, it cannot be said that the Nazis were socialists."

So Erika, with your provocative tweet you simply and plainly lied to us. The NSDAP was about as left-wing as a terrible comparison with your thumbs. Your worldview is still what it was yesterday. And we still find Nazis terrible. Without exception. And because you've all been paying such diligent attention to our history lesson, as a reward you're allowed to get an ice cream. Or even two. And after that you won't believe a single word wicked Frau Steinbach says to you. No matter what she tells you.

Zombies, Run! Get Slim With the Undead

If you're not one of those hip nerds who are always hopping around in music channel commercials and dancing their way to fame and sex thanks to cool clothes and tech gadgets, then you belong to the other variety. Called geeks. The ones who can argue all night with like-minded people about Star Wars and do sick things with their cat. And you're into zombies. They all are.

On top of that you're probably not the slimmest. How could you be, sitting in front of the computer, the Xbox, or your comics all day. That's okay, as long as you don't hate yourself. Okay, so probably not okay after all. A new game is supposed to help you finally get back in shape. And thanks to a f***ing zombie apocalypse! Great...

"Zombies, Run!" is an app for your mobile phone. Do you remember those little yellow, disgusting Pokémon devices that forced small, unsuspecting children to trudge around stupidly in the area to save their Thunderbolt Pikachu? This is exactly the same idea, only with zombies instead of anime creatures. What we hear from the developer sounds genuinely fun. And promises great bodies.

The story is quickly told. Very quickly. You survived some kind of deadly virus outbreak and now get to share the planet with a horde of undead. By getting your legs moving (in real life), you gain access to food, weapons, and secret missions that you can then use and deploy on the game's website. So "28 Days Later" in app form. Awesome.

You receive your missions, have to hurry, plan, always stay on your guard. And you get to use your own soundtrack. So if from now on you see chubby, blood-smeared guys sneaking through Berlin alone at night with a Fisher-Price chainsaw, you'll know what to do: dress up as zombies and follow them! Old René can sweat it out a bit...

The software "Zombies, Run!" will be released for both iPhone and iPod Touch as well as Android. You can pre-order it here. We're secretly rather just hoping that people will eventually get bored of the game by itself and simply start their own apocalypse. Including street battles, secret hideouts, and free zombie ladies for everyone. Yeah.

AXE 2012: Happy End Of The World

This year the world is ending. There, we said it. That probably shouldn't surprise anyone anymore, but even though December 21st feels like an eternity away, we should slowly start with the preparations. Because what brings even more than posting funny 2012 quips on 9GAG or watching a certain film over and over again? Exactly: Surviving!

Our friends at AXE have gone all out for the looming danger and deliver with their new fragrance not only the perfect aroma for the approaching end, but even help you finally get your act together so you might possibly even live to see next year. With plenty of pretty girls on your arm, naturally — that goes without saying.

On their golden website they give you not only the opportunity to write down your last wishes, but are also giving away plenty of wooden greatness on their Facebook page that you can place in your apartment. Or on your own ark. If you have one. To participate, join the AXE Effect fan page on Facebook and use the application to describe creatively in the free-text field what you'd like to do one last time before the earth shows you who's boss.

And after you've done that and secured your chances of winning one of those sexy mixing desks or the foosball table, you can still snag this sweet cocktail shaker made of dead tree right here from us, which is perfectly suited to sweeten the end of the world for you. Simply leave a comment with a valid email address before Monday, February 13th and the thing could be yours.

This is a sponsored article by AXE. Advertise here too!

Miracle Drug Ketamine? The Drug Against Depression

It always goes the same way. You start with a bit of weed, then you meet strange friends who bring even stranger little bags or tabs along. You try speed, LSD, and sometimes also mushrooms. And anyone who still wants to beam themselves somewhere different and knows a pharmacist or a nurse or a lunatic from the park will eventually end up looking into ketamine.

What you're snorting in dubious clubs as Special K is actually an anaesthetic. What's special about it and why you can take it without becoming completely defenceless: unlike most anaesthetics, it not only produces freedom from pain and that certain feeling of soulful lightness, but also preserves your protective reflexes. And that's good.

But ketamine apparently has even more to offer besides lifting you to other spheres. Doctors in Houston have now discovered that the stuff is also optimally suited against depression. And within just a few hours of taking it. "This lightness and a feeling of confidence came so suddenly," says Heather Merrill, a mother of three who has been suffering from severe depression for years.

Of course you can now say: Yeah sure, after I've taken some other stuff I always feel that way too. That's ultimately why you don't buy a few kilos of gummy bears for the same money and lock yourself in the cupboard with them. But there's more to it than that. Because ketamine changes the connections between brain cells — entire molecules are optimized.

"The whole demeanor of Heather changed rapidly," says Dr. Asim Shah from the Ben Taub clinic where the ketamine study is being conducted. "She is now a more joyful person who truly seems to be happy with her life. Before the therapy she was downcast, withdrawn, almost tearful." That already doesn't sound too bad.

Carlos Zarate from the National Institutes of Health also confirms the positive effect of ketamine: "Patients we treat with ketamine suddenly feel as though they were never depressed in their lives. They can finally work again, participate in society. And they don't just feel high — they feel as though a blockage has been lifted." Wow.

Before we now storm the next hospital because we're all somehow little depressive life-weary souls who finally want to grin carefree again, you need to keep one thing in mind: you have no idea about dosage, duration, or the substance itself. Which means it probably won't do any good if you take ketamine now thinking it will suddenly make everything better.

But should further studies confirm the positive effect of this particular anaesthetic on our minds, then we can probably look forward to a lot of happy moments in our future. Instead of always hanging around crying at home wondering what went wrong in our miserable lives. Thank you, science. We love you.

What Is ACTA? The Internet Is Under Threat Again

Don't you find it terrible that you can't even lean back in peace for an hour or two without some clueless idiots wanting to make your life miserable? We had only just successfully thwarted the American dream of some surely totally lovely lobbyists with our sit-down fight against SOPA and PIPA, and already the next threat is circling overhead. Just sitting back and enjoying a cola isn't an option. Or even just taking a nap.

If you're at all interested in the internet and don't only use it to play "Modern Warfare 3" against your friends or share photos of your outfits, then you'll surely have heard of ACTA. For example here. Or here. Or here. The whole thing is called "Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement" and on closer inspection it can really put the fear into you.

What does ACTA do, what can ACTA do, can you eat ACTA? Maybe, yes... But actually it's an anti-piracy agreement of the European Union intended to ensure that you don't share and download illegal files like films, music, or videos. Or otherwise get up to mischief that people in suits have a problem with. And if you do it anyway, the police come and take you away. Or they cut off your internet connection. Forever. Then you can see what you do all day without YouTube and Facebook.

What makes ACTA so terrible are many different factors. For instance, the fact that the contents of the draft law were negotiated for years behind closed doors. By government representatives, but also by lobbyists from the major media corporations. For whom only their own profit matters and who see every internet user — meaning us — as a minor criminal anyway.

On top of that, your internet providers will now be held liable if you don't respect copyright laws online. That would force them to monitor your lines and report every violation. Your provider would then report you (because they have no desire to pay fines for your offences) and the rights holders would also sue you on top of that. For an awful lot of money.

But that's not all. Websites like Twitter, Tumblr, 9GAG, or YouTube would no longer be possible, because even quotations, ideas that build on each other, and background music in private videos would be punishable. Not to mention other people's films, music, and photos. Freedom of opinion would be restricted, blogs, magazines, entire portals would disappear. In plain terms: if you want to continue having fun on the internet, express your opinion freely, or simply don't agree that Telekom should know which naughty sites you're browsing late at night, then you have to do something about it. Otherwise things are looking bleak.

How can you help ACTA disappear back to where it came from? First: Sign this petition on Avaaz. It will be presented to representatives of the European Union in a few days, who still have to vote on whether ACTA becomes reality. Second: Call Brussels, write emails, publish articles about it, tweets, Facebook posts, tell your friends and your family. Third: On Saturday, February 11th, take part in demonstrations in many European cities. We know, on Saturday you'll be hungover and still a bit high, but this time it's truly important. So get your arses moving.

We still have the chance to stop this nonsense together. Because ACTA stands against pretty much everything we love about the internet: freedom. Fun. Exchange. Information. And the occasional porn. Once ACTA has been passed, it will be too late. So take a quick look at this urgent video — and then get a little bit rebellious. Hop, hop!

American Apparel: We're Giving Away Vouchers Galore

We love American Apparel. Really. So much. Their clothes, their image, their campaigns. With all those bright colors and pretty models and fashionable dogs. That's wonderful. And do you know what's even more wonderful? American Apparel loves us back! And do you know what's even more wonderful than that? The guys and girls from sunny Los Angeles love you just as much as well. Even more, in fact. No question about it.

And to make life a little more pleasant for you, so shortly after what was often such a rocky start to the year, the sexy fashion label from the US of A has pelted us with a stack of vouchers, which we hereby pass on to you with feigned delight. After all, you've earned it. Surely. For whatever reason. And there's a lot you can do with these things. Promised.

Order your fed-up girlfriend or yourself some really nice underwear. Or a pair of new, perfectly fitting jeans. Or a watch. What do we know — your creativity and shopping enthusiasm know no limits here. After all, we're not just giving you a few measly euros; we're practically force-feeding you digital happiness. Wow!

We are giving away vouchers worth a total of 1,500 euros to all AMY&PINK readers for the American Apparel online shop! That's right. Take a deep breath, people. To participate, you need to complete at least one of the following steps. Either Facebook or Twitter. But your chances improve if you do both. The competition ends on Monday, February 6th.

Facebook
1. Click "Like" on AMY&PINK on Facebook
2. Click "Like" on American Apparel on Facebook
3. Click "Like" on this article
4. Comment on this article with a valid email address

Twitter
1. Follow @amyandpink on Twitter
2. Follow @americanapparel on Twitter
3. Retweet this article with the hashtag #AmericanAmy
4. Comment on this article with a valid email address

PS: Please don't write your email addresses directly in the comments. It's enough to enter them in the field provided for this purpose.

Tips For The Weekend: Ten Little Missions

Oh, here we are again. The weekend is here, your freedom is waiting for you within reach. No more school, no work, no commercial television-controlled welfare program keeping you from making your dreams a reality. Just one more episode of "Suspected Cases," and then I'll invent the cure for AIDS, I swear! Anyone for whom that sets the bar too high is welcome to try their hand at these ten little missions. After all, you have no fun in life otherwise. Our sincere condolences.

One. Eat nothing but Chicken McNuggets for years, collapse as a result, and then make it into a national newspaper. Two. Write Twitter an email saying you think censorship is totally stupid and they should be deeply ashamed of themselves. Then tweet about the email. Three. Finally buy yourself a Nintendo 3DS. Otherwise Mario and Luigi will get seriously angry and show you their other Italian side. Fanculo! Four. Only buy your clothes at Urban Outfitters in Berlin. But don't be surprised when tomorrow you look just like all the other totally individual people. Five. Try the alternative to tampons. Even if you actually have a penis.

Six. Leave the church and found your own little cult. With mass orgies and the sacrifice of virgins. We'll even bring beer, promised! Seven. Visit Hannah's Facebook profile and tell her how much you love her. And that she's the most wonderful girl in the world. She needs that sometimes. Eight. Dig out your old Bravos from 10 years ago and reminisce about how hot Rachel Stevens used to be. Go ahead and have a little moment to yourself. Nine. Sell your own opinion for fifty quid on eBay and become soulless consumers again — just as RTL originally intended. Ten. Lick your sister.

Muschi Kreuzberg: Life Is Not an Underground Station

If you're not currently suffering from a rare disease of the senses, you will have noticed: it's cold outside. Really, properly, awfully cold. But while we can retreat into the next Starbucks, into the office, or into a cozy apartment when our little fingers start to freeze, there are plenty of people for whom these options remain off limits.

So the celebrated Berlin label Muschi Kreuzberg has teamed up with the homeless magazine Strassenfeger and is presenting a genuinely great campaign called "One Warm Winter". Essentially the idea is that you donate your old winter jackets — the ones you no longer wear because they're no longer in fashion or simply don't fit you anymore — to the people who can truly make use of them. And that really is wonderful and absolutely worth getting behind.

On Saturday, January 28th, the accompanying party will be held at the Alte Münze, where TV personality Palina Rojinski, music enthusiast Sacha Robotti, and the enchanting Juli Holz, among others, will be DJing. In return, and because you love them all so much, you simply bring your old winter jackets along and give them to the people who would otherwise only find shelter in one of the many underground stations.

So come along, wear as much as you can carry, and combine a proper good time with a worthy cause. I myself will be hauling along my oversized winter jacket from H&M, in which I regularly risk disappearing entirely, and am glad to be able to do someone some good with it. And those of you who don't live in Berlin or simply don't have time to join the dancing can also just donate a few euros here. That always helps too. At least until the wretched winter is finally over.

Special Engagements: Woodkid Live in Paris

Dell and Intel have joined forces again, together with the music platform Noisey from Vice, to continue the concert series with the sexy name Special Engagements. This enables real music fans and savvy computer enthusiasts not only to follow the concerts of their favorite bands live via stream, but to even interact with them before and after the show.

Tonight the French singer Woodkid, alias Yoann Lemoine, is performing live in front of the Eiffel Tower in Paris and you can use poll widgets, Twitter, and Facebook to decide what the show should look like. Which songs should be played? What kind of design and color scheme should be used? What equipment will be brought along? And the most passionate fan will even have the 28-year-old dedicate his track "Iron" to them. How sweet is that.

Just head to the official Facebook page of Special Engagements to get information about the event, participate in the decisions, and win even more tickets. Each Special Engagements concert is also hosted by a notable and dynamic host who serves as the link between the artists and their fans.

You can watch the spectacle live from 8:30 PM Central European Time on the Noisey website or right here on AMY&PINK. So grab a bag of currywurst crisps and a big cup of sugary Pepsi and sit back and relax. The next concert will take place in New York, by the way. Who, when, and why — you'll find out soon enough. But we're already very excited.

This is a sponsored article by Dell, Intel, Noisey, and Vice. Advertise here too!

Mixtape: Kill The Morning

Sometimes we have no other choice but to hurl ourselves headlong into the darkest abysses. Because the walls are closing in on us at home. The problems crushing us. The worries eating us alive. The voices driving us mad. Switch the head off, put stuff in, turn the music on. Whether surrounded by hundreds of unfamiliar, expressionless faces or alone in a wine-red-drenched room. Surrendering to this night of bombardment of the self. And killing the morning with it. With Zola Jesus. SBTRKT. And Justice.

Skins 6: No More Fun and Games

What begins with an extravagant vacation trip to Morocco and plenty of weed, freedom, and lost virginity ends with a shocking moment that drags us back into the messed-up teenage world of Franky, Mini & Co. The encounter with a wealthy drug dealer and the discarded inhibition toward unfamiliar danger proves fatal for the headmistress's daughter Grace, Matty flees into the distance out of fear, and back home the grey everyday routine awaits us along with the memory of a mistake that could have been prevented.

Tonight the sixth season of "Skins" starts on the British channel E4. And we've already taken a first look at the first episode. No series before has ever toyed with my feelings quite like this — violated them. Has drawn me in so completely, made me think about small details and big scenes even years later. Has made me love and suffer so much.

And even though I have to say that the first and second generations grew much more on me than the current kids, because I could identify with them even more, Liv, Rich, and the others still manage to convince far more than the usual garbage on television could. Because it still seems so different and real and deep.

Freckle-faced Mini has transformed from a corrosive high-school diva into a likeable daredevil. Franky can't cope with her relationship with her boyfriend anymore, becomes withdrawn, lonely, vulnerable to other guys. Only Liv still seems to be her own self — always a bit of a wild one, the good soul, thoughtful, misunderstood. Life is slowly showing its other side.

The second season of a generation is traditionally somewhat more serious and darker, which I particularly welcome in the current line-up. Because the previous episodes were, admittedly, a little too childish and playful. Even though I know the series will probably never hit me as hard as it did with Effy, Cassie, and Tony, I'm curious about what Bryan Elsley and Jamie Brittain will serve up in the coming months. And we shouldn't be disappointed.

Tips For The Weekend: Ten Little Missions

Hidden in the following two paragraphs are between eight and thirteen missions that you need to complete by Sunday. Big and small, hard and easy. Completing these tasks is, as always, mandatory. Anyone who doesn't manage it is, as a punishment, never allowed to return to AMY&PINK and must spend the rest of their days reading the make-up blog of Ms. Kirschvogel and Tine.

One. Sign up to Matecloud, the first social network exclusively for Berliners. But don't be surprised if you're completely alone there for the next few months. Until it gets shut down again. Two. Learn a bit about how the average porn star tends to meet their end. Then stick to the amateur videos with your chubby girlfriend. Three. Watch Lana Del Rey's disastrous performance on "Saturday Night Live" one more time. Preferably without sound. Please. Without sound! Four. Participate in the "war on the net" and just hack random websites. Start with your uncle's fishing blog and don't stop until you've reached NASA. Five. Set something on fire.

Six. Start a shitstorm against our web girls. Or go buy yourself some nice shoes. Seven. For Fashion Week, just grab a bunch of golden plastic wristbands and scribble on them a bit with a marker pen. You'll get in everywhere. Eight. Treat yourself to what is probably the best Gotye cover of all time. And then that's enough of that nonsense. Eight. Go to your best friend's place, kick in the front door, throw her on the bed, and give her a full-on kiss. That will either be the best night of your life — or you'll get an up-close look at what a prison cell looks like from the inside. Nine. Get yourself one of those absurd weather machines and blast chemicals into the air to do away with the clouds. You might even get a badge for it. Ten. Start reading more again.

News For Original Girls: Uffie, Rye Rye and Palina

Yesterday was a day to celebrate. Why? Because the new portal News For Original Girls by adidas finally went officially online. A red-hot site all about fashion, music, and pop culture, by tough girls for everyone else. So for you too. And you. And you. Our writers Hannah and Sara are part of it, as are the lovely Nike and party animal Laura, among others. All under the editorial leadership of Palina Rojinski, who wasn't about to miss the chance at last night's launch party at Flamingo Berlin to jump up on stage herself and blow the crowd away with her tunes, supporting Uffie and Rye Rye in making that evening unforgettable. And she succeeded.

New Author: Christine — She Slept Her Way Through All of Berlin

Do you know our author Meltem? Of course you do. And she's great. She sometimes chatters a little too much. And just like that, out of nowhere. Has her very own plans; nobody quite knows what's going on inside that little head of hers. And one day she brought a visitor and told us: "Hey, this is Christine. She's writing for us starting today." And we nodded and were pleased.

Christine Neder was born in 1985 in the Lower Franconian town of Schweinfurt and enjoyed a carefree childhood with piano lessons and horse-riding classes. After her Abitur she fell in love with the glitter and glamour of the fashion world and moved to the non-existent Bielefeld to study fashion design. She quickly realized she was completely talentless when it came to handling needles and thread and preferred reaching for the pen again — her great love, which her German teacher had soured for her for a few years with a regular grade of F in essays.

After working for all manner of well-known fashion magazines (Vogue, Elle, Sleek, Zeit Magazin), she got bored and launched her own project "90 Nights, 90 Beds", in which she slept her way through Berlin. This account of her experiences gave her enough insight into the heights and depths of humanity that she finally feels mature enough to write for AMY&PINK in addition to her blog.

Besides fashion, never staying in one place for more than ten days, and other people's beds, she is also interested in small drooling dogs with enormous amounts of hair. When Christine's life gets too stressful, she ties on an apron like a good housewife, plants herself in front of the stove in her Berlin apartment, and bakes her notorious mug cake. Amen.

Save The Internet: Why SOPA Is Not Exactly a Hit Right Now

Anyone who is online regularly hears the same old story around every corner. For 20 years. The bosses of the music industry are crying that they can no longer wallpaper their villas in gold, those in the film world would love to send a monthly bill the size of a small car to anyone who owns a torrent program, and anyone who is against freedom of speech and/or is afraid that their power might be diminished by bits and bytes is allergic to browsers, iPads, and flat-screen TVs anyway.

We've gotten used to the fact that people who find the internet and its possibilities somehow stupid are constantly interested in spoiling our fun, instead of maybe watering their plants for once. Or buying their wife a nice necklace. But one of them must be particularly unhappy with his life. An American. His name: Lamar S. Smith, a member of the US Congress.

He is responsible for a term that has been making web administrators around the world shudder for weeks: "Stop Online Piracy Act," or "SOPA" for short. This charming document is a bill that packs quite a punch. And should it become reality, none of us would have anything to laugh about anymore. Really. Because it would restrict the fundamental principles of the internet so severely that you might as well cancel your broadband contract.

How bad the thing really is is described in detail here by journalist Chris Heald on Mashable. "SOPA" would give US authorities the ability to target even sites that are not hosted on US servers. Search engines would then no longer be allowed to display them, US companies would be prohibited from placing ads on them, and Americans would be unable to access them.

Everything under the hammer would be sites that violate US law even in the smallest way. For instance torrent, MP3, and film sites that offer illegal downloads. But also any website that violates other copyrights and uses images that were not legally acquired. Or portals that allow users to publish their own content. Like Flickr, YouTube, or Tumblr.

And it gets even worse. Should even a single video or photo be uploaded that violates any kind of law, the entire web presence would be placed on a blacklist and censored. This would mean you could forget the internet with all its diversity, because under these conditions nobody would dare do anything at all anymore — out of fear of receiving the full fury of a few angry Americans. You could then write off blogs just as well as video platforms or photo communities.

The bad part: the terrible idea is being backed by a few wealthy patrons with plenty of cash. The Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) and the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) are financially supporting "SOPA," as is the Entertainment Software Association (ESA). Because those responsible think this will finally put an end to online piracy. And everything else while they're at it. But who cares that much, if people then spend a bit more money on films and music. Maybe.

The good part: major companies like Google, Sony, and Facebook have publicly declared that they are strictly opposed to "SOPA" and "PIPA" and would do everything imaginable to stop this nonsense. Even better: even if the bill were approved by the Senate, Barack Obama would have to greenlight it first. And he really doesn't see the point. What a wise man.

Anyone who is smart and has been paying attention will recognize that "SOPA" and "PIPA" can be the undoing not only of American site operators. But of anyone who puts anything online whatsoever. Be it videos, photos, texts, or music. And perhaps other countries will then be inspired by the nonsense too. They're not exactly comfortable with the internet and all the crazies in it either.

To publicly demonstrate that Lamar S. Smith and his idea are pretty stupid, major sites like Wikipedia, Reddit, and Mozilla have announced they will be shutting down their services today. Google will inform users on its homepage about "SOPA," and other portals such as Boing Boing, Nerdcore, and Spreeblick will also participate in the blackout to show their support.

What can you do to stop the madness and stand up for a free internet? Write about it in your blogs and on social networks. Get your American friends to write letters to their political representatives, urging them to vote against "SOPA" and "PIPA" on January 24th. Or simply invent your own internet that is much better than the current one, and against which even the USA can do nothing. Or anyone else who has a problem with peace, freedom, and creative thinking. Thank you.

Internet Y U No Connect? I Demand Free Internet For Everyone!

Last week I was out and about. Very far away and an awful lot of stress. Here one minute, there the next. On various planes, in various hotels, cities, shopping centers, bars, parks, backyards. What did they all have in common, besides the fact that many other people also got the idea to be there at the exact same time, sweating, smoking, and stinking? Exactly: forget about the internet. Completely. And that regularly drove me to the edge of madness.

Of course I could now say that I needed the constant internet connection for work. You know. Things like earning money. And emailing photographers. And harassing bloggers. And so on. But actually I just wanted to check in on Facebook, read idiotic tweets from even more idiotic people, and watch animal porn. Just not miss anything. And be able to react quickly. But that wasn't possible. Because someone up there has decided that a constantly available internet is still not a basic right.

15 euros for one day of slow Wi-Fi in the hotel. Really? And then only for credit card holders. Half an hour of free internet on the plane courtesy of a Ford promotional campaign. Really? And everyone on board is over the moon about it. An apparently free Wi-Fi from Nike that only exists to automatically redirect you to a jogging iPhone app. And nowhere else. Really?!

So I was constantly running around with my iPhone in my hand, holding it high up in the air on an eternal search. "Free Public Wifi" is often a guarantee of connectivity. But not always. "McDonald's" is great. But limited. "Starbucks" is something like God. Or even better. Open it up, press a button, have internet. Forever. Well, at least until the battery or the White Chocolate Mocha gives out. "Marcel, look: Megan Fox dressed in nothing but jelly on a flying unicorn that looks like a prettier Keira Knightley!" "Yeah yeah shut up now, I still have to check five apparently open Wi-Fi networks..."

I don't necessarily want it to be free. Really. Although I do believe the future belongs to free internet, right now, today, I would still be willing to pay for it. But not too much. It's 2012. I don't want to waste my time chasing the internet. Whether it's on a plane, in a hotel, anywhere that isn't quite Germany. Let's say 15 euros for a full week of internet wherever I happen to be. So everywhere. And we're in business, yes? Okay: 20 euros. That's what it would be worth to me. Truly.

Sounds too utopian? Maybe. But I'd no longer have to be afraid of sliding that tempting roaming button to the right and plunging my children and grandchildren into centuries of debt. I wouldn't have to watch the hundredth rerun of "The Big Bang Theory" on the plane and pretend I still find "Penny, Penny, Penny" funny — I could use my time productively instead. And would someone please spare a thought for the humanely penetrated monkeys...!

What I'm trying to say: Hello, whoever currently holds power over this measly little world and would prefer to remain anonymous (I completely understand that, honestly): please just finally put the internet everywhere. For everyone. Forever. For me. At some point for free as well. Very soon for free, please. That would be really very kind of you. Warmly, your Marcel. You asshole.

Mixtape: Only Your Cat Loves You

So here we sit, alone at home. Wondering what happened. Sure, we got invitations to some parties. With actually pretty good friends. And yet we'd rather sit here. Alone. Wondering what happened. Why we keep getting older and are seriously thinking about getting a cat. One that loves us. But we're not quite there yet. Better put on these tracks instead. A mix of gentle and rough. To bring you back to real life.

2012 International CES: Welcome to Nerd Heaven

20 hours of flying haven't exactly done wonders for my otherwise so immaculate appearance, but after stopovers in London and Los Angeles we've arrived happily in Las Vegas. For the next few days we'll be staying in a villa that MTV has used as a reality show location. Together with 20 other nerds who at some point dared to start their own blog.

Who else is here? Oliver from Zeitgeschmack, for one. Simon from Blogwerk. Anna from Hi-Tech. That kind of crowd. Somewhere MC Winkel and Caschy are also running around, but they're surely getting loaded in some table dance bar right now. And why are we here at all? Microsoft invited us to CES 2012. Wow, that was explained pretty quickly.

What's there to see? No idea. But for your sake alone I did a little research. Microsoft will be presenting its next operating system Windows 8 along with phones and new Xbox 360 games, Nintendo will be putting the Wii U in our hands, and Sony the PlayStation Vita. But of course that's not all. Countless companies will be presenting TVs, gadgets, software — useful things and useless things.

But naturally there's also plenty for people who have no idea about technology. Justin Bieber will be there! Yeah... And 50 Cent! Yeah... And Eliza Dushku! Ooh... And Jillian Michaels! Who...? And Miss Jamie Michelle! Yes... yeeess! And Snooki! Umm... Tiësto will be giving a live concert on Twitter, Teresa Scanlan, better known as Miss America 2011, will be attempting to formulate verbally logical sentences, and if I add any more links here some browser manufacturer will surely sue us soon. So I'll leave it at that.

Until Thursday I'll be here in the City of Sin (I love that expression) and then I'll be bussing through the desert to Los Angeles to fly back to Berlin from there. If I survive. I'm as excited as can be about the next few days, and anyone who still has no idea what the International Consumer Electronics Show is can watch the video below from Destructoid. Things get interesting from minute 12 onwards. Goodbye, see you soon, I love you all! And all that stuff.

Katawa Shoujo: Your Girlfriend Is Disabled

Do you still remember all those little girls in your class who at some point, thanks to "Sailor Moon" and "Wedding Peach," collectively started scribbling manga into their exercise books? Who then bought screen toner and Copic markers and subsequently shoved wildly drawn girls with superpowers in a tangled love story in your face, which you were supposed to please, please like? Even though your little brother produced better pictures with finger paints? Raita was exactly one of those girls. Only better.

She began in the last decade channeling her passion for drawing into "Katawa Shoujo." A comic about the so-called Yamaku High School somewhere in Japan, where disabled teenagers are taught. Like Hanako, who was severely disfigured in a fire. Or Emi, whose leg had to be amputated after an accident. Or Lilly, who was born blind.

The first sketches of the manga caused a great stir in 2007 on the online platform 4chan, whereupon illustrators, developers, and programmers from all over the world came together to turn "Katawa Shoujo" into a real dating game, a genre that is particularly popular in the land of the rising sun. The goal: as student Hisao, to win over disabled girls.

The game was released this week as a free download for all common platforms and is available in various languages including English, German, and Russian. And even those who aren't won over by the concept itself must still acknowledge the passion that went into the project and what you can accomplish these days thanks to the internet.

But it's not only the content of "Katawa Shoujo" that is likely to cause a stir — the title alone may rub some people the wrong way. Because literally translated, the name means "cripple girls," a term that isn't exactly bursting with politeness. Anyone who still fancies taking a quick look can download the dating simulation for Windows, Mac, and Linux here.

Tips For The Weekend: Ten Little Missions

Oh, the first week of the new year wasn't so unpleasant after all, was it? We stumbled into it a little drunk, but all things considered, the days from Monday to Friday were pretty chilled. Let's just boldly assume that. But now it's the weekend. And that means: action, action, action. If you're not too lazy for that. "Ten Little Missions." And go!

One. Only open the door for carol singers dressed in nothing but an Aldi bag on your head and then belt out the greatest hits of Michael Jackson at them. Don't forget to wiggle certain body parts. They won't be coming back anytime soon. Two. Listen to the track "Genesis" by Grimes and just be glad that she exists. Three. Move to Sweden and convert to the Church of File Sharing. Life unlocked, we'd say. Four. Join the digital fight against Barbie-fication. Only upload completely unedited photos to Facebook and in doing so set the wheels in motion for a brand new trend: the courage to embrace natural ugliness. Five. Breathe more quietly.

Six. Buy this Futurama Monopoly. And tell your mum she still needs to do the laundry. And bring cookies down to the basement. And fetch you some acne cream from the supermarket. Seven. Make more frequent use of your middle finger again. Show it to everyone who gives you grief. And to everyone else too. Eight. Pay a visit to Una's Tits. If you happen to be passing through Antarctica. Nine. Finally come to terms with the fact that you're not indie, you're simply a slut in a granny sweater. Ten. Surrender to the beautiful beauty of truly beautiful black and white photographs. Beautiful.

News For Original Girls: To Fashion Heaven With Adidas and Palina

The countdown is on: just under two weeks to go until News For Original Girls, the brand new portal for female fashion victims, opens its doors and bombards you with great interviews, explosive reportages, intimate backstage reports, and up-to-date news. Right on time for the next Berlin Fashion Week, Adidas Originals is launching its latest digital achievement and has snapped up a not entirely unknown face as its fully competent editor-in-chief: grinning cat and party queen Palina Rojinski!

The 26-year-old VIVA presenter won't be filling the site alone, however, but together with enchanting writers, photographers, fashion bloggers, and artists from the German-speaking world, she'll be causing a stir on the web. All handpicked, of course. The team wants to "create an editorial home for everyone who is tired of having to choose between style and intellect." Sounds great!

But now it's your turn. You have all sorts of ways to get involved in the new News For Original Girls. Can you write well, are you creative, stylish, fashion-savvy? Then apply as an editor and become part of the team. Has your secret dream always been to run around at the Bread & Butter with a pseudo-secret mission? Including travel and accommodation? Then become a fashion correspondent! Or maybe you just feel like surrendering to the beats of Uffie and Rye Rye at the launch party at Berlin's Flamingo? Then win tickets! Just click here and get involved as much as you want.

On January 19th, the new fashion, music, and lifestyle magazine News For Original Girls will finally launch, and we can barely wait to see what Palina and her team of tough and ravishing girls have come up with to give the somewhat sleepy German-language internet a thorough shake-up. You're allowed to be excited — we certainly are.

Mike Matas: One Week In Japan

Over 4,000 truly wonderful photos were taken by Mike Matas and his enchanting girlfriend as they traveled through Japan at the end of November last year. They took the train from Kyoto through Nara and Hakone all the way to Tokyo, passing teahouses, markets, and shrines along the way. And instead of carefully packing the pictures away into a sea of photo albums, they simply put them into one gigantic video and set it to a tinkling melody. That I am terribly jealous of the two of them, because they — like so many others — set foot in the land of the rising sun before me and surely experienced one magical moment after another there, probably goes without saying.

Blog Talk: The Eternal Battle Against the Trolls

Do you still remember our above-average, well-researched article about trolls on the internet? Very good. Because we were simply curious about what other totally important people on the internet think about those who want to ruin everything for you with annoying comments and corrosive persistence. And why they think what makes it so much fun for them.

So we spontaneously launched a new column in which we will now always ask five bloggers, Twitter users, and other internet sympathizers about a very specific topic. And then publish their answers in a post. We'll call it the utterly boring name "Blog Talk" and the first edition starts now. So Jana, Wenke, Wolf, Heiko, and Hannah: what do you think of trolls?


Jana Windoffer, editor of Bekleidet

Just the other day someone wrote under a photo of me that I have elephant legs. Quite apart from the fact that I'm well aware that I have many things, but certainly not elephant legs, and I wouldn't want to know what kind of disturbed perception that person must have, I can only scratch my head when I think about what that comment was supposed to achieve.

Once again someone is telling me in a certain way that I — or a part of me — is ugly. That happens every now and then. Okay, I'm no beauty queen and everyone certainly has the right to find me ugly, but why do people also write it to me? Why would you tell an ugly person that they are ugly?

Not because it is a well-meaning hint meant to encourage something to be done better. It's meant to hurt. This kind of comment has the sole intention of making me feel bad. Some person out there, who doesn't even have the nerve to reveal their identity, tries to hurt me by throwing virtual insults at my head that they would probably never say to my face.

I can easily work myself up into a frenzy about it, have done so often enough, and still can't help it from time to time, even though I actually know how pointless the whole thing is. Because every time a troll dies, a new one is born somewhere. That's the tiresome story of trying to please everyone.

In November I wrote about the killing of dogs in Ukraine and some person out there insulted me as stupid and naive because I write about animals when there is so much other, more important suffering in the world. And I was just so angry and a thousand things raced through my head. I never claimed otherwise, I am well aware that so many terrible things are happening in this world. Why are people who think about animals naive? Why does this person, among all these millions of people out there who do ABSOLUTELY NOTHING, single me out? Because I chose what they consider the less important suffering? Who decides that humans are more important than animals?

A few days later, while surfing a blog that was participating in a charity campaign for AIDS patients, I found an anonymous comment asking why no one ever donates for animal welfare, as they couldn't bear to see AIDS patients anymore. Since that campaign I have found a very satisfying solution for myself. If you can't behave, I'll simply delete your neatly written troll comment and all your effort was for nothing. I know how much that annoys you. Sometimes I feel like a kindergarten teacher.


Wenke Walter, editor of WENKEWHO

Ah yes. Trolls, those rats of the internet. Honestly: they don't bother me at all, they rather amuse me. In their unfortunately all too often pitiful and contentless comments, you mostly just feel pity and a little bit of hatred. But the good and justified kind. It's like this: the more constructively criticism is formulated, the more seriously you can take it. You don't exactly like being made to look ridiculous by anonymous amateur dissers from the outside. It's already hard enough to accept well-intentioned suggestions for improvement from friends.

Trolls have to exist just as much as groupies do. They are a sign of one's own successful polarization. Let's be honest: sometimes it feels damn good to be hated, dissed, and trolled in an outrageously ugly way. Screw it and at least give the failed life-loser their brief "f*** you" moment. Whether you react to the trolling or not doesn't matter anyway. The hater only compensates for their missing "whatever" in the moment of their empty reflection on what you've created.

For all I care, all these pathetic little trolls can team up into a 22-man football team with pink devils on their jerseys and run with hate-filled faces into the imaginary digital steel walls. Just bash your skulls to pulp, you broken ones. Your hate slogans are mostly just colorless husks and loud, misplaced cries for help. Better find yourselves a troll-doc with a degree and come back healthy.


Wolf Speer, editor-in-chief at Game One

Trolls have always existed. The internet has simply given these hyperactive troublemakers a voice at last. And just like on the playground, the one who screams the loudest gets the most attention. Common sense advises you to simply ignore the disrupters, the nuisances, the find-everything-terrible crowd — if only to protect your own nerves.

But even seasoned online veterans (or those who consider themselves as such) have a certain threshold for suffering. And once that's been reached, all good intentions go out the window: you swear up and down that you'll never publish another single line, because the internet is apparently full of *censored* idiots who can kindly shove their *censored* dirty opinions up their *censored*. Phew. That kind of thing feels good in the short term.

But it doesn't solve the problem. Because if you were to cave in to the ranters, the whiners, and the quarrelsome, it would amount to a capitulation. And it would be going too far to let people ruin the fun in your work — people whose vocabulary includes "lololol," "that don't work" and "crap." Besides: for every critic there are ten well-meaning readers who find what's written at worst just okay, and at best absolutely phenomenal — but who don't bother to share their opinion with the whole world in a multi-page comment.

I believe the majority of regular readers and users of a site come back because they feel well entertained or informed — because they genuinely enjoy visiting "their" site. These silent readers are far more important and valuable than the raging mob that sees every line, every video, every post as an intolerable provocation and, with the inexhaustible energy of an overtired toddler, regularly tries to stir up a rebellion.

Of course the question remains: WHY do so many people on the internet spend their time and energy getting worked up? Let psychologists deal with that. Until it's finally resolved, I advise every site operator to maintain a certain composure — it simply isn't worth getting upset over trolls. And I'll direct one more appeal to everyone else, the real, the "good" users — people, you can solve this problem in one fell swoop and immediately make the digital world a little better: Don't feed the trolls.


Heiko Hebig, digital strategy developer at SPIEGEL Gruppe

Trolls deserve absolutely no public attention, because that is exactly what they're looking for. "Don't feed the trolls" is therefore also the only effective response to such behavior. It is therefore also not interesting what kind of people they are or what agenda they have. Troll comments should be deleted or simply not engaged with in the discussion they're trying to provoke. The internet is big enough for everyone. These people will find a playground somewhere.

I suspect many trolls feel safe because they comment anonymously and with fake email addresses. However, they are in fact only anonymous in a few cases. Every troll leaves relatively easily attributable traces and patterns. Recognizing these patterns is relatively easy for anyone who has administered a blog, a forum, or a YouTube page over a longer period of time.

Conspicuous patterns are relatively easy to block. And that's exactly how I've handled it in all my previous projects. When troll comments become inflammatory, abusive, or personally attacking: take them offline. Nothing more, and nothing less.


Hannah Maria Paffen, editor at AMY&PINK

I used to find stories and myths about trolls quite interesting and exciting, but today they are unfortunately an expression of agitators and haters on the internet. Most of the time they don't bother me; I sometimes even find it rather amusing how some people vent on our blog, and that's probably the only advantage of the whole thing. But when they become truly insulting, threaten you, or advocate certain extreme worldviews, that's no longer normal trolling — that's terrorism. And that sort of thing has no place on a blog.

Sometimes it's probably due to the phase of the moon, the lack of oxygen in their tiny brains, their upbringing, because they simply had a terrible day and wanted to go on a trolling spree, or because a text, a photo series, or something got on their nerves. At regular intervals, essentially every one of our authors gets mobbed at some point. But in my opinion it's still within manageable limits.

Who exactly is behind our favorite trolls, I don't know. I don't even believe they're necessarily just readers — they're also other bloggers who simply think we suck. Maybe some people feel pressured by us and our presence. On the internet you just type something out much faster than you'd scream it at people in the pedestrian zone or go to the trouble of writing a letter to the editor. They apparently can't find the balance between performance and reality.

There's probably no recipe against the creatures of the internet. I'm in favor of banning rude, perverted, and threatening trolls from the comments. Perhaps with the less aggressive ones it helps to engage with them more often. This is the internet — it consists mostly of letters. Not of feelings, gestures, and facial expressions. Not everyone can express themselves well in writing, which probably amplifies the whole thing too.

Actually, all of this has always existed. The internet is simply the perfect breeding ground for trolls. In elementary school you still risked detention if you teased a child with glasses, and you had to continue dealing with the topic, the parents, and the teachers the next day, instead of simply closing your laptop.

Christian Wulff: The General Hatred

When I finally take the club out of my closet, it simultaneously means that something terrible is going on out there. This time it's not merciless alien soldiers. Or hungry cheerleader zombies. Or the renewed outbreak of a right-wing extremist epidemic. No, it's an outraged mob with wild screaming, torches, and pitchforks roaming the digital streets of the nation, foaming at the mouth with their lust for a lynching. That's you.

It almost frightens me how quickly many people blindly and without questioning let themselves be infected by a hate hype that is stoked by the media. Week after week, over and over again. The current victim of the moment: Federal President Christian Wulff. Because of phone calls to major publishers in which he pleads — almost threatens — them to refrain from reporting on his home loan.

SPIEGEL calls it the "voicemail affair," BILD demands his resignation, DIE WELT labels the 52-year-old a "Stromberg" in Schloss Bellevue. Süddeutsche Zeitung is finally calling for a statement from the Chancellor, taz predicts a lonely time ahead for the Federal President. And even Bushido has no kind words for him. Which in itself says something.

While the nation's press representatives pour more oil on the fire day after day and must carefully avoid words like "banishment" or "execution," the people are raging as if Wulff had just set fire to a few orphans at the zoo. Daniel Bax insults him as impotent, a Twitter user demands that the USA please bury him in a hole in the ground, the press review considers his office as good as lost anyway.

Don't get me wrong. I couldn't care less whether the man stays in office or not. He's already financially set for life. What worries me far more is this synchronized agreement of a broad mass of people to pick up the proverbial rifle without thinking or reflection. BILD, which we normally all can't stand anyway, will surely be right about what it says. And RTL. And the important-looking guy with the glasses on the morning show.

This supposed refinement of our society often seems to be just a facade, quickly forgotten the moment it's time to chase another pig through the village. And the participants in the hunt seem to want to outdo each other in blind hatred and loud shouting. And that really scares me. Specifically for the threatening future.

When you ask children at school whether they can imagine something like Nazi Germany happening again today, they shake their heads. "No," is the answer. Because they genuinely believe it. But when I then look at how quickly people can still be brought into line with targeted propaganda today, I'm not so sure about that anymore.

So form your own opinion, by all means. But with everything the media drills into you day after day, think a little too, and don't obediently chase every hate trend just because the current mood suggests it. Because at the wrong time, in the wrong place, that could once again have terrible consequences. For all of us.

IBM Makes It Possible: More Money for Eating Healthy

I haven't yet found definitive proof of this, but I'm quite certain that the international association of mad scientists reached a consensus long ago: I am the laziest person in the entire wide world. Truly. Without a doubt. I get less exercise than a Russian tapestry, eat myself into a delirium in front of the computer, and could sit on my couch for weeks on end, practically growing into it — if only I weren't afraid of subsequently meeting my maker.

And because I'm not entirely alone in my aversion to a healthier lifestyle, the fitness gurus have to come up with something new. Take IBM, for example. The American computer giant has now filed a patent for an innovative system that rewards you for eating more healthily. With money. No joke. "Providing consumers with incentives for healthy eating habits" is what these clever nerds call it.

Attentive employers and concerned mothers can use the software of the future to give you a longer and fitter life. It automatically recognizes whether you're stuffing an apple or a chocolate muffin smothered in processed cheese into yourself, awards you bonus points accordingly (or not), which you can cash in at the end of the month. The thing is even supposed to notice if you're cheating during your food intake and simply dumping those strange things like oranges, salads, or cucumbers straight into the trash.

These questions naturally arise even for the laziest person in the world, as I am now almost demonstrably: When is this coming? How do they do that? And most importantly: Would I really give up fast food, schnitzel with fries, and (my absolute favorite dish) baked camembert with frankfurters and pretzels, if I had more in my bank account instead? Hm...

Mixtape: Fuck You, Two Thousand Twelve

Who would have thought that such outstanding changes would spread among us on the very second day of the new year? After we got along quite well with Grooveshark over the past 12 months, the juice shop now just annoys us. Disgusting ringtone ads everywhere, songs and widgets that don't work, pages that constantly crash.

So starting today, we're sending a little hometown love to the guys and girls at SoundCloud and are now abusing their sexy systems to spread our taste in music among the people. The start is made by a small but fine selection of great remixes. Current and established, bouncing and floating. Just click through and do something productive while listening. Thanks.

Weekend Tips: Ten Little Missions

Welcome to the final edition of our little mission frenzy this year. This section has now reached 62 editions, and we would like to politely thank all you favorite idiots who spend the passing weekends successfully completing as many tasks as possible. To lead a better life filled with lots of fun and interpersonal unions. We love you. And to celebrate the occasion, here once again is a true firework display of “Ten Little Missions.” Hooray.

One. Spend New Year’s Eve listening to the 100 best tracks of the year that Sara painstakingly put together for you. Be prepared for your computer to explode. Two. Have some proper cybersex with complete strangers again. However, don’t be surprised if you end up gifting digital orgasms to close family members or hated math teachers. Three. Please only throw your babies into trash containers that do not explicitly state that you are not allowed to throw babies into them. Four. Let Christine teach you how to properly dance to electronic music. Don’t fall in love with her in the process. Five. Wash your dildos again.

Six. Let little Riley explain to you how sexist consumer society really is. Starting tomorrow, only buy products in green packaging. Seven. From now on, please only change your clothes directly in front of your window. So the neighbors get something out of it too. Eight. Pat your best friend’s newborn and then say in a totally cute voice: “Oh, the little one will grow up so fast. Before you know it she’ll be big and sucking dicks!” Nine. Listen to Adele once more, performed by this talented South Korean girl. But that’s it with the crybaby stuff after that. Ten. Say goodbye to the year with a very special version of Nyan Cat.

Back on Facebook: Who Wants to Be My Friend?

Of course you remember. Facebook deactivated, blocked, deleted my account about a month ago — well, in any case, I was no longer to be found on the largest social network in the world. Which is pretty shitty. When you work on the internet. And live there. And so on. Because one month in the real world is famously half an eternity in the digital sphere.

After twiddling my thumbs waiting for an answer from Mark Zuckerberg or one of his little henchmen, occasionally staring stupidly out the window or keeping myself entertained with not-so-current video games, at some point it became too much for me. No Facebook? Not without me! Because no matter how much hate and skepticism you may have toward the data octopus: you at least have to be part of it to properly raise hell. Otherwise no one listens to you.

So I signed up again. Which is probably totally illegal and will be punished with a compulsory stay in Mark’s basement. Where there’s only bread, water, and Wi-Fi with one bar. But it’s really a great feeling to finally reward pointless activities and photos of people who occasionally visit you in your damp dreams with little thumbs again.

The only thing I’m missing now is lots of real and nice friends. The kind who annoy me with FarmVille invitations, post Instagram pictures of their feet, and badmouth their employers in strictly secret agency groups. So go immediately to my new, sexy Facebook profile, add me, and then write to tell me how awesome I am. That’s not too much to ask. Thanks.

Delilah: Love You So

Dan Cermak: I’ve Always Wanted To Do This

jj: VI

Masanobu Sato: The King of Wankers

Pony Pony Run Run: Just A Song

Weekend Tips: Ten Little Missions

Just one more sleep and it’s already Christmas Eve again. Hooray. Of course you would have completely missed that if we hadn’t just pointed it out. So quickly grab a few heartfelt gifts at the local gas station (half-eaten chocolates, two tit magazines, and a pack of canned beer always work), drive to your beloved family, and if you still have time, complete our “Ten Little Missions” on the side. That should somehow work. And go!

One. Snort cocaine out of your brother’s ass. And then die from it. Two. Mix schnapps from Mexico with orange juice from Albi and Red Bull from Kaiser’s. Tastes terrible, but serves its purpose. Three. Staple reindeer antlers onto your pets’ heads. They love it. Really. Four. Listen for three whole hours on Christmas Eve to the social critiques of your drunk Uncle Karl-Heinz. Then hug him and cry a little with him. Five. Buy yourself a girlfriend.

Six. Make yourself a T-shirt that says “I didn’t visit a single Christmas market this year — and I’m proud of it!” Provided it’s true. Seven. Don’t stuff yourself so much. Because whoever eats less stays young longer. Eight. Fly to Sweden, find a job, marry a model, have five children, buy a small estate in the countryside, grow old together, come back home after 47 years and pretend nothing ever happened. Nine. Only have sex with organically grown vegetables from now on. Anything else is totally unhealthy. For the environment and stuff. Ten. Postpone New Year’s Eve by one year. No stress.

Tam Vibberstoft: Today’s Lesson From A Stranger

Merry Xmas: Yuletide Fancy Dress

Vintage Arcade: Arcades in the 80s

Unlike in Germany, in other countries on this planet a diverse and colorful arcade culture developed over the last 30 years, to which young and old alike contributed. Whether in Asia, America, or our European neighbors: meeting up with a bag full of coins in the glittering, noisy venues to celebrate games like “Pac-Man,” “Donkey Kong,” or “Tekken” quickly became a favorite social pastime.

Due to legal interventions against the emerging gambling addiction among young people, arcade machines quickly disappeared from pubs in the Federal Republic, arcades degenerated into seedy establishments for adults, and the rise of home consoles finished off the culture here. Unfortunately.

What we mostly know from movies, series, or vacations could also have been part of our own personal past. And that makes me sad. Especially when I look at these funny photos from the 80s. Kids eagerly tugging at Atari and Nintendo machines, always searching for the next high score. Ah, it could have been so nice…

Lykke Li: The Lost Sessions Vol. 1

I’m also someone who gets fed up with overhyped bands and musicians faster than a 12-year-old good-for-nothing with ADHD gets fed up with quantum physics. In Latin. In summer school. James Blake doesn’t kick me anymore, Lana Del Rey can gladly go out with me if she keeps her mouth shut, and when it comes to Casper or Tyler, the Creator, I’m just not the type.

In fact, Lykke Li is one of the few artists I occasionally cheat on to get a fresh kick elsewhere, but to whom I eventually return remorsefully after my tragic journey soaked in punishing memories, throwing myself into her arms with tears in my eyes and a smile on my face while she gently strokes my head.

Anyone who hasn’t already bought or downloaded the talented Swede’s albums and listened to them to death can rejoice. With “The Lost Sessions Vol. 1,” a free playlist is now available featuring the magnificent tracks “Youth Knows No Pain,” “Jerome,” and “I Follow Rivers.” As acoustic versions and available for free download.

When Boys Bake: Cookies That Look Like Little Piles of Poop

So, are you already properly in that disgustingly gentle Christmas mood? With love in your heart, mulled wine in your stomach, and family stress in your head? Yes? So are we. And what do you do when you just want to squeeze Santa Claus and all his side characters invented by clever marketing experts really tight? Exactly: bake cookies! Well, at least we tried.

We grabbed Paulchen’s food-obsessed girlfriend Lena, who knows exactly how to do something like that. From years of practice — or because she once saw it on some cooking show, no idea. So together with self-proclaimed music editor Janos and a randomly passing Thai hooker named Thang, we kneaded the dough, got drunk on an increasingly potent mixture of cinnamon, oranges, and schnapps, and listened to Chris Rea driving home for Christmas. Like every year.

Happily, we slid the cute army of things that looked like little crescents into the preheated oven. Lena left for sports. All we penis-bearers had to do was not let the things burn. “No problem!” we thought, threw the first part of “Home Alone” into the Blu-ray player, and kept filling each other up with alcohol. At the latest when Kevin arrived in New York, we should have noticed that a dense fog was making its way through the hallway.

Long story short: after a good two hours of baking time, the cookies were nothing but charred little piles of poop. That didn’t even taste good anymore. And what do real men do in such an extreme situation? Clearly: order the entire Christmas menu for four from our trusted delivery service. And contrary to all fears, it actually tasted pretty good. Merry Xmas!

Deichkind: Illegal Fans

Perfume: The Japanese Music Drug

You don’t have any cash to properly score a few mind-expanding substances from shady guys in front of the late-night kiosk? The last task force “confiscated” your hard-earned MDMA and LSD stash? Or you still haven’t made it past smoking weed, but you feel that forbidden curiosity deep inside you? Then why not try a Japanese music drug.

Perfume is an electro-pop band from Hiroshima, consisting of Ayano Ōmoto, Yuka Kashino, and Ayaka Nishiwaki. And you can still sense a certain residual radiation in them without a doubt—the girls create a kind of soundscape that should probably require a five-minute, legally mandated listener warning beforehand. If it were up to us and established mental institutions.

Their tracks carry illustrious names like “Computer Driving,” “Vitamin Drop,” and “Electro World,” blow your everyday problems out of your head for a few minutes to hours, and then leave you grinning stupidly to yourself. If you’re unlucky, forever. Because you’ve seen so many colors and smileys and whoooooaaaaaa. And afterward, you’re not the same person anymore.

So put the YouTube playlist down below—recommended only for the hearing-impaired—into full-screen mode, crank the volume up to rainbow, and dive into the hell of Japanese music producers who make skullcaps crispy-soft and drive your parents to put a starter package of park drugs under the Christmas tree rather than let you go through this radical sound trip one more time. Personally, I also like listening to “Perfume” while working. That explains quite a bit, of course. Akihabalove!

Christian Dubstep: Jesus Gets Down Too

Who even knows what Christmas is really about? Loads of presents from Santa Claus? Yeah, not bad. About everything except the Easter Bunny? Somehow true as well. The birth of the Son of God? Wow, bullseye! Exactly—Jesus was born around 2,000 years ago somewhere in the desert far away; if you were an altar boy or part of some other perverse cult, you know the rest.

And if you really mean well by your family on Christmas Eve—after the gift exchange and the big feast—you might happily play them “Silent Night” on the recorder or plink out “Jingle Bells” on the keyboard set up just for the occasion. But that’s kind of 1992. Cool kids bring atmosphere into the house. Christian atmosphere. Hooray.

So why not drag the drug-excess music from the village disco under the Christmas tree and really make Grandma Gerda’s world shake? “Christian Dubstep” is the key to a refined Christmas Eve. With tracks like “God Gave Me,” “O Praise Him,” and “Forgive Me,” you can truly demonstrate some love of your neighbor. Skrillex would be proud of you. And Jesus too.

For the unbelievably affordable €8.99 you can grab the whole record on Amazon or iTunes. Shrill tones and pounding bass included. Holy, that is. And we all know: once a music genre has been infiltrated by worshippers of God, it’s far from dead. Didn’t hurt rock either… more or less. Yeah, dubstep forever!

Zweitausendelf: The Articles of the Year

Black Mirror: Brainfucks From the Future

René pointed me a few weeks ago to Charlie Brooker’s new series “Black Mirror,” which is currently airing on British television. On the magnificent British television, one has to say. After all, over the past few years the Kingdom has blessed us with gems like “Skins,” “Misfits,” and “The Inbetweeners.” This miniseries raises the bar even further and smashes your tiny brains.

Each episode is a self-contained story with different main characters and events. The overarching theme, however, remains the same and is retold and reinterpreted with every story: the technology of today and tomorrow—and how it can virtually abuse us as human beings. Media criticism at the highest level, tension in every frame, and constantly the question in your own head: What would I do?

At one point, the kidnapper of a princess demands that the British Prime Minister have sex with a pig live on television, or she will not survive the day. In another episode, the young Bing awakens in a future world dominated by casting shows and loses his new love Abi to the digital porn industry. And in yet another, a small chip in the head destroys the life of a likable family man.

“Black Mirror” is a series that every one of us should have seen. Because you carry its stories around with you for weeks afterward, constantly retracing and revising your own decisions. In a world full of 4chan, Twitter, and Facebook. Charlie Brooker knows how to skillfully penetrate the minds of his viewers. And for that alone, he deserves considerable respect.

Cheer Up Clothing: Black, White And Pixel

GIF. ME. BERLIN.: The Moving Party

Mixtape: The Quiet Weeks

When it gets colder outside, darkness falls over us already in the afternoon, and the year slowly draws to a close, we begin to think about where all of this is actually leading. How far we’ve come. Whom we’ve lost and whom we’ve gained. Which opportunities we missed and which we seized. And whether we are truly happy. With our lives. The snow quietly settles over the rooftops and fields of our city; the silence must give way to the music in our ears. We dare to take a short walk. Scott Matthew, William Fitzsimmons, and Gregory And The Hawk accompany us for a little while.

2012 International CES: Las Vegas, Here I Come!

At the beginning of January, the 2012 International CES will take place in sinfully awesome Las Vegas. For all non-nerds: it’s something like our IFA—only more bombastic. And our friends from MTV and Microsoft were kind enough to invite me there for a week. So I can dive into the action on site and experience firsthand what awaits us in the coming years in terms of technology, digital revolutions, and life-improving products. Like kitchen appliances that wash the laundry and pick up the kids from school.

In various casinos, hotels, and halls there will be talks from, among others, Google, Facebook, and Sony, plus plenty of representatives from major American blogs, video game manufacturers, and film studios. Microsoft will equip me with a new Windows Phone 7.5 and a laptop and throw me fully geared up into the great wide world of nerdism, while I occasionally babble totally competent things into one of the wildly blinking MTV cameras. In German. And English. Because I can do that excellently well. Or something like that.

But that’s not all. Since I’ll already be in the US and A and not mistaken for an illegal immigrant, I’ll get on a bus right after this event and head to Los Angeles for a few days. Alone. Because you simply have to have been there at least once. Hollywood, Chinatown, Universal Studios… I will be the biggest tourist this city has ever seen! Promise.

So I’m looking forward to a week far, far away—and maybe I’ll just stay there. And become a hot dog vendor on Sunset Boulevard. Who knows. So if you have tips on what I absolutely have to see in Las Vegas and Los Angeles and what I should definitely avoid, send them my way. And where I can sleep cheaply and well in LA. And how I can skillfully prevent being robbed on the very first night. Thanks. USA, USA! (Oh, where is my passport, anyway…?)

Weekend Tips: Ten Little Missions

The year 2011 is gasping its last breaths, crawling the remaining meters on its gums, and will probably soon pass away. Reason enough for us to properly celebrate one of its final weekends. Rot away indoors with movies and cheese pizza or burn up on the dance floor outside—doesn’t matter. The main thing is that you take the current edition of the “Ten Little Missions” to heart.

One. Tattoo standard business hours on your forehead. Without exception, ignore all people who approach you outside of those hours—or want anything else from you. Two. Convince Clara to become one of our Netzmädchen. Alternatively, Palina, Katja, or anyone Janos has a crush on would work as well. Three. Order dead beetles dressed up as characters from “Jurassic Park.” Then have them delivered somewhere. Four. Watch the trailer for Sacha Baron Cohen’s new film “The Dictator.” Try not to choke on your laughter. Five. Ask your religion teacher whether the Holy Spirit is a fat programmer.

Six. Meet Barack Obama and tell him about your dreams, your disappointments, and the fact that through God, drugs, and good friends you found your way back to the path of enlightenment. Be prepared for bodyguards who will slam you against the wall without asking. Seven. Record another video for YouTube and sing us something nice. Eight. Watch the documentary series about jj and afterward feel the sudden urge to emigrate to Sweden. Nine. Go out twice a week with your ex-girlfriend’s unhappy mother. Fool around in the cinema, laugh in the restaurant, take romantic walks along the Spree… In war and in sweet revenge, everything is allowed. Works the other way around with fathers, too. Even better. Ten. Eat significantly more Rice Krispies.

Katie Miller: Earth Girls Are Easy

AXE Excite Advent Calendar: That’s Not How You Talk to an Angel!

The enchanting Sarah Brandner is still diligently unwrapping Christmas presents in the Axe Advent Calendar in the most creative ways, all suggested by witty participants. But you already know that, because the blonde angel sent us a very personal message right here. We lucky fools.

At the top of the wish list at the moment: body painting, Spider-Pig, and Nyan Cat. We think that’s a pretty solid selection. Respect. But we also know that not everyone on the internet is that charming. And nice. And creative. Some people enjoy playing pretty nasty tricks with participatory games like this and think they’re absolutely hilarious. Heh heh.

That’s why the clever minds at AXE created a blacklist of bad words to prevent the worst from happening. Because honestly: that’s not how you talk to an angel! Words like blockhead, duck butt, and skunk won’t be found in the sexy Advent calendar. Nor will amoeba charmer, brothel rat, or egg biter. Who even comes up with this stuff?

And so that you finally learn that it’s not crude insults but only the power of verbal love that leads to success, we’re giving away a complete year’s supply of AXE Excite, the fragrance that even seduces angels. What do you have to do? Simply leave us the cheesiest, nicest, sweetest comment of all time by Saturday, December 24. Go!

This is a sponsored article by AXE. Advertise here too!

Lana Del Rey: Born To Die

Sheila Pepe: The Surface Of A City

For thousands of years, one major trend in human history has become unmistakably clear: the world around us is becoming increasingly urban. This year, the global population surpassed seven billion, and all eyes are focused on one crucial question: what happens next? With us. And everyone else.

It’s not only economists and scientists who are thinking about the living spaces of the future—advocates of modern art have also dedicated themselves to creative solutions that aim to clarify how cities will gradually evolve. In the coming years. What they will look like. What they will be capable of. How we, as tiny particles, will experience the big picture.

New York artist Sheila Pepe from Brooklyn has developed her own distinctive way of constantly transforming and beautifying the face of her hometown metropolis. She knits. Not just at home, in galleries, or in exhibitions. But practically everywhere. Nothing is safe from her. Whether buses, buildings, or entire stretches of street—the 52-year-old has turned her hobby into an infectious passion.

“Cities shouldn’t just be black and white. Instead, a wide range of values and ideas must be interconnected. In line with the ideology of fuzzy logic.” It sounds unsettling, and it looks unsettling—but hey: better a world full of colorful knitting than hastily sprayed street art from a can. You can find more of Sheila’s work at smart urban stage.

This is a sponsored article by smart urban stage. Advertise here too!

Mandy-Lyn Antoniou: Teenage Meat

The Avantgarde/Diaries: Mystical Playground

Broken Dreams Club: The Return of Personality

"I realized that AMY&PINK is no longer me. It’s us. And I’ve been feeling that for months now, if not for a year. AMY&PINK simply has its image and there’s no shaking that anymore. It has become work. I just want to post some random shit or a quote or a photo or something stupid without immediately worrying that advertisers or trolls will think it’s crap or that it’s too little text. Everything we have on AMY&PINK is automatically a full article. This morning I looked at this. And I really missed it—the comments, the people, the personal stuff..."

What I wrote here to Hannah on Skype is the conclusion of a mental journey that slowly pushed me to the brink of sanity. Blogging was always my outlet to deal with problems, feelings, and decisions. Like songs for musicians. Or images for artists. Just letting everything out. And afterward you feel better.

But because of the way AMY&PINK has developed—into an online magazine with topics, an image, and a fixed team of authors—that doesn’t really work here anymore. It’s the perfect place for new music. And great photographers. And articles that open your eyes. By amazing people who can write and have opinions. But not for the personal shit in between.

So I decided to start a new, private blog. Completely independent of AMY&PINK, where I can mess around. And cover topics that simply don’t belong here. Posting who I did what with and where, without sticking to any of the rules we set up ourselves. Just for me. And for the three people who might actually care.

I’ve called it Broken Dreams Club. Why? You can read that here. Nothing will change at AMY&PINK for now. Except that hopefully it will grow bigger and more important every day. For us. And for our readers. And they’ll be happy that I won’t be whining about my problems here anymore. At least not as often. God, you have no idea how much I’m looking forward to just blogging stupidly again. I’ve really missed that.

Special Engagements: The Rapture Live in London

Dell and Intel are teaming up for the fourth time to continue the concert series with the sexy name Special Engagements together with the music platform Noisey from Vice. It enables real music fans and savvy digital natives not only to follow concerts by their favorite bands live via stream, but even to interact with the band before and after the performance.

Tonight the New York band The Rapture will perform live at the retro bowling alley Rowans in London, and via poll widgets, Twitter, and Facebook you can decide what the show should look like. Which songs should be played? What design and color scheme should be used? What equipment will be brought along? And afterward, the guys will even invite the most passionate fan to a round of bowling.

Simply visit the official Facebook page of Special Engagements to get information about the event, take part in the decisions, and win more tickets. Each Special Engagements concert is also hosted by a well-known and dynamic host who acts as the link between the artists and their fans.

You can experience the spectacle live from 10 p.m. Central European Time on the Noisey website. So grab a bag of popcorn and a big cup of sugary Coke and sit back and relax. The next concert will take place in Paris, by the way. Who, when, and why—you’ll find out soon enough. We’re definitely already very excited.

This is a sponsored article by Dell, Intel, Noisey, and Vice.

Gabriela Antunes: Girls With Games

Things & Ponys: Hannah Now Has a Tumblr

If you’re sick and groaning around at home in a feverish haze, you do strange things. Watching nine seasons of "Little House on the Prairie" in one go with a hot water bottle on your head, for example. Or mixing whipped cream and cough syrup in a cup and washing it down with warm beer. Or you use the time to do something productive. More or less, anyway.

Our little Hannah chose the latter and used her computer and the connected internet to immerse herself in the lifestyle of 70 million 14-year-old, American, depressed teenagers. And to set up her own Tumblr blog. With the super-creative name THINGS & PONYS. Typical girl. Things...

After Hannah didn’t really warm up to Twitter, she’s now happily posting stylish photos of snow-covered wolves, floating girls, and exposed breasts here—and if you ask her very, very nicely, she might even upload some secret personal pictures or short texts. Just letting your soul dangle virtually and creatively getting through the sick days. Great.

And if you’re currently in a Tumblr craze, you can also check out our other photo blogs. For example, Sara’s Y.S. Kanaan. With weed and sneakers and riots. Or WE ♥ MARCEL, my digital self-glorification. With lots of... me. Or the long-established AMY&PINK Tumblr. With more visual orgasms than your body can handle in a day. Welcome to image hell.

Creep: Animals

Kyary Pamyu Pamyu: Tsukema Tsukeru

Tennis: Deep In The Woods

South Park: The Game: Warriors, Kids, Colossus of Combat

Everyone has their own favorite episode of "South Park." For example, the one in which Cartman inherits a million dollars, buys his own amusement park, and Kyle comes down with hemorrhoids in the meantime. A classic. Or the one where Chinpokomon raise Stan & Co. to become Japanese battle robots in order to overthrow the American government. Still insane.

Mine is called "The Return of the Fellowship of the Ring to the Two Towers." Stan’s father had rented a copy of "The Lord of the Rings" as well as the hardest porn in the world from the video store. And of course he switched the cases. The sex film ended up with little Butters and the rest of the kids set off in cute medieval costumes to retrieve it.

That episode immediately came to mind when I heard the confirmations about the first real "South Park" RPG. And by real I mean real. It’s supposed to use the "Dungeon Siege III" engine, include five classes (Warrior, Rogue, Paladin, Wizard, and one that Cartman invented), and somehow be a bit like Nintendo’s "Paper Mario" games.

The combat and leveling system is modeled on the "Final Fantasy" series, and unlike the previous casual games of the cartoon series, creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone will be heavily involved in the story. You yourself will play a taciturn kid who has just moved to South Park, gets accepted into the group, and suddenly finds himself in the middle of a huge adventure.

The magnificent thing is being developed by Obsidian, who already proved with "Fallout: New Vegas" that they know their craft. Presumably shortly before Christmas next year, owners of PlayStation 3, Xbox 360, and PC will be able to blast, slash, and cast spells their way through the colorful cartoon world.

As much as I love the series itself, I hated the previous games even more. Played them briefly, dismissed them as irrelevant and pure licensed crap, and got rid of them. But I’m REALLY looking forward to a REAL "South Park" role-playing game. If it turns out to be as great as promised on NeoGAF. 2D action? Yeah! Christmas level? Hell, yeah! Making fun of the competition? Definitely, double yeah!

Grimes: Nightmusic

Scroobius Pip: Let Em Come

Mona Ødegård: Baking Girls

Weekend Tips: Ten Little Missions

Outside… Outside… Was there actually anything outside our own front door besides wet streets, gray clouds, and gloomy people? No idea… But once again we were brave, took a quick look at this “outside” for you, and can reassure you at this point: You’re not missing much out there right now. Instead, you should stick to the master plan. For this weekend. So you don’t go crazy indoors and don’t get lost outdoors. “Ten Little Missions.” Let’s go!

One. Gather your friends and all jump together into the Icon in Prenzlauer Berg one last time. Before it’s finally demolished. Two. Cuddle for a bit with the largest insect in the world. If no one else will… Three. Watch a round of RTL again. It’ll really sweep your brain clean. Don’t stop until you’re drooling and shouting “Fucking, beer and old crap.” Four. Travel to Japan. If only because of these awesome Pringles. Don’t forget to bring some back for us. Five. Report the Pope because he was driving around Germany without a seatbelt. You’ll go straight to hell for it, but hey: You’ll be in good company there. Hehe.

Six. Watch the new video by Lana Del Rey. You’re allowed to touch yourselves while doing so. We all did. Seven. Go murder a few annoying people and then shout in court: “I’m not a murderer, I’m a ghost creator!” Eight. Have Ada read you a few bedtime stories. Nightmares guaranteed. Nine. Grab a few bottles of top-notch organic wine and a little bag of pep, watch “Skins” all over again from the very beginning, and pretend it’s the past. (If you even touch the American season, we’ll personally come over and bite off your genitals…) Ten. Whatever you end up doing: Survive.

Lady Gaga: Marry The Night

Axe Advent Calendar: Sarah Brandner Loves Us

Ah, isn’t it nice to wake up with such a charming video in front of your nose? Exactly. Top model and Schweini’s girlfriend Sarah Brandner is currently on the road as a Christmas angel for this year’s AXE Advent Calendar and is not only asking her fans on the website for gift suggestions, but also me: “Hey Marcel, what would you put in my advent calendar?”

And while more or less creative minds have already suggested body paintings, short haircuts and, um, sexy school uniforms, I’ve been lying awake at night thinking about it. Really. What on earth would I put in Sarah’s advent calendar? A pair of warm wool socks? A cute little puppy? World peace? Until it suddenly dawned on me.

Dear Sarah, I wish that we could show up at your place with a large cheese pizza and nerd out on your couch playing a round of “Mario Kart.” Then we can see just how retro a Christmas angel can be with a controller in her hands. And if that doesn’t work out, then at least we wish you a gray old Game Boy. With “Tetris.” And “Super Mario Land.” And “Pokémon.”

Now I’m curious to see whether we can make that happen. And while we eagerly wait for our cheese-pizza-Mario-Kart invitation, you can head over to the AXE website and submit your suggestion about what Sarah Brandner will find in her advent calendar. Zombies? Milking machines? Wet T-shirt? Really? Come on, you can do better than that…

This is a sponsored article by AXE. Advertise here too!

Burnout: The Beginning of the End

Today at 3:36 p.m. I slammed my head onto the desk, folded my arms over my head and stayed like that. For the next half hour. I didn’t cry, but I was close. Burnout, quarter-life crisis, screw it—whatever pseudo doctors and amateur psychologists might call it: I simply couldn’t go on. Done, over, finished, finito.

After spending the last few days thinking about what I’m actually spending them on, I eventually started talking to myself. And yelling. And attacking the mountain of tasks in front of me with tirades of hate and kicks. But it just kept getting more and more and tighter and tighter. I was literally sinking into things I couldn’t even clearly describe.

Sure, burnout. You hear about it from colleagues. And friends. How they complain and then collapse. And you just think: Dude, just take a week off. That’ll fix it. You’ve just overworked yourself a bit. Whatever it is. Pull yourself together and stop whining. Wimp. But slowly I began to understand.

Everyone wanted something from me. Answers. Texts. PR statements. Designs. Videos. Photos. Decisions. Corrections. Preferably me as a person. And no matter how much I typed into this computer and called and Skyped, it just wouldn’t stop. On top of that there were technical problems and legal problems and human problems. And then just hatred.

I just wanted to scream: “Fuck you all!” but I couldn’t, because I was to blame for everything myself—I wanted all of this, somehow. And the others couldn’t help that I kept piling so much onto my own plate. So I kept going, and with every email, with every checked-off item, three new ones appeared. No, four, no five! Ahhhhhhhhhh…! I found myself in a swamp of tasks.

Take a deep breath, look for balance. That was the plan. That’s what you do. Parties. Yes. Girls. Exactly. Alcohol, drugs, friends, something to make all this weight more bearable. But none of it helped. No matter how many parties I wore myself out at and no matter how much fun I had with whoever, as soon as I sat back in front of my computer and saw the tons of messages and wishes and expectations in glowing, red-framed numbers, I wanted to smash my head straight into one of the screens.

I knew it couldn’t go on like this when I became increasingly irritable. And rocked my upper body back and forth like a psychopath. Constantly. Kept asking myself what I was doing all this shit for in the first place, and whether it would ever end. Or get better. Whether I had lost the joy in it forever or whether it was just a temporary brain invasion.

Today at 3:36 p.m. I slammed my head onto the desk, folded my arms over my head and stayed like that. For the next half hour. I wished for nothing more than for everything to just collapse. The laptop has eaten my soul. I just wanted to get away. To Sweden. To England. To a lonely island somewhere in the Pacific. Anywhere else.

I haven’t found a solution to the problem yet. And even specialist literature and conversations with friends can’t make the decisions for me about planning my next steps—so that I neither take pointless extreme measures nor simply give up and let myself be devoured by this huge, pulsating monster made of bits and bytes.

Probably the end of the year is the perfect time to take things a bit slower. Go on vacation. Slow down. Maybe do a little more sports. More is good… actually do sports at all. And figure out what isn’t right here. With me. Or with the world out there. Not slamming my head on the desk anymore. That’s a good start.

Lykke Li: Youth Knows No Pain

Season Series: One Episode After Another

There are series that only unfold their magic for the individual viewer when we watch them in one go. One episode after another, season after season. Instead of just once a week. Because then the characters grow much closer to our hearts, we can look forward to a sea of stories and relationship arcs, completely merge with the fictional parallel world being told. Only to end up crying in the end.

That’s why here are five current series, unfortunately somewhat unknown in Germany, that have been on the market long enough to already be available by season, but are not yet so old that you’d have to be ashamed to only be consuming them now. And to make one thing clear from the start: I love every single one of them. Deeply. By heart. Really. Bitches.

Community

The story about a few failed personalities at Greendale Community College is probably the only series in the world that gets better with every episode. Jeff Winger, the arrogant lawyer, Britta Perry, the blonde bitch, Abed Nadir, the… well, you’re not quite sure what he actually is. But you’ll fall more and more in love with the characters every time you hear the theme song.

Legendary are Ken Jeong as the crazy Spanish teacher, the almost traditional paintball war episodes and the tons of film and TV references that are used in such a funny way that I almost fell backwards off my chair several times. From laughter, that is. If NBC cancels Community, I will unfortunately have to get physical.

30 Rock

At first the story about the staff of the NBC comedy show “The Girlie Show” sounds a bit dry. It’s about to be canceled, and only drastic changes can save it from its impending end. So head writer Liz Lemon and her new boss Jack Donaghy hire the scandal-ridden movie star Tracy Jordan to give the program new momentum.

As with “Community,” it’s primarily the lovable characters, who seem to suffer from brain damage and schizophrenia, that shine here. 30 Rock achieves authenticity especially through Tina Fey’s personal business experience and the fact that company names are not altered as usual. Everything feels real. But totally insane.

Louie

Louis C.K. can easily be described as one of the most direct and funniest stand-up comedians of our time. The 44-year-old steps onto the stage, sings something into your ears about his fat belly, his little kids and something about fucking, fun and nonsense—and suddenly you break your elbow laughing. However you managed that.

Louie is the name of his current series on FX, and it combines parts of his performances in front of an audience with quite normal everyday stories that could happen to anyone. Or maybe not, because the guy isn’t normal. Not for the faint of heart. Or minors. Or feminists. Or Catholics. Or guys who are afraid of the truth. Or or or…

Modern Family

Okay, Modern Family doesn’t really need an introduction anymore. The series about three rather unpredictable American families is practically showered with awards. In “The Office” style, a fictional camera crew follows the Delgado-Pritchetts, the Dunphys and the Pritchett-Tuckers, whose head of the family is played by the graying Ed O’Neill.

The subtle situational comedy and the clumsiness with which Phil, Claire & Co. stumble through life have made “Modern Family” a sitcom star. You have to ease yourself into the bustling story a little to enjoy it, but that happens all by itself. A little more with every episode you watch.

Wilfred

Admittedly, Wilfred has only had one season so far (including the most annoying cliffhanger in human history), but the story about Elijah Wood and his perverted mutt is the perfect example of why you should watch series in one go and not episode by episode. Because this psycho-comedy adapted from Australia just flies by, is cult, must not be interrupted.

You quickly develop a certain love-hate relationship with Wilfred. Because he’s the biggest animal asshole you can imagine. He does save his buddy Ryan in some twisted way and stuffs him with drugs and alcohol, but sometimes you wish he’d just get run over by a car. At least until the last episode ends.

Cymbals Eat Guitars: Keep Me Waiting

Mark Hunter: The Cobra Shop

Peaking Lights: Hey Sparrow

Dan Martensen: America

Olek: The Surface Of A City

After a few weeks ago we already wrote about the Turkish photographer Eylül Aslan, who creates works that allow humans and nature to merge and use the structures of the modern city as their foundation, in our article "Sound To Help Urban Farm Grow", the search for urban faces continues on the official website of the smart urban stage.

The graphic designer Mario Lombardo, born in Argentina in 1972 and now living in Germany, is considered one of the most influential of his kind. He is responsible for the creative direction of magazines such as SPEX, Liebling and Dummy, has worked for clients including KaDeWe, Sony and Mercedes-Benz, and is globally respected for his intelligent impulses and timeless art.

Mario knows that the basic structures of cities were defined centuries, even millennia ago. With their streets and blocks and houses. But we live in an age of rapid change—so why shouldn’t these dictated schemes break apart as well? Especially since space in cities is becoming more limited with each passing year.

The Polish artist Olek addressed this issue and shows with her colorful knitted sculptures that with every movement, every breath, every step, we continue to evolve. Yes, to mutate. It is not necessarily about the dead infrastructure, but particularly about the bodies that move through it.

She lets taxis, people, even entire house facades disappear beneath a sea of color, drawing attention to the fact that art can move. Even within the long-established and hardly changeable schemes of modern metropolises. You can find out more about her work and additional ideas from artists about the future of cities on the website of smart urban stage.

This is a sponsored article by smart urban stage. Advertise here as well!

Cee Lo Green: Anyway

Haters Gonna Hate: Trolls, Bullying, Pests

If there is anything that has emerged over the past few years on this site, it is the rise of trolls. They are here. Always. And everywhere. It’s not exactly easy to decide whether we should feel flattered or upset that AMY&PINK has become a mecca for visitors who seem to be stuck in permanent annoyance mode.

And we are far from alone. Fashion girls who have to deal with dumped stalkers and envious H&M kids. Political bloggers who battle the headwind of other parties or even their own comrades. Everyday writers who constantly have to listen to how boring they are. Or how unattractive. You’re a loser, nobody listens to you anyway.

Trolls are the plague of modern communication and the international blogosphere. They are not concerned with improving the media landscape or offering supportive help to those responsible. Instead, they are on a daily crusade of humiliation. Of know-it-all behavior. Yes, of constant micro-destruction.

The bigger and more successful a blog becomes, the more often its authors have to deal with people you simply cannot please, and who use the comment function as a valve for their collective discomfort. It’s not about the fact THAT they leave their opinions under articles, but HOW they do it. Whether those opinions are of interest is another matter.

Because we actually enjoy praise and criticism equally. Honest praise. And constructive criticism. Discussions are important both for readers and for us as those who want to inspire and entertain them anew every day. Unfortunately, trolls tend to suffocate any dialogue at its root and instead prefer to fling the verbal hatred that seems to lie deep within them.

I like to imagine that these people are socially isolated losers who dropped out of their warehouse clerk training and at 38 still live in the attic room of their single mother. Or are in prison. Or are named Kai Enders. But of course that isn’t the truth. At least most of the time.

Often they are people whom we have disappointed in some way. Because we didn’t feature their submitted video or publish their school essay about their first love. Because we didn’t respond to a tweet or email—or not thoroughly enough. Because we didn’t give them the attention they believe they deserved.

If they don’t belong to the category of personal disappointment, then they have either joined the general trend that AMY&PINK is the hipster BILD newspaper of the German web and has a long tradition as a troll biotope. Or they know our authors personally and never liked them anyway. Or they are Nazi communists. Or moral apostles. Or jealous small bloggers.

The sad thing is that they are often not entirely wrong about what they say. At least regarding the claims themselves. Usually not regarding the justifications mentioned in the same breath. Yes, it’s true that Hannah is publishing fewer texts than she used to. No, it’s not true that this was some clever PR stunt, but simply that she has little time because of her studies and isn’t quite sure what she actually wants to write about.

Yes, it’s true that we post exposed secondary sexual characteristics on AMY&PINK. No, it’s not true that this means we don’t have the right to write about current and pressing issues affecting the young generation of our country. Instead, we prove to ourselves again and again that we have the courage to unite seemingly different and offensive genres within one medium.

And yes, it’s true that we often go too far or have to take responsibility for wrong decisions regarding articles, ideas or design. No, it’s not true that we are stupid, superficial or greedy. Instead, we try day after day to experiment, to take new paths and to grow in our own diversity—sometimes too slowly, sometimes too quickly.

How we would love to participate in these discussions ourselves from time to time. But the way they are currently conducted—not only on our site but on many blogs in the German blogosphere—we simply cannot do that. We tried, really. At the beginning. But we quickly realized why “Don’t Feed The Troll” has become the mini-manifesto of the digital age.

After all, trolls feel validated in their secret provocations with every reply and then continue even more intensely. Readers who had just commented kindly and didn’t receive feedback see this and may end up going down the wrong path. That’s how you practically breed more trolls. Which we have probably done quite often in the past.

We were often close to disabling comments entirely. Because most visitors were satisfied with using the various social media buttons like Facebook or Twitter when they liked something, instead of leaving textual feedback. But that would be 1. economically rather stupid, since every comment increases our advertising revenue, and 2. a proper comment section is simply part of it.

Besides, this measure wouldn’t solve the problem that there is a small troll inside all of us from time to time. Sometimes I notice in myself that I would love to throw an objectively stupid comment at some blogger. Because I had a bad day. Or because he sells old topics as new. Or makes money with systematic nonsense.

But that would benefit neither me nor the other blogger. So I refrain from doing it. And instead invest my time in pushing my own projects forward and letting myself be inspired by the media I like, not provoked by those I don’t. I recommend that to anyone who plans to waste their time trolling. It’s simply not worth it.

It’s almost depressing that there is no patent solution to this issue. That I haven’t found a way to either turn trolls into constructive readers or at least keep them away from our blog. We will continue to keep the comment section open and also not switch to the Facebook solution used by many. Because we want to outsource as little as possible to platforms over which we have only limited control.

Hardcore trolls, whom we feel are solely bullying or trying to derail the topic, will be blocked as usual. Which they often don’t even notice—which somehow adds a bit of humor to the matter. And we prefer to discuss with readers who give us personal and comprehensible feedback. Because it’s simply much more fun.

To all bloggers who also suffer from this problem, I can only pass on the following pseudo-wise words: See it as a compliment when people make the effort to want to ruin you. It only proves that you have already achieved something that bothers others and that they apparently are not capable of achieving themselves—or have already failed at.

Feel free to delete comments if they bother you. After all, it’s your site—and you can do whatever you want there. That no longer has anything to do with freedom of speech, but simply with netiquette. And most importantly: always see it positively. Because if we at AMY&PINK can handle the masses of pubescent and recurring trolls—then you certainly can as well.

Snoop Dogg & Wiz Khalifa: Young, Wild And Free

Jägermeister Wirtshaus Tour: We Rocked the Alps

Weekend Tips: Ten Little Missions

How quickly time flies. We were just complaining about Monday and its ever-recurring curse on humanity, and today the weekend is already starting again. And how could you possibly make better use of it than by successfully completing ten little missions and collapsing happily and contentedly onto the couch on Sunday evening? Exactly: You can’t! Let’s get started.

One. Call the police when 12-year-olds kiss on the playground. It could be rape, after all. Or an impending teenage pregnancy. Or simply pedophilia. Two. Write Kenza tons of love letters. Because she’s so great. And Swedish. And still into Tokio Hotel. Three. Grab the SNES classic “The Legend of Zelda – A Link To The Past.” And abuse it in the worst possible way. Four. Touch yourself to Megan Fox from 2005. The current one is lame. Five. Grab a few girlfriends and reenact Rebecca Black’s “Friday” in your small town. Including a rapper of color.

Six. Send the GEMA a photo of your crying little brother because he can’t watch the latest Rihanna video on YouTube. Or the one by Lady Gaga. Or the one with the cute little owls set to Katy Perry’s “I Kissed A Girl.” Eight. Go ahead and celebrate Christmas, New Year’s Eve and Easter already—then you’ll have that whole crap behind you and can focus again on what really matters: video games and porn. Nine. Throw all your stupid T-shirts into the used-clothing collection and wait for some poor child from the Third World to wear one in the news. Ten. Buy yourself a goldfish. If it can grant wishes—even better.

The Weeknd: The Knowing

Mercedes Esquivel: I Shot Myself

The Ting Tings: Silence (Bag Raiders Remix)

Forever Alone: Facebook Hates Me

It’s not like this is the first time it’s happened. Open mail, check Facebook, account blocked. In a very polite tone, they inform you of this, as if today was simply the day for it. From now on, you are denied access to your profile, your pages, your friends. But hey… we’re just the tech team, the messenger. So don’t rant at us.

What makes me angry about it is not that it happens, but how it happens. After all, someone must have found something I did on Facebook unacceptable and clicked a designated button. Because they hate me. Or they’re the sexton of a Christian institution. Or they didn’t get the joke.

An administrator then apparently classified my offense as so cruel, terrible, and disgusting that they didn’t even consider it necessary to send me a warning. Was it a photo, a text, a like? Did I insult someone, write subjectively questionable things to his sister, did I simply have the wrong language setting? Or did they think my name came from a fantasy tale?

Even in the most uncivilized groups and the most dubious legal cases, you are at least told what you shouldn’t have done. Shortly before, of course, you still lose your head. Or other important body parts. On Facebook, however, you are confronted with a fait accompli. No charges, no judge, no trial. Just a verdict.

After my first suspension, I paid meticulous attention to following the rules. Really. Exposed breasts or primary sexual organs? Forget it. We even technically and laboriously added black bars to the preview images of certain AMY&PINK articles—just to be absolutely on the safe side. Which makes me even angrier this time.

It wouldn’t be so bad. Hey. I can contact friends via Skype or phone. Or write them a letter again. How lovely it is here. On the other side of Berlin. Networking can, after all, be done just as well via Google+. Or Xing. Or… something with VZ. (Insert pause for awkward silence.) Okay, that was all more or less a lie.

But an account like that isn’t just for parties, funny sayings, and poking. Primarily, at least for me, it’s for work. If you are denied access to the largest network in the world without warning, it’s comparable to a storm troop clearing out half your office. And then taking a dump on the table that’s left behind.

After all, you are then no longer able to fill your pages with new links and information, nor to maintain business contacts, internal groups, or upcoming events. That means losing future deals, important readers, and administrative rights that are essential for a well-running business. And that nowadays are considered a given.

So now I’m sitting here in front of my email program, waiting the next three to nine weeks for a proper response from Facebook, and in the meantime almost obsessively praying that the intern who did this to me will roast in bit hell. And what do we as users learn from this? Perhaps that one shouldn’t rely too heavily—neither privately nor professionally—on a website whose regulatory system is as unpredictable as the Berghain bouncer with visitors. Or me with bad comparisons.

Camille Rowe: Deadliest Catch

Dominique Young Unique: Hype Girl

Jeremy Jansen: Mishka 2011 Holiday Lookbook

Rebecca & Fiona: Jane Doe

Kate Bellm: My Roomie Minnie

Florence And The Machine: No Light, No Light

Happy Birthday, Webcam: The Greatest Invention in the World

Tips for the Weekend: Ten Little Missions

When Rebecca Black introduced what we now call Friday back in the 17th century, nobody had any idea how much fun we would eventually have with this thing. School’s out, work’s out, brain’s out. For the next few hours, you’ll be doing all the things that are probably forbidden on some Christian planet. For example, successfully completing all ten little missions. Here we go!

One. Write down lots of great ideas for a new social network on a piece of paper. Then tear it up and flush it down the toilet – we have enough of those. Two. Complete the ten hardest Zelda dungeons of all time. Then buy yourself a princess. Three. Be annoyed that God was a little more generous with your little sister than with you. Four. Stuff yourself with pizza. After all, it’s officially considered a vegetable now. At least in the United States. Five. Treat yourself to some Tim Burton.

Six. Name your child Dovahkiin and score free games from Bethesda for life. Seven. Print out the photos of Cintia Dicker from Brazilian GQ in life size and find some crazy priest to marry you. Eight. Get yourself a pet and name it Schnuffel. Doesn’t matter if it’s a cat, dog, or fish. Nine. Tweet a photo of your son. Then realize you probably should have been a bit more careful. Ten. Gain access to the club that only admits people who have had sex on a bridge. Make sure you don’t end up under the headline “double suicide” in the next issue of BILD.

Mike Piscitelli: The Good Life

The Naked and Famous: No Way

Sky Ferreira: Traces

Patrick O'Dell: Babes On Wheels

Adidas Originals: Made For Tokyo

There are two things that, separately, already make me incredibly excited. First, sneakers from Adidas. Superstars, to be precise, with which I practically abuse the ground I walk on. And second, Tokyo. Because… well… Tokyo. You just have to love the Japanese capital. Anyone who doesn’t feel the same is welcome to beat themselves with a frying pan.

To celebrate the tenth anniversary of the first Adidas Originals store in this crazy city, the label is releasing the so-called "Made For Tokyo" package, which includes one of 150 limited and numbered pairs of sneakers. All in black, just the way the Japanese currently love it. Leather, rubber, everything in delicately different shades – a collector’s item, a masterpiece.

Adidas will release its tribute to Tokyo sometime in December. The price and exact date are not yet known, but anyone lucky enough to grab one of these packages will also receive a matching jacket on top of it. So if anyone happens to be in Tokyo in the near future and manages to get their hands on this sneaker dream, you know where to send it. Thanks.

Sepalcure: Pencil Pimp

Rasha Kahil: In Your Home

Urban Cone: Freak

Zelda vs. Skyrim: Whom Do I Give My Lifetime To?

I can hardly remember the last role-playing game that I truly played with dedication and depth. It’s been a long time. “Chrono Trigger,” maybe. Or “Final Fantasy 9.” Or “Pokémon.” I searched every single corner, over and over again. To squeeze out even the very last secret from these games. And if possible, much, much more.

Everything that came afterward I more or less just rushed through. Quickly from one village to the next, quest here, quest there, yeah yeah, final boss, done. Start over again with all the equipment? Explore new caves and add-ons? Unlock additional characters? Fuck you, I really have better things to do. Well… not really, but no thanks.

On some days I want to cry, scream, despair over how I once managed to lose myself so magnificently in games and not regret a single second of my wasted lifetime that I could have invested in gyms, party orgies, and picking up girls. Because they shaped my character and gave me the opportunity to understand the world better.

As Christmas approaches, so many good games are raining down on us again that each of us would prefer to clone ourselves. “Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3,” “Batman: Arkham City,” “Rayman Origins.” We’re all chasing that feeling we had when we were younger. Holding that damn little box in our hands, flipping through the manual on the way home, wow and this here and I’ll go there and I’ll play with him and anyway. What time is it? Adventure time!

While all the little kiddies are blowing each other’s brains out in fictional wars or making dark cities unsafe with snobby superheroes, two gigantic golden gates light up before me, opening the doors to two monumental worlds full of new friends, discoveries, and battles. “The Legend of Zelda - Skyward Sword” and “The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim.” Madness.

Both games are roughly equally good, scored top marks at Destructoid and IGN, and without exception deliver EVERYTHING they promise. Visuals, depth, length, controls, presentation, exaggerated nerd factor. Everything that gives the video game addict from a long-gone era infinite joy. In theory. But as a busy idiot, you have to choose one.

I love “Zelda.” Truly. “A Link to the Past,” “Link’s Awakening,” “Ocarina of Time,” “Majora’s Mask,” and yes, even “Wind Waker” were all games I would have died for. If they had asked me to in a dialogue box. I only raced wildly through “Twilight Princess.” And that’s exactly the point why, in this epic battle, I’ve decided against being Link once more. I’ve been him too often; my heart screams for new adventures.

The previous parts of “The Elder Scrolls” more or less passed me by and supposedly weren’t that good either. That’s what I’ve heard. But the hype infected me so massively that I can hardly wait to fight my way through this lovingly crafted icy landscape myself. With a horse that casually defies gravity and dragons so fat and bombastic that I want to touch them.

But the decisive, admittedly somewhat creepy main argument for why I’m choosing “Skyrim” over the new “Zelda” is this: Why did I play “Super Mario World” back then? Because my friends played it. Why did I play “Pokémon”? Because my friends played it. Why did I start “World of Warcraft”? You get the point.

Not because I’m such a follower (at least not when it comes to this topic), but because I love the idea that people I like, know, or somehow find pretty neat are wandering through the exact same adventure as I am. Despairing at the exact same enemies, discovering different solutions and secrets, falling in love with this world as well.

I can measure myself against them and exchange ideas. Discuss victories and defeats, accomplish it together and yet alone. That’s also the reason why I used to prefer watching movies on television instead of on DVD. Because it gives you a sense of community you actually thought you had long since lost. Sometime in your early youth.

So while I’m currently installing Windows on my Mac like the ultimate uber-nerd (which already says quite a lot) and will download “Skyrim” via Steam, I’m looking forward like a little moron to the coming weeks in which I’ll grow fatter and hairier because the mountains of Tamriel will swallow me up and spit me out again in spring as a pimply pseudo-Viking.

So a big apology to my former favorite Princess Zelda—maybe I’ll rescue you again next time—and an even bigger hello to the return of my more than dusty love for role-playing games. But if even “Skyrim” can’t rekindle it, I’ll admit defeat and, out of spite, only play “Solitaire.” Forever.

Eylül Aslan: Sound To Help Urban Farm Grow

In the coming decades, it will become increasingly difficult to provide people with fresh, biologically sound food. Especially in major cities. Singer Peaches is also aware of this problematic trend and, as part of the Future of the City Awards by smart urban stage, asked eight outstanding photographers for inspiring assistance.

How could art, for example music or photography, contribute to supporting the cultivation of vegetables and fruit in metropolitan areas? Perhaps through newly developed melodies and sounds that accelerate growth, or images that make people aware of the importance of this issue and prepare them for a not-so-easy life without gluttony.

The Turkish photographer Eylül Aslan subsequently created works that merge humans and nature, pointing out that cities already burst with vibrations and sounds. The more inhabitants live in urban environments, the more visible their influences become. The racing pulse, the breathing, the rumbling stomach when hunger sets in. All of that is the music of the big city.

You can view more photos by Eylül and other photographers such as Adrià Cañameras, Mariana Garcia, and Laurie Kang on the official website of the Future of the City Awards and at the same time vote for the ideas and works you consider the best. In the coming weeks there will be more food for thought, and in January the creative award ceremony will take place.

This is a sponsored article by smart urban stage. Advertise here as well?

Aline Weber: Saturday Sun

King Krule: The Noose Of Jah City

For More Diversity on the Web: Germany Needs New Bloggers

While the blogosphere in the United States bubbles along merrily, a major problem is becoming apparent in Germany. We’re slowly running out of fresh blood. Established giants like Spreeblick or Nerdcore have dominated the charts and RSS readers of the nation for years, and the fact that people without tax advisors and pacemakers prefer to post their experiences on Facebook or misuse Tumblr as a wild image pinboard doesn’t exactly make the future look rosy. But you can change that.

Many of you are not aware that with a little commitment and creativity, you can achieve far more than just collecting a few ultimately worthless likes and reblogs. If you’re hanging out on the internet all day anyway, at least make something of it. Grab a current WordPress version and your own domain, and the whole world of blogging is open to you.

We’ve compiled ten creative fields for you—from fashion to music to politics, including great examples—where you can situate your new project. Simply choose the ones that make your heart race and, if you don’t completely screw it up, you’ll soon be surrounded by fans, travel, and money. So… maybe.

The Private Blog

The simplest and purest form of blogging is writing down personal experiences. You really only need two prerequisites for that. A truly flawless writing style and an incredibly interesting personality. Nobody wants to read about an uncreative couch potato without character. Get out there, tear things apart, stand up for things. Be exhibitionistic to a likable extent.

Take inspiration from Sara, Clara, or Marcel and stuff your articles with varied texts about life, love, the world, happiness, and sorrow. Garnish the whole thing with photos, videos, and favorite songs and no one will be able to resist you. Please don’t bother if your name is Sarah Hockemeier or you don’t know how to upload your own videos to YouTube.

The Magazine with Friends

You don’t feel like writing alone? No problem. Just gather a few good friends and talented acquaintances around you, agree on a common style or combine different boy band attitudes (pretty boy, rebel, know-it-all, slut) and unite your forces under a catchy label. Basically, the same rules apply as with the private blog. Just with more players.

Great role models are Rookie, Jane Wayne, and Finding Berlin. Be diverse, but set your own boundaries so as not to blur your authenticity. Don’t forget to put yourselves personally in the spotlight; otherwise your readers can neither love nor hate you. And that would simply make you boring. No matter how well you write.

The Hottest Shit

If you’re not particularly interesting or don’t feel like every perverted elementary school teacher knowing your deepest secrets, then you should tackle the complete opposite of private blogging: reblogging. Here you choose one or several topics (for example sneakers or cat videos) and post with increased frequency everything your feed reader spits out about them.

You’ll need a lot of source blogs (preferably American ones), incredible stamina, and the time to publish 5–20 articles per day. There are many good pioneers: Hypebeast, Slamxhype, Killahbeez, Beautiful/Decay, Booooooom, or MashKulture. You might as well get used to the idea that your laptop will sooner or later merge with you.

Clothes

If there’s been any boom lately, it’s that girls (and boys too) around the world stand in front of mirrors, take photos of themselves in 20-euro outfits, and then slap them into a Blogspot field titled “Outfit of the Day.” This world is hopelessly overcrowded and if you haven’t felt the urge to become part of it so far, just leave it. Unless you look really good or have a unique style. In a positive sense.

Refrain from daily self-portraits and instead pick up a few tricks from Swedish fashion bloggers like Lisa, Filippa, or Kenza. Through high-quality photos, strong opinions, and an enormous dose of femininity, they manage to convince not only readers but also advertisers. Networking with other “colleagues” and plenty of sweet-talking are the recipe for success here.

Music Was My First Love

If the world needs anything less than more fashion blogs, it’s pure music blogs without personal elements. They’re quite interchangeable and quickly get lost among all the video Tumblrs, platform playlists, and direct releases from record labels. It’s better to combine music blogs with personal articles or offer your readers added value such as interviews, premieres, or band features.

Take inspiration from well-known sites like Stereogum, Your Music Today, or even Hipster Runoff and get in touch with small and large labels. Give your project a hefty pinch of individual character and a catchy image. Without these ingredients, both your readers and you will quickly lose the desire to keep updating the site.

I’m Going into Politics

In Germany, there is a true fetish for political blogs that culminates daily on Rivva in a disgusting orgasm of democratic diversity. The problem: most of these topic blogs are either maintained by older gentlemen who like to predict the end of humanity or by overly feminist women who exclusively talk about their rights and sexual organs.

This dusty chamber desperately needs fresh air. Only enter it if you truly have your own opinion. You’ll quickly be excluded by the other loudmouths if you’re a Nazi, left-wing extremist, or CDU voter—and even faster you’ll have strange friends hanging around who somehow also hate foreigners, the government, or Prussia. Try a young mixture of Netzpolitik and the politics section of Freitag. If you can’t manage that: the next free fashion blog is waiting for you.

01010000 01000011

Why bother with music, fashion, and politics when the obvious is right in front of you: the computer! The internet is nothing more than a vast network of PCs, phones, consoles, and tablets. The theoretical readership of a blog about exactly this topic is enormous. Sites like Engadget, Mashable, and GameOne have shown it: technology always works.

You’ll earn bonus points if you’re an Apple fanboy, own a time machine, or have grown fused to your Xbox on the toilet. However, you should be aware of one thing: you won’t pick up girls with this topic, even if you find all the iPhones of the next ten years on the street tomorrow. Unless you write for Project Bunker or Destructoid.

Fill a Niche

Instead of attacking the big, established blogs, it’s easier to specialize in a very specific topic that only interests the mainstream when an idiot dies because of it or it appears as a new trend in BILD. Why not write about fishing? Explain the difference between rubber trees and a spade? Or gather the last three survivors of the “Magic!” trading card series around you? Many small worlds with even smaller readership numbers lie ahead of you.

In one of these niche universes, with a bit of perseverance, you’ll quickly crown yourself king. But be careful not to let success go to your head. Outside your realm, you’re still a nobody blogging about the latest collection of balloons. Stay prepared for potential interviews with RTL2 in case some lunatic tries to reenact the movie “Up.”

Something with Sex

Sex sells. That’s as certain as amen in church. Unfortunately, it’s quite difficult in this field to strike the right balance between respectful seriousness, likable opinion-making, and cheap porn. And certain associations might sue you into the ground if you show primary sexual organs. But it’s not impossible to make something great out of the topic of sex.

Check out sites like Slutever. Women write there about love, sex, and passion. Or Is Anyone Up?. There, a guy named Hunter Moore collects nude photos of people from Facebook. Okay, you’d probably land in jail faster than you could click “Publish” in this country for that, but hey: you’ll think of something. Just do something with sex.

I’m Something Very Special

If you’ve gone through all these points without putting any of them into practice right now, then you either can’t read—or you’re something very special. You want to launch something completely new, never seen before, fresh, unique. And for that, we already congratulate you at this point. Even though you haven’t accomplished anything yet.

Why not photograph notes like Notes of Berlin? Or put girls topless on bicycles? Or have Paula Deen ride things? There are endless possibilities to bring a blog to life. Be brave, be unique, and become the shooting star of the dusty blogosphere. Because someone like you is something we could really use here. More urgently than ever before.

Mixtape: Time Travel Terror

Every decade we survive is, in retrospect, even more embarrassing than the previous one. While the 80s came along with perms, neon colors, and studded belts, and we’ll describe the first ten years after the millennium to our children as a pre-apocalyptic purgatory, it was the 90s that shaped personalities and laid down life paths.

We were often still too young to truly assess the impact of bands like The Prodigy, Faithless, or Daft Punk, shook our little kid butts to S Club 7, Alice DeeJay, and the Vengaboys, and felt like gangsters when we listened to The Notorious B.I.G., House of Pain, and Dr. Dre. Welcome back. Welcome to hell. Welcome to the 90s.

Navigational Aid: Trend Indicator November

Only a few more weeks and 2011 will already be history. How quickly it all goes. Time for us to thoroughly analyze November and examine the good and bad sides of this boring month. Who should you definitely open the doors of your heart to, who rather not, and are pants tucked into boots still in? Here we go.

Good: Mojo. Mom. Fooling around with Serdar Somuncu and Carolin Kebekus. Nerdy family photos. Women with balls. Sequins. Cold baths. Getting deflowered at a bus stop. David Lynch. Creative use of the middle finger. What women think during sex. Never growing up. Fart apps. This duck. Garters. Lace. Saunas. Well-functioning lube. The Beavis And Butt-Head soundboard.

Eating pizza at work. Thinking about the Generation Facebook. Snooping around in Uffie’s closet. Participating at AMY&PINK. Listening to Slayer again. Amanda Seyfried in a bikini. Losing yourself in "Skyrim." Enforcing a state-recognized hibernation. Downing counterfeit Red Bull in liter bottles. Booking the Christmas flight home now.

Bad: Swag. Bladder infections. Fakers. Rigged award ceremonies. Tartar. Cold. Bad breath. Filthy music and movie crap just before Christmas. Cheapskates. Bosses with small dicks but big mouths. Blabbermouths à la “I’ve got something really big in the works.” Pants tucked into boots. That after a blog post comes another blog post. Having to decide. PETA’s humor.

Delivery services without a drinks menu. Personal crises that last longer than some degree programs. A world without bubble tea. Wine in the double-digit price range that tastes like expired gasoline. Never being able to have the feeling of your first orgasm again. That you need Nintendo consoles for Nintendo games. Still no new Club-Mate flavor. Berlin party capitalism.

Katy Perry: The One That Got Away

Rammstein: Mein Land

Chloë Sevigny: Terry Richardson Kisses Himself

Theophilus London: Love Is Real

Nick Farrell: High Gloss Trash

CSS: City Grrrl

Jägermeister Wirtshaus Tour: The Mountain Calls

Servus! The Jägermeister Wirtshaus Tour is back and this time the boozy party orgy is heading high up. On November 26, as a friend of fine electro taste, you’ll be making a pilgrimage to the mountain hut Drehmöser 9 in Garmisch-Partenkirchen, located at an altitude of 1300 meters.

In the thin air you’ll meet disco heroes WhoMadeWho and the French synth-pop duo The Teenagers, and you can immediately battle them in Bavarian pub games like Maßkrug sliding, crosscut sawing, and hammering nails into wooden boards—or at the foosball table and the dartboard.

And we wouldn’t be telling you all this if we weren’t going to cart you off from Munich by shuttle to this exclusive event—packed with lots of Jägermeister and good vibes—where only 250 selected people will be allowed to attend. 1x2 tickets are up for grabs here, and on top of that you and your charming companion will also stay overnight in a 4-star wellness hotel.

If you feel like dancing down cheerful avalanches with us, just leave a comment with a valid email address by Wednesday, November 16, and you might soon experience the mountain party of your life. If you want to play it safe, you can also try your luck on Facebook or at Das-Wirtshaus.de. The mountain is calling!

This is a sponsored article by Jägermeister.

Iggy Azalea: My World

In Our Own Interest: Violation of Youth Protection Laws

The Media Authority Berlin-Brandenburg has filed a criminal complaint against AMY&PINK for the distribution of pornographic material. In this specific case, it concerns two editions of “Lost in Blogs” from July of this year that contained links to sites not suitable for minors.

To prevent such incidents in the future, we are now working closely with Jugendschutz.net, our youth protection officer, and the Media Authority Berlin-Brandenburg. After all, nothing could be further from our minds than harming our younger readers—possibly you.

For us, this means going through every single article and checking where we may have been too careless or too bold with nudity and links. For you, it means that some articles may be partially changed or possibly deleted altogether. But there are worse things.

If you notice anything on AMY&PINK that strikes you as the visual embodiment of lawlessness or that you think has no place online, simply send us a message at info@amypink.com or directly to our youth protection officer. We’ll take care of it and do everything we can so that the state media authorities and we will soon become best friends.

Truly Alternative Music: Awesome Tapes From Africa

Music from the African continent reaches us at best when Shakira is having another stylistic mood swing or Bono kidnaps a drummer on one of his charity trips. Yet there is a euphonious world hidden there that deserves to be explored—and it is full of surprises.

The website Awesome Tapes From Africa presents new and old cassettes by artists such as Zagazougou, Solomon Manori, and Nâ Hawa Doumbia, including MP3 downloads, cover art, and additional information—in a quality and scope you’ll search for in vain elsewhere.

The tracks themselves are so different and often so bizarre that I lack the words to explain them. They range from rhythmic spoken-word pieces from the ’70s to greasy pop from the ’80s and even to genres from a time that shouldn’t even exist.

So if everything currently sitting in your iTunes library is getting on your nerves, feel free to download a few files there, close your eyes, and gently nod your head. By the way, the site is also a hot tip for anyone who owns a Sudanese snack bar.

AMY&PINK on Google+: Join The Party

If you’re one of the twelve people who still use the totally snazzy social network called Google+, then we’ve got the news of the day for you. Just for you. And the other eleven idiots: AMY&PINK now has its own page there! You may now burst with joy.

We’re not entirely sure yet what to do with this newfound freedom, but hey: it will surely be great. Maybe. That now depends entirely on how strong the response is and how the network develops in the near future.

We will definitely post the latest articles and news over there so you can always stay up to date on what’s happening with us. And the more people we gather, the more exclusive mischief we’ll get up to—things you won’t even find on Facebook. Obviously.

So better play it safe and add AMY&PINK on Google+ to your circles today. Or +1 it. Or whatever you call it these days. After all, something might come of it. Join the party! Maybe we should also reactivate our MySpace account soon…

Editorial: Supreme in London

Die Antwoord: Fok Julle Naaiers

Henrik Purienne: Fun with Girlfriends

Quentin Tarantino: Films, Fiction, Women’s Feet

Let’s just say it like it is. You either love Quentin Tarantino. Or you wish him to hell. His films are controversial masterpieces that lie somewhere between the genres of kung fu, grindhouse, and spaghetti western, and into which he pours so much love, soul, and meticulous care that it almost makes you sick.

Whether it’s “Reservoir Dogs,” “Pulp Fiction,” or “Inglourious Basterds” — the now 48-year-old American director has an unmistakable signature and ingredients that truly only make sense with him. Endless conversations that slowly build, piece by piece, only to end in a violence-hungry explosion where blood, body parts, and screams darken the air.

After “Kill Bill” you want to go hunting with a samurai sword. Preferably to visit the guy who stole your girlfriend. After “Death Proof” you crave bare women’s feet casually stretched out of a car window. And after “Natural Born Killers,” you should probably lock yourself up at home for a week so you don’t do anything stupid.

A guy named Joel Walden has crafted this snappy video tribute to the creator of Vincent Vega and The Bride. And if you’ve got nothing better to do tonight, we recommend watching all these films in one go. You definitely won’t regret it.

Emily Scarlett Romain: Friends I’ll Never Meet

Just Like on TV: My Life in High School

The fact that we Germans know about thirty zillion times more about the customs, culture, and history of Americans than the other way around is obvious. Our history books are crammed with facts about the discovery of the country, the War of Independence, and its economic relevance. Every little kid today learns that Christopher Columbus was actually looking for a short sea route to India and only accidentally ran into that big chunk of land in the way. Or they’ll smugly add that some Viking had already been there much earlier. Who discovered Germany? Some barbarians? No idea.

Day after day we’re bombarded with news about Barack Obama or the protesting 99 percent. We watch American sitcoms with American families in American cities experiencing American stories. “King of Queens,” “Modern Family,” “That ’70s Show.” And sure, it’s totally in right now to bash the nation of the overweight and war-hungry, but sometimes, people, sometimes I’m damn jealous that I wasn’t born among them. Especially because of their school system.

Not because it’s so well balanced and thought through or because it guarantees its graduates a golden future. But solely because it’s so colorful and diverse. At least on television. While I had to get up at 6:30 in the morning in complete darkness for years, drag myself through eight hours of math, German, English, and other perversions, and in the afternoon be happy if I made it to our couch or to my buddy’s sister, American high schools and colleges are packed with opportunities and variety. At least on television.

Before you take the yellow bus to school in the sunshine, you first sit down with the whole family for a full breakfast consisting exclusively of bacon, grapefruit, and magical cornflakes. Once at the educational center, you line up with the group assigned to you by cooler classmates.

If you’re lucky, you’re a football player, a cheerleader, or the guy with the leather jacket. If you’re unlucky, you’re a loser, an emo, or the pimple-faced kid. If you actually died years ago in a school shooting but just don’t know it yet, then you’re normal. But that rarely happens. At least on television.

At our school, outside the regular, suicide-inducing lessons, there were exactly two extracurricular activities. A theater class that each year attracted three—let’s say—extraordinary children, whom you never saw again after the first big break. And the third-floor school bathroom. For which exactly the same applied.

What a much more fulfilling life I would have led if I’d been able to choose between all the courses and sports and programs that high schools overseas offer. Watching the girls on the sports field from the stage in the morning as they shout letter combinations and animal names around in colorful costumes. I wave at them stupidly. One of them is surely my girlfriend. If only just before falling asleep.

After that, I hop to my locker filled with photos and funny things—oh, today there’s the meeting of the school newspaper (a cool one, of course, not one that nobody reads), then a food fight in the cafeteria (like every day at one), and afterwards debate club. Or baseball practice. Or we all sing around like idiots as in “Glee,” who knows. Anything but RTL.

I have two best friends. A funny geek (mostly Black) with big glasses and giraffes on his pants. He burns me the best porn onto CDs and knows how to hack the grades in the school computer. And a sharp-tongued girl with a cute nose and red hair who has always been my neighbor and whom I will kiss with tongue for the first time at the prom (episode 163).

Of course, my perverse idea of this parallel world is based solely on years of television abuse, definitely doesn’t apply to public institutions in New York City, and probably only exists to some extent in Disney-built suburbs—but anything that comes even close to this fantasy has to be infinitely better than what students here in Germany have to endure day after day. For what feels like eternity.

So if I’m lucky and not reincarnated as livestock or as Boris Becker’s son, then I have only one wish: Please, please, dear God, give me a chance to experience all these great adventures myself and let me grow up right in front of a cute high school in the United States. Or in a sitcom. Anything but RTL.

Mister Heavenly: Bronx Sniper

Necrophilia in Russia: The Cabinet of Corpse Dolls

What Anatoly Moskvin from Nizhny Novgorod in Russia did is something you have to manage first. When his parents paid an unannounced visit to the 45-year-old journalist and historian who lived alone, they couldn’t believe their eyes: the guy had 26 corpses sitting around at home.

He dressed some of them up as dolls or teddy bears and arranged them stylishly in his apartment. On the couch, in the bed, or in the wardrobe. He had no interest in men, though—every single one of his finds was female.

The women, aged between 15 and 26 and deceased for quite some time, had been carefully selected by Anatoly from over 750 cemeteries he had visited, dug up, and then carried home to his three-room apartment in plastic bags. There he dried out his new visitors.

No one knows exactly how long the little corpse desecrator had been pursuing his illustrious hobby, but apparently he had slept for years in coffins or on benches in front of graveyards. At night, he and his shovel then had a lot of fun with the girls.

Anatoly speaks 13 languages fluently, has incredible knowledge of world history in his head, and surely knows a secret or two that would make most people’s heads explode. Maybe that’s the reason the police released him shortly after his arrest.

He’s probably not particularly happy about that, though, because he now has to start all over again with his collection. The nasty authorities took all his new girlfriends away without exception.

Skream: Anticipate

Role Reversal: Six Girls in Boys’ Clothes

Your Weekend: Ten Little Missions

Yesterday you were laughing so hard you nearly wet your pants when Google spun wildly around the screen, and today you’re sitting bored in front of the monitor again because your friends preferred to go to the village cinema without you and your parents haven’t returned from vacation in two years. We’re still giving you reasons not to mess around with the kitchen knife. Ten of them, in fact.

One. Let people give you ten euros so you can infect them with your flu. They’ll get a week off and you’ll earn some pocket money on the side. Two. Laugh while throwing small puppies into the river and have it filmed. It’s been a while. Three. Use the word “dick” at least twenty times a day. It must not die out. Four. Watch this video for three hours straight and then ask your unicorn how much purple is around sun after tree. Five. Trade your virginity for a bubble tea.

Six. Follow the fat Pikachu on Twitter and eat a chocolate donut with every one of his tweets. Seven. Let your mom cuddle you properly again. You’ve both missed it. Eight. Create a brilliant joke using the following terms: “underpants,” “holes,” and “mother.” Then write it in the comments. Nine. Grab your little sister’s badminton racket and go zombie hunting at sunset. People over 60 who didn’t make it home in time count too. Ten. Write funny sayings in your intimate area with a red marker and do everything you can to make sure someone besides you reads them.

Yoshihiko Ueda: Tree Hugger

Since as a spoiled city kid you no longer even know what a forest is: it’s a collection of… Since as a spoiled city kid you no longer even know what a tree is: it’s a wooden… Since as a spoiled city kid you no longer even know what a plant is…

The 1957-born Japanese photographer Yoshihiko Ueda once drove into the Tannicht around Washington and began taking photos of those large, brownish-green things standing around there in masses and stubbornly refusing to move.

“The undergrowth rustled, the moss glowed green, almost as if it were shining from everywhere,” Yoshihiko recalls. “A collection of living colors, soaked with rain and light. I had discovered a kingdom of primordial chaos. I witnessed something human eyes were otherwise never allowed to see. It shook me, I was overjoyed, then I thanked the gods of the forest.”

He called his photo series “Quinault” and has already exhibited it in various galleries around the world. Whether the now 54-year-old might have licked flying mushrooms or talking toads before his trip into the American forest is unfortunately unknown.

Bleeding Knees Club: Teenage Girls

Fighting Earthquakes: Japan Builds a Second Tokyo

Even more than half a year after the major Tōhoku earthquake, normality has still not returned to Japan. At the Fukushima nuclear power plant there are recurring signs of a renewed meltdown, and along the coasts residents are still busy with cleanup work.

Nearly 16,000 people died in the disaster. The earthquake had a magnitude of 9.0, and vast parts of the east coast were devastated by gigantic waves. If you weren’t there that day, you can’t imagine how unbelievably terrible it was.

Now the Japanese government under Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda has released a curious plan intended at least to protect the residents of the capital Tokyo from the destruction of their livelihoods and even death in the event of another severe natural catastrophe.

Five hundred kilometers west of the megacity, work is underway on a backup city. The new area, with the provisional project name IRTBBC (Integrated Resort, Tourism, Business and Backup City), will have space for 250,000 residents and workers. There will also be offices, restaurants, parks, and casinos.

The replacement Tokyo will be located right at Itami Airport. And the country’s second-largest city, Osaka, is also not far away, so staff and emergency workers can be requested from there at short notice. Parliament, ministries, very important people—if there’s an apocalypse, they’ll simply relocate.

Hajime Ishii, a member of the Democratic Party currently in power, says about the plans: “You have to imagine it like a backup battery that secures the functions of the nation.” What will happen to the remaining 13 million people of Tokyo if the city really were to go under, he didn’t tell us. Maybe it won’t be that bad after all.

Science Makes It Possible: Change Your Eye Color

Are you also one of those sub-humans who can’t fascinate and enchant passersby with their radiant blue eyes, almost like the ocean? Instead doomed to lead a shadowy existence as a brown-eyed sourpuss forever? Then science has something for you.

A newly developed laser technology from California simply burns away the brown color. The pigments, known in professional circles as melanin, are removed from your iris, leaving behind two baby-blue eyes—provided you haven’t already lost one in the school bathroom.

A certain Dr. Homer, who has been working for ten years on messing with genes, has already received tons of emails from potential customers. “Many of them write to me saying that the eyes are the window to the soul and that they want a clear view. The brown color just gets in the way.”

At the moment, the 20-second procedure is still being tested on volunteers. In a few years, any of us will be able to give God the finger for about $5,000. However, you’d better be pretty sure about the permanent change—there’s no reversing it.

So if you’re already dyeing all your hair blonde and want to take a decisive step toward transforming into the ultimate Aryan type ever, you’d better start saving now. It won’t be long before you’re Hitler’s favorite. Or Norwegian.

Zara Mirkin: Scream Machine

The Kills: Baby Says

A Day in New York: Claire Does Ballet Exercises

The Internet: Cocaine

Web Girl Angela: At Night in the Pool

Angela turned eighteen this year and lives in Viersen. That’s somewhere in North Rhine-Westphalia. When she’s not being stressed out by teachers or poisoning old, rich grannies in a luxury perfume shop, she first gets herself drunk on tequila and then turns night into day. But that can take a while, because despite her Asian roots, she can handle an unusually large amount of the liquid stuff. Angela has sworn to become rich and famous soon. If necessary as a porn star, but she’d rather devote herself to art. Under her pseudonym Emilia Coeur she blogs cheerfully away and occasionally takes pictures of random people. Or lets herself be photographed. Like when she swims around naked in a pool.

Do you want to become our next Web Girl? Then simply click here!

AMY&PINK in a New Shine: Prepubescent Seriousness

On Friday evening I found the rest of the MDMA from the Melt Festival under my bed, finely crushed, it looked almost like powdered sand. And while normal people would run cheering loudly to the nearest Atzen party with it, because they’d just saved themselves twenty bucks and the trip to Tiago, I canceled all my extremely important appointments and, with its magical help, finally began to clean up the cluttered AMY&PINK.

It was simply annoying that we always described ourselves as a digital magazine but looked like an exploded Care Bear. No wonder neither the political press nor established representatives of the print industry took us seriously. And that certainly wasn’t because of our prepubescent texts or the schizophrenic back and forth between world-changing poetry and exposed primary genitalia. It was solely because of the design. Sure.

So what has changed? If you’re not blind or dead, you can see that everything is much brighter and even more eye-catching. Provided one of the advertising banners isn’t currently abusing the page with toxic green backgrounds or pushing it wildly around. Many elements that no one needed were thrown out. That includes boxes, images, and the once so cute color coding. It looked nice, sure, but nobody understood it and it was simply too colorful.

What you have in front of you right now is not a design revolution. Or a completely new way of using the internet. It’s simply a consistent evolution of AMY&PINK and a long overdue shedding of ballast. More sovereign, more serious, more grown-up—call it what you want. We’re having fun here and are even prouder to present our highly competent opinions on this medium. Fuck.

So tell us what you think of this and, while you’re at it, check whether everything works on your nerd devices. Internet Explorer in particular will live up to its legendary status and anally penetrate some of the innovations, that’s for sure. And then we’ll finally be done with articles that are exclusively about us and the site and the greatness of all this here, and we’ll devote ourselves again to the beautiful things in life. Promise.

Tips for the Weekend: Ten Little Missions

While you’re probably busy coming up with excuses not to let your stupid friends drag you to an even more stupid Halloween party, we’re tackling the latest edition of your beloved “Ten Little Missions” without pumpkins, vampires, or blood. Well okay, maybe a little red juice will flow during one task or another, but hey: that’s life... Let’s go!

One. Grab a bag of popcorn and some cola and watch Jamie’s birth in full screen. If you make it to the end, you’re ready to knock up your girlfriend. Completely regardless of whether she wants that too. Two. Take part in the new internet trend “Big Bad Wolf Planking.” Then send the photos as real greeting cards to friends, relatives, and teachers. And to us. Three. Support the local economy and buy the supplies for your weekend exclusively from your neighborhood dealer. Globalization pisses all of us off after all. Four. Masturbate to Lindsay Lohan again. The poor thing doesn’t really have anything else left. Five. Launch a new blog that effortlessly screws over everything that has come before it. We want that so badly. Seriously.

Six. Sell your parents’ jewelry on the black market. Invest the money you make in Bubble Tea. Seven. Lock yourselves in at home and play nothing but Water Temple levels in video games. Flood your school on Monday. Eight. Search for and find at least two clitorises and give them a kiss. Nine. Slip small, anonymous love letters under all your neighbors’ doors, each ending with “Thanks for the amazing night!” Sit back and listen to the consequences of your wickedness. Ten. Commit suicide. But first inform yourself using this chart about which method of departure is optimal for you. See you in hell.

Katy B: Movement

Native Shoes: Asian Girls Wear Winter Boots

Ghost Beach: Empty Streets

HTML5 Makes It Possible: Watch Our Videos on the Go Now

As some attentive readers (and we love them the very, very most) have surely already noticed, we at your favorite magazine AMY&PINK are currently in the process of converting our old, dusty Flash videos to the now not-so-really-new HTML5 technology. But it was time. Totally nerdy. And it’s happening gradually, step by step, video by video.

What’s in it for you? Until now, the little films on this site could only be watched from your computer. With certain browsers that also needed a Flash plugin. That used to be a fast, technically reliable solution. But times have changed and nowadays that’s obviously no longer enough to make you happy.

With the new version, you can access the videos from practically anywhere. Whether from your computer, tablet, or phone. Whether PC, Mac, iPhone, iPad, Android. If you have a browser that supports HTML5, our entire library is open to you. If not: no big deal. Older browsers can still play the little treasures too — at least in theory. The only drawback: embedding them won’t work for the time being. But let’s be honest: you hardly ever used that feature anyway. Maybe we’ll add it back at some point. If it’s necessary.

We tested and checked everything as thoroughly as possible, but from experience we know that something always fails. When you least expect it. So take a look at, for example, this video here and tell us which operating system + browser you’re using and whether everything works technically on your end. That would mean a lot to us. Thanks. Now go!

Crystal Fighters: Champion Sound

Dana Goldstein: Pumpkin Heads

Duck Sauce: Big Bad Wolf

Emeli Sandé: Daddy

Oh My! Dirty Dancer

Mixtape: Under The Shower

Once we have turned on the water and held the showerhead over our heads, the following minutes are the perfect reflection of our current emotional state. If we are happy, we belt out catchy melodies loudly, lyrics full of joy, energy, and drive. If everything is shit, we sit curled up in the wetness, our heads sunk into our own laps, crying, the sounds muffled and unsettling. This mixtape is a small companion—listen to it, alone or together. In the shower.

Claire Gordon: How To Be A Teenage Girl

Weekend Tips: Ten Little Missions

The big coughing, sniffling, and fevering has been in full swing again since this week. Most of us are lying in our beds with red noses, burning foreheads, and sweat-soaked backs, covering our immediate surroundings in bodily fluids and fumes and whining helpless survivors to death via chat, phone, or droplet infection. On our lovely Facebook page we asked what you do when you’re flattened and slowly dying, vegetating miserably—and from the best answers we created a truly magnificent “Ten Little Missions” special. What significantly increases the level of difficulty? Masturbation forbidden! And go...

One. Pretend to be an underage girl in the Knuddels chat. Reveal your true identity only after a 62-year-old elementary school principal has bought you tickets to the Maldives and you have already arrived at Malé International Airport. Two. Wait for the coughing to transform your fat bellies into six-packs. Sue Ratiopharm if it doesn’t work. Or McDonald’s. Three. Check out Kitteh Roulette. Don’t stop until you start touching yourself while doing it. Four. Play all episodes of “Family Guy” backwards and try to uncover various conspiracy theories in the process. Five. Have a round of fisturbation. But don’t forget to spit on it nicely beforehand.

Six. Convince your grandparents to give you these cute little piggies. You’re allowed to eat one of them right away. Seven. Read Bukowski again. If you don’t know who that is: play “Pokémon.” Eight. Listen to M83’s new album “Hurry Up, We’re Dreaming” on repeat. Maybe you’ll fall asleep while doing so. Nine. Refresh Facebook every second. At the same time, hope that a cure for flu viruses appears in your stream—one that tastes like rainbows, does the dishes, and gets you free sex. Alternatively, a nude photo of Miley Cyrus will do. Ten. Okay, you’ve tried everything. Every series has been watched, every book read, every game played. Time to drop your pants and do again what illnesses were actually invented for: masturbate until your hands fall off! Even if you actually already feel completely healthy again...

Friends: I’m His Girl

Wenke Leaves AMY&PINK: The Girl with the Pink Blood

So. Even though we always pretend here that we’re fucked-up know-it-alls who, through excessive drug use and worn-out genitals, have long since lost every shred of meaning in life and can only gag up a few emotions when it’s time to write yet another heartfelt article about love, lust, and life, that is of course a blatant lie. We’re overly sensitive whiners who can get mentally hung up on the most disgusting and intimate events and then can’t cope with the images and thoughts our heads put into our heads. And in this regard, I’m basically the master.

After Hannah left AMY&PINK, Wenke and I took matters into our own hands and tried to push this little perverted online playground toward world domination with great new authors, an office, and lots of grand ideas and articles. Over the past year we became insanely good friends, shared days and nights, parties and festivals, funny moments and intimate ones, loved, won. And honestly: That couldn’t end well.

As sensual types of the embarrassing extra class, known both in the city and in the countryside, we suddenly kept stumbling over emotional fuck-ups that we first laughed off but, as things grew more serious, simply couldn’t clear out of the way anymore. We failed because of humanity, because of closeness, because of pressure, because of false expectations and deep-rooted naivety. We failed because of ourselves.

It truly pains me that we have to give all this up because of this mental bullshit, but any further step together would only make everything worse. That’s why Wenke will no longer be working as an author at AMY&PINK as of today and will instead focus entirely on her own blog WENKEWHO. Her writing, her digressions, and her excellent taste in music will be missed more than anything—but hey: She’s not out of the world.

So all that’s left for me to do here is to say thank you for this truly amazing time and to let Wenke go out into the wide world with a heart heavy as stone. But one thing should be clear to all of us: We’re going to hear a lot more from this girl. Because once you’ve tasted pink blood, you want more of that shit. So Udo: Be diligent, make us proud, and may the Fitch be with you.

Jake Sheiner: Sodom and Gomorrah

Gaddafi Street Style: The End of a Fashion Icon

With the death of Libya’s former head of state Muammar Gaddafi, the world was not only freed from a bloodthirsty tyrant, it also lost one of the most dazzling fashion icons among the ranks of rulers. Like no other, the 69-year-old managed to combine the intimidating role of a dictator with ever-new, ridiculous costumes.

His exquisite choice of clothing was always colorful and eye-catching, sometimes adorned with an oversized array of medals, often accompanied by sexy security guards dressed in camouflage and garnished with expensive sunglasses. Vanity Fair once crowned Muammar Gaddafi the “fashion genius of our time,” Time wished him good luck and success in the sofa beauty contest, and the Huffington Post praised his creative streak that should inspire other heads of state.

We bow to so much concentrated style in human form and sincerely hope that one of the many Z-class fashion designers out there will show mercy and present a Gaddafi memorial collection at one of the next Fashion Weeks. So that we, too, can partake in the shine, the glamour, and the grandeur of a man who probably never even dreamed that his life would end so ingloriously ended. Goodbye, asshole.

Knotan: That One Guy From Örnsköldsvik

Misfits Goes American: Josh Schwartz, the Series Rapist

Some mistakes of humanity—which we’ll cheekily count ourselves among—are repeated almost consistently. Again and again. Without anyone in human history learning anything. These include, for example, world wars. Or financial crises. Or famines. Or adaptations of great series for US television. For which the original just isn’t good enough.

As Vulture reports, the next victim of this plague of bad decisions is the alternative hero saga "Misfits," about a few hopeless teenagers who suddenly acquire superpowers. And drugs. And sex. And all that stuff. So far it has run for two successful seasons on the British channel E4; the third will follow soon, and we’re eagerly awaiting it. And now this.

Of all people, Josh Schwartz is supposed to restart the series from scratch. Exactly, the guy responsible for “The O.C.” and “Gossip Girl.” You know, I love “The O.C.”. Back then. Many years ago, at least I did. And I at least tried watching that bling-bling-we’re-all-so-rich-and-annoying show about a bunch of messed-up teenagers from good families. But. It was just too stupid for me.

Aside from people loudly eating döner on the subway and Christmas markets at Alexanderplatz, there’s practically nothing that makes me angrier than US adaptations of foreign series I’ve given my heart to. Because nothing screams louder that story, characters, and music are arbitrarily interchangeable and replaceable than when someone grabs finished, legendary, perfectly crafted episodes and throws them into the recycler.

After all, that already worked so incredibly well with "Skins." On MTV. With censorship. And outraged Christian parent associations. Who even complained about the watered-down version because it was about fucking. Between teenagers. And a naked boy running down the street. Because he was thrown out of the house. The idiot. And then the whole thing had to be canceled after one season. Because it was so shitty. And unnecessary. And just wrong.

There should be an international law against this. Really. Right after the first article of the constitution, directly after “Human dignity shall be inviolable,” it should say: “Adapt series and we’ll shoot you and everyone involved straight to the moon.” And every single country in the world should adopt it. So for now I’m just really hoping that this is all just a bad dream and that no one is even remotely thinking about relaunching "Misfits" for the US market. And then we can take care of the other things. Like world wars. Or financial crises. Or famines.

We’re Giving Away Exclusive Tickets: Holy Ghost! Live in Berlin

Dell and Intel have joined forces to team up with the music platform Noisey from Vice to launch a concert series with the sexy name Special Engagements. It not only allows passionate fans and savvy digital natives to follow the action live via stream, but also to interact with the band before and after the performance and even make decisions.

On Monday, October 24, the New York electro duo Holy Ghost! will perform at 10 p.m. at the Museum for Communication in Berlin, and you can use survey widgets, Twitter, and Facebook to decide what the show will look like. Which songs should be played? What design and color scheme should be used? What equipment will be brought along? And the Americans also want photos from you for a remake of their video “Hold My Breath.” Now that’s what we call flexible.

Just go to the official Facebook page of Special Engagements to get information about the event, take part in the decisions, and win additional tickets. Each Special Engagements concert will also be hosted by a well-known and dynamic host who acts as a link between the artists and their fans.

We’re giving away an incredible 3x2 tickets for Alex and Nick’s bombastic performance in the capital. All you have to do is leave us a comment with a valid email address by Sunday, October 23, then cross your fingers really hard and, if you win, grin stupidly at the wall in your room for half an hour.

This is a sponsored article by Dell, Intel, Noisey and Vice.

Steve Aoki ft. Rivers Cuomo: Earthquakey People

Navigation Aid: Trend Indicator October

If, like us, you pursue an activity that—with a few exceptions—is consistently modeled on the lifestyle of unemployment, you might occasionally forget certain dates. Or weekdays. Or only realize toward the end of October that we haven’t published an issue of the “Trend Indicator” yet this month. But hey: We’re flexible. So what’s totally great—and what isn’t?

Good: Anatidaephobia. Teenage Mutant Ninja Noses. Penises that smell like strawberries. Going on a first date to "Hero Hitler in Love." Being a freshman. Beating up vegetarians when they nibble the skin off their lips. The one in the middle. Falling out of bed and having a hairstyle like Son Goku. Living solely on red wine. Watching “Suburgatory” while thinking about Tessa. A bathtub full of bubble tea.

Russian cheesecake from Dr. Oetker. Automatically blocking trolls. Ditching the bill. Catching the flu from Nora Tschirner. Finger-hole games. Watching and understanding Chris Poole’s lecture. Hibernating. Buying cucumbers and carrots just for that one thing. Missing Charlie Harper. Lesbian fantasies with Nike, Isa and Sara. Emptying your bank account and just flying away. Fulfilling the cliché.

Bad: Anything to do with Oasis. Fefe. Zombie pussies. Android. Having a star-in-a-triangle tattoo. Blogging about Apple stuff. Social media. Sex only in bed. Sand in your eye. Coffee addiction. Getting upset about articles on Spiegel Online. Old geezers adding you on Google+. Bands already announcing for Melt 2012 that no one will be listening to in a year anyway.

Zooey Deschanel. Hopeless doctors. Not being able to whistle the melody of “Beauty And The Beast.” Baseball instead of The Simpsons. Loud neighbors. Dumb neighbors. Drunk neighbors. Fucking neighbors. Neighbors. Watching “Tatort.” People who tweet during sex. Seventeen-megabyte press releases. Not having enough Grippostad C in the house. Not understanding the world but running your mouth anyway.

Ellie Goulding: Music Runs Ellie

Archeo: Mr General

M83: Midnight City

Erika Braukis: Fuck I’m Doomed

Mixtape: Into Another World

There are certain evenings in life when you simply have to be alone, take a deep breath, look within yourself. Numb yourself. The light very dim, the bed so comfortable. And the music, yes, the music has to accompany you on a journey through the lonely night. From the courageous beginning, the first sips and drags. Through the late hours, when your thoughts beat you in the face, won’t let go, you scream, strike out, the wall bleeds. The eternities when you are only lying there trembling, in the darkness, sleep no longer even a possibility, too much is fucking you in this very moment, only a few small, quiet sounds whirr through the room. Until the redeeming sunrise embraces you with warm arms and whispers in your ear: Everything is fine, close your eyes, the world belongs entirely to you. End credits.

Occupy Wall Street: We Are the 99%

Stroke Artfair: Young Art in the Capital

It is known far beyond the borders of this small, tranquil nation that I am the one and only true reincarnation of every significant artist there is. Or rather, ever was. That’s why this year’s Stroke Artfair in the art capital par excellence, Berlin, is of course exactly my thing, my hood, the territory where I can really unfold.

Provided that the refined guest understands this to mean smuggling beer bottles past security non-stop, standing in front of certain artworks with a finger to the lips while looking profoundly contemplative, or watching little children happily painting T-shirts. Even though I really wanted to do that myself. Little brats.

While our creative god Danny Doom terrorized virginal pieces of clothing with spray cans and Edding mashups, I strolled from booth to booth with my two druffis David and Anna, saw great things, saw bad things, saw strange things. But all relaxed and cool and totally hip. Hop. Typical forever-young capital city stuff.

Artconnect Berlin had up-and-coming artists paint specially erected walls, Gofresh presented the book "Social Network Photography," which caters to the self-shot fetishists of Web 2.0, and on more than one surface my current model crush Caro Clash beamed at us, who was already allowed to present her enchanting upper body at her own exhibition at Mein Haus am See.

The Stroke Artfair runs until Sunday at the Postbahnhof at Ostbahnhof in Berlin in Germany and should be visited by anyone who is even remotely into modern, young art. Street art, graffiti, photography, illustration, strange 3D thingies—everything that makes the hip heart beat faster. And there’s beer, too. And strange sushi rolls. Which surely taste exquisite. Yeah!

Akila Berjaoui: Beauty And The Girls

Icona Pop: Nights Like This

Tips for the Weekend: Ten Little Missions

Did any of you actually notice that we didn’t have any “Ten Little Missions” last week? Oh nonsense, you wouldn’t even notice if your neighbor hijacked a Boeing 787 and crashed it straight into your Kreuzberg backyard. But whatever, here they are again, just for you, just against your boredom, and that of your family and friends and anyway. Let’s go.

One. From now on, live exclusively on red wine. With an organic seal of approval or from the toilet of the kebab guy across the street—doesn’t matter. Two. Be as happy as Bumsi the squirrel that "Misfits" is finally starting again soon. Then cry to your roommates because Nathan isn’t in it anymore and he was the best thing about the whole show anyway. Besides Alisha’s boobs. Three. Use the global economic crisis as an excuse to pump even more cocaine and alcohol into your battered bodies. Because who knows how long you’ll still have the money for it. Four. Keep an eye out for gore Tumblrs and then spend the rest of the weekend hiding under your bed because suddenly everything and everyone wants to slaughter you in a bestial way. Five. Eat more bananas again. A lot more.

Six. Take part with your class in a bus trip through the Black Forest. We give no guarantee that things on your bus will go down like here. Seven. Start celebrating Halloween now and don’t stop until the federal government recognizes it as an official holiday. Feel free to throw some candy and Spider-Man masks at a few police officers if necessary. Eight. Ask your big sister whether it’s true that girls stick a finger into their vagina on the toilet to push out a stuck piece of poop from their intestines. Nine. Kidnap Jane Levy and send her straight to us. We’ve developed a bit of a crush. Ten. Admit to yourselves that Arnold Schwarzenegger takes cooler vacation photos than you. No matter how hard you try.

Doorknob Girls: Japanese Girls Suck on Doorknobs

Gruff Rhys: Whale Trail

Anna Ryon: I Don’t Mean A Thing

Jägermeister Wirtshaus Tour: Simply Sink Bremen

There it is again. The Jägermeister Wirtshaus Tour is back and once more brings hearty beer garden atmosphere together with stag heads, beer barrels, and party-hungry young city dwellers. Only there can you play a little darts and foosball while being blasted with illustrious electronic music and knocking back a glass or two of good cheer – that’s the dream of every up-and-coming youngster.

The next edition of this gigantic celebration will take place on October 20 aboard the MS Treue in Bremen, where Feadz from France and Does It Offend You, Yeah? from Great Britain will be guests, getting you to shake your behind excessively. And for the first time, a Wirtshaus Tour will take place virtually on the high seas, including the best indie and electro sounds.

And of course, as usual, we’re bringing you to the place where there’s the best herbal liqueur and beer and fun and good vibes and everything else. We managed to snag 2x2 exclusive tickets for you. If you want to win: simply leave a comment with a valid email address by Sunday, October 16, and you might soon bring Bremen to collapse. If you want to play it safe, you can also try your luck on Facebook or at Das-Wirtshaus.de.

This is a sponsored article by Jägermeister.

Niki And The Dove: The Drummer

Undercut Girls: Sweating, Skrillex, Soul Shaving

While you’ve just made an appointment with the hairdresser you trust and have already been thinking for hours about whether you’ll just have the tips trimmed or maybe run around with highlights again this fall, there are certain girls out there who simply shave off half their heads. Because they think it’s totally cool.

For us, that’s like a journey back in time. Do you still remember back in the day when all freshly menstruating music leeches wanted the same hairstyle as the androgynous brat from Tokio Hotel and the small towns of the nation were flooded with poorly copied Bills? Of course you remember; half of you were actively involved in it after all. You poor, poor souls.

And actually we had hoped that the next abomination to roll over us since the embarrassingly wild Rave-Techno-Marusha 90s had been pushed back somewhere into the depths of stuck-in-their-ways welfare recipients and Jew-hating Nazi bitches, but suddenly it’s popping up everywhere again. On the heads of class rebels, supermarket cashiers, and porn stars: the side- & undercut.

The culprit of the moment is quickly identified. Back then, the floor was still soaked by lyrics like “Through the Monsoon” and “Scream,” but today’s first-time thong buyers only jump around the basement to a pounding mix of “Neyiaowwwwww Wihwihu Wuh Wuh Wuh Wuh Wuh Weh Weh Weh Wuh Wuh Wuh Wuh” and “Guhh Waow Gwaowwww.”

Dubstep pro player Skrillex is clearly the new hipster-alternative-sweaty Bill of the modern age, and if the girls can’t lay him down in his trailer in front of their MacBook altar, then they just wallpaper their walls with self-printed posters of their new favorite. And steal his haircut. Standard. So the next time you’re at the hairdresser, just shout “Rug Ah Gug Gug Gug, Ruh Ah Gug Gig Gog” in his face and become a permanent part of a trend that will surely last forever. Skrillex!!1elf

The Horrors: I Can See Through You

Hugo Jozwicki: Bonne Bouche

Failing Because of the Other: My Personal Downfall

So I turned around. And left. It wasn’t one of those tear-soaked farewells from cheesy relationship dramas that air on Tuesday nights on Sat.1 and trigger hopefully urine-free waterfalls in lonely housewives from your neighborhood. Nor was it a hate-fueled tornado of insults, mother jokes, and obligatory vases shattering loudly against walls wallpapered with stolen posters. We stood in the street, the sun was shining, I walked away. And that was the last time we looked each other in the eyes.

It’s easier to get into Berghain on a Sunday morning—fat, naked, drunk, with human shit smeared across your face and a rabid pit bull foaming at the mouth on a leash—and still score a friendly pat on the ass from the bouncer, than to admit that you’ve failed because of another person. A person in whom you’ve invested so much time and emotion and yes, somehow love. A peculiar love, not dripping with heavy feelings and eternal dependency, but that special, light kind.

The kind where you hug as if there’s no tomorrow. Where you drink as much red wine as you can, smoke weed and talk and laugh and make plans. Grand plans. And where, on a pep trip, you fuck each other silly, grinning like idiots, while the weekend races past the fogged-up window and winks at you cheekily.

The catch? I was the only one who felt that way. Out of two people. And I didn’t even want to. Until that final day, I simply refused to admit that some kind of feelings were screwing with my head. Being in love is all well and good. And we urban emotional corpses are thrilled when, after roughly a millennium, we manage to squeeze tiny chunks of feeling out of our concreted and long-forgotten hearts. With pus and pain and everything that comes with it. But then at least let it be for someone who doesn’t have the EQ of a ten-year-old asshole kid addicted to PlayStation.

What’s worse than having to admit that you’ve failed because of another person? Knowing you’re not the first. And that after me, plenty more will follow. That you’re just one of many who tried not to fall into that emotional trap, but to stay cool. To stay friends. With all their strength. To rise above it. Because she’s a buddy. And you just fuck occasionally.

So you line up in the long row of tragic fails who didn’t make it into her so desirable heart, maybe never even wanted to, fought against it like others fight Kreuzberg gentrification. Because the other person is an emotional-Nazi-communist-cripple who can’t even help it. And has great hair. And a nose. And feet.

All that’s left for you is to cling to any other remotely conceivable explanation for why you’re suddenly kind of insane, can’t think straight anymore, jealous like Uncle Ferdi over the neighbor’s long dick, yelling at parties, issuing ultimatums that are out of this world, crying to yourself on the way home, and freaking out over situations that are just boringly, normally everyday. For others. But not for me.

When you somehow manage to pull yourself together—because you’re listening to a good song, or you like the day of the week, or the food from Kentucky Fried Chicken doesn’t cause diarrhea for once—you try to take a deep breath. And swear to yourself that tomorrow everything will be normal again, like before. And you masturbate a little to her photo. But only one more time. Promise.

What’s worse than having to admit that you’ve failed because of another person and knowing you’re not the first? The helplessness when you finally realize that the other side isn’t responsible for your misery. And never was. Because she’s just Ernie. And I’m just a humorless Bert who values control over fun and my own happiness over hers.

She never made me false promises nor lied nor loved nor understood what my damn problem was and why lately I’ve been acting like an electrified idiot making elephants out of every mosquito. Even though I only wanted one thing: that she understands. Or even better: that this whole shitshow finally ends. I don’t even need a suburban house with a front yard and a dog and DNA thieves without puberty. Just that this stress finally disappears from my head.

So it was only a matter of time before the situation escalated. And I was firmly convinced that I’d find her in some disgustingly stinking club toilet, sucking MDMA off black dicks, and that a few minutes later I’d become a voluntary victim of the Berlin subway while Lykke Li whispers “Let It Fall” into my ears. Instead, I seized that day, that minute, and decided that it had to stop now. The pressure, her look, my personal downfall. Forever. So I turned around. And left.

Slove: Flash

Melchior Tersen: Funeral Ficus

Peter Kernel: Panico! This Is Love

Yuksek: Always On The Run

The Stepkids: Legend In My Own Mind

God Is Dead: Steve Jobs, Old Friend

It’s already late, I’m lying in bed. The neighbors have finally stopped loudly and drunkenly rampaging in the stairwell. Darkness around me, brightness in front of me in my view. A MacBook Pro rests on my lap, an iPhone lies next to me. On the bookshelf, not even a meter away from me, there are numerous biographies about Apple and its founder; in a drawer of my desk an iPod nano rests. It is blue, an outdated generation. I haven’t used it for quite some time.

When the first tweets about the death of the man who, upon closer reflection, shaped and accompanied me more than all religions and teachers combined appeared in my timeline, the feeling that suddenly struck me was impossible to describe. It was ridiculously emotional and cold and unbelievable. Not now, not him. Not Steve Jobs.

For many, over the past few years he had degenerated into a mixture of cult leader and joke figure who sold overpriced phones to showcase yuppies, sued competitors, and then, emaciated and ill, was thrown to scandal-hungry trolls on dubious celebrity sites. That made me angry. And sad. Because he was a role model for me. Truly.

I remember exactly how I gave my mother a carefully planned and energy-charged presentation at the kitchen table to convince her that it was time for us to bring a Mac into the house. And not just for us—preferably for the entire neighborhood, the whole Western world. Screw you, Bill Gates. I will not become a PC zombie with a gray box. And without a soul.

Night after night I dug through books about Steve Jobs and his story. How he achieved success with tricks and persistence. Because he had a vision and realized it with determination and a bit of LSD more intensely than he himself probably ever expected. Dropped out of school, small side jobs in factories, time off in India. Steve combined pioneering spirit with creativity—and that attracted me incredibly.

Of course, he also had his low points. And dark sides. And scandals. He mercilessly harassed his employees. Denied his illegitimate daughter. Cheated his business partners. And I don’t want to excuse or glorify any of that. But from all his highs and lows each of us can learn. Anyone who has dreams in this digital world. And not only there.

We like to remember his fiery speech at Stanford University in 2005, in which he encouraged his listeners to keep searching for the work that brings them joy, that is fun. And if you haven’t found it yet, don’t rest, but move forward. Again and again. And he also spoke about death. And that impresses even more today than it did back then.

"Being aware that I will soon be dead was the most important tool that helped me make all those big decisions. Because everything else falls away. All external expectations, all pride, the fear of failure, and shame. And all that remains is what truly matters. Remembering that you are going to die is the best way I know to avoid the trap of thinking you have something to lose. You are completely naked. There is no reason not to follow your heart."

I will remember Steve as the man who constantly guided me in my personal and business decisions. Because every time, I asked myself anew what he would do in my place at that moment to make the situation his own. And it worked. Not always, but often enough to internalize it as a secret philosophy of life.

My MacBook’s battery is slowly running out, the music in my ears is getting quieter and more peaceful. Night owls on Twitter and Facebook are flooding the feeds with condolences, quotes, and the same old photos. Take care, old friend. A nerd, a dreamer—the world certainly won’t forget your name anytime soon. Steve Jobs. God is dead.

Nero: Crush On You

Weekend Tips: Ten Little Missions

Friday almost always sounds like a social threat. The hard workdays are behind you and now it’s time to have as much fun as possible. Preferably drink a lot, be outside, dance, fuck, smoke weed, laugh, and then on Sunday evening grin broadly at the approaching Monday and know: Yep, I did everything you could possibly do in that short span of time. Conformist pack. Why not be totally special instead and solve our ten little missions? Exactly.

One. Together with your friends, learn a completely absurd language—preferably one that’s been extinct for thousands of years—and then use it to insult all your loved ones and enemies behind their backs. Two. Write a monumental blog post in which you expose all the secrets, affairs, and hatreds you’ve encountered in your life, complete with photos. Then emigrate to Paraguay. Three. Screw Facebook, WhatsApp, and email. From now on, chat exclusively via fax machines. Four. Buy a family pack of Flutschfinger popsicles from Langnese and take them with you on your next date. You know what to do. Five. Travel back in time and bang one of the Spice Girls before Geri Halliwell got fat. Alternatively, an orgy with S Club 7 counts too.

Six. Send Siegfried Kauder a tube of hair growth product and kindly suggest he focus on obvious problems instead of messing around with things he doesn’t understand. Seven. Breed moose in trees. Eight. Host a movie night on a grand scale. Hide subliminal messages between scenes like “Give me money!”, “Bring me beer!” or “Take off your clothes!” that flash for milliseconds. Nine. Ask random people on the street if they want to sleep with you. Statistically, it works 1 out of 100 times. Unless you look like Uncle Fritz on withdrawal. Ten. Program an app called “Your Mom…,” whose sentence can be completed and then randomly sent to someone in your contact list. Enjoy the thrill that the message might go to your boss. Or your mother.

Deerhoof: Secret Mobilization

Terra Nova: Welcome To Paradise

Back then, we didn’t have private television. Fifteen years ago. But my grandma did. RTL, ProSieben and all that consumer-happy stuff. So every Sunday afternoon after the big meal at her place, I’d sit in front of the TV and witness great series like “Xena,” “seaQuest DSV,” and “Hercules.” Weren’t they amazing? Back then?

The best of them all, though, was “Earth 2.” Because it made my little kid brain explode. A… fucking second Earth? With aliens and lots of jungle and people with no plan but plenty of intrigue and monsters and heroes? One episode more amazing than the next. And of course I never noticed that the show had already been canceled after the first season because it was insanely expensive. I just thought it was a shame I never found out how the story ended.

Now with “Terra Nova” FOX has made a second attempt to bring the saga of a new world back to the screens, and they’ve sprinkled in a bit of “Jurassic Park” for good measure. Story: In the year 2149, Earth is an overpopulated and filthy pile of crap. The air reeks of exhaust fumes, the sky is beige, people are sick. Disgusting.

How wonderful that scientists have developed a time machine so that selected lucky ones can travel 85 million years back in time to found a new civilization in the green. So we follow the Shannon family into what at first glance seems like a utopian paradise in the middle of the Cretaceous period, where everyone grows their own vegetables, lives in chic wooden cabins, and happily goes about their new professions. But they quickly realize that even there, not everything is peace, joy, and pancakes.

The pilot episode recently aired and, no joke: “Terra Nova” has so much potential that it almost makes my head hurt. The big, wide planet, sprawling mysteries around every corner, trigger-happy rebels, twisted love stories, alien runes, reworked pasts, and terribly animated yet completely awesome dinosaurs.

If they manage to steer the thing even halfway in the right direction and make use of all the mega-story opportunities they so boldly wrote into the script, then “Terra Nova” could blow everything out of the water that the science fiction TV era has produced in recent years. But who am I kidding—this thing will probably get canceled after five episodes anyway. Because they’ll realize dinosaurs are even more uncool than spending every Sunday afternoon watching TV at your grandma’s. Too bad.

Jägermeister Wirtshaus Tour: Thumping Beats in Bochum

Twin Sister: Kimmi In A Rice Field

DeathSpank: The Savior of Thongs

I don’t even know where I found the time back then to play through Super Nintendo role-playing games like “Chrono Trigger,” “Lufia,” or “Terranigma” nonstop. Over and over again, with all the alternate endings and secret worlds and characters. And when I was done, I’d run the things through Action Replay because I wanted to see what was behind the invisible boundaries and what would happen if I had all the equipment right from the start.

Today I’m a busy man with deadlines, appointments, and trips abroad internet, delivery service, and bed, who of course no longer has the time to live through years-long digital adventures and mentally and physically commit to one like that. Because in the back of my head there’s always a little guy yelling at me that I’m missing something online right now. Asshole.

When I was clicking around in the App Store on a dreary afternoon, hoping to be enchanted by a game once again, I downloaded “DeathSpank” by a guy named Ron Gilbert without any great expectations. After all, he was responsible for nerd classics like “Monkey Island” and “Maniac Mansion.” Couldn’t be all that bad.

In this comedy adventure, you’re a knight who is somehow searching for magical thongs, wandering through a fairy-tale world full of goblins, witches, and chickens, and taking on all sorts of ridiculous quests. And in the end you kill Santa Claus. Something like that. In fact, I played through “Orphans of Justice” and “Thongs of Virtue” within just a few days. Without reason or restraint.

When I saw today on GameOne that the third part of the series, “The Baconing,” has finally been released for PlayStation, PC, and Mac, I immediately pulled my pants back up and started playing it. Now. At this very moment. While you’re reading this. Unless I’ve already finished it. Because the series is that great. And it’s been genuinely fun again.

“DeathSpank” is the perfect game for anyone who doesn’t have the time or desire to devote years to a single game. But who also isn’t a total brain-dead slacker who just drools over FarmVille or Bejeweled in the evening. Just give it a try if you’re into light, breezy, humorous puzzle-combat action with a tendency toward stupid dialogue. You definitely won’t regret it.

Jason Nocito: The Ego Has Landed

CSS: Hits Me Like A Rock

Louise Benson: All Her Paths Are Peace

Tove Styrke: Call My Name

Tokyo Street Style: Monsters, Masks, Marios

If you compare Tokyo’s street fashion with that of the rest of the world, one thing immediately stands out: the rest of the world is pretty dull. While Yvan Rodic only captures a bland mix of conformist hipsters and gullible Gucci wearers in Paris, London, and Berlin, in Japan’s capital things can confidently be colorful, crazy, and different.

Yuna and Fumika, two 16-year-old schoolgirls, roam Harajuku together as their favorite video game heroes Mario and Luigi, while just a few streets away Raymy and M.J. patrol as self-proclaimed fashion police. And whoever escapes them will run into Kazuki and Miyu at the next corner, who adorn themselves as urban cyber pirates with huge, decorated pants and tiger sneakers.

It’s almost sad that in our latitudes no one dares to say goodbye to the dusty vintage look and usher in a new era of street fashion in which you can give free rein to your imagination and sense of expressionism. Without people immediately crossing the street when they see you coming. Or worse.

So if you’re fed up with the usual suspects on the streets of German metropolises, you are warmly invited to go all out in style and finally dispense with pre-chewed trends and constantly recurring styles. There’s plenty of inspiration for that at Tokyo Fashion. Make us proud.

Coed Topless Pulp Fiction: The Topless Book Readers

These sunny warm days are the perfect opportunity to finally read a good book from cover to cover again. A novel, short stories, the civil code. Just roll into the park and let the fantasy ride begin. A group of young girls in New York City calls itself the very easy-to-remember “The Outdoor Co-ed Topless Pulp Fiction Appreciation Society,” and their motto is clear: “Making Reading Sexy.” They don’t just leaf through dead trees on publicly used green spaces—they prefer to do it topless. Together. Girl power. Or something like that. However, if anyone notices that the enchanting bookworms always seem to reach for the same books, they may have a deeper problem and should promptly purchase some psychological reading.

Forever Alone: The Decisive Loneliness

It is not uncommon for loneliness to make us doubt whether the decisions we have made so far were the right ones. Then we sit, lie around for days, weeks, sometimes even months in a kind of waking coma, dissatisfied with ourselves, with others, with everything. And it is completely irrelevant how many friends, acquaintances, and romances are buzzing around us.

When we feel that something in this life is not as it should be, we become depressed, withdraw, want nothing more than to sink into bed. And we can no longer even imagine where on earth we are supposed to get the strength to ever get up again. We will die here. Without a doubt.

A theory hastily cobbled together by me while drunk, but absolutely watertight, states that we feel all the lonelier the more phenomenal a circle of friends we had in the past. At some point in youth, perhaps. A small but indestructible universe of people we could stuff with our private bullshit day and night. Unannounced.

With whom we mocked police officers in the street, only to run off throwing rotten Easter eggs. And with whom we seduced girls, pissed in phone booths, invaded swimming pools, stole cheese sausages, played video games, slept in packs, watched porn, skipped school, sank bicycles, and beat up the hosts of lousy parties.

Once you have experienced what true friendships can move and what feelings they can trigger, everything that comes afterward is just superficial coffee klatsch with people who happen to live in the same place at the same time. You like each other, you know each other, you meet up. It’s all quite nice. But that bond of loyalty and love and experiences and secrets is long since nothing more than a memory of past moments that grows ever more distant.

So when we then sit for days, nights, eternities without analog conversation in front of the computer, pour one bottle of wine after another between our dry lips and follow the timelines of this world more defensively than offensively, some gloomy thoughts come to mind. Especially in autumn. The ceiling crushes us.

Whether it was really such a good idea to leave home in order to dig for happiness and money in the big, bad city. Sure, at home you would probably sink into welfare and move from one pub to the next at 1 p.m., but at least you wouldn’t have left behind the people who know you better than all mothers and relationships and doctors combined.

Perhaps this depressive loneliness is also an unmistakable sign that it is slowly time. Time to dare the next step. Away from a life that has settled in and whose surprises have already been exhausted. Show courage again, risk something, don’t remain stuck. Stagnation is death; staying is the end. We actually know that.

Why not start a world trip like Sara? Only to realize that happiness probably isn’t at the other end of the world after all. But that the search alone was worth finding that out. Or like Hannah, move to a city unknown to you and rediscover everything. People, places, romances. Or finally realize that one very personal dream you filed away years ago. Because damn life got in the way. But that you never quite forgot.

And in the end it comes down to this one decision. Do we finally have the balls to put into action the thoughts we fall asleep and wake up with every single day, and that we know give our existence meaning? Or do we sit on our fat asses, let time continue to trickle past us, and in the distant future have to admit with tears in our eyes that we didn’t take advantage of the numerous chances and opportunities? Let’s go or forever alone. The choice is ours.

Björk: Moon

AXE Hot Jobs: Become a Lingerie Fashion Show Dressing Assistant

Side jobs are usually the horror of every individual. You slave away for hours on some assembly line, cheerfully deliver pizzas through arctic snowstorms, or get to serve beer to drunk idiots in a grimy pub. All for a few measly bucks and a damp venereal disease on top. No thanks, we’ve all been there.

AXE has pity on you broke but nevertheless hardworking people and is making you a job offer you would otherwise only dream of and can hardly refuse. Just imagine being surrounded all day long by enchanting girls who simply knock you out with their charm and one or two physical attributes. Models, athletes, goddesses.

Got them in your mind’s eye? Then add to that the fact that you’ll get paid for it too! A full 400 euros plus travel and accommodation if the workplace isn’t in your city. And all that as a lingerie fashion show dressing assistant! To sum it up: you get to professionally and skillfully grope hot girls and get paid for it. Well, holy shit!

What do you have to do? Just get informed here at Caschy or directly at AXE and apply there skillfully as the person who can later tell his little brats: You know, Ferdinand and Dörte, back then your dad had the best side job in the world. With money and lingerie and boobs. And that’s exactly where he met Mom. Or something like that. Good luck!

This is a sponsored article by AXE. Advertise here as well?

Tips for the Weekend: Ten Little Missions

What an exciting week lies behind us. The Pope happily keels over in the Bundestag and, in the process, reinvents the story of the birds and the bees; in Berlin, hordes of nerds and gold diggers chase across Kotti because of Social Media Week; and poor Troy Davis kicks the bucket before he can experience the insanely great changes on Facebook that Mark Zuckerberg presents hours later at a dull press conference. The crowning finale? Of course: the “Ten Little Missions.” Let’s go!

One. Don’t get annoyed if your internet stops working. Instead, look for life tasks you can check off in the meantime. Do the dishes. Or tidy up. Or do something nice for your girlfriend. Two. Go to Fashion Week and throw back a dose of LSD beforehand. Suddenly everything is much more colorful and funnier. Three. Share lots of great GIFs with your friends on the internet. This one. Or this. Or this. Four. Inform yourself thoroughly about neurofibromatosis. The disease that looks as if bulging, fully filled scrotums are growing all over your body. After all, it can affect any of us. Five. Push your little brother into the Pope’s arms and then run away quickly while shouting: “You can keep him, he’s the Antichrist!”

Six. Activate the new Timeline on Facebook as soon as possible and show off in front of all your classmates. You’ve got nothing else going for you. Seven. Stop snorting cocaine. It makes your grandma very sad. Eight. Go to an illustrious house party and let everyone in the room touch your bare chest. On a list you brought with you, carefully keep track of it until you eat the list yourself because of too much alcohol in your blood. Nine. Seduce a fashion blogger. You’ve wanted that for a long time. Ten. Go shopping again and cheerfully ask random passersby on the street whether you should bring them something.

Asobi Seksu: Perfectly Crystal

Damon Loble: Hedonism Afternoons

Awesome New Republic: It’s Around You

We Make Nerd Dreams Come True: 20 Naked German Twitter Girls

Rarely before has a single article cost us so much preparation time while at the same time potentially bringing us so much trouble. For months we meticulously searched for uncensored recordings of well-known female Twitter users across Germany. We bribed angry ex-boyfriends, hid under the beds of the enchanting prey, and even bought magical X-ray glasses at the fair. Tons of them.

And it paid off. Here you will now find 20 completely illegal nude photos of the 20 hottest Twitter girls in the nation. Save them on your computer, print them out, stick them above your bed so you can fall asleep better. But hurry: the first letters from lawyers are already on their way at this very minute—and we don’t know how long we can keep the images online!

Amber Heard: Girl In The Garden

The Big Pink: Stay Gold

Student Protests in Chile: Sebastián Piñera Against the People

Fenech-Soler: Golden Sun

Cass Bird: I Look Just Like My Daddy

Mixtape: Autumn In Bed

Autumn is generally known as the time when breakups, depression, and suicidal thoughts advance to become widespread social diseases that persist throughout the entire winter. That’s when you crawl into bed with ice cream and a ton of DVDs during rain and snow, cry and wait and listen to dark, slow melancholy music to fall asleep to. But it doesn’t have to be that way. Autumn in bed is perfectly fine, but then with high-energy, good-mood tracks to keep on living. And to jump around on the mattress. And invite friends into the sheets. With SBTRKT, Aeroplane and Passion Pit. Don’t give gloom a chance!

Hannah Is Back: Welcome Home

When Hannah and I started at the beginning of 2009 to turn a small junk blog into the tastiest online magazine under God’s sun, we had no idea what we were actually getting ourselves into. We were the web designer from Berlin and the fashion student from Munich. We and everyone else didn’t need to know more. And this here was the playground of our feelings, wishes, dreams.

In countless texts we opened ourselves up to the ever-growing audience, rejoiced in the steadily increasing interest that apparent strangers showed us. And many of them became our friends. We pumped the project so full of soul and passion that after a short time it threatened to burst, brought authors on board, had to deal with advertising agencies and trolls. We made plenty of mistakes nonstop, but we learned from them and were never too cowardly to try new things.

While I primarily dealt with the dirty topics of everyday life, Hannah was always the person of the heart, the enchanting one, the honest one, the balance. She brought AMY&PINK to life with texts about pain, about love, about cognitive dissonance. When she was in Tokyo for a few months, she diligently reported from the Japanese capital, we stirred up class trips together and I even wrote her and the cheesecake a love letter dripping with devotion and affection in the Süddeutsche Zeitung.

But as it often happens when two people work closely together on something filled with so much passion, we increasingly got on each other’s nerves. Over trivial things. And over important ones. At the end of February this year it simply became too much. We could no longer stand each other, screamed and hated and cried and wanted only one thing. For it to stop. Hannah left. And with her our shared story, which actually meant so much to us. And still does.

It is probably precisely this story, the past itself, that I have to thank for being able to announce to you, with almost heart-tearing joy, that as of today Hannah is once again a permanent part of AMY&PINK. Because we were never truly able to let go of each other; it is our project, our vision, our future. And it is about celebrating the highs and mastering the lows.

She will slowly settle back in here. Writing texts in the foreground and skillfully taking care of the PR matters behind the scenes that are piling up in our digital inboxes. It is an incredibly wonderful feeling to finally be reunited with the person who built all of this together with me. Whom the pubescent boys out there love more than free porn on the internet. And who puts just as much heart and soul into AMY&PINK as I do. Welcome home, Monti. Welcome home.

Sneaky Sound System: Big (The Moment)

I Love Tomboys:

When I was twelve years old and I was stroking my very first so-called girlfriend’s naked, hairy ass in our homemade secret hideout somewhere among cardboard boxes, rat poison, and industrial pallets, I knew what to expect for the rest of my life. Because she wasn’t one of those normal girls who at some point started slapping makeup on their faces like crazy, going for pedicures and shaving their legs, but my best buddy. For several years now.

We jumped over sandbags as Power Rangers, beat each other black and blue in the woods, and watched our first porn movies on TM3 late at night with her little brothers, only to laugh at her own flesh and blood and push her down the stairs with hooting and hollering. I admired Maria with every fiber of my being. She was my first tomboy.

Three years later, we had sex for the first time. She had just come up to her room from waitressing at her mother’s restaurant, and we talked all night. About crazy dreams and the future and Xavier Naidoo. With a flick of my hand, I slipped her light yellow panties off her body and rummaged through her hairy lower abdomen.

A good friend was sleeping next to me, smiling, the full moon shining into the room—how romantic it was. The fact that she confessed to me a year later that she was actually a lesbian and had already wanted Liesl and Beate to hug her during nap time in kindergarten didn’t stop me from continuing this love for female buddies.

In fact, I’ve never been into annoying chicks. With their high heels and handbags and glittery lips. Although I did date some of them. To test them out. What I wanted were girls with brains. And directness. And a sense of roughness. I liked the ones who wore boxer shorts instead of thongs. Who got bloody knees on skateboards instead of burning in tanning beds.

Who could assert themselves and were cheeky and had their own opinions and would rather fuck life than let it penetrate them. Who you got to know as good friends and who suddenly stood in front of you with plump tits and ready pussies, smiling, but who hadn’t changed. And then tried out what was new. Like with Maria. Or Anastasia. Or Wenke.

A good friend once told me that I like this type of girl because I grew up without a father. And that’s why I try to regain lost authority by any means necessary. That may be true, but it doesn’t change the fact that I can’t stand girls who say yes and amen to everything. Who have to conform to the prevailing ideal of beauty. And who giggle and twinkle and never fart or grunt or hit. How boring. I might as well be with a doll.

That’s why I’ve always had the most beautiful and possibly also the most educational times of my life with female beings who were more like buddies than girlfriends. With whom I could drink and do coke and puke and bawl at night, only to be allowed to fuck them on the balcony while Muse played at full volume—because it was summer and the city was threatening to melt in the heat. The small, firm breasts with those insanely great, puffy nipples because God was undecided until the last second about what gender he should give them for his own sake. And I was infinitely grateful to him for that.

And who first went next door to loudly defecate during sex, only to return a few minutes later grinning, recounting their abstruse and crazy adventures on the toilet, and then continuing to copulate with a greasy salami sandwich and a freshly opened bottle of beer in their mouths. Then they took photos of themselves with a crappy digital camera from the discount store and sent them to another one of our buddies the next day. That’s true love, far removed from all the crappy Disney movies and Bravo photo love stories and picture book advice guides. What a load of crap.

So I continue to live my life as normal, occasionally sleeping with boring people whose stories have been told a thousand times before, and secretly hoping that one day I’ll fall head over heels for a cheeky, crazy, uninhibited, burping, farting, beer-drinking, dirty-laughing, makeup-free, small-breasted, self-confident buddy type with freckles and a pretty vagina and a mischievous smile and abstruse experiences, and vice versa, who isn’t afraid of life and laughs just as disgustingly as I do at every hollow blonde joke.

Someone who has a past to dive into. With ups and downs and favorite movies and songs that are so great you want to kneel down and worship them. Who spent more time with other boys on the soccer field than in the Barbie dream house. And who is a she, and you know at first glance: Dude, with her, the rest of your life will be a big mix of sex and beer pong and beating up loudmouths and going on trips and setting cars on fire and admiring the sunset and listening to Slipknot and throwing money around and partying and splashing around naked in the lake and shoving bottles down each other’s throats and smiling at each other with that very specific grin that you only know when you’re fucking your best friend. That’s the best thing. About life. I promise.

.

Tips for the Weekend: Ten Little Missions

What happened on Tuesday? Exactly. What happened on Thursday? Right. And on Monday? That’s it. Nobody remembers any of that shit anymore. The only thing that ever really matters is the weekend and the amazing, magical moments you’re allowed to experience during those few days of happiness. Whether you cuddle up naked with your best friends or prefer to watch all the “Saw” movies back to back on your own. And only one thing is as certain as amen in church: “The Ten Little Missions” are once again waiting for your participation. Let’s go!

One. Call yourself Sarah Hockemeier, be born on June 29, 1993, and have a son named Tyler-Joel. Two. Order a few snails for dessert from your delivery service of choice. Because that’s super exciting and exotic. Then realize they actually taste pretty boring. Three. Check yourself into a clinic because you’ve masturbated so often to the nude photos of Scarlett Johansson that your flesh is falling off. Four. Listen very closely to the DragstripGirl Birthday Mix while baking a few hash cookies. Suddenly everything feels like it did back then. Five. Sing cartoon theme songs nonstop. From “Alfred J. Kwak” to “Adventures of the Gummi Bears” to “Pokémon.” Until someone can’t take it anymore and you tragically fall victim to iron bars flying through the air.

Six. Stay awake for an entire night and do absolutely nothing. Don’t listen, don’t eat, don’t drink, don’t smoke weed, don’t watch TV. Hold out until you see the first rays of sunlight outside. Seven. Wait excitedly for “Two And A Half Men” to start again and, as a farewell, let Charlie Sheen slip between your legs one last time. Eight. Listen to the best singer in the world. Nine. Finally stop dancing. The aliens already think we’re crazy anyway. Ten. If you live in Berlin: Go vote! Preferably for the Pirates or one of the funny joke parties (this time that does not mean the NPD). If you don’t live in Berlin: Vote for world peace. Or some shit like that.

Salem: King Night

Gäg Bäll: When I Was A Teenage Whore

Mount Kimbie: Carbonated

Anna Tatton: Garden of Earthly Delights

It’s Such a Buddy Thing: Party, Prague and Prefab Housing

As a growing wannabe outsider, you learn one thing faster than how to buy Playboys without looking embarrassed or how to forge your teachers’ signatures: that good buddies are the be-all and end-all for a fulfilling life. Okay, besides a fast internet connection and making love every now and then. Over the course of your life, you encounter many different kinds of friends.

The coworkers you like to go out for a beer or two with. The people you constantly run into at the same events and parties and with whom you can talk quite openly about joys and frustrations. And then there’s that very special kind of buddy you already tried to strangle in elementary school, who knows you inside and out, dressed and naked, proud and embarrassing.

It was 2005, a school trip to Prague, this story I like to remember. The new school year had just begun, a mix of well-rehearsed classmates and fresh newcomers. After several hours on a bus from Bavaria to the Czech Republic, we were all just one thing: buddies. The girls too. We bonded on grimy seats and behind even grimier rest stops, drank and kissed and laughed and made music. It was a rolling four-ton truck of bliss.

Prague itself then became a gigantic, temporary playground for us. We roamed the streets, breweries, and discos. Turned the felt seventieth floor of our prefab hotel into one huge party, burned holes into the carpet with shishas and T-shirts set on fire. Hannah and I sat in front of her room filled with pretty girls in underwear, grinned, talked, made plans for our future. And then threw empty beer bottles out the window.

Even years later, we all still draw from this adventure, think back to the magical moments, like when we were all cuddled up together on the ride home, racing into a sudden snowstorm while little Manu plucked “Californication” by the Red Hot Chili Peppers on his guitar. André, Meggi, and the best bus driver of all time: Heinz. These are moments you’d most like to pack up and preserve forever. Good thing we had a small camera with us the whole trip that we just kept running. And yes, the sex symbol with the long greasy hair and the wet mouth is me. It was 2005, bitches!

[flv:prag.mp4 prag.jpg 640 480]

This up there, by the way, is the original cut of our trip that we handed out shortly before graduation and that we enjoy on mild winter evenings to indulge in nostalgia. This article was also created as part of the “It’s Such a Buddy Thing” campaign for the new Bacardi Oakheart; you can find more stories at Thang and Gilly. Enjoy reading.

Neon Indian: Polish Girl

Berlin Festival: Party Like It’s 2008

In the Bavarian backwater where I grew up, you were already considered one of the twenty most desirable under-20 penis carriers if you managed to make it to a festival in the surrounding area once a year. Rock im Park was the pinnacle of rustic emotions. After Hurricane and Melt!, the Berlin Festival was my third this year and something like the autumnal finale of festival season. One more bit of feeling, one more bit of music, stages, fans.

With nationally and internationally popular acts like Beginner, Beirut, and Suede, the celebrations around the former Tempelhof Airport were actually set up for a couple of grand days. Three large stages awaited numerous pushy visitors, there were bumper cars and food and a mobile disco, countless booths vying for consumer suckers; the grounds were actually quite suitable for such an event. Still, a really good atmosphere never quite emerged at the pseudo-fairground.

Odd Future had to cancel their performance shortly before the event, fans paid through the nose for extra tickets for the main event and the nightly side concerts, artists like James Blake were wasted on Friday at 2 p.m. Two p.m.! Most people are still at work then or just getting up because they stayed out too long on one of those drum-’n’-bass victim parties on Thursday.

Bands like CSS, Santigold, or Yelle, whom I loved three to five years ago, were pulled out of obscurity. Probably because too few current good acts were willing to move their asses to Germany. It felt like 2008. Add to that the often rather dubious and gray weather, the subdued visitor numbers, and those annoying Marlboro registration zombie students. If even one more of them had dared to nervously ask me to become “part of their shitty community,” at least BILD would have reported on the Berlin Festival the next day. But as it was, that didn’t happen.

I was positively surprised, however, by Buraka Som Sistema, who at least created a proper atmosphere with funny ideas, an insanely seductive singer, and great tracks; the Silent Disco, which was really fun even without drugs; and the best dürüm döner I’ve ever devoured at a mass event. And of course the Skrillex fitness program on Saturday at Club Xberg together with my pimped dose of Club Mate iced tea and the sweat-soaked Nikelein.

The Berlin Festival 2011 was neither a huge disappointment nor will it be forever etched into my mind. Why not a single ticket for all events instead of confusing additional costs? At a cheaper price, mind you. Why not steal the awesome beach backdrop from this year’s Bread & Butter to create real summer feeling? Why not move the event forward a few weeks to increase the chances of really good weather? Questions upon questions.

As we all know, you can only learn from mistakes. So next year we’re looking forward to everything being better and bigger and more beautiful and file this year’s Berlin Festival somewhere under “Sufficient.” Anyone who belongs to Berlin hipsteria and only leaves Sankt Oberholz for a single multi-day music event is much better off at Melt! Much better.

The Golden Filter: Syndromes

Scarlett Johansson: Nude Photos of a Goddess

Charles Kelman: Real Life Is Boring

AMY&PINK Is Shit: Praise, Criticism and a Whole Lot of Bullshit

In fact, with AMY&PINK we have walked a often long and arduous, but mostly cheerful and devoted path. Before that the whole thing was called Tokyopunk, before that MarcelTV and even before that Aniboy. True story. No joke. But back then people were still building homepages with tables. In Frontpage. Or Word. When you were a poor, pimply student and had nothing else.

Those who have been reading us for a while know all the small and big scandals that have happened here. The identity crises, the change from blog to magazine and back again. And back again. And back again. And back again. The amazing authors who temporarily worked with me on our constant quest for world domination, the sections and articles, ideas, photos, campaigns, legends.

And it’s no secret that once a year I sit down with a glass of wine and a rented secretary to review the current status of this masterpiece and decide which direction we should head next. Whether the decisions of the past were right. Or wrong. Whether developments fit the plan we’ve sketched out in our little heads. Is AMY&PINK getting better? As we believe. Or worse? As our two critics shout day after day.

To answer this essential question, I wrote a supremely desperate email and sent it to selected bloggers, readers, media partners and interns in a nearby psychiatric institution. All of them were people who truly read us. And love us. Or at least once truly read and loved us. I wanted to know how they currently see AMY&PINK, what they like, what they don’t. And what we absolutely have to do to fill their souls with pure happiness again. Since I asked them to be as honest as possible, because false politeness helps no one, harsh truths were soon hurled at us.

“Among other things, I like AMY&PINK because of its roughness,” writes Timo*. “Sex and drugs, rock’n’roll and somehow a new, modern and German Playboy — plus a few great women on the author team! Maybe sometimes still a bit too nice, the content could use more juice and power.” Julia* says: “I threw AMY&PINK out of my reader a few months ago. The endless photo series of naked, pierced people annoyed me.”

“Marcel, your posts had so much heart. Really. That’s totally missing,” Paula* misses. “That’s what made your blog special. No one wrote so openly about relationships, about what goes through your head — simply because no one dares. And that drew me in, and maybe many others too. I can’t really connect with the others. The times with Hannah and Caro were beautiful, for example. Sure, I liked one more, another less, but you also read when people polarize. The current ones feel like they’re just there so there are several. None of them really captivate me; I’m missing a fascinating personality.”

Karl* notes: “I think the layout is great, and it’s really proven that this magazine theme works best for the format. Especially with the amount of articles.” He continues: “What I don’t like so much: contrived capital-city blah blah. Yes, we all live in Berlin and it’s not that crazy. Pornographic stuff, blogger cuddling, fucking fucking fucking. Yes, we all do it, but it’s kind of unexciting. Giveaways en masse, superficial reviews, too much PR and sponsored events. What I personally like to read: texts about life — well written and thought-provoking, inspiring photo series — also with aesthetic nudity, links to interesting sites / texts / blogs beyond the ones everyone already knows, (new) music, authenticity and the courage to be real.”

“I also don’t think much of this whole ‘You used to be better’ discussion. The internet used to be different too, we were all younger, etc. Trolling happens everywhere and even if I’m not one of those ‘They’re all just jealous’ people, others love to gossip and criticize, especially anonymously, and the more surface to attack, the better. But that’s part of it, I think, and justifications are the wrong way.”

What I filter out from these opinions and other emails (which I’ll spare you here, because who wants to read all that?) are the following points. Overall, you think everything’s pretty neat. Layout good, topics good, development good. What you don’t find so great: false objectivity, too little private, personal, passionate content. Too little Marcel (Yes, that’s me!), more inspiration, more creativity.

And we wouldn’t have thrown this overwhelming mass of information at you if we didn’t also want to hear your views. Which of course are less valuable than those of the people mentioned above, because most of you are little trolls anyway, but hey: it’s worth a try! So let it all out: what do you find great about AMY&PINK, what belongs in the trash. Which authors have won you over, which sections should be expanded, destroyed, missed? Praise, criticism — we promise this is the only chance this year when we really want to hear your opinion. Speak now or forever hold your peace!

*Name changed by the German Foundation for Alternative Designations.

Cash, Coke and Currywurst: The Thing About Celebrity Parties

If you find yourself in the middle of the night at an event where alcohol is poured into your face for free in countless variations at nine different stands and a currywurst is sprayed on top, and surgically enhanced Z-list celebrities are throwing their oversized breasts around your ears, then that either means you’ve really made it in Berlin — or you’re just very good at sneaking in.

After a first day at the Berlin Festival that didn’t exactly fill me with orgasms, I drifted at midnight to a secret location (ewerk, Mauerstraße 78–80, 10117 Berlin) to a secret party (European Music & Media Night) hosted by a well-known German automobile company (Volkswagen), where only the most important people (Indira Weis) from the most important companies (Neun Live) in the most important industries (horticulture) were dancing around. And me in the middle of it. Slightly tipsy.

I chatted with Wilson Gonzales Ochsenknecht about our truly grand time at the Snowbombing Festival, with Bonnie Strange about role models and friendships, and with numerous music managers about the death and resurrection of the business in general. Pro tip: Mention the keyword “business” five times in one sentence and your standing with your conversation partner rises by 56%. But don’t overdo it, because with increasing alcohol levels suddenly everyone wants to make you big. Regardless of your gender or sexual orientation — or whether the person opposite you actually just cleans the toilets at Universal.

The crowd itself is an illustrious bunch of likable busybodies. The celebrities complain about other celebrities, music people about other music people, and everyone together about Karl-Heinz from Bottrop-Kirchhellen, who made it to the party through a shady Superillu sweepstake and calls Hannelore back home every second to inform her which famous faces he has seen in the last minute. “Here, that one from the jungle camp, Hannelore, the one with the big tits! I was standing at the bar with her!”

But catering companies and bartenders have long known one thing: stars are just people too. So at 2 a.m. they brawl to H-Blockx in the much-too-small side room, throw glasses and bottles around every second (probably just to please the fakirs waiting outside in droves), and dutifully stand in a seventy-meter-long line stretching across the club to get a little bread with red sauce. Like right after the war.

At some point I’d had enough of half-naked, sweaty coke models and soap actresses rubbing against my astral body, let myself be carried via stage diving to my neon-blue jacket of oppression, and left the hustle without a goodie bag and without Pierre “I’m a music manager out of passion, you are my muse” Koslowski. Thanks again to the band whose name I’ve already forgotten but who bravely smuggled me in inside their guitar case, and to Bruno, the overly correct bouncer whom I licked at briefly and lasciviously and who asked no more questions for the rest of the evening. God protect you.

SBTRKT: Pharaohs

Ilyas Iglesias: Simferopol, Bitches

Anton Kusters: Yakuza In Tokyo

Jessica Weiß in Conversation: LesMads Is Dead, Long Live LesMads

While these days millions of little girls photograph themselves daily in H&M tops and Vero Moda pants in front of the bathroom mirror on the 13th floor of their prefab apartment block, Jessie, Julia and Schnati from LesMads were the first to understand what a successful fashion blog in Germany should look like. Since mid-2007 things have been going steeply uphill; their path led the three young women past awards, fans, trolls and the constant temptations that a digital masterpiece like this inevitably brings with it.

Now Jessica Weiß, the last founding member, is leaving the project that in no time made her a significant name in the fashion industry. With one laughing and one crying eye, she looks back on four years of digital passion. The 25-year-old Berliner speaks with us about childhood dreams, haters and the major problems of today’s fashion blogs.

What did little Jessie want to be when she grew up?

As a young girl I always wrote short stories, so it was obvious to me that I would become a writer. Then music television came along and I saw my future as a presenter—at some point, when I was no longer just standing in front of the TV reenacting music video choreographies.

Within just a few years LesMads mutated from a small private fashion blog into the absolute online bible for fashion junkies. What does it feel like to give up a project you’ve put so much heart into?

We founded LesMads with completely different intentions than making money, and that was what drove its rapid success: a new approach to the fashion world, a certain bluntness, definitely a bit of naivety at the beginning, and a lot of love for fashion and writing about it. Burda helped us turn our hobby into a profession—which meant we professionalized incredibly quickly and learned an enormous amount.

Accordingly, a lot changed. Especially in the last year I took on many classic editor-in-chief tasks, and you can tell that in a blog once it reaches a certain size. I’m extremely proud of what we achieved. A few months ago giving it all up would have seemed unthinkable, but honestly we achieved everything there was to achieve with LesMads.

I consciously made the decision to leave. It feels strange, but after a few weeks that has already subsided. The moment I no longer have access to my backend or my Facebook group will certainly feel odd again. But since it was my own decision, I have to be able to deal with it.

What were the best and the hardest moments in the past few years?

The best moments were basically constant, because I was always happy with my project. Successes like the Lead Award, positive feedback from the industry, steadily growing readership or the nomination for the Grimme Online Award are of course wonderful and quite moving at my young age. Still, I could never fully comprehend how many malicious people appear in your often virtual life as soon as success becomes noticeable.

I constantly had to deal with haters, trolls, liars and above all envious people. Especially in the blogosphere there are some pathetic creatures who have publicly vented their resentment for years. I first had to learn how to handle that dark side. Interestingly, all haters are people who were “rejected” in the past—even if only because I didn’t include suggested links or failed to answer every single email.

You sometimes published ten articles a day. Often even more. Was there any offline time for you at all?

Blogging is a lot of work, especially at the pace you once set for yourself. I’m always very ambitious and actually learned to love writing under time pressure. But in the long run that pace isn’t sustainable, and after four and a half years it became noticeable. Not only does inspiration fade, it also gradually lost its appeal for me. At some point I introduced the rule of no longer writing on weekends—there was finally some offline time and it temporarily slowed down my workflow.

Julia’s departure to Condé Nast was a big topic in the German blogosphere. There were rumors that your separation had not only professional but also personal reasons. What was going on?

When friends work that closely together, it’s of course not always easy. But internal disputes were never the reason for her departure—rather personal decisions, like the one I’ve now made myself. Julia and I are very good friends and there’s not a day we don’t communicate or exchange ideas.

When an internet project grows larger and larger, one thing usually suffers: the private bond with readers. Was that the case with LesMads, and how did you react?

I can only confirm that. We grew relentlessly with our site, shared a lot of private things, publicly expressed our opinions. The more readers we gained, the more uncomfortable the thought became of sharing friends and family, diary-like impressions and personal matters. Or rather: because of many indecent comments, it was no longer possible. At the same time we were in the middle of a professionalization process.

How do you appear serious to agencies and clients if the next post is another little-girl mirror post? How do you share party photos and then write seriously about fashion? The bigger you get, the more pours in on you. I receive around 150 emails a day; everyone wants something from you, and at some point you realize it’s simply impossible to reply to every single person. So compromises had to be made again and again.

What other difficulties arose over time and how did you master them?

The biggest challenge was always explaining: What is a blog? Why should I be invited, let alone added to a press list? When we started there were only a handful of fashion blogs in Germany. The biggest hurdle was constantly being taken seriously by the print industry, agencies, designers and the press. We mastered that with a lot of hard work and perseverance. Including a few side swipes.

Do you like being in the spotlight?

No, being observed makes me extremely uncomfortable. Still, I was always incredibly happy when readers approached me.

Did you ever become arrogant?

I come from the Ruhr area; arrogance has absolutely no place there. I’m quite an unimpressed person. A lot would have to happen to cause gigantic joy and a resulting high.

Many of your readers constantly claimed that LesMads would never have become so big without Burda. Do you agree?

Of course the fact that we had Burda backing us helped, but why should that be held against us? Still, we had to work hard for many things and sometimes even fight for them. Fortunately, Burda always gave us free rein. For the publisher, just as for us, it was an exciting experiment to see where a personalized blog could go.

What impression do you have of today’s fashion blogging scene?

Compared to developments in countries like the USA, England or Sweden, I’m disappointed and bored with the German fashion blogosphere, with few exceptions. Truly original ideas, like The Man Repeller, are rare; copying is rampant, links are not shared, instead people sneer left and right. It’s also noticeable that many very young people start fashion blogs—not those in their mid-twenties and older. I would have found that more exciting.

What will you miss most when you leave your desk?

I’m not attached to material things and apart from all the lovely people I’m leaving behind, I probably won’t miss anything in my office.

Do you think all full-time bloggers eventually have to part from their project to move forward in life?

No, not necessarily. You just have to keep taking new paths and trying new things. And turn your name into a brand, even if that doesn’t quite fit the German mentality. See Elin Kling. The Swedish blogger is now a TV star, stylist, editor-in-chief of a magazine and designer.

Will there be a LesMads without you, and do you think readers can get used to that?

LesMads will no longer be the LesMads it is now. But I would see that as an opportunity. Katja from bees and ballons is the only person in the fashion blogosphere I’d gladly hand this task over to—and trust with it.

And what does your personal future look like?

A concrete job offer tempted me. I will become Executive Editor Online at Interview Magazine, which launches in Germany at the beginning of 2012. It’s a great challenge, especially since the website doesn’t exist yet. Privately I can’t quite give up blogging and at least tumble a bit at lajessie.tumblr.com.

What advice would you give today’s fashion bloggers?

Anyone who is unique and ambitious, has new ideas and above all perseverance, still has good chances of success—as models like Into the Gloss or Travelettes show. Of course you have to distinguish between private blogs and those that want to work professionally. Those are very different approaches and motives. Fashion blogs have never fit into one single category; you have to differentiate a lot.

Would you do everything exactly the same way again?

Oh yes.

Mixtape: Last Days Of Summer

We slowly have to face the following frightening fact: summer is largely drawing to a close. The days are getting shorter again, trees are losing their leaves, pretty girls begin once more to wrap themselves in dark coats—or are immediately locked back in the attic by their overprotective fathers. How nice it is to at least celebrate the approaching end of the hot sunny season through music. With such great artists as The Weeknd, Destroyer and Little Dragon. Oh summer, we wish you would stay forever. Just kidding, get out of here—that’s enough for now.

That's Why You're Fat: The Internet and Your Fat Ass

The sad truth is: the internet makes you fat. All day long we flatten our asses on office chairs, café benches and cold basement floors, move at most to plug the iPhone into the computer or grab fresh tissues for a quick stress-relief session, and would rather go to sleep when the calendar actually says something about sports.

When it comes to eating, it has to be quick. After all, that one project still needs to be finished. Or the code tested. Or the interview conducted. Of course lazily by email. Pizza, pasta, burgers—roll quickly to your trusted snack bar to shove the Hong Kong-style roast duck into your swollen face crease in one bite and then hurry back to the home or agency office—the internet never sleeps. Ever.

I notice it myself. While writing this text, I have to push my belly aside to somehow get the double-fried paprika chips into my body. And of course I’m often even too lazy to go outside to get food. That’s why I’ve abused Lieferando so much in the last two months that with the loyalty points alone I could have fed half of Africa. And Rainer Calmund. And Ottfried Fischer. And your mother.

And if I actually manage through mental strength to ride my bike to appointments instead of taking the subway and, instead of ordering the double special with crazy fries and cola at Rosenburger, get the warm goat cheese salad (which is actually really tasty) with tap water one stop further, the next day I only remember how I puked drunk into Burger King at half past three in the morning while simultaneously screaming like a little child for the bacon-cheese nuggets with fivefold Whopper and country potatoes. And throw nine Hot Wings on top. Bye, see you later!

Of course television is to blame. And society. And advertising. Not me. I could live on peaches (if I weren’t allergic to them) and home-grown tomatoes with self-hunted lean chicken all day long if Doug Heffernan didn’t constantly suggest how gay vitamins are. And everywhere you’re flooded with currywurst and kebab. And Colonel Sanders from Kentucky Fried Chicken would chase me in my sleep through a field of oversized corn cobs if I stopped consuming his finger-lickin’-good products. It’s your fault! Not mine. Assholes.

But that ends now. Because I not only notice how more sluggish and tired and unfocused I become from this mass-produced food junk, but that often it doesn’t even taste good anymore. At least sometimes. Burger King can change its product range as often as it wants—the stuff always tastes the same. Like smoked hobos. Always. Call A Pizza sells calorie Frisbees drowned in fat with tenfold cheese, whose production probably costs eleven pizza bakers their fertility each year. And I won’t even start on the Asian noodles at Alexanderplatz. Before I buy those again, I’d rather march into the Iraq war armed only with an elephant thong.

It really can’t be that hard in this profession not to look like the stereotype from a poorly researched RTL report. Or the guy from Nerdcore. The fashion bloggers manage it after all. Okay, they live off marriage proposals from 64-year-old stalkers from Braunschweig alone. Or these skinny Harry Potter nerds who now all squeeze dubious beards out of their baby cheeks and look like a broom swallowed them. Oh wait, they’re not even real.

So what’s to be done? One thing is clear: without at least partially healthy nutrition we won’t live to see the next Mac OS update because of a stroke or morbid obesity. Do a bit of sport. Take an hour to get on the bike. Or cough your lungs out in the park. Remember: jerking off is not a sport. Escape the stress on the weekend. Sit outside on a bench and read a book, arrange paintball with the brothers from the yodel club. Just recharge your batteries.

It’s not about saying goodbye to your Twitter friends, starting a new life as fitness guru Power-Peter and riding a Kettcar across the USA. It’s about becoming aware that you can’t hide behind your screen forever because at some point the fat rolls will grow over your eyes. And maybe even have sex again. With more than one person. Let’s use the coming end of the year to celebrate a healthier lifestyle. With everything that goes with it. But let’s start tomorrow—I still have vouchers for McDonald’s.

Underground Heroes: Weed And Born To Lose

Mint Julep: Aviary

Fran Allen: Forever Unknown

i-ref: The Magazine for Finding Happiness

Attention and listen up. Our very best friends over at i-ref finally completed their long-awaited relaunch this morning, right on time for their one-year anniversary, and of course they want the whole world to notice and immediately check out their absolutely beautiful site. After all, with their magazine they’re practically part of our little family. That’s how much we love them. And curly-haired Isa and workaholic Norman are doing such great work over there that we simply couldn’t resist telling you about it right away.

They’re actually not that different from us. Both are run by a career-driven anti-couple and stylish additional authors; over there it’s also about music and art and fashion and photography and the everyday madness. Probably with a bit more sophistication and a bit fewer breasts. But who really knows these days…

And because they’re so incredibly happy about their new design, they’re giving away some amazing things as well. A brand-new tablet from Sony, for example—so new that it’s only just being presented at the IFA. Or a sexy bag from MCM. Decadent clothes from Ben Sherman. Or tickets for the upcoming Berlin Festival featuring wonderful artists like James Blake, Beirut, and Casper.

What do you have to do? Simply stop by here, become a Facebook fan of the enchanting overall package, and leave a comment filled with lots of love and soul. In any case, we wish the spirited crew continued success and joy in writing. Maybe we’ll just marry them soon and have cheeky little blogger children together, whose first words will be RSS, Trackback, and WordPress. How sweet and wonderful and nerdy that would be. Sigh.

Nicolas Sisto: Paris, London, Montréal

Lauren Young: Party Naked

Julia Marcell: Matryoshka

ZDFneo TVLab: Declaring War on TV Trash

Do you remember when, in our furious article Sendeschluss, we pointed out that German television is slowly but surely going under? It’s still the truth, but one channel has taken this attack to heart and is now trying to restore television to its old, new glory: ZDFneo, the channel that no normal person can receive in any way whatsoever.

With "TVLab" the pseudo-Mainzers have now introduced a new concept in which viewers themselves can decide what the programming of the future should look like. Ten pilot episodes of very different series and shows are competing; the best one will continue, the rest will sink into eternal ratings obscurity. The whole thing is hosted by Joko and Klaas.

And because on this beautiful day we had nothing better to do, we simply watched all the contestants and will now tell you bluntly which show absolutely has to come back and whose editors deserve to be beaten up today. You can watch all the shows in full length here and vote until September 3. Let’s go!

German Angst

Unlike our Germanic ancestors, who feared nothing and no one and simply stormed into other people’s villages in colorful armor and played with matches, modern Germans are basically afraid of everything. Of data protection, of rotten meat, and in the pilot episode especially of the strange-looking Turkish neighbor from across the street.

With Micky Beisenherz, "German Angst" wants to take away these softies’ reasons for whining and complaining, using comedy and knowledge to dismantle prejudices and encourage a rethink through sketches and interviews. Unfortunately, many ideas feel too harmlessly executed, and the biggest weakness is probably this: the pub-table Dieters who still rant against Muslims, vote for the NPD, and want to ban the kebab shop downtown will never even see this format thanks to the chosen TV channel.

For fans of: Die Sendung mit der Maus, Yourope, The Greens.

Bambule

Anyone who doesn’t love Sarah Kuttner is an asshole. You don’t even need an article before the noun to realize that German television needs much more Sarah Kuttner. After being chased from the Barbie channel VIVA to various third channels, the 31-year-old is now bringing out the big guns and trying her hand at a magazine show—about herself. And everything around her.

But if you look beyond the questions, inserts, and witty remarks, "Bambule" isn’t really about Sarah Kuttner at all, but—exactly—Berlin! And in its purest form. Alexanderplatz here, yellow trams there, naturalized underground-agency-music-fuckers over there. Anyone who lives in another German city (yes, that apparently happens) will have a problem with the show; everyone else will get comfortable in St. Oberholz for half an hour and simply stick a "Sarah Kuttner Show" logo on their MacBook.

For fans of: Die Sarah Kuttner Show, Die Sarah Kuttner Show, Die Sarah Kuttner Show.

Ausgekuschelt!

The devil himself must have sent René Marek to Earth to fill entire arenas and make people laugh with unfunny hand puppets. "Ausgekuschelt!" simply takes that template and throws in a pinch of "Drawn Together" to have washed-up ex-celebrities in plush form go at each other.

It’s probably my own preference, but I hate hand puppets. On my scale of goodness, they rank somewhere between clowns and run-over rabbits, and if Special Ed from "Crank Yankers" isn’t shouting “I got mail” in the background, I can gladly do without them. Please. Forever. And longer.

For fans of: Vampy, Fur TV, Puppetmastaz.

Scharfe Hunde

TV commissioner "Matze Beck" is replaced after ten years by a lesbian American and doesn’t handle it well at all. Together with his burned-out screenwriter, he sets out to solve real criminal cases from now on and first rescues a little black boy, only to hit on his own daughter in the end.

No one could explain to me until this moment why "Scharfe Hunde" is currently in first place in the rankings. The story is kind of nice, the main actors mostly are not. Many scenes are below Sat.1 level, fun and action are completely missing; my little cousin could have squeezed a better suspense curve out of his felt-tip pens. They’d be better off bringing back "Dr. Psycho" with Christian Ulmen. Television Germany could count itself lucky.

For fans of: Verdachtsfälle, Dr. Psycho, Dieter’s class trip video from 7th grade.

Moviacs

Nilz Bokelberg is the likable chaotic guy from the good old VIVA days and together with his buddy Donnie O'Sullivan he wants to revolutionize the genre of film magazines. Finding blockbusters shitty again, chatting up Matthias Schweighöfer in the bathroom, masturbating over favorite films. And somehow the two of them manage quite well.

Of course the first episode has weaknesses. The first episode of everything has weaknesses. If you watch the premiere of "GameOne" today, you just want to hurl your Sega DreamCast at the TV and throw yourself screaming out of the tenth floor. The hope that something could come of "Moviacs" makes the show my personal favorite.

For fans of: Film ab, GameOne, German music channels from 1993.

Teddy's Show

I have no idea who Tedros Teclebrhan (try typing that last name) is or how he slept his way into his own show, but he apparently comes from the YouTube corner and thinks he’s a comedian. So far so good. In classic sketch-and-stand-up style, he tickles his audience’s funny bones until they break. Or at least he should.

Somewhere between Dave Chappelle, Simon Gosejohann, and Klaus-Jürgen Deuser, the young entertainer and musician seems to have gotten lost. No one here was doubled over with laughter; now and then a polite smile here and there. That was it. "Teddy’s Show" was supposed to be "Comedystreet" and "Broken Comedy," but it barely manages to be "Vasta TV."

For fans of: Quatsch Comedy Club, Nightwash, Uncle Werner’s grill party jokes before 4 p.m.

Wie geil ist das denn?!

The idea is more than charming: Caro Korneli dedicates herself to things in life that everyone should have done at some point but either doesn’t dare to or simply has no time for. Really letting loose for once, for example. Or driving a tank. Or spitting at a llama. It usually happens quickly, the camera follows along, and then it’s on to the next thing.

The only drawback of "Wie geil ist das denn?!"? It doesn’t help us. As sweetly likable as Caro is, it doesn’t benefit me to watch her live through the checklist of a morning editorial meeting while I’m stuffing fries into my face in front of the TV. Will that motivate me to get my fat ass off the couch? Probably not. And at some point they’ll presumably just run out of ideas. Probably already after the pilot episode.

For fans of: Ulmens Auftrag, Wario Ware, people who can’t tell K and C apart.

Neoexplorer

With probably the most innovative idea of the competition, "Neoexplorer" enters the race. Anne Herzlieb and Jan Ferichs travel around the world and let viewers advise them beforehand on which corners one has to see, where to get the best ice cream, and how to get most beautifully from one place to another. With them: an iPad. That’s it.

Away from the usual dusty travel documentaries, this show feels fresh, modern, and lively, combining the desire to travel with the technological achievements of recent years. Through the internet there is a constant exchange between the globetrotters and the viewers. Great idea, somewhat sluggish hosts, but where does the budget come from?

For fans of: Public broadcasting travel documentaries.

Bullshit

The concept of "Bullshit" isn’t that easy to explain; maybe I just don’t get it. Three guys… and that’s already where it ends. Something about pranking people in pedestrian zones, completing tasks, driving around in a huge car. Add a catchy title and the cloak of guerrilla reports, and you get a cream puff without any sense or reason.

There isn’t much to say about the show by Martin Fromme, Lutz van der Horst (hehe), and Sven Nagel anyway, because it’s pointless. "Bullshit" won’t manage to convince viewers, let alone be developed further. That’s the sad truth. Although, not that sad. It’s just the truth. Better keep watching the test pattern.

For fans of: DMAX, A-Team meat substitute, meaninglessness.

Liebe auf Speed

Some MTV intern must have made it undercover into the ZDF building; there’s no other way to explain the following show concept. In "Liebe auf Speed," unsuspecting singles are invited to a speed dating event to find the partner for life. The only catch: everything is planned from start to finish—except the poor single has no idea.

I could honestly beat up every single editor on this planet who still brings dating shows within range of my eyes and ears. What started somewhat amusingly with "Herzblatt" (when we were 8) and mutated into the running Diddl mouse of the TV landscape with "Nur die Liebe zählt" was simply anally raped by "Date My Mom," "Disaster Date," and "Love is Blind." Culprit: MTV. Alone. So, to pull out an old saying again: No amnesty for MTV! Although we would gladly date host Jeannine Michaelsen. Under any circumstances.

For fans of: Every shitty MTV dating show that has ever existed.

Is It Okay to Steal Someone? Your Girlfriend Is Now My Girlfriend

I met Katha at a typical countryside party on the outskirts of my hometown. She was tall, she was pretty, her long black hair blowing in the wind that smelled of cheap beer and vomit-stained corners. Of course she had a boyfriend. For three years. Ferdinand. Somewhere with the German army. A soldier. In the barracks. Or at war. In any case, not here. With her. His bad luck.

My conscience, which has been undersized since birth, switched to “Fernsehgarten” mode when at three in the morning we turned our backs on our cheering friends to let loose in the apartment of her somewhat mentally disabled older sister, swearing eternal love to each other in the moonlight while slurring our words. And another drink on that.

The next morning my phone display exploded. “You stole Ferdi’s girlfriend? Dude…” it read. “You hero,” said some. “You asshole,” said others. “Good luck!” said her best friend. And she didn’t necessarily mean the well-being of our newly ignited love, but rather my physical health. Because Ferdi… well, let’s put it this way: even concrete walls are no obstacle for him.

I could now tell you how a few days later I barely escaped his clutches and the machine gun he had at the ready (which was probably more of a crooked stick), ran to the next bus stop in my boxer shorts and begged a crazy flower lady for €1.30. And how Hobby-Rambo called Katha in tears to confess his eternal love and babbled something about marriage and children, and then almost killed himself because she laughed and hung up, only to send me nude photos of herself and her favorite teddy bear afterwards. But that’s hardly worth mentioning, since our relationship lasted just four weeks.

The question that has occupied me ever since this formative experience (actually not that much, since at some point I traded my conscience for supposed internet fame and will end up in hell anyway): How bad is it really to steal someone else’s girlfriend? If she is surely doing terribly in the other relationship. Or if you love her much, much more than the other ever could? Or if you’re simply damn horny for her?

Or should you surrender to society’s outrage over the issue and just wait until nature (or in this case each individual’s instability) takes care of it, so that right after the breakup you can strike and offer your sexy shoulder to cry on? On the other hand, wouldn’t actively destroying another relationship only speed things up, wouldn’t it?

I only saw Katha twice after our lightning liaison. The first time she told me about a spontaneous anal party in her boss’s Jeep with him and his girlfriend; the second time she proudly announced while standing on a pub table that Ferdi and she would be getting married the following spring in the little chapel in the woods. I was happy for the two of them. Honestly.

Little Jinder: Without You

TOKYOPUNK Is Looking for Reinforcements: Come Join Us in Nippon Wonderland

It’s like this. TOKYOPUNK is, alongside this world-domination machine here, one of my favorite projects. Not because it’s such an innovative idea or grants eternal life to people out there, but simply because it exists. I love Japan. And so many great things happen over there all the time—musically, artistically, insanely—that it would be a shame if those ideas and videos and photos never made it to Germany.

My wonderful colleague Asumi, with whom I started the project, loves TOKYOPUNK too. But she has little time for it. Because of university. And a side job. And life. It’s similar for me. If you bundle all three previous points into “internet stuff.” But I absolutely want it to continue, to finally gain momentum, and under no circumstances to die.

So what’s the logical next step when you have a living concept but no time to implement it properly? Exactly: you get support. That’s why I am personally looking for Japanese volunteers around the world for TOKYOPUNK who would like to share their country’s culture with German-speaking readers. We will divide all advertising revenue into fair little slices among us, although I can honestly tell you: at the beginning it will look rather bleak. But that will change. With time. If we stick with it.

The goal is clear: regularly post new music videos, present art projects, street style, books, events—everything that makes life in and around the Land of the Rising Sun so incredibly awesome. You should be able to write reasonably well, also in English if you like; I’ll translate it, no problem at all. The main thing is that it’s interesting. We’ll do this together.

So if you’re Japanese or know Japanese people or are planning to conceive some, then get in touch here: bewerbung@tokyopunk.com. I will also send this call for support to thematically related institutions such as associations, universities, authorities; Asumi is searching too. Somehow we’ll manage to assemble an illustrious team. Help us—it’s going to be great. Arigatō.

We are currently searching for new Japanese authors for our project TOKYOPUNK. If you know someone who would be interested in writing for us, please send a mail to bewerbung@tokyopunk.com. We'll share all ad revenues in fair pieces and you can prepare your articles also in English; we would translate them into German. You've got questions? Just write us.

Regular Show: The Losers and Life

If there’s one thing I’m always up for, it’s completely insane animated series that defy all rules, conventions, and logic in a charming way while still remaining credibly crazy. “Ren & Stimpy” fucked my brain anew every week, I’ll one day read the scripts of “Adventure Time with Finn And Jake” to my poor children as bedtime stories, and “Rocko's Modern Life” raised entire generations of creative screwballs.

With “Regular Show,” J. G. Quintel created the world of the two late-pubescent slackers Mordecai and Rigby, who land a job as park groundskeepers for a talking gumball machine. Together with a muscular yeti, a walking brain tumor, and High-Five Ghost, they live in a loose shared apartment, play with dead animals in the street, or skillfully dodge their duties.

The blue jay and his best friend, trapped in the body of a raccoon, naturally miss no opportunity to get themselves into increasingly stupid and stupider predicaments. They have to break the universe record against giant floating heads, rescue their friends from an internet controlled by a biting grandma, or destroy the party god. And usually every episode ends with the entire world going up in flames and psychologically unstable trash being hurled around.

The animated series, broadcast on Cartoon Network since 2010, brims with idiotic ideas and unbelievably twisted characters, cleverly mixed with a hint of American loser mentality. The third season is expected to appear soon; critics prefer to compare “Regular Show” to “Beavis and Butt-head.” Because Mordecai and Rigby are you and me and all of us—rather gaming than working, preferring staring contests and long lunch breaks and stuffing ourselves with sweets over anything else. What a life.

Jägermeister Wirtshaus Tour: Sausages, Beats and Mini Golf

After we used Wednesday night to shred our vocal cords at karaoke, we headed to Hamburg a day later to shake the Hanseatic city as part of the Jägermeister Wirtshaus Tour. On board: little Nike, Fluffy Head 1, Fluffy Head 2, Ladyboy, Josh and the Audiofreak. On the train we philosophized about lesbian cheese adventures, at the hotel we destroyed remote controls and hairdryers, and then headed to the mini golf course to properly hole out with the guys around The Toxic Avenger. And although rumors spread that the VIP brigade won the tournament, the real winners were us – the “Lägga Dörtschn.”

Refreshed with beer and stuffed with sausages, we stumbled in the evening into the nearby clubhouse where long-haired dachshund Skrillex, who upon arrival first ran full speed into a wall that didn’t move out of the way, made the raging crowd explode with beats and drums and dubstep. Head grease flew through the air, Jägermeister down throats, bodily sweat into faces.

Before long we couldn’t stand it behind the barrier any longer, threw ourselves into the roaring crowd, collected bruises and colorful glitter and seventeen sexually transmitted diseases; somewhere David, Nils and Marian, the guy with the craziest eyes in the world, were swimming along. Between the last song and the scene where I, armed with a Super Soaker, hunted down the common folk, a few images are missing in my head. Orgy in my hotel room, feast at Erika's Eck, showering with Nike. Somehow in that order.

Thanks to all the nice people behind the scenes of this event who, for legal reasons, may not be mentioned by name (Hello Charlotte, Alex, Björn, Nele, Sara and Nadja) and to the slowly bonded blogger tour team that I grow fonder of with every little trip. It was a damn good night with you lunatics. Only one thing I regret afterward like crazy: that we didn’t steal one of those naughty garden gnomes with their dirty little butts. We little cowards.

This is a sponsored article by Jägermeister. Advertise here too?

Steve Jobs Resigns: Role Model, Junkie, Cult Leader

In truth, I haven’t had that many role models in my life. A handful, maybe. There was that good-hearted surfing dad from “O.C., California.” Sandy Cohen. The one who always had an open ear for his surroundings and for friends and enemies alike. Or the Chinese author Mian Mian, who slept her way through half of Shanghai, pushed illegal substances into various bodily orifices, and with whom you were never quite sure what was fiction and what wasn’t. And then there was Steve Jobs.

It was easy for me to devour his unauthorized biographies, one after another. Always the same story, always told a little differently. How he went from being an LSD junkie somewhere in Silicon Valley to becoming one of the most significant men in the history of technology with Apple. How he squeezed money out of gray-suited businessmen with false promises, cried and screamed and sulked when he didn’t get what he wanted. And how he was thrown out of his own company, only to rise again like a phoenix from the ashes and make everything even bigger and better and more of everything.

Today Steve Jobs is 56 years old and ill. And he doesn’t want to anymore. He wrote a letter to the world. “I have always said that if there ever came a day when I could no longer meet my duties and expectations as Apple’s CEO, I would be the first to let you know. Unfortunately, that day has come.” And that makes me sad. Nerd-sad. If I ever had the ambition to make something great out of my life, then I borrowed it from him. From nothing to everything, being a pioneer, daring something new. Regret nothing.

The man is probably quite an asshole. He yelled at his employees, denied his children, constantly made the people around him feel, in the harshest ways, that he didn’t like them and that they should kindly throw themselves out of the thirteenth floor of his glass complex. Because it’s fun. If you believe the countless stories about him, then he’s not exactly someone you’d want to share a room with for more than ten minutes. The cult leader, the choleric.

And yet there were always people who spoke of his aura. Of the incredible energy that could seize and carry you away, even if the ideas themselves were complete nonsense and all signs pointed to disaster. They called it the reality distortion field. Really. He walked into the room, you were against him, a bird flew past outside, you were for him. Just like that.

Now the man no one can replace is stepping down. Steve Jobs gave the Windows haters pure hope, the hipsters supposed individuality, the creatives their creativity. And he gave me a role model whose idealism I stole, copied, and hid deep inside myself. So that I will never forget it. Goodbye, Steve Jobs. I will miss you. And then I remembered that you’re not even dead yet.

Ellen Von Unwerth: After After Party

Send-Off: Television Is Abolishing Itself

Television channels like RTL, ProSieben, and Sat.1 had decades to buy the favor of viewers based on a single criterion: there was nothing else. Whereas today we simply open one of tens of thousands of other websites if we don’t like the current one, with TV we could only choose between a handful of private channels and the public broadcasters — or just go outside. Into the sun. Lie down on the grass. Or something.

For years now, digital natives have been preaching the end of television. Why still rely on a fixed program schedule of a few selected outlets, let yourself be passively entertained by the mass broadcasters? When you can constantly and everywhere see and hear everything, whenever and wherever you want? Without commercial breaks? From people you trust, from sources whose interests you share?

If I want to watch films or series, I download them, lie in bed with my laptop, and watch them there while I crumble cookies and chips. I can pause them whenever I want, take them with me, to the bathroom, to the kitchen, share them with others. If I want to know the news, I don’t wait until 8 p.m.; I get it immediately. And not from German media, but from international outlets. Because they are faster. And better. And more trustworthy.

Television, especially German television, has proven one thing for years: that it is becoming obsolete. While Tripoli burns, German channels show reruns of old series or documentaries about the fall of the Berlin Wall. Because they don’t have enough money to cover the events in the media. When a successful gaming convention takes place in Cologne, the pumped-up private networks can think of nothing better than to broadcast a pseudo-fascist report about sexy female students and ugly nerds. Because it serves the cliché.

It’s astonishing that television itself shows how dead it actually is. On “Zapping International” on Arte, families around the world are regularly visited and the local programming examined. The sad truth: everywhere it’s the same. Consumer-crazed casting shows, softened and often manipulated news, cheaply produced films, soaps, shows.

Instead of entertaining and informing local viewers in an interesting and challenging way, the same idiotic mush-brain programs that have worked for years, decades, are played over and over again. And only a few people are responsible for deciding what the public should see. That aspect alone is, let’s say it as it is, stupid.

Bloated broadcasting centers are unnecessary, lifestyle magazines that have “discovered the source: internet” just as much, “Big Brother,” “Verdachtsfälle,” “Alles was zählt Episode 72635”… why does any reasonably thinking person still put up with this crap? That’s no longer entertainment; it’s genocide. And the sooner it all ends, the better. For all of us.

Merlin Bronques: Berlin Loves You

Beck’s Mix Fusion: The Digital vs. Analog Party

Ever since the first computers changed the face of the earth, an unstoppable war has been raging between supporters of analog tradition and the digital future. Cameras, media, music — no one can really decide between one or the other. But one event is finally putting an end to the eternal back and forth and calling for the ultimate battle: the Beck’s Mix Fusion Party in Berlin!

The third celebration of its kind promises, after the great start in Hamburg and the stopover in Munich, to be another fantastic evening. On September 16, Berlin’s party crowd will gather at the Nhow Hotel on Stralauer Allee. This time featuring Columbus, Greg Wilson, and xXxXx. And of course you can attack the newest fusion, Beck’s Black Currant, and other illustrious drinks ice-cold. Sounds great. We wouldn’t be AMY&PINK if we didn’t somehow get you in.

That’s why we’re giving away 1x2 tickets for the Fusion Party and, on top of that, a brilliant Vestax Typhoon USB DJ controller, with which you can easily mutate into a professional DJ. It includes an integrated sound card that allows a microphone and headphones to be connected directly to the controller, as well as automatic beat synchronization so you can focus on what really matters.

All you have to do to win the sound package is leave us a comment with a valid email address by Wednesday, August 31. And if you want to push your chances of party entry to immeasurable heights, you should also try your luck on the Beck’s website or the official Facebook page. Tickets are also being given away there.

This is a sponsored article by Beck’s. Advertise here?

Rene Vaile: The Afternoon

Still Corners: Cuckoo

Mixtape: Chill Until You Die

Anyone who hasn’t drawn the Hartz IV bonus card or ended up as an old fuddy-duddy in a retirement home has stress. Constantly and endlessly. In our fast-paced world, it’s almost impossible to take a really deep breath, let five be five, and just not give a damn about your job, university, or annoying friends. Because that would entail consequences so unpredictable that they would only create even more stress. It’s terrible. The only thing that can save us from this vicious cycle is good music. From TV On The Radio, Miike Snow, and Passion Pit. Chill until you die.

MDMA – The New Cancer Killer? How a Party Drug Is Saving the World

Three essential ingredients are absolutely necessary for the typical young person in a major German city to have a memorable weekend: overpriced cocktails, a grimy music dive with an even grimier backyard, and a bag stuffed to the brim with MDMA—the disgustingly stinking chunk drug in white or piss yellow. Depending on how gracious the dealer is when it comes to color preferences.

Now, hypocritical straight-edge supporters might look down contemptuously on these inferior figures who almost compulsively resort to alternative ecstasy just to survive in nightlife. But as it turns out, those youthful hobby junkies may have anticipated the latest scientific findings: MDMA is the new cancer killer.

A medically modified version of the intoxicant is said, according to the University of Birmingham, to be particularly effective against blood cancers such as leukemia, lymphadenitis, and plasmacytoma. “We don’t want to give people false hope just yet,” says Professor John Gordon from the School of Immunology and Infection. “But the study has enormous potential to advance cancer research in the coming years.”

The British scientists have apparently also uncovered the secret of how the otherwise notorious addictive substance works in the body. “It seems that the substance attracts fatty acid molecules in the cell membrane, making the cell softer. This allows the drug to penetrate the cell more easily. It doesn’t work as easily with healthy cells.”

At the moment, the dose of MDMA that would be required to combat malignant hemoblastoses would still be fatal for humans, but in a few years a special version of it is expected to be tested on living subjects. “It will still take some time and work,” predicts cancer researcher Dr. David Grant. “But we will soon be able to present the world with a new cancer drug.”

Whether it’s advisable for a passionate partygoer to treat themselves to a double portion of MDMA next weekend to rid their body of unwanted diseases is another matter entirely. But once again, it’s astonishing from which shady milieus certain remedies for future generations can emerge. Save the drugs. Or something like that.

Oh Land: White Nights

Bon Iver: Holocene

Hairy Pits Club: Tastes Like Grandma Under the Arm

My first real girlfriend was 14, blonde, and had more hair under her arms than your father has between his legs. Nina wasn’t one of those cliché feminists or trying to make a statement against the deforestation of the rainforest. No. She would have had enough money for razors and shaving foam — she just didn’t know any better.

During the brief year in which we shared love the way only a naïve teenage romance can, I made my way week after week toward her secret zones. At the public pool, in her room, on the desk of her alcoholic father. “Welcome to the jungle” is probably what I would have called my mission, if those words had already been a tangible phrase shortly before the millennium.

I loved biting into the tufts of hair arranged in a trapezoid under her arms, affectionately naming them after the Teletubbies. Dipsy was the fuzz on her upper lip; the others I rotated as I pleased. When we broke up on a mild spring evening because she was sleeping with her cousin, the shaving craze had just begun to invade the minds of the city girls. Nina’s armpit hair died that very night.

When I sit today with a glass of Pinot Noir in front of YouPorn and look at all the smoothly shaved bodies bouncing more or less in ecstasy before me, an inexplicable melancholy surrounds me. Thoughts of tufts swaying in the wind drift through my mind’s eye. Nina probably never even knew how much I adored her puberty. To call me a sick teenager would directly penetrate the general meaning of the word understatement.

But not all female beings seem to welcome the obsession with removing their natural defenses. In the Hairy Pits Club they indulge their love of growth. They measure their armpit hair, style it, dye it. And then celebrate worthy anniversaries with delight. That most of them seem to find sexual pleasure in their own gender may be left aside for the moment, but it’s still nice to see that the consumer war against God’s creations, led by Gillette and Wilkinson, hasn’t been entirely won yet.

Jours Aprés Lunes: Little Girls and Fashion

What would the fashion world be without a little scandal here and an uproar there? Exactly: dull. The French label Jours Aprés Lunes recently released a lingerie collection for little girls along with a corresponding photo series that doesn’t seem to be well received by everyone. The accusation: the clothing is too sexy for minors, the images tinged with pedophilia — they should all be ashamed.

“I looked at this and almost freaked out,” says Amanda Russell Felhofer on Buzzfeed. “All so-called parents who buy these lingerie pieces for their children should be shot immediately.” The industry-favorite website Fashionista also finds only harsh words for the fashion line: “Should four-year-olds really be skipping around in bras and panties — and wearing nothing else? Is there even a conceivable situation in which something like this would make sense?”

In fact, the heated debate about very young girls in an overly sexualized context is not coming out of nowhere. Just a few weeks ago, French Vogue faced harsh criticism for a photo spread in which they did not portray a ten-year-old model named Thylane Blondeau in an age-appropriate way. Her mother responded tersely: “At least she was dressed.”

The fact that the accusations of pedophilia and the resulting hostility seem to come predominantly from the United States may not shock anyone in Europe anymore, but the intensity with which people are storming around with pitchforks and torches over harmless depictions that have appeared in every Otto catalog for decades is still surprising.

At least not everyone seems to have switched off their brain. “I don’t understand all the fuss,” says user Brittany, for example. “Young girls have to wear underwear too, after all. I would have been happy to have pieces like these back then. These aren’t lingerie; this is completely normal underwear. Get that into your heads.”

The Paris-based label Jours Aprés Lunes has not yet commented on the accusations, but for days now it has been verbally attacked by various users on its official Facebook page. “These poor girls!” one reads there, “There should be a law against this,” and “This is the most disgusting thing I have ever seen on Facebook!” You can overdo it.

Grace Denis: I Could Love You So Exquisitely

The Naked and Famous: The Sun (Where’s My Head)

Tavi Gevinson: Creepy Little Girl

Four Years in Berlin: City, Depth, Moment

I have now been living in Berlin for four years. Exactly four years. I could now tell you in golden words how magnificent this city is in summer. That on every corner and at any time there are dirty secrets to discover that can change your entire life forever in a single moment. In a positive and negative sense. Or how many incredibly talented people glowing with a spirit of departure hang around here, all of whom you should get to know and love.

But once you’ve gotten past the exciting initial phase and your soul has settled into certain structures and circumstances, even the most seemingly unreal place begins to sink into everyday grayness. You start to stand above the trends that seemed so incredibly appetizing in the first weeks and that transform into a mutation of themselves at every moment.

The body seems to adapt to the endless hectic pace of the city, which newcomers constantly fail to withstand. And you begin not only to view the once so hip events with the same hip people more critically, but almost to see them as a farce. Truth and copy lie nowhere closer together than here. The risk of no longer being yourself, of denying who you are, is omnipresent.

More than once I have lost friends who allowed themselves, without resistance, to be hooked by Berlin’s greasy, curling bait and dragged down into the depths. Who couldn’t withstand the eternal temptations of the nightly clubs, cheap drugs, real enemies; who didn’t just taste but devoured, who didn’t think of tomorrow, who renounced consequences. And when you meet them again months, years later, they are only shadows of themselves, who regret, who want to forget, their eyes dull, their lungs filled with repulsive breaths.

Berlin withholds its true moments of happiness from the attentive. From those who are not seduced by the obvious but instead find their own path through all the streets, cafés, and old apartments. Together with people who truly deserve to share their time with them. Who do not belong to the fast-moving event crowd that first sets you on fire with their seemingly endless energy and then, with the next breath, fades away silently behind the next industrial gate.

An eternal kiss under the fireworks on the banks of the Spree. When the first rays of the sun tickle your face after a night of partying while your favorite song plays on the iPod. When the hope and the work you’ve invested in your dream somehow pay off and Berlin smiles at you: Well done, keep going. There is still much to do.

Do not hesitate to love this city. With heart and soul, with reason and courage. Forever. For whoever follows its countless possibilities and uses the well-hidden clues wisely merges with it into a unity whose inspiration and greatness are hard to grasp. And yet I notice more and more that Berlin is not the end of my journey; there is so much more out there to discover, to see, to admire. But time will tell. Four years. That is so much. And yet so damn little.

Ruby Mercier: Sweet Sixteen

Dubstep Lyrics: Electronic Dance Music for the Deaf

[flv:dubstep.mp4 dubstep.jpg 1074 604]

TRASHTEEN: Interweb’s Little Sister

It wasn’t a particularly big effort. We bought WANNAFUCKAHIPSTER for a döner and something to sniff, smashed it flat with axes and spit, and then subjected the thing to a merciless brainwashing as well as a sex change. A rocky road lay ahead of us and cost us a whole lot of Nyan Cat videos, double rainbows, and “Friday” covers. But after weeks in the therapeutic institution, our little sister was finally released and now has only one mission: to give the trash back to the Internet.

TRASHTEEN is therefore the name of the new baby whose idiocy is obvious at first glance. On the mostly still unwritten pages, it’s all about the most delightful events on the Internet. Whether bloody GIFs, traumatic videos, or exposed butts. Lovely memories, countless Pokémon, razor-sharp videos. Or cheering superheroes, grinning non-fuckers, and bursting balloons. The shit of the entire net on one page. New and fresh and first.

It’s going to be so damn grand that we can’t sit still ourselves. Especially because TRASHTEEN is bursting with personality and WTF moments, and every new article makes at least one person in this world cry. Whether from joy or hate remains to be seen, but that doesn’t really concern us. Finally a blog worth reading again. And now share and like and comment as much as you can—then we’ll all be happy. Right over there. TRASHTEEN, TRASHTEEN, TRASHTEEN.

Mr. Little Jeans: The Suburbs

Charlotte Free: Model Buys Toilet Paper

Angela Boatwright: Suicide Practice

Daisy Lowe: Playboy Summer

Kaya Yusi: Terror Tower

Cee Lo Green: Cry Baby

Urban Cone: Urban Photograph

Eriko Nakao: Crazy Asian Superstar

Rachel Lynch: The Milshire Motel

New Author: Lisa: The Enchanting Series Monster

When it comes to television series, there is practically no one who knows more about the subject than Lisa here. Not the crazy Arab with the 73 satellite dishes on his roof, not Josh Schwartz’s mother, and certainly not the programming director of SuperRTL. And because finely chopped and episodically fragmented never-ending films are the old new shit, we grabbed the likable 23-year-old from Bremen and hired her as our fresh expert in matters of serialized epics.

You know Lisa. She floats around the German-speaking internet under the pseudonym Placetogo. And she created this exceedingly fabulous list of the best series that have ever made it onto digital paper. And she studies sociology and she’s a Werder fan and she hangs out in dive bars and she has friends and she loves “Weeds” and “Californication” and “United States of Tara.” How great is that? Exactly.

So please give a warm welcome to our newly acquired savior of quality entertainment. And from this moment on, you must be clear about one thing: Lisa’s opinion about any series whatsoever is absolute law and you may trust it without further thought. Whatever she hates will mercilessly sink within the next two weeks; whatever she adores will… well, still get canceled at some point, but at least it won’t have been completely in vain. Rejoice and start downloading the torrent programs of your choice. It’s about to begin.

Jerry Hsu: Nazi Gold

Katy B: Witches Brew

Toro Y Moi: How I Know

Charles W. Cushman: New York in the Forties

Tokyo Tower: You Little Sexy Tower, You

[flv:tokyotower.mp4 tokyotower.jpg 1074 604]

Lykke Li: Jerome

Nina Zivkovic: She Was A Vision

Stylish Kicking the Bucket: How Do You Want to Die One Day?

What did Vikings, samurai, and Amy Winehouse have in common? Exactly: biting the dust at the legally recognized retirement age was completely out of the question. You were expected to perish bravely and roaring in battle. Stylishly and gracefully in the war against the armies of evil. Or young and with all kinds of opiates on your life list at the lowest point of your own existence.

How you die is crucial for how you’ll be regarded by friends and relatives afterward. Sure, they loved you. Unless you strutted through the hallways of your three-room apartment like a domestic Hitler, wildly lashing out at everyone. But when people think back to you, the story of your demise will immediately come to mind.

There are pathetic deaths. Slipping while brushing your teeth and ramming the toothbrush down your throat. For example. You can’t even retell that without snickering. Or catching a media-hyped epidemic. That’s something for unimportant extras. Or bleeding out during cosmetic surgery. She had her boobs pumped up and then what? Tragic, tragic. But pathetic.

Heroic deaths are much better. He rescued 35 orphans from a burning hot-air balloon and then personally steered the flaming sphere into a camouflaged communist-Nazi aircraft carrier. That’s magnificent. Or collapsing with a grin like Oscar during a lively thirteen-some with the Swedish women’s national beach volleyball team and their younger sisters. Naturally after breaking the orgasm record of everyone present in the room. Or running toward a horde of zombies with a bomb under your arm just to save a mother and her child… oh wait, that was a movie. Whatever.

Often, the epic quality lies in the details. As a welfare recipient dying from a low-quality batch of heroin in a train station restroom? Bad. As a celebrated rock star ending from a sleeping pill overdose in the presidential suite at the Ritz? Good. As a senile old man collapsing on Wednesday afternoon in the visitors’ room of St. Martin’s Home and soiling yourself in the process? Bad. As a beloved grandfather peacefully dozing off with a sincere smile while enjoying the sunset at your favorite lake? Good. And somehow enviable.

But most of us will die in an accident, from a heart attack, or from cancer anyway. Provided the Third World War continues to take its time. That’s neither particularly sensational nor embarrassing. Unless someone takes photos and posts them on 4Chan. What truly matters are those final seconds when your life flashes before your eyes like an anti-trailer, hammering the moments into your fading memory that were so grand and fantastic and unique.

The number of exactly those moments is probably far more important than putting the often inglorious end itself into a hypothetical spotlight. The journey is the destination. Or something like that. After all, none of us are built to last forever. And yet one question remains, one we surely ask ourselves more than once in our small lives: How do you want to die one day?

Baby Monster: The Fear Of Charlie Sunrise

Beck’s Mix Fusion Party: Sexy Ambience Meets Rocking Junkyard

Certain parties only really become fun when opposites collide—things that apparently don’t fit together at all and then create explosive variety. Old and young, rich and poor, beautiful and… well, the others. And since Germany’s hottest events don’t always take place in Berlin, this time it’s Munich’s turn.

The second Beck’s Mix Fusion Party promises, after the great kickoff in Hamburg, to be another fantastic evening. On August 6, Munich’s party crowd will gather at the Alte Börse, Lenbachplatz 2. Sexy ambience meets rocking junkyard. And of course, you’ll get to try the newest fusion, Beck’s Black Currant, free of charge and ice-cold. Sounds great. We wouldn’t be AMY&PINK if we didn’t somehow get you in there.

That’s why we’re giving away 1x2 tickets for the Fusion Party and, on top of that, a brilliant Vestax Typhoon USB DJ controller, which lets you effortlessly mutate into a professional DJ. It comes with an integrated sound card, allowing you to connect a microphone and headphones directly to the controller, and automatic beat synchronization so you can focus on what really matters.

All you have to do to win the sound package is leave us a comment with a valid email address by Wednesday, August 3. And if you want to boost your chances of getting into the party to immeasurable heights, you should also try your luck on the Beck’s website or the official Facebook page. They’re giving away tickets there as well.

This is a sponsored article by Beck’s.

NYU Reality Show: Hipsters Are Roaming The Campus

Björk: Crystalline

Kristie Muller: Pills On My Tongue

Hypocritical Pack: The Internet Is a Repetition

Once you’ve spent half your life on the net and see your browser more often each day than your family, your friends, and the mirror combined, one single truth quickly reveals itself: the internet is a repetition. An eternal, constantly recurring repetition. Of everything. Technology may steadily advance, but the loops triggered by certain events seem destined to remain unchanged forever.

Example 1: Disasters. When a few lunatics get the idea to wipe out innocent human lives, or nature once again strikes with devastating force, two hostile camps form within ten seconds. The major media outlets, competing for readers and viewers with scandalous headlines and intrusive “articles,” sparing no opportunity for sensationalism, and the bloggers and Twitter users who draw attention to precisely this misconduct. Naturally with texts that are hardly any less sensational. Just to get enough likes and end up on Rivva. Those who complain remain known. Stefan, Thomas, Don. Hypocritical pack.

Example 2: Social networks. Because many sleepyheads realized two years too late how amazing Facebook, Twitter, and Tumblr can be, they now waste every free minute trying to find the next big thing and loudly point it out at every tiny glimmer of light. Whether it’s Diaspora, Wave, or Google+ – as soon as a new digital home appears on the horizon, many net dwellers lose their minds. Invites are fired off in a frenzy, get in as fast as possible, everything that existed before is old crap from yesterday and we never liked Facebook anyway. Until three weeks later, when they realize that only Fat Nerdo from Hanover and Billy, the pimple-faced hanger-on, have wandered into their new home, and then pretend they never said anything. Hypocritical pack.

Example 3: Deceased celebrities. Year after year, usually an English-speaking celebrity bites the dust. Michael Jackson, Ryan Dunn, Amy Winehouse. What happens? Of course. On social networks, “RIP” becomes the word of the moment. Photos, songs, and videos are shared, mourned, commented on. Until bored chimney sweep apprentice Fabian P. from L. suddenly thinks: “Hey… people are dying in Africa too!” Quickly shove that in everyone’s face. And of course he’s right. Even if not often in life otherwise. But we mourn Michael and Amy because they moved us deeply, made us laugh, cry, and think. And no matter how shocking we find other deaths, emotionally we only let people into our hearts for whom we feel something. Anything else would be stupid. And dishonest. Hypocritical pack.

Unfortunately, these are just three striking points that an attentive observer of German internet culture repeatedly encounters. I won’t even begin to talk about politics bashing, shitstorms, and troll camps. Because no matter how new, revolutionary, and wise the internet and its inhabitants often present themselves, at the core it’s about one thing only: the attention of the individual.

The big problem is this: in order to capture it, many small minds tend to position themselves against the prevailing sentiment and represent a counter-opinion – even if they don’t truly embody that stance. The chance of short-term fame outweighs the free development of their actual viewpoint. Like a little loudmouth running noisily around the group, only to have nothing but garbage to say when you finally look at him. And who really just wants to belong.

So don’t be too surprised when the same old story plays out on the internet again and again. Blogs, websites, and personalities may change over time, but the spirit of the actors remains the same. And after a few rounds of celebrity-terror-network, you’ll be sitting there drooling and resigned, muttering “Seen it before” from your crusted lips, wishing you could switch channels. But that’s simply not possible, and you must realize: the internet is a repetition.

Mixtape: Broken Summer

Starting a conversation by talking about the weather is probably one of the most unoriginal and passionless things a human being can do. And yet a huge piece of information stands written in the sky like a monument: the weather is shit. The summer is gray, the clouds grayer, the mood grayest of all. So that we don’t completely lose our minds and don’t summon autumn too quickly, we’re bringing a bit of sunshine back to you with “Broken Summer.” Beach Fossils, Calvin Harris, Robyn. Here we go.

God Kill The Queen: The English Version Is Dead

It must have been in the early eighties when we decided to offer our masterful articles in an English version as well, making them accessible to an international audience. Shortly after Rocky’s third victory and long before the fall of the Berlin Wall. The technology was right, the will was there, and the muse to pick out every single text and carefully translate it into another language was bursting out of us. Big wide world, here we go!

For a few years it worked quite well; we penetrated the internet with our brain outpourings and won worldwide awards for our more than excellent interpretations. For a while, a volunteer even helped us seize world domination even faster, and we rewarded her with free shoes and lunch followed by sexy time.

But soon gray clouds gathered over the pseudo-British landscape. The decision, chiseled in stone, to promote every damn word in an international edition as well was made at a time when we published only two sentences and a few personal bang-photos per week and spent the rest of the time throwing cocktails at petite Asian girls on the Côte d’Azur.

After the economic crisis, we were finally forced to toil away in our dark basement on three to twenty-eight articles per weekday, and believe us: the thought that we also had to port each of them into English quickly gave us nightmares and chills. At some point we started secretly throwing the long texts into Google Translator.

Adventurous clickers could experience firsthand what came out of that when they visited our global version. Embarrassing texts without sense or reason, endless mistakes; an independent institute assured us that we were responsible for four out of five brain tumors overseas. It simply couldn’t go on like that.

So we pulled the plug and since yesterday have been offering AMY&PINK only in German. For many this won’t make much of a difference, but we have a better conscience knowing that stoned New York teenagers can no longer laugh themselves into delirium through our magazine. So let’s bid farewell with tears to the other AMY&PINK and at the same time scrap the botched plans to offer this site in Russian, Swedish, and Japanese. Goodbye.

Valerie Phillips: Don’t Be Pretty

Game Of Thrones: Waiting For Winter

I’ve never been a particularly big fan of knights, castles, and the Middle Ages. A time when servants who smelled like shit sacrificed themselves for their king and endless rides, steel battles, and forest marches were the order of the day. A bleak world of short existence in which every wrong step could be your last. But I make an exception for “Game of Thrones.”

The ten-part television masterpiece from HBO tells the story of seven kingdoms and the approaching winter that will turn the continent of Westeros upside down and shake up its balance of power. While the three noble families Stark, Lannister, and Baratheon vie for the throne of the fading king, the undead awaken beyond the great Wall in the North, and in the South the Dothraki, furious barbarians with no sense of mercy or compassion, prepare to march into the land of castles.

The narrative itself is based on the novel “A Song of Ice and Fire” by American writer George R. R. Martin, but is presented as a brutal mixture of soap and fantasy epic. Without regard for losses. Fucking siblings, beheaded traitors, boys thrown from towers – the world of “Game of Thrones” is neither for the faint-hearted nor for casual viewing.

If you don’t meticulously memorize the constantly newly intertwined intrigues and faces of the various protagonists, you’ll quickly lose track of what’s actually going on. But even intelligence-free idiots, whose appreciation for grippingly told stories isn’t that well developed, will get their money’s worth in this royal slaughter.

Bare breasts of numerous whores are constantly bouncing somewhere, while in the next scene witches are burned and villages overrun. Horny dwarfs argue with blonde goddesses for the favor of the audience; there’s always something happening, which may not make this knightly drama normal, but certainly turns it into a qualitatively extreme and stirring series adventure.

The first season of “Game of Thrones” has just ended in the USA; it will continue next spring. German fans will be able to enjoy the bestselling adaptation in November on the pay-TV channel TNT, and those who don’t want to wait that long will, as always, find the internet their only hope for timely television pleasure.

Bread & Butter Summer 2011: Mini Festival Of Hearts – The Mini Festival of Hearts

Mona Kuhn: Home On The Sun

Kyary Pamyu Pamyu: Pon Pon Pon

Beastie Boys: Don’t Play No Game That I Can’t Win

[flv:beastieboys.mp4 beastieboys.jpg 1074 604]

Adventure Time: A Hero And His Dog – Dogs, Heroes, Brainfuck

If you spend the whole day hanging around on the internet trying to relieve rich old men of their hard-earned money, you need distraction at the same time so you don’t completely lose your mind. That’s why something always has to be running on the other screen. In the form of films, preferably series – ideally animated ones.

It has to be funny, not complicated, always short enough to digest in small bites. And once you’ve worked your way through the usual suspects like “The Simpsons,” “Futurama,” “Family Guy,” “American Dad,” “The Cleveland Show,” “Bob’s Burgers,” and “Spongebob Squarepants,” you have to dig a little deeper into the depths of American television to find something new.

Cartoon Network made a splash last year with “Adventure Time with Finn and Jake,” a ridiculously colorful cartoon series about a hero. And his dog. And a candy kingdom complete with princesses and horny giant snails and magic and Korean unicorn rainbows that are all so completely insane that you instantly fall in love with everything that pants and crawls around in it.

Every single episode offers so many WTF moments that you can practically hear your stupid little brain crack. When the Ice King once again kidnaps the Hot Dog Princess in order to marry her with the help of his penguin army. Or when stoned plush bears throw the fattest party of their lives inside the stomach of a depressed monster, only to flee from its asshole shortly afterward because of stinking lava. Or when frozen zombie businessmen try to seize power by saddling heroes with obesity.

A few days ago, the third season of the series—almost disgustingly adored by critics and fans—started in the US, and once you’ve let Finn and Jake carry you off into the magical world of Ooo, you’ll want to take the next golden shot just to be part of it as quickly as possible. And rescue whistling slime babies. And turn into oversized feet. And set old grannies on fire. But watch it in English. As always, really.

Ilze Vanaga: A Kid’s Life

Handsome Furs: What About Us

Icona Pop: Manners

Fernando Tsuchiya: Somewhere And Nowhere

]

Berlin: Wenke Gets High

[flv:http://marcel.amypink.com/videos/IMG_0128.MP4 http://marcel.amypink.com/videos/IMG_0128.jpg 1074 604]

Oh My! Kicking And Screaming

[flv:ohmy.mp4 ohmy.jpg 1074 604]

Vampire Blow: I Really Think You'll Let Me Go

[flv:vampireblow.mp4 vampireblow.jpg 1074 604]

Laura-Lynn Petrick: Document Til Death

Society Fucks: Small Talk Is Hitler

So we’re standing there in this hotel lobby at the counter, staring holes into the air. The girl’s name is Irina and she’s buxom, the guy’s name is Erik and he’s important, my name is Marcel and I want to go home. But that’s not possible. Business appointments are essential for business. Instead of telling Irina that I’d like to penetrate her anally in her single room around 9 tonight and gently tack my bank details onto Erik’s forehead so he can transfer his inherited fortune to me, we first have to perform the social dance of all dances.

I hate small talk. And I hate that attentive your-life-is-actually-fucking-irrelevant-to-me-yes-nice-weather smile with those dull looks that were all trained so we don’t fall on top of each other yawning. And I hate most people anyway. So why the whole thing? Dogs sniff each other’s backsides, humans get closer through babble. Which is clearly less fun. Just imagine the wondrous hours we could save if we got straight to the point.

Because let’s be honest. Rudimentary conversations are a fraction of the general German chatter. Exchanging information is important. Your aunt’s cute dog is not. Screaming at someone out of deep hatred because he knocked my ice cream onto the ground is important. “Farmer Wants a Wife” is not. Throwing myself drunkenly in front of a girl in the park at night to tell her how much I love her and that she has the most beautiful backs of knees in the world—that’s important. 99%, no wait, 100% of all tweets are not.

However, I am also the master of double standards. While I would gladly elbow my way to the top of power without many words, I can’t stand people who try to do the same with me. If someone wants something from me, they should damn well know my favorite color, wax lyrical about Munich in the summer, and say something at the exact moment I’m thinking it. The importance of this rule decreases in inverse proportion to the bust size of the person opposite me and the number of hours on my cheap Swatch watch.

Let’s sum it up. Small talk is Hitler when I have to endure it, but a fucking law if anyone else even considers skipping it. Don’t you dare try to get buddy-buddy without preparing your face for a counterpunch. Stand in front of me properly, shake my hand, and tell me who you are. And give me money. A lot of money. Then we can keep talking.

While the scrawny Erik rambles on about his plans for some idiotic web project and Irina’s lips seem to melt away, I try to telepathically signal the bartender to bring me a sharp knife or pull the fire alarm or loudly recite filthy jokes in operatic form. None of it happens; instead, I’m handed a glass of sparkling wine. I nod politely, clink glasses with the two of them, and laugh insincerely at a more than lousy pun. God, I am so fake.

Stuart Mitchell: Walnutwax Shoots

Mixtape: Road of Happiness

So we all head out into the street together. Not to demonstrate. Or to flee. Or to riot. But solely and simply to celebrate together. To activate summer in our hearts despite the bad weather. We embrace each other tightly and dance the night away, and afterward we know the secret of a life that is far too short. Bon Iver supports us, as do The Go! Team and Nneka. Let’s be free and do our part. On this road of happiness.

Net Addiction: Internet Makes (Un)happy

It was one of those typical days again when you just can’t get away from the computer. After getting up early, I grabbed a ready-made Starbucks coffee from the fridge, flipped open the lid, connection on. The first article isn’t even finished yet, a system error is giving me a headache, PR agencies from all over the world are vying for my attention. An email here, a translation there, image research, corrections, the next article, texts, chats, topic scouting, social media stuff.

In between, quickly ordering something to eat from the Greek place, jerking off, making phone calls. And before you know it, the sun has already disappeared again and you haven’t even caught a glimpse of daylight. I stand there screaming and puking and thinking: Is this it? Is this my life? Did I really choose this? Every minute in the fresh air lately feels like buried treasure. Meeting friends, sex with the willing, conversations with the interesting.

Real life is becoming scarce. Especially because the circle of people you surround yourself with increasingly consists only of overworked career types who are either rotting away online or at university. Dog, relationship, traveling? No time. Deadlines here, appointments there, keeping everything running. For me, as an intensive chaotic, it’s a double burden. What am I even doing this for?

In a brief moment of clarity, I turn around and see my own kind. Everywhere. People sitting in front of screens day and night, racing around with their iPhones, always online, no breaks, constantly busy. Because downtime is dead; any moment a new topic could pop up. Photo spread, video, catastrophe. Tweeting and blogging and posting and chatting and reading, reading, reading nonstop. Facebook, Tumblr, Formspring, Google+, blogs, Twitter, Skype, WhatsApp.

Sometimes I feel like I’ve subscribed to one quarter-life crisis after another. I just want to grab people and scream at them. Does this really make you happy? The more you’re online, the happier you are? Someone who types their thoughts into the world every minute, every second, who watches two full seasons a day and still knows more about the digital daily news than Spiegel Online, Reddit, and Sascha Lobo combined — can such a person really lead a balanced life?

The worst are those who have completely merged with their online image. The ones who make fun of World of Warcraft players but then mourn every single follower who unfollows them. Who misuse TinyChat as a substitute for cuddling and wake up drenched in sweat at 5 a.m. because they dreamed someone withdrew a favorite. Who read magazines only on the iPad, file deletion requests on Wikipedia, sit in the agency at night, immortalize themselves on DailyBooth every evening, order groceries on eBay, know SoundCloud by heart, load English books onto their Kindle, and click on a shitty app for the current weather instead of just sticking their fat head with its fat neck out the fucking window.

I love AMY&PINK and I love what I do and I love (most of) the people I’ve met through this whole online thing. But sometimes I’d pack it all into a sack, trade it with some shady street vendor for magical LSD drops, and catapult myself into another world. One where there is neither Tim Berners-Lee nor Mark Zuckerberg nor Bill Gates, but only some old villages from those enchanted Astrid Lindgren stories. The children from Bullerbü always seemed pretty happy to me. Or Emil of Lönneberga. When he wasn’t being beaten by his father...

After all these years, I’m not sure who’s more foolish. Those who have devoted themselves body and soul to the web and therefore no longer feel guilty. Because they call themselves Digital Natives and work online (when their mother calls again and asks what the hell her spoiled offspring is doing all the time). Or losers like me, who sometimes feel suspicious about the whole thing but still can’t remember the last time they shut down their computer.

For me personally, I’ve discovered that the internet makes me happiest when I pack as much real life into it as possible alongside it. By that I mean movement. And sun. And occasionally fucking. That’s enough. A cheerful evening with friends. Cruising around for a week. Discovering something new. We just have to know when enough is enough with all this digital crap and learn to close the laptop and switch off the iPhone. So that we don’t turn into absolute net zombies who at some point get put together into a state-funded self-help group in a house by the lake, where we’ll only babble terms like Circles, Apple, and Meme. Because the days when you just can’t get away from the computer are slowly becoming the norm.

We’re Giving Away Tickets: Jägermeister Wirtshaus Tour

Hooray, the popular party series called Jägermeister Wirtshaus Tour is entering the next round and once again brings hearty beer garden vibes with stag heads, beer barrels, and party-loving young city dwellers together. Here you can play a bit of darts and foosball while being blasted with the latest electronic music and throwing back a glass or two of good cheer — that’s the dream of every hip night wanderer.

The now fifth edition of the big bash takes place on July 7 at the Lederer Kulturbrauerei in Nuremberg, where Totally Enormous Extinct Dinosaurs, D.I.M., and Optimus Maximus will be guests and shake you up properly. The oldest brewery in Franconia’s capital will transform for one evening into a sexy electro dome with a tavern flair.

The best part: You can be there live! There will also be top-notch herbal liqueur and beer and fun and good vibes and everything else you could want. We managed to snag 1x2 exclusive tickets for you. If you want to win: Simply leave a comment with a valid email address by Tuesday, July 5, and you might soon be bringing Nuremberg to its knees. If you want to play it safe, you can also try your luck on Facebook or at Das-Wirtshaus.de.

This is a sponsored article by Jägermeister.

Alexandra Tunnard: Super Human

Beck's Black Currant: Fusion Party in Hamburg

Once we’ve decided to party our nights away in urban electro clubs, we actually know exactly who we absolutely do not want to run into there besides hot acquaintances, skilled DJs, and the occasional opened bottle of beer: our parents. Because who can really party uninhibited under epilepsy lights and pounding bass when the attentive little eyes of our progenitors are watching us from the other side of the venue? Exactly.

With the Fusion Party starting July 9 in Hamburg, Beck's Black Currant aims to bridge precisely this generational gap and packs you together with Liem, H.O.S.H., and the 70-year-old electro granny “Mamy Rocks,” aka Ruth Flowers—who has already played at Karl Lagerfeld’s Chanel party—into the Oberpostdirektion of the Hanseatic city.

There you can celebrate next to stuffy oak wall units or feel twelve years old again racing slot cars, while mom next door makes sandwiches and nicks the occasional alcoholic beverage from the fridge. Preferably the limited-edition Beck's Black Currant with a splash of black currant, which will only be available at your trusted late-night shop until October.

Of course, we wouldn’t be telling you all this if we weren’t slipping you into exactly this party. 1x2 tickets are up for grabs. Simply leave a comment with a valid email address by Tuesday, July 5. And if you want to play it safe, you can also try your luck on the Beck's website or on the Facebook page. Olé!

This is a sponsored article by Beck's.

Google+: The Next End Of Facebook

At some point it had to happen. After deflowering little emo girls thanks to MySpace, rising to become Gruscheln champions on StudiVZ, and taking Facebook to bed with us every night, Google is now (once again) trying its hand at the next big social network. Google+ is supposed to become what Orkut should have been and what Wave wasn’t even close to being: a mass-compatible next-generation community that brings together computer novices and tech experts, young and old.

Because let’s be honest. Even if it seems that way at the moment, we won’t be poking, linking, and posting on Facebook forever. Mark Zuckerberg can greenlight as many boring Hollywood blockbusters about his company as he likes. In just a few years at most, the blue mega-network will have served its purpose, and we’ll already be dealing with entirely different digital habits. And even though it always makes me a little uneasy to place too much informational power in the hands of a single company: Google won’t stop until it has us all. Probably.

Basically, Google+ builds on the advantages of Facebook, minimizes the inconveniences, and spices up the offering with well-thought-out and intelligent features. You can sort your contacts into “Circles” and thereby shield yourself from the voyeuristic gazes of bosses and stalkers. “Sparks” automatically lists supposedly interesting happenings. And with “Hangouts,” you can video chat with equally bored friends. In that worn-out computers-make-the-world-better style of demos and videos, it all looks quite nice—but it’s not really that special after all.

The only question is whether these functions are enough to persuade ambitious lovers of the current biggest network to permanently relocate. And soon. Or whether Google+ is simply a newly branded Orkut-Wave leftover that will at best be celebrated by a few nerds and ultimately meet its inglorious end in a small niche. If at all.

At the moment, the latest project from the American internet giant is still in a closed beta phase. But anyone who wants to take a look inside can apply as a test user and might soon be able to play around with the colorful features. Although previous early programs have already shown that it’s only half as much fun alone. So the rest of us still have a little time to make what could be a momentous decision for ourselves: Do we really need Google+?

I Heart Berlin: Vintage Smackdown

The Vintage Smackdown by iHeartBerlin, which we so enthusiastically praised, is now entering the निर्ण­sive round. Tons of applications from sexy, toned, and stylish boys and girls have poured into the virtual lottery box, and now it’s up to one power-obsessed group to decide in this important matter between eternal success and laughable defeat for the top 20: you!

To make things a little easier, each reporting medium has been assigned two graceful participants, whom we let compete against each other like cute little Pokémon. And we were very lucky to welcome the enchanting Berlin rascal Helen Arend and the no less good-looking Swede Isabelle Åström into our pink arena of fortune.

All you have to do is so simple it almost hurts. Helen and Isabelle are each competing with three outfits for the crown of Vintage Queen, which they proudly present in this chic iHeartBerlin Facebook album. Now simply click on your favorite photo, like it, hooray. Best of all, add a slimy marriage-proposal comment underneath, and your good deed of the day is done.

The lucky winner will then be allowed to show what he or she can do on the runway at the corresponding Wedding Dress Shows on July 9 at 6 and 7 p.m.—and be showered by you with more red roses and fewer used condoms. If Helen and Isabelle are somehow not enough for you for bizarre reasons, you can view all participants here at a glance. So what are you waiting for? Vote like there’s no tomorrow and let the best style win!

The Shoes: Wastin’ Time

SBTRKT: Wildfire

Tips for the Weekend: Ten Little Missions

We should be clear about one thing. Every single time a brand-new edition of “Ten Little Missions” appears on your home screen, you have moved seven days closer to death. And so have all your loved ones. Ruin, misery, dying. Exactly. And to sweeten the cruel thoughts of this inevitable scenario, we’re sending you on a journey of experiences again this weekend. Ten missions that you must all have successfully completed by the break of Monday. And go!

One. Throw on your best evening wear, grab a tablecloth, porcelain plates, and wine glasses, and turn your next McDonald’s visit into a culinary event of the highest class. The other guests will be amazed – or beat you up. Two. Download the new CSS song “Hits Me Like A Rock.” For free. And then dance. Forever. Three. Watch the ZDF video by the electronic reporter with Ines in the leading role. Then rejoice in the fact that you’ve slept with her. Four. Find the house of Boxxy. Run inside screaming loudly and beat the ADHD out of her. Seriously. Five. Finally shut down your blog. Nobody reads it anyway. No announcement or explanation – just close it and keep your mouth shut.

Six. No cat videos. Seven. Grow a bushy Ryan Dunn memorial beard, get drunk with your friends and then… just go through with it hardcore. Eight. Spend a day licking everything that crosses your path. Use some complicated and mentally twisted oral complex your stepfather is responsible for from when you were a tender five years old as an excuse. Nine. Confess your undying love to at least one person. Prove it with a ten-point list in which you outline all your plans, from eating ice cream to anal sex. If it doesn’t go over well, just move on – someone’s bound to like it. Ten. Screw scheming documentaries and donate 50 euros to the WWF. After all, they do good work and have a cute panda in their logo.

Luana Teifke: Lost in Translation

Brent Stirton: Rotting Souls

Super Styles: Pretty in Pink

Blonde girls who even remotely look like Lykke Li can basically wear whatever they want. Leopard leggings, your boring stepfather, or this brown leather jacket combined with tight black pants. Completely irrelevant.

Even back in school, the little sluts with those huge earrings got everything they wanted. The sexy guy from the last row. Their parents’ car. The best grades from the pedophile teachers. And this principle of success still works quite well today.

There’s probably nothing that screams makeover and a fresh load of Cosmopolitan subscriptions more than greenish-blue ruffled tops with a forest-pattern flair. Even hipsters who fell into their grandmother’s rummage box as a child have renounced this fashion trash.

Let’s put it this way: if Brian dared to show up in front of us in this green nightmare of a half-naked outfit and make exactly this move, we’d practically set his balls on fire. Especially because of the hairstyle. Light blond and black. Yuck.

It’s probably completely irrelevant what your little sister is wearing when she shows up at kebab salesman Ali’s place. He’ll still drag her into his musty Mercedes and then lick her tears away with his topped tongue. Because she didn’t listen to you. We like Ali’s sweater. And the chain. It’s got something.

Only whores and women who are ovulating wear red shoes. Chucks and sneakers excluded. Usually. And if there’s also a thick layer of patent leather gleaming on those things, you can go ahead and call your drinking buddies to tell them you’re done for today. Now come along, Ursula.

Masked guys from the ghetto neighborhood with fighting dogs at the ready and schoolyard brawler Dilara in the heated center can dress as well, as individually, and as fashionably as they want. We’d rather hand them the dreary contents of our pockets and move on. Nice cap. Or whatever.

Fuck, you can’t get blood out of expensive designer T-shirts. Especially when they’re green. You can scrub and wash and spit on it until you’re empty—you’ve only got two options. Give the thing to Grandma Gerda for wallpapering or sell it as the new hot shit. You Rambo, you.

Jenny does everything right. Pants top, hair top, top top. We’ll stop the nagging, waste our time elsewhere, and play Battleship instead. D4? Miss. B5? Miss. A7? Miss. F7? Miss. A4? Hit. A5? Hit. A6? Miss. B2? Hit. B3? Miss. A3? Sunk.

Mike Spears: Alien Eyeball

Carpark North: Everything Starts Again

[flv:everything.mp4 everything.jpg 1074 604]

Ting Cheng: One And Two And Up And Down

Yuck: Shook Down

[flv:shookdown.mp4 shookdown.jpg 1074 604]

Hurricane Festival 2011: Rockers, Rain And Riots

So we spent the entire weekend at this Hurricane Festival. Four stages blasting alternative rock music non-stop, plenty of booze and people and dirt and the occasional completely unpredictable highlight – away from all the hustle and bustle. Armed with crease-proof press passes, Sara, Isa, Thang, Flo, Alex, Christoph, Thomas and our shrunken heads threw themselves into the illustrious chaos and were able to experience three days of the hardcore festival-goer lifestyle first-hand – in pussy-light mode.

Because instead of drowning on a campsite in wind and weather along with alcohol and a sleeping bag, we were accommodated in an idyllic guesthouse. Complete with a calorie-rich breakfast, funny pedal cars and a nearby little forest where, at four in the morning, you could happily stare stupidly into it for half an hour and philosophize consistently about the beauty of silence.

Whenever Weather-Rüdiger once again meant a little too well with watering his earthlings, Wenke and I stayed exclusively in the bone-dry press tent and its sanitary facilities, where instead of water it rained Beck’s Lime and the concerts were broadcast live on a flat screen. Outside my ass. If that became too boring for us, we smuggled ourselves into one or another back room of certain sponsors thanks to sexy photographers, or enjoyed the few rays of sunshine in the grass and stared a little enviously at the sometimes quite toned bodies of the guys and girls when they tumbled out naked from the standing AXE showers.

Of course we didn’t tell any of the diligent ticket buyers that we are absolute festival pussies. Obviously. Otherwise, thanks to their elevated alcohol level and the weather frustration, they probably would have set us on fire in one of the Dixi toilets. Instead, with stressed looks and a golden wristband on our arms, we stormed past the security staff and loudly shouted something like “Too late!” and “All fired!” to make sure we could get in everywhere. The fact that we still missed Lykke Li, who was actually the only reason I sold my free weekend, is another story and must never be mentioned again. Thank you.

The quality range of the music played could safely be rated from God to “Was that a band or the rehearsal guitarist?”. Hercules and Love Affair set our asses on fire, Glasvegas were incredibly bad. Blood Red Shoes gave it their all, William Fitzsimmons was tiring. But good. And funny. And away from the proper atmosphere. Flogging Molly were surprisingly high-spirited, My Chemical Romance hackneyed. And old. The rest was a matter of fans. Goes without saying.

And so we say goodbye to the Hurricane Festival and fondly remember puking teenagers and drugged-up bouncy castles and spinning ceiling lights and disgusting gas station burgers and failed police checks and non-functioning W-LANs and pumped-up penises and decadent tour buses and little sock secrets. We will never forget it, after all there are plenty of photos. The outstanding works in color, framing and motif naturally come from Katja Hentschel. Who else.

Mixtape: Clean Your Mind

Every single day we have to wrestle with so much crap in our heads that it’s almost a miracle we don’t hang ourselves with the next hipster scarf. Thoughts of a forbidden love, worries about money we don’t have, the hunt for the next ultimate kick – that once again makes us feel that we’re even still here. So we run through the city with our tracks, throw ourselves into the next club, storm toward the next sun-drenched meadow, to the lake, onto that body, into happiness. Mostly without noticeable success, but with a few new favorite songs in our ears. From Miike Snow, Lykke Li and Owen Pallett. Clean your mind.

Donald Weber: Ukraine Interrogations


Car theft


Attempted rape


Prostitution


Burglary


Prostitution and drug abuse


Smuggler


Prostitution


Drug abuse


Theft


Prostitution and drug abuse


Prostitution


Theft


Shoplifting

Sit Down First: Sex And Consequences

It was actually a nice evening. We stayed overnight at a friend’s place, stuffed a few warm wraps between our lips and downloaded crappy movies from the net. Big bed, plenty of space. And then someone said something about HIV. It starts like the flu, then you hear nothing for ten years – and then it hits you with full force. Heard it a thousand times before. But this time the thoughts circled in my head – all night long.

The next day I combed through the internet looking for symptoms. Fatigue. I’ve got it. Headaches. That’s exactly my world. Skin rash. On my right thigh. Diarrhea. Mr. Hankey in liquid form. Cough. I’m wheezing my lungs out of my body. Feeling sick. Yes, yes and yes again! The net is a really fat asshole. And you can convince yourself of anything.

For a whole week I was firmly convinced that I had HIV. Surely already in the final stage. There’s not much left after that. I watched masses of YouTube videos of young people who had been infected and were still in good spirits. Documentaries about progress in drug research. Blogs by gay AIDS activists. Guides that gave me tips on how to tell my family. And my colleagues. And my teammates. And my girlfriend. And my fuck buddy.

I was ready for my fate. So off to the Berlin AIDS-Hilfe, get a rapid test done. The waiting room was wallpapered with brochures about diseases, homosexuality and weekly barbecues with those affected and their relatives. I already saw myself as a full-fledged member of a Wedding support association where I would finally get to know true friendship and meet the love of my life – all because of an aggressive killer virus. Maybe my real life was only just beginning?

Detlev and Roman in the hallway were nice, the campy receptionist was nice, the overly talkative counselor was nice, the chubby doctor was nice. Everyone was nice. Was this my first test, they asked. Yes, I said, embarrassed. After giving blood I had to wait half an hour. I decided to sit out the life-threatening decision on a small bench in a small park around the corner. And in half an hour an awful lot can run through your head.

I thought about who could have stuck me with this shit. Because besides certain holy graces who rode me into the sunrise, there were of course one or two skanks. When nothing else was left. Or when you only found out half a year later that behind your back she had been in bed with the entire city football club (amateurs and seniors). Great love and all that. Or when you were already so drunk that you were lucky not to end up with a dick-bearer with hair that was too long.

My entire sex life passed before my eyes. Sabrina at that awful village party, for example. She was only 16, but somehow… Bianca, also known in certain circles as the jingling bang-bimbo – suddenly a lot made sense. And she already smelled kind of strange. Down there… Melanie. Oh Melanie… Haven’t heard from her in ages. Is she even still alive?

Of course I was scared. When you sit there on that wooden bench and for seven days have been talking the biggest nonsense into your own head and throwing symptoms into one pot and seeing situations completely twisted and viewing even the sweetest girls as potential virus carriers and you’re already sure that this test will be positive, then you’re scared. Scared as hell.

Back in the waiting room they called my anonymous number, I shouted loudly “Here!” and stumbled up to the reception desk. My short-term counselor glanced at the most important document of my damn existence and then said something like, “Um… yes… we’d better go into the consultation room. It’s quieter there. Please have a seat first.”

Please have a seat first? PLEASE HAVE A SEAT FIRST?! Oh shit, I’d rather call my mommy and run to church to confess and build a time machine and smack the horny Marcel from six years ago with a hard-on on his hard-on instead of ever sticking anything into that contaminated Sabrina. But I definitely did not want to sit down! Dead! Over! Finished!

Of course the test was negative. Otherwise I would have written this article in a style dripping with melancholy and humility that would have made even Julian Assange cry. She just wanted to show me what such a rapid test looks like and collect the 15 euros for it. That was all. So my life went on. No barbecues with those affected and their relatives, no new friends in the Wedding AIDS club, no great love with too few antibodies in the blood. I was almost a little disappointed.

I was actually firmly convinced that I would now experience that really awesome moment when you realize how good you actually have it and suddenly see everything with different eyes. And immediately fly to Tokyo and donate your money to needy children in Africa and only care about family and friends instead of rotting away in an office waiting for retirement. But that wasn’t the case.

Of course we celebrated the day by dousing ourselves in beer and MDMA and dancing all night in some Kreuzberg dive until sunrise. But more because the next day was a public holiday. That feeling didn’t come and the happiness didn’t come and the joy didn’t come. And why? Because first of all that only counts for the moment and secondly so many kids are sitting in this damn room finding out more than they’d like, and thirdly HIV and AIDS are still haunting around and have innocent people on their conscience.

The only good thing I could take away from this incisive experience is the fact that it sensitized me once again to the topic of HIV and AIDS and has secured a firm place in my awareness. It will be there the next time, out of stupid horniness or misplaced trust, I leave the condom in my pocket. And tell me: Dude, don’t do anything stupid now. Who knows how many have already been inside her. Or better yet, just leave it, put the thing back in and instead have a nice evening. With warm wraps. And crappy movies. And good friends.

Paperchase Ahoy! The Red Bull Cola Treasure Hunt

Deep down, we are all still little children. We want to experience adventures. Discover secrets. And stock up on valuable treasures. As much as we can carry, piled high, so we can buy the coolest things with them. And behold: your deepest wishes have been heard! Tomorrow the Red Bull Cola Treasure Hunt starts in Germany—and this is not just some boring marketing gimmick, oh no.

In over 60 cities, tons of treasures have been hidden. Among them are treasure chests containing tickets to amazing music and sports events as well as limited-edition Red Bull Cola refrigerators. 2,500 in total. And the best part: whoever finds one of these chests gets to keep it, of course, and should register the enclosed code on the website to check what other great treasures are inside the chest.

You can find the first encrypted clue with coordinates to the chests at redbullcolaschatzsuche.de, and if you’re really diligent, with a bit of luck you can even win a trip for two to a Red Bull highlight event of your choice in 2011. You can choose between Red Bull X-Fighters, Red Bull BC One, Red Bull Cliff Diving, and Red Bull Flying Bach.

So what are you waiting for? Play pirate again, set sail, and go find a treasure! And if any of you amateur landlubbers still haven’t quite understood what this is all about, you can find all further information about participation and a cute promotional video about the treasure hunt here. Hey ho, let's go!

This is a sponsored article by Red Bull.

Adam Tensta: Scared Of The Dark

[flv:scaredofthedark.mp4 scaredofthedark.jpg 1074 604]

Best Coast: Gone Again

[flv:goneagain.mp4 goneagain.jpg 1074 604]

Win the Last Tickets: Let’s Go To Hurricane Festival

The festival season is washing over us like a refreshing summer wave, and while you can still snag tickets for Southside plus a cell phone right here, we’ve just received exclusive tickets for the sold-out Hurricane Festival. And because we’re ridiculously nice like that, we’re happy to pass them on to you. After all, we’ve already secured ours.

Thanks to our best friends at Axe, we’re giving away 1x2 tickets for the massive music event at the Eichenring in Scheeßel. Featuring bands like Foo Fighters, Incubus, Chemical Brothers, Arctic Monkeys, Lykke Li, Sum 41, Blood Red Shoes, Crystal Fighters, and many, many more. On top of that, you’ll get the complete Axe shower gel collection, a fast pass for the showers, and two sexy door signs for your tent.

All you have to do to be part of the Hurricane Festival from June 17 to 19 at the very last minute is leave us a comment with a valid email address here by Sunday, June 12. And with a bit of luck, you won’t just attend one of the hottest music events in Germany—you might even run into us. Just hug us. Or kiss us. Or whatever else comes to mind… Good luck!

Weekend Tips: Ten Little Missions

This article was created for one reason only: to sweeten your weekend. Divided into ten rather interesting and benevolently designed obligations, the following lines offer you the unique opportunity to bring the coming weekend to a joyful close. The level of difficulty in the “Ten Little Missions” is not linear; a loose order is allowed—and encouraged. Pros are welcome. And now have fun and good luck collecting the respective points.

One. Kidnap the winner of this year’s “Germany’s Next Topmodel.” Don’t be surprised if nobody misses her. Or even knows her. Two. Give your 7-year-old daughter a breast enlargement for her birthday. While you’re at it, consider pumping up your brain as well. Three. For heaven’s sake, read Clara’s blog. From front to back and then backwards again. Four. Finally buy yourself an iPhone. Because if you don’t have an iPhone, then you don’t have an iPhone. Five. Listen to more reggae. Even if the world around you is collapsing, friends turn into enemies, and your life no longer makes sense… listen to more reggae.

Six. Violate a slice of toast. At least be gentle at the beginning. Seven. Climb into a bathtub together with your best friends. It’s good for the environment and makes some secret desires bubble up to the surface. Eight. Ambush Lady Gaga after a concert and then laugh at her not-so-pretty boobs. Nine. Staple a megaphone to your mouth and scream wildly through the streets. Count the seconds until someone kicks it straight into your face. Ten. Dress up as an oversized EHEC pathogen and throw licked cucumbers and sprouts at unsuspecting passersby.

Google, Facebook & Co.: That Stupid Data Privacy

If there is anything Germans fear even more than EHEC, terror, and “Farmer Wants a Wife” combined, it’s data privacy. Or better yet: how nasty corporate bosses suck up the personal information of their users through a greedy gullet, raking in high dividends while simultaneously generating future power. Because they know that Ute is cheating on her Detlev, what hair color Grandma Krause sports in summer, and what kind of gambling Mayor Maier indulges in behind supposedly closed doors.

That’s not a bad thing. People are afraid that someone will misuse what has defined them since birth. That these character traits and life decisions might one day be used against them. Yet the online community laughs at them every single time. Unjustly.

I’ve personally never been someone who particularly guarded my data in secrecy. I ran an open-hearted blog where I shared detailed stories about myself—often involving ex-girlfriends, school stress, or family matters. My default settings on every new web service are as open as they can possibly be.

I shove my recently tanned face into webcams everywhere, post photos of my genitals in dubious porn forums, and have explicitly tuned my iPhone to track me everywhere. Fuck, I’m so obsessed with seeing my damn name everywhere that it almost hurts. Google knows me, therefore I am. That used to be a striking phrase. In the beginning.

And that’s how many so-called digital natives feel, or those who hang out in Berlin Mitte in web cafés filled with MacBooks while sipping chai tea. Otherwise none of this would work. Not the blogs. Not Twitter. Not Facebook. But that’s not the majority of the population.

Most people are just that—people. Kids. The elderly. Those who aren’t online 24 hours a day, who may have never clicked on anything beyond Jappy, Flash games, and Windows Help. And who are constantly yelled at by suddenly appearing RTL crews and amateur data protectionists: “Hey citizen, watch your data! And now to the commercials.”

So it’s no wonder these people develop paranoia and try with all their might to hide their photos, addresses, and favorite foods from the public. And fail spectacularly. We laugh at them. Because they forbid Google from photographing their houses but allow Facebook to scan their faces.

Because they complain that Apple products record their vacation routes, yet they broadcast them to the world minute by minute via Twitter. Or because they fear faulty ATMs but then make transfers through shady online banking portals. We question their consistency but forget one crucial factor: they simply have no idea!

People who demonize one thing but allow another simply don’t understand the system. They’re easy prey for media companies whenever there’s a summer news drought to fill. They get tangled in incomprehensible terms of service written by analog devils. And they fear the internet because one wrong click could cost them their house, their children, and their finances. It’s all scammers here. Without exception. And then all these endless possibilities…

The problem with data protection and its implementation is not that the population is uninterested, but that they simply don’t have the time to patch all the leaks at once. When a different organization invades privacy every week and a new horror story wrapped in colorful Web 2.0 logos wanders through the nation’s newspapers every day, even I would resign. If I didn’t live on the internet. Because I don’t really have a life.

As is well known, I don’t care whether Google knows that I prefer Japanese pop music for masturbation. Or that I pose naked with a deceased friend for an art project on Facebook. Or if someone steals juicy party photos of me from my old StudiVZ days and sends them to my future employer. Which won’t happen—because who would even want to hire me anymore? Except big publishing houses looking for a social media manager. Of course. Others may be wired differently.

So accept that when it comes to data privacy, there are as many opinions as there are faces on this earth. Stop making fun of others just because they don’t understand the sinister machinations of large corporations and governments, and instead help them adjust their level of privacy to match their own character traits.

And if you digital know-it-alls are so well informed: first, stop spreading panic; second, start taking responsibility yourselves; and third, switch on your common sense. Only then will you stop being screwed over by dumbed-down TV stations, failed data protectionists, and money-hungry executives. And then we’ll finally have time again to focus on the really important things in life: EHEC, terror, and “Farmer Wants a Wife.”

I Heart Berlin: Vintage Smackdown

You’ve now had more than enough time to perfect your vintage style, test it in wind and weather, and turn the streets of your city into the runway of the nation. Our favorite hipster blog number one, I Heart Berlin, is now taking on all you fashion victims out there in a big way and sending you into the catwalk ring with their Vintage Smackdown.

The rules for this epic fashion battle are more than simple. Pull your most beautiful, inspiring, and impressive vintage or DIY outfit out of your overcrowded closet, throw it on, and take a few expressive photos of yourself. Then skillfully send them by email to smackdown@iheartberlin.de and, with a bit of luck, you could win both 500 euros and a gallant appearance at the fashion show of the Berlin festival Wedding Dress!

Even the general conditions are quickly explained: registration runs until June 17. Genuine designer pieces must stay in the closet—only vintage and DIY are allowed. The Wedding Dress Festival then takes place from July 9–10, and the show in which the ten selected participants will walk will be held on July 9 starting at 6 p.m.

All submissions will be published on Facebook, and people will be allowed to decide who delivered the best digital performance. The top 20 participants will then compete against each other on great blogs such as I Heart Berlin, I Love Ponys, Dandy Diary, Glamcanyon, Lachsbroetchen, Les Berlinettes, and Kalinka Kalinka. A jury will ultimately select the absolute winner among the fabric fetishists. All clear? Then jump into your favorite outfit and show what you’re capable of in fashion!

Super Styles: Pretty In Pink

People who dress up as Teletubbies are always shady. Always. These two fellows are probably on their way to abduct a few compliant toddlers. Or rob a bank. Or hand out flyers for the next Ergo party. We don’t know. Blue sneakers are unfortunately far too underappreciated in the street fashion scene. Instead, everyone wears those stylish white kicks or feels comfortable in colorful neon shades. But just plain blue with stripes – THAT should become the trend this summer. Definitely. Richard Simmons’ eternal fitness craze seems to have melted the last of his brain cells, as he dances through the most boring sports parties in the world as a campy mix of Elton John and Big Bird. We just want his dealer’s number. Nothing else. This Lady Gaga fan casts the term “grey mouse” in a completely new light. She stood against the dark wall of a trendy club and nobody could see her. Or wanted to. At least that way she could sneak past the bouncers undisturbed. Summer is here and that means: finally get rid of those disgusting tights. They remind us of childhood days, an impossible feeling around our genitals, a nightmare to take off. Nobody should ever have invented that crap. Tear them off your bodies! Anyone who has always wanted to experience a quickie with Batman and Robin but kept their hands off because of the homosexual image can turn to these two comic Giselas. A Batmobile won’t be available, but you can’t have everything. This little Japanese girl is the sole owner of the most beautiful pink tote bag in the world. With lovely dots on it. No wonder a whole horde of respected journalists and photographers are scrambling for her. After all, there’s nothing else to see here. Or is there? Girls are fed up with these metrosexual hipster boys without genitals. They want real men. With a cardigan and a full beard and emotional warmth in their aura. Grab him before he flies back to Canada – or kills the next trend. It’s hard to believe, but controllers from the 16-bit era didn’t yet have a vibration function. So you could wedge as many of those things between your butt cheeks as you wanted and ask a friend for support: more than making Mario jump was not possible.

Berlin: Greetings From Beyond

James Lortnoc: Burn Down The City

On the Departure of Kino.to: Final Victory of Double Standards

For years, the illegal movie portal Kino.to was the most popular destination for antisocials who were too dumb to get themselves a proper torrent program but still displayed enough criminal inclination to temporarily lose interest in cinema visits or DVD box sets. Today the site and everything associated with it was blown up by a special task force of the police, and I ask myself: how bad is that really?

Granted. The selection of free blockbusters, series and documentaries was impressive. And even we caught ourselves on one drunken night or another celebrating illegal activity in the form of watching, under a hail of shady pop-ups and persistent demands to install the DivX player.

But honestly: screw it. Because Kino.to was the crack den of the internet, a disgusting collection of digital junkies and shivering guys in long coats who all wanted just one thing: for you to click as many stupid links as possible. Anyone who survived this hell of uncomfortable design and intuitive negligence and voluntarily returned repeatedly deserves my utmost respect. It was always too stupid for me.

And instead of teaching the children of this world after the end of this cancerous growth how to casually stride the path between legality and gray area with the help of trackers, seeds and ports, the blogosphere once again gets tangled up in the old refrains about police-compliant behavior and self-castrated retiree thoughts. That we need user controls. And tougher laws. And that everyone who tramples on legal distribution channels should shamefully stand in the corner and ideally call 110 right away.

But let’s be honest: that’s bullshit. This whole black-and-white thinking is bullshit. And these endless lectures are even more bullshit. The past, the present and the future belong to one principle alone: double standards. As children we recorded the radio charts onto cassette on Friday evenings and still emptied the CD shelves at the supermarket. Today we happily download movies and series from the net and still go to the cinema. Or watch TV. Or order entire DVD box sets.

And in the future we’ll get some of our software from friends via Dropbox – and still legally purchase the occasional code masterpiece under state control. Let’s strongly hope there will never be only one side or the other. Because that would only be possible with laws that wouldn’t even allow us doggy style in the bedroom.

Without illegal downloads I would never have discovered some of my favorite series. “Skins”? No chance. “Misfits”? Never in a million years. “Bored To Death?” Not at all. But that doesn’t mean my life is defined by breaking the law. Of course I then buy the seasons at Media Markt or Amazon – when my heart tells me to. Of course I prefer to work with legitimate software because it feels safer. And, oh my God, of course I download music from iTunes. Because I love the artists. Not all of them, but some.

Even if the departure of Kino.to means that ten new sites of this kind will emerge, that’s not a big deal. Because each of us can constantly decide for ourselves how often, how intensely and how free of alternatives we make use of such offers. Whether it’s because you can’t or don’t want to pay the prices of the film lobby, because you want to “try” first, or because the product simply hasn’t been released in Germany yet.

Criminal offerings on this scale ultimately exist for only one reason: because enough people are happy to accept them. Providers and users should start there. Together, fairly and conscientiously for both positions. Only then will double standards gradually blend into overall satisfaction. And until then we’ll casually bounce between the two worlds of legal and illegal downloads. At least until a special police unit kicks down our door.

Cayal Unger: Youth's Decline

The Big Budget Lie: Fucking Bloggers Made Easy

Here’s how it goes. PR agencies from all over the world stuff us daily with more or less interesting promotional emails. In them, they explain to us in miles of warm words why this band or this opening or this product or this artist or this video or this child porn site is supposedly the absolute best thing that has ever happened to the world. And that we should not only take a look at it, but immediately publish it on AMY&PINK with a preview, update, and follow-up report.

Of course, most of it is pure garbage, and you almost have to feel sorry for the poor people who have to dress up that crap in marketing jargon dripping with metaphors. Some pubescent VIVA bands. Dubious online shops. Or electronic junk that no normal person would ever need. Sometimes I almost regret that emails can be sent for free.

Whatever doesn’t immediately end up in eternal digital oblivion at the push of a button gets a closer look. Event invitations, for example. Creative things. Stuff that’s fun for us—and even more so for you. The really awesome shit that tickles our urethra when we read or watch it, we’re happy to put out there. Even for free. When young artists send us a breathtakingly good portfolio or fresh bands send outstanding material, it goes on air. As quickly as possible. Because it’s genuinely good.

For stuff backed by a big PR agency and possibly an even bigger corporation behind it, we charge money. Makes sense. After all, that’s usually pseudo-viral advertising, and they can definitely throw something our way for that. They’ve got it. Of course, we also pay attention to what we throw at you here as sponsored articles. Only partners who fit surprisingly well into the little world of AMY&PINK have a chance—anything else wouldn’t benefit you, us, or them.

So we write back to the nice people and present them with a reasonable price offer. For such and such an amount, we’ll write them an absolutely magnificent article, bursting with wordplay, charm, and sexiness—turning advertising into love. Many of our previous clients, such as MTV, Nokia, or Telekom, were thrilled and are always happy to work with us again.

Other agencies and companies, however, apparently haven’t arrived on the internet yet—or they think they can screw us over. Those who don’t send us almost horrified replies expressing disbelief that we would actually charge for an article and that we should be grateful to even use their name—others try to lull us in with worthless offers. From vouchers to cheap “cooperations” to link exchanges, everything is included—everything that makes us want to puke. Budget? What budget?

The delightful Maria from Stylekingdom has already expressed her understandable frustration about this, just like Ashe from Independent Fashion Bloggers or Mary from Stil in Berlin. It’s the same question that TV stations or print magazines would ask themselves—if they weren’t already established: Why should we advertise for someone and help increase their profits if we’re paid inadequately or not at all?

Online magazines like AMY&PINK or other blogs don’t finance themselves on air and love. Not yet. Servers, rent, chicken döner, travel expenses, MDMA, contracts, brothel visits, time… All of that costs us a lot of money, which we can only recoup if we make a small part of our publications available to companies that want to use the reach of our work while simultaneously contributing to our survival. Because let’s be clear: without advertising, we wouldn’t exist in this form. Even rocks understand that.

But bloggers themselves are partly to blame. When huge corporations send mass emails to persuade clueless sites to post a few “exclusive” promotional videos every week, just for the slim chance of some trip to some event, that’s simply stupid. These companies and the agencies attached to them make a fortune from your talent—and you let it happen without seeing a single cent. Voluntary slave labor in times of digital revolution.

So once again for idiots. Bloggers: Don’t let yourselves be screwed over. Companies: Pay properly for good advertising. It’s amazing what unprecedented opportunities the internet offers all of us. So let’s use them fairly and skillfully—and not destroy the trust that’s just being built by allowing clueless people to exploit the work of others for their own sleazy advantage. That definitely wouldn’t end well, and in the end we’d all be broke. But at least there wouldn’t be any more annoying promotional emails…

Front: Summer Girls

Soundcheck: Albums Of The Week




K.I.Z. - Vacation for the Brain
The favorites of all mothers-in-law are back, and with them a new album. Most of you are probably dancing the “son of a bitch” out of joy right now. Tarek, Maxim, Nico and DJ Craft make more than just music for vacuuming, loafing around, drinking, or simply destroying things. With "Head of the Love Department" the record also gets romantic for a moment, with "In Your Mother" there’s something to laugh about. K.I.Z. fuck you up verbally.

Amazon | iTunes


Austra - Feel It Break
Behind Austra is a Canadian electro project. The head of the creative trio is singer and songwriter Katie Stelmanis, who gives the record "Feel It Break" a classical sound somewhere between Fever Ray and Bat For Lashes with her operatic voice. Simple beats combined with a crystal-clear voice make the album an ambitious record.

Amazon | iTunes


Chiddy Bang - Peanut Butter And Swelly
With "Peanut Butter And Swelly," the alternative rap duo from Philly delivers the soundtrack for this summer. With a hefty mix of electro, indie samples, bouncing bass, and rapper Chiddy, whose style strongly recalls grime, things really heat up. The mixtape is perfect for relaxed hours at the outdoor pool, in the park, or as a warm-up to slide smoothly into the weekend.

Free Download


SebastiAn - Total
The guy isn’t the fastest, but perhaps the most talented of the Ed Banger crew. His first LP "Total" really goes through the roof. Worthwhile features like "Love Motion" with Mayer Hawthorne compete with older tracks like "Ross Ross Ross." It was probably one of the best decisions of the talented Frenchman to finally give up the dreary basement-dweller existence.

Amazon | iTunes


Four Tet - Rounds
Sometimes I’m amazed at what our senses are capable of when properly stimulated. What LSD and the like achieve through toxic manipulation, Four Tet achieves through his incredibly intoxicatingly aesthetic soundscapes. The album "Rounds," released in 2001, is without a doubt an acoustic fairy tale made up of elves and fairies. Very high goosebump factor guaranteed.

Amazon | iTunes


Battles - Mirrored
There are really only a few things that get my pulse up to 180. Either I’m doing excessive sports or I’m listening to this album. It doesn’t always take a great singer to make rock worth hearing. Sometimes a few electronic elements, experimental rhythms, and of course always being slightly off-key are enough… and "Mirrored" is done.

Amazon | iTunes

Super Styles: Pretty In Pink


Some girls really do everything they can not to end up as cheap trophies in the thoughts of macho men smelling of sperm. And if that means two tufts of armpit hair and a dirty black dress. Oh well, what’s all the fuss about: we’d still take her home with us.
Hey come on, we really couldn’t help not turning him in. Because not only does Black Rambo probably have three police officers and fifteen kindergarten kids on his conscience, his stained dick briefs were simply too much. But now he has time to do the laundry.
Asian women undoubtedly have something mysterious and at the same time emotionless about them. The black bodysuit, the badly bleached blonde hair, and a deadly weapon of the highest caliber in her hand. This slender angel of destruction could pretty much pin us against any wall. Bang, bang!
No, the era of embarrassing ghetto kids is still not over. Because as the prophecies from the current Def-Shop catalog predict, the epic battle Hipster vs. Pseudo-Gangster must happen first. Who will win? Place your bets.
Dwarfs who let themselves be prostituted by the media landscape to earn money with pain and humiliation don’t deserve anything else but to come home covered in blue and yellow bruises. In their underwear. To their dwarf wife.
What men couldn’t care less about with their useless nipples, but what has preoccupied the other sex since puberty: Do the two pieces of underwear have to match? We say: Nope. But only if the result looks as sensational as it does here. Keep on ironing.
Shopping is damn boring. Always strolling through the same aisles, buying the same stuff, paying with the same money. So why not bring a little variety into the whole thing? With the black mini skirt and the matching glasses, this trip will be remembered forever.
Emos are dead. Emo bands are dead. Emo songs are dead. Emo hairstyles are dead. Emo magazines are dead. Emo animals are dead. Emo crybabies are dead. Emo colors are dead. Emo websites are dead. Emo asses are dead. Emo kids are dead. Emo emos are dead. Thank God.
Whenever supposedly weaker forces fight against an overpowering enemy, the Anonymous masks are dug out. Whether against Scientology, Sony, or the Spanish government. But of course we’re on their side – otherwise we might end up with problems ourselves...

Hamza Ali al-Khateeb: The Boy And His People

Every revolution, every resistance, needs a hero. A symbolic figure who unites the anger and passion of the people and drives them together into the streets to fight against oppression and for justice. Neda Agha-Soltan is that figure in Iran, Alexandros Grigoropoulos in Greece, Iman al-Obaidi in Libya. And now Syria’s tormented opposition has gained new momentum – through the cruel death of a 13-year-old boy.

Anyone who looks at the body of Hamza Ali al-Khateeb is confronted with a more than horrific sight. His round face completely purple. His skin covered with deep cuts, burn marks, bullet holes. His jawbones and kneecaps shattered, his penis severed from his body. The suffering of the innocent teenager must have been unimaginable, the screams bloodcurdling, the tears endless. And all of this just because he was in the wrong place at the wrong time.

At the end of April in Jiza, a small village in the south of the country, Hamza had been arrested by police during a demonstration and had been missing ever since. Only a month later was his disfigured body returned to the family. “He was just a child,” an activist who wishes to remain anonymous for security reasons tells us. “It is a crime, a really serious crime.” The family itself does not speak about the death of their child. To anyone.

In Syria, news of the student’s fate has triggered a new wave of protests against President Bashar al-Assad. Over the weekend, people across the country demonstrated against the cruel act and for a change of power. “We are all Hamza Ali al-Khateeb,” they chant loudly in unison, and “Was he such a threat to you?” On a specially created Facebook page, they are already celebrating the 13-year-old as a martyr and demanding the resignation of their head of state.

The video, which details the hellish agony Hamza had to endure and in which a speaker comments on each wound one by one, was unblocked today by YouTube. The two and a half minutes are oppressive; one can hardly comprehend how we adult human beings are capable of committing something so cruel. Incomprehensible. If what people are saying is true.

A family loses its child, a people gains a hero. And even though Syria’s news agency Sana describes the media reports about the barbaric death of Hamza as false and deceitful, in the upswing of worldwide protests he is a sarcastic blessing for the national counter-movement. After all, the video is currently making its way around the world. But it is too much for me. As I click stop and close the exceptionally ad-free window because I simply cannot bear it anymore, the Doodle for International Children’s Day jumps out at me on the next page. For today, my words have run dry.

Super Styles: Pretty In Pink


This coming summer will once again be the season of the barefooters. No more stinking soles on the underside, instead air, lightness, and an irresistible connection with nature. So better leave the cheese at home.
Ugly children can become the greatest embarrassment for otherwise proud parents. So why not pull a full-body costume over their ghastly faces and only free them again once they’re old enough for cosmetic surgery.
Andre from Manila is probably not only a little bit gay, but also likes to temporarily tattoo stars onto his flawless face. Add the matching style and a long blonde mane. Against him, you can only lose.
Roger has already seen a lot in his life. Wars, for example. Disasters. Women. Many women. That’s why he’s allowed to grin so wisely and shove his ancient tie wherever he pleases.
All that American Apparel crap really seems to suit only emaciated hippie hipsters who still appear to be stuck in 2008. And not necessarily wanting to leave. Or to put it differently: Put something else on.
We grew up in the ’90s. Disney movies shaped our burstable dreams, cartoons were our family, anime a foreign world full of wonders. So why not celebrate them. For example, with oversized shirts.
One fashion item receives far too little attention: the pajama pants. Sure: many won’t get to see you in your sweat-soaked nightwear. But you never know who might be standing at your door late at night.
There are moments in life when faces become irrelevant and only the attached genitals count. Stick it in or have it stuck in. So why not let yourself be mounted by a deer? As long as he has a human penis.
Headbands were always worn by those strict nerdy bitches from the parallel class who wouldn’t even look at you, but slept with the teacher instead. Today they’re colorful and Peace, so why not.

Nomi Forchhammer: Girl At Home

Text Battle: We’ll Make You Famous

Day after day, we deliver more or less well-researched background reports on current topics, personal mentalities, and red-hot trends. We’re even happy to beat the nights around our ears for it, just to inspect the harvest the next day with a tired smile on our faces. But that’s over now. At least partly.

Because out there are so many things we have no clue about. But would love to. Insights into worlds that have so far passed us by completely, but might mean all the more to you. Whether they’re events currently happening on this planet or enduring passions that deserve to be pushed into the spotlight more often. And that’s where you come in.

That’s why we want to send you young aspiring writers into a fulminant text battle called “Schreibkampf.” Anew at the beginning of every week. We’ll set a topic, you’ll write magnificent pieces about it and send them to us by Sunday evening. We’ll publish the best text the following Monday, big and bold on AMY&PINK—and then a new topic will already be waiting in the wings. So that you don’t get the flawed idea of slacking off again after just a short sprint.

The whole campaign brings enormous advantages for you and for us. Namely: through high-quality, critical, funny, ironic, and punchily written texts, you’ll become world-famous, and we’ll save ourselves some work and can use the time to post more ridiculous finds and photos on Facebook. Hooray. Texts that don’t make it into the virtual finale can gladly be published on your own blogs (if you have one), and we’ll link to them afterward. So pay attention and join in. Simply send your works now to schreibkampf@amypink.com. You have until Sunday. And the first topic is...

Interim Result: A Good Month

It’s sometime just after four. At night. I am the only breathing and living person in this tangled office complex. Apart from the black shadow that occasionally wanders across the bare walls and makes me doubt my sanity. Around me lie empty Red Bull cans. Fast-food leftovers. And magazines. But my gaze is fixed on the monitor. After all, I still have work to do—I’m not going home today.

A good month ago, we moved into the Betahaus with AMY&PINK and finally turned our former hobby into a profession. With fixed working hours and meetings and brainstorming sessions. Or, as is more often the case with us: stumbling loudly through the door in the afternoon with residual drugs in our blood, coffee battles in the courtyard, and prolonged staring contests until office plant Billy mutates into a projectile. But believe it or not: these few weeks mean so incredibly much to Wenke, me, and the rest of the team that I can barely keep up with mentally processing it all.

Only a few of our new readers even know who is actually behind this magazine anymore. Our faces, experiences, pasts. Which is sometimes a shame, but mostly somehow understandable. Because it’s rarely about our personal intimacies anymore. Those who still know us are aware that we are practically chaos in human form. And possess the attention span of a duped mayfly. Which is why any form of professionalism on our part borders on a miracle.

But we do our job surprisingly well. We keep calendars and spreadsheets, connect with more or less important people, and happily write our way through the colorful world of topics. With sections. And mix guarantees. And ideas we steal from neighboring tables during lunch breaks. At the Asian place. Or the Sudanese.

Of course, not everything always goes according to plan. Then we just get drunk all night on wine and beer, eat our way through vegan delicacies, and watch bad Australian movies about overly busty women. On a Wednesday. Only to wake up the next afternoon with pounding heads, the three of us in a huge bed in Wrangelkiez, and then be evacuated because of a forgotten aerial bomb. Naturally, work is out of the question then. More like coffee. And sun. And headache pills. But it works out.

After all, it’s always a risk to misuse your passion in order to pay the rent with it. In both a financial and emotional sense. Because we only believe we can manage it because we love what we do. And know each other. Are friends. With arguments and trust and lots of stupid chatter.

And one thing we’ve learned this month: how quickly everything can happen. That our idea never stands still and we’re constantly learning something new. When we’re not busy throwing chewing gum at each other. Or boogers. It’s like a giant role-playing game, only in real life. With opportunities and pitfalls, decisions and wisdom.

That’s why we, too, are in a constant state of change. Trying out new things, reviving old ones. Here one moment, there the next, and next month we’ll probably find a new home. In a somewhat crazy artists’ commune. Just a few corners further on. Because Kreuzberg: that’s a must.

So we thank you for the first weeks in the tough world of putting everything on one card. To everyone who somehow believes in us and does shady business with us. We always look forward to your criticism and your praise and your sometimes small and sometimes big stories. And we remain curious about the things that may still come. Because one thing is as certain as the lousy quality of the weed next door in Görli: world domination has never been so close at hand as it is today.

Weezer: Paranoid Android

]

Tips for the Weekend: Ten Little Missions

While the recently published weather reports from various media corporations are predicting temperatures of over 30 degrees at the beginning of the week, we’re sitting here in storm and rain on the gray parking lot of an office complex that wishes to remain unnamed, indulging in chai teas and hot chocolate as we skillfully slide into the weekend. As usual, you can celebrate it as well with our “Ten Little Missions,” for whose continued existence we hereby call upon your active support.

One. Become our fan on Facebook and push the thing past a respectable number of 5000. Ask your friends, relatives, and cellmates whether they’d like to dare this legendary click. Two. Meet up at McDonald’s for a blind date with a feeder. Order only a small salad and a still water. Three. From now on, put a condom over your Spanish cucumbers. You’ve got to protect yourself from this killer virus somehow. Four. Watch the new music video “Smile” by puff-punk Avril Lavigne. Afterwards, don’t find her quite as shitty anymore. Five. Be a little more like Han Solo.

Six. Revive those childhood doctor games together with your siblings. Try not to get each other pregnant—Mom and Dad wouldn’t find that funny at all. Seven. Throw your euphorically written Ergo job applications into the trash. It’s not nearly as lovable at those bore-fests as the media makes it seem. Eight. Buy a trampoline, haul it onto your balcony, and then really let loose. Nine. Make an appointment with the dentist. Those black stumps need to be painted white again. Ten. Help the Greeks simulate an epic earthquake. Then go fundraising with them.

Dana Richardson: Oh Canada

]

Compulsive Going Out: Summer’s In Town

The middle of the year is approaching at breakneck speed, and anyone who doesn’t happen to be spending their dreary life in the southern hemisphere knows what that means: summer, sun, sunshine. Some are tanning their barbecue-bloated bellies at the quarry pond, short skirts and skimpy tops multiply before our pointed eyes in ice cream parlors, and in the evenings people chill with beer in the park while a Spanish sunny boy strums his guitar and even bottle collectors wear a hearty smile on their faces.

If you don’t join in, you’re a boring homebody, a loser with no friends, sadly drifting past life. Or are you? The media drum it into us, entire TV channels shut down their afternoon programming. Radio hosts bombard us with event tips—here a festival, there a rave, now and then an open-air cinema. Something is happening everywhere. But only outside, not inside. That much is certain. And if you ignore it, you might as well hit restart and go back to birth.

How much of it is really a mix of compulsion and a guilty conscience? Are we emotionally strong enough not to let ourselves be swept away by the public party outside and instead stay home? With pure intention, because after all we have other things to do than waste our time outdoors on pointless leisure activities like swimming, cycling, or lazing around.

Or is the exact opposite true? Don’t all these persistent outdoor fanatics, who bolt out of their apartments at the slightest hint of sunshine and every weekend just to soothe their supposed inner voice in overcrowded pools and parks, get on our nerves? God forbid being labeled a dull indoor person. Always on the move.

As always, the truth probably lies somewhere in between. Outside isn’t mandatory; inside is an option. Or something like that. Those who free themselves from all obligations and feelings of guilt and don’t let themselves be bossed around like a stupid sheep by rigid voices should experience a more than pleasant summer. Whether with sweaty fellow humans in the park or sometimes all alone on the couch at home. After all, you can at least open the window.

Boris Mikhailov: Case History

Richard Kern: Face to Panty Ratio

[flv:panty.mp4 panty.jpg 1074 604]

Finally Back! Hardcore Contact Ads

One or another attentive reader may still remember the hardcore contact ads through which we once paired you up with plenty of other nerds, fashion girls, and normal people. Not rarely even quite successfully. Because if it didn’t work out for great love, then at least for a little rendezvous with a happy ending. But since many of you were overwhelmed by the fact of having to compose a complete text about yourselves, including wishes, experiences, and characteristics with callback, wit, and a common thread, we had to come up with something.

With the new hardcore contact ads, we now offer you a creative framework that you need to fill in. With cheeky questions and simple multiple-choice tasks, we squeeze the interesting bits out of you, form a picture of your personality, and thus improve the chances of finally getting your fat ass away from that computer you’ve grown into, so you can enjoy the summer and perhaps even more. With a hot person by your side.

So if you haven’t yet found a soulmate, are always open to a bit of fun, and don’t have any aversion to virtual flirting, you can try your luck right away on this great page. Every Tuesday we’ll pick one of the contact ads and proudly present it to the public. With your text, photo(s), and an email address to which your eager fans can then turn with pounding hearts. Just give it a try and if you can think of other great questions we could possibly ask, send them our way. Have fun with the brand-new hardcore contact ads!

JJ: Made In Sweden

[flv:madeinsweden.mp4 madeinsweden.jpg 1074 604]

Olivia Crawford: Summer In The City

Super Styles: Pretty In Pink


Girls without a character of their own like to squeeze themselves into the most eye-catching outfits. From this colorful mess we can therefore safely conclude that Rainbow Regina is a boring and dry sandbox.
In the land of our soon-to-be conquerors, China, women can now be cultivated in cans. Like plants. Or mold. We immediately ordered eight pallets and will raffle off the most beautiful specimens in the near future. Not that one, though.
Forget machine guns or Uzis – cats are the weapons of the new generation. At least if your opponent is allergic to the furry things. Every urban warrior looks dangerous and stylish. With cats at the ready.
While we’re on the topic of furry things, here’s a warning to all festival-goers and summer drinkers: Not every human being in a coconut bikini is a girl you can sleep with. Just sayin'.
How to get everything right in terms of style is shown by our good friends Pharrell Williams and Tyler Okonma. The shirts, the pants, the caps. But honestly… those two motherfuckers look good in anything.
Flowers in the hair can turn even the darkest trench-coat Gabi into a cute creation of nature. How long they can distract from black streaks, ugly belt buckles, and gloomy shirts is up to you.
All my female classmates turned into pregnant breeding sows shortly after their 20th birthday, with only one goal in life: to give birth as much as possible. Unfortunately, not a single one looks as good as this fairy and her offspring.
Mickey Mouse wasn’t even this gigantic in “Fantasia” as she is on the shirt of this gluttonous overeater. She almost hypnotically wiggles across the belly. Back and forth… she is your new master. Bow before Mouse!
Girls with black knee socks have never been as sexy as a certain specimen at the end of 2010 in Munich. Forget tops, pants, or underwear… We officially allow you to strut through the summer like this. Really, we swear.

Katy B: Easy Please Me

Mazda & Vice: 2 Design Connection

Forget the loutish nastiness of Xzibit’s “Pimp My Ride” or the workshop that reeks of rotten eggs known as Uli’s Corner Garage. Anyone looking for a truly innovative design for their ride should confidently rally behind the two rival groups in the 2 Design Connection by Mazda & Vice competition. The initiative has set itself the task of sending the plain, ordinary passenger car look off into the desert and giving the new Mazda2 the face it rightfully deserves.

In Team 1, the fashion designers from Starstyling are working their butts off together with installation artist Nik Nowak, who is known for his glossy large-scale works, while in Team 2 the experimental creator Bongoût and his kindred spirit Jakob Hinrichs are competing for the favor of the users. The result is a true battle of urban 3D designs, inspiring paper cuttings, and genuine storms of color. And of course both squads have only one goal in mind: to win, damn it! If necessary, by any means.

Electro grandma Peaches and the editor-in-chief of Intersection, Götz Offergeld, are acting as patrons of this epic madness, and we wouldn’t be throwing the whole story at you if there wasn’t something in it for you as well. Until mid-July, you still have the opportunity to vote for the best designs and even submit one of your own. The most creative mind will win a brand-new Mazda2 with everything that goes with it. So make an effort and show what’s hiding in the twists and turns of your brain.

This is a sponsored article by Mazda.

Wasted Youth:

Sasha Kurmaz won’t be pinned down. Not in a box, not in a label, not even in a single, clean sentence. He slips through categories like smoke through cracked windows, leaving behind a scent of something burning. Perverse voyeur? A prophet of wasted youth? Bisexual excess in human form? His camera eats the world whole.

Flesh, neon, asphalt, ecstasy—anything that shivers in the light. Anything that looks like it might bite back. And somehow, no matter how raw, how grimy, how reckless, it’s absolutely beautiful. The kind of beauty that feels like it shouldn’t be, like it was never meant to be seen this way. But here it is, captured, framed, undeniable. It’s real, it’s true, it’s us.

What matters most is the moment when something ugly becomes hypnotic, when filth turns into poetry, when the world strips down and stands there, raw and waiting. Sasha measures cocks, dissects monkeys, puts a swastika onto the table before snorting it up. Not for shock, not for cheap thrills—there’s something more, something honest.

He shoots what’s there. The things people don’t want to see, but can’t stop looking at. The kind of images that brand themselves deep into my brain and never leave. And what can I do? Nothing. I just stand here, watch, feel it crawl under my skin. The kind of filth that doesn’t wash off. The kind that makes me want more, more, more.

The camera keeps rolling. It’s a silent witness, an accomplice, never flinching, never looking away. Sasha’s work is way too intense, too electric, too alive to turn away from. He moves through the world like a fever dream, sweat-drenched, intoxicating, a little sickly sweet. He pulls me in without a word, makes me complicit without asking for permission.

There’s a kind of violence in that, but also something tender, something disturbingly intimate. A whispered confession that no one remembers making. Maybe he’ll let me in one day. Maybe he never will. Maybe I’m already there, trapped forever inside the frame, watching myself through his eyes, and I just haven’t realized it yet.

.

James Blake: Lindisfarne

[flv:lindisfarne.mp4 lindisfarne.jpg 1074 604]

Ben Sherman: V.I.P. Charity Concert

Last Friday evening, Ben Sherman threw a very special party for everyone who not only loves fashion but also has a heart for other people. As part of the Europe-wide “Very Important Plectrum” charity campaign, the fashion brand invited fans and guests to Berlin. All proceeds from the evening went to Trekstock, an incredibly great initiative that fights cancer together with young people. And unlike typical charity events, this one was anything but boring.

After a small exhibition at the Ben Sherman store at Hackescher Markt titled “Very Important Plectrums,” which featured unique collector’s items from participating artists, the party continued at Cookies. The London indie boys from The Rifles played an exclusive unplugged concert, Crash:Conspirancy provided energetic support, and the Musikexpress DJ Team guided the 500-strong crowd through to the end of the night.

To ensure that the social aspect of the event was not overlooked, bands and musicians such as Mando Diao, Maximo Park, and Michi Beck signed unique plectrums, which will be auctioned on eBay starting May 29. True to the motto: A plectrum may be small in size, but it is great in meaning. And of course, all highest bids go directly and without detours to a good cause. After all, it is always a wonderful thing to kick cancer’s ass.

This is a sponsored article by Ben Sherman.

Shinya Aizawa: Cornation

Those Dancing Days: Can’t Find Entrance

[flv:entrance.mp4 entrance.jpg 1074 604]

Matt Sharkey: A Lot Is Soon To Change

Organ Envy: Jasmin’s Big Boobs

If my DNA had put me into the body of some wandering vagina-bride, then today I would be the pseudo-southern pre-fatty type with lush sagging breasts but considerable puff nipples. And if I were then to stand every Thursday evening under the shower in the Wedding community center with the much younger girls from my volleyball team, I would be jealous. Fucking jealous. Of all those with bigger breasts. And firmer breasts. And prettier nipples. And fewer freckles between those things. And possibly even of their narrower labia.

After all, you can be jealous of so many things. Of Mr. Schmitz’s brand-new Audi A3 next door. Of the color-true red Chucks of the girl sitting next to you. Or of the overly nice family that stupid Thorsten was born into – and doesn’t even appreciate. But of primary and secondary sexual characteristics? Did Jesus really want that?

My former good friend Chrissy, with whom I occasionally engaged in simulated intercourse for the preservation of our species, recently told me over a cup of caramel macchiato that her new stud owns a penis as big as the Washington Monument. Hardly to be surpassed in width and length. On mild full-moon nights they would practically have to pound the thing into her with tons of lube and spit. Whether that was medically justifiable, I ask her quietly and examine the crotch tear in my jeans in a depressed manner.

Yes, I was jealous, okay? Admittedly, I don’t have the smallest dick in the world. One or two Twitter girls can confirm that. In good light and with less pubic hair, it is easily above the internationally measured average. Asia excluded. But still. When I think about how he nails her to the wall with his too-long and too-big blade and bellows for vengeance like a knight from times long past, I am jealous. Fucking jealous.

Although she assures me that it is nowhere near as good as one imagines: the resentment remains. For the things you simply cannot influence. Not even through dubious internet offers or botched cosmetic surgeries. With extensions and silicone. But which in today’s society somehow seem more important than ever. In conversations among themselves. Why wasn’t nature a little more merciful with us – but with those over there? Assholes.

In my recently acquired female body, I step out of the sports hall and trot home with my head lowered, stand naked in front of the mirror and inspect the two flaps above and the two flaps below my belly filled with cheap fat. I could cry when I think of the perfect body of the blonde Jasmin from the opposing team. As if God himself had locked himself in the bathroom for five minutes when he created her. Until it occurs to me that once again I got stuck in my imagination and am not at all jealous of any breasts, vaginas or butts – but solely and exclusively of the much bigger penis of Chrissy’s new stud.

JJ: Angels

[flv:jjangels.mp4 jjangels.jpg 1074 604]

Ryoichi Maeda: Under Your Skin

Marley Kate: Boys And Girls

Relaunch, Baby! We Are MagazineWe Are Magazine

Those of you who grew up in the 80s may still remember that here at AMY&PINK we originally started out as a pure blog. Digital diary. Personal knickknacks. Nicely arranged from top to bottom – and then turn the page. Over the past few years, however, we increasingly merged into a mutated symbiosis of weblog and online magazine, to the point where we ourselves were already suffering from an identity crisis. So what were we now? One or the other? Something in between? Bi?

To put an end to our sleepless nights and to spare our parents the anxiety and anticipation regarding our anti-analog preferences, we grabbed the tried-and-tested old design, catapulted it into the year 2011, and now loudly and contentedly shout over the heads of the crowd: “We are a magazine!” And properly so.

We’re wider now. And brighter. And more eye-catching. The homepage simply blows everything away; we’ve tidied up and rearranged and organized. And we’re finally paying tribute to our many great articles and finds by serving them to our visitors here in style on a silver platter. A color system with rainbow attitude keeps the various categories and sections separated, new advertising opportunities and the passing of our aging mascot Lil’ Amy round off the relaunch.

Of course, there are still plenty of errors to fix here and there, adjustments to be made, pages to be refilled. We’ll take care of that. Over the next few days. And you diligent trolls can help us. Have a look around, see where something isn’t quite as it should be, and let us know. Including operating system and browser – if you think that’s necessary. In any case, we’re looking forward to a freshly renovated home for our abstruse ideas, stories, and coke videos, and at least on one thing we can all agree: There’s not much blog left here anymore. And that’s a good thing.

Berlin: Café Kotti

Hamburg: Wenke at the Maritim

Hasisi Park: Like A Dirty Dog

Austra: Lose It

Nothing: Infinite Emptiness

So we’re all sitting together in this huge room full of hard-working people, trying to keep an online magazine running. That’s great, that’s fantastic, that puts us in a good mood. Most of the time, anyway. Because despite all the Google calendars, notepads, and found-item tabs acting simultaneously within our field of vision, it can unfortunately happen again and again that the vast mass of the internet offers nothing worth imagining. Then we’re high and dry. And the wailing is huge.

The clock is breathing down our necks, the frenzy is intense. Quick: Awesome topics!! Fresh, high-quality music videos packed with underground and indie, maybe a bit of mainstream? Negative. Then a great photo series, including tits, animals, and talent? Nothing found. Breaking news that is neither BILD nor Financial Times and enriches, discusses, and illuminates the world we live in? Um… nope.

To hell with good weather, low radiation levels, or being in love. Because it’s astonishing how much our good mood depends on this medium called AMY&PINK consistently staying alive. This machine that wants to be fed with only one thing: digital input. And how unbelievably radically everything inside us transforms into a boiling cauldron of hate when we can’t manage that.

Of course, we’re thinking only of you: the reader. Sitting like an eternally hungry chick in your nest made of Facebook and Twitter, constantly screaming for something new. Naked skin, provocative news, personal shit. The right mix, a bit here, a bit there. Always surprising. And punchy. And anyway. Because we don’t want to just throw out anything.

So while we smash Billy, the office plant, against the wall and pray sacrificially to the heavens that our feed readers will scream “Heeere!! Tooopic!! Awesome!!!” or that a messenger will burst in with the pirated copy of Osama’s death photo, we slowly begin to understand: the internet is empty. There’s nothing left for us to do but wait. And let burning paper airplanes glide out the window.

Emily-Jane Robinson: Dreamland Stories

Amadou & Mariam: She Went Along With Him

[flv:along.mp4 along.jpg 940 529]

Swarovski: Discover Your Light

The glitter company Swarovski has enlisted the immensely talented artist Bruno Aveillan for its new spot and presents “Discover Your Light,” a monumental short film of the highest caliber. Actress Tina Balthazar and a little boy discovered in Turkey wander through a magical world full of crystals, always in search of themselves.

The visually stunning epic lasts a full three minutes and offers plenty of glamour, light, and beautiful dresses, all designed by French designer and newcomer Yiqing Yin. There is also a legendary ring. And nanoseconds. And if you look very closely, you can even spot a small journey through the history of Swarovski.

Starting May 5, the wordless journey will run in selected cinemas in Berlin, for example before “Red Riding Hood,” “Pirates of the Caribbean 4,” and “Norwegian Wood.” But of course you have the chance to see it beforehand. Here. With us. In its full length and almost exclusively. And as a fantastic extra, there’s also a highly worthwhile making-of. It’s magic.

This is a sponsored article by Swarovski.

Palladium Boots: Hidden Gems of L.A.

Berlin: Above Görli / Over Görli

Hurts: Illuminated

Thor: The Guy With The HammerThe Guy with the Hammer

There is one thing out there that is as certain as amen in church: superheroes on the big screen guarantee large audiences, high box-office revenues, and almost always endless sequels. And since the studios seem to be slowly running out of characters after such heavyweights as Batman, Spiderman, and SpongeBob SquarePants, they are now starting to adapt the more obscure comic types. In 3D, of course.

Thor is still known to the attentive nerds among you from school lessons, as he was one of the few Marvel heroes adapted from a saga. Accordingly, his life as a selfish hammer warrior takes place in the magnificent kingdom of Asgard, which is locked in a perpetual war with sinister ice beings from the basement. And they have red eyes. But otherwise everything is fine.

At least until the day Thor (Chris Hemsworth) gets a little overconfident, marches alone with his disguised drinking buddies into the dark ice world of Jotunheim, and starts a fight there. Then everything happens very quickly. Bombastic explosions, gigantic snow creatures, furious fathers.

Before our blond knight knows it, he finds himself in the human world and meets the adorable scientist Jane (Natalie Portman). Thor’s only goal: to return to his golden planet and finish what he started. But of course, that is anything but easy...

The story of the god’s son is a typically calculated sum of the elements that have worked perfectly in every superhero epic so far. Action, love, and a certain touch of humor, mixed with likable characters and impressive special effects.

Of course, the film has no chance of making it onto your list of favorite movies, and it won’t bring you any closer to the meaning of life either, but as fast-paced popcorn cinema for the average guy on the street, it definitely does the job. And that’s all we expected anyway.

Alena Jascanka: I’m A Happy Girl

Lykke Li: Sadness Is A Blessing

Party Review: Jägermeister Wirtshaus Tour 2011

The fact that one party or another also takes place in Frankfurt had largely escaped our notice until now. All the more surprising, then, was the announcement that the final stop of the Jägermeister Wirtshaus Tour 2011 was happening right here in the financial metropolis. And with Frittenbude and Tom Deluxx as fulminant live acts, no less.

Unfortunately, we weren’t able to be there in person, but our charming colleagues Isa and Norman from i-ref not only put together a detailed report about the special event, they also produced a video worth seeing.

And while we stand in the corner crying foolishly because we couldn’t be there, you can take a look at a few fitting photos. The next party will take place on May 19. This time in Stuttgart and with Peaches.

This is a sponsored article by Jägermeister.

Millie Brown: Puking ArtistPuking Art

[flv:milliebrown.mp4 milliebrown.jpg 940 529]

H&M: Fashion Against Aids

Kate Bush: Deeper Understanding

[flv:deeperunderstanding.mp4 deeperunderstanding.jpg 1074 604]

Lou O' Bedlam: Girls Portraits

Mixtape: After Party

The most beautiful moment after all those sweat-soaked parties in some stinking clubs is when you take that first step onto the street in the morning and the sunrise smiles right into your face. From waking dream into daydream, from alcohol in your hand to shawarma in your mouth. Not another soul on the street. Just you and your playlist, featuring Neon Indian, The National, and Miami Horror. And rightly so.

Tips for the Weekend: Ten Little Missions

We’d love to spill the beans. That we’re currently sitting here with beer and sunshine in a huge abandoned office and that only minutes remain before we tear the clothes off our bodies and jump into the already flooded conference room 3. But you just don’t do that. It’s somehow unprofessional. So instead we officially inform you that we’ve brought the “Ten Little Missions” back from obscurity and are now throwing them at you in the usual form. So you don’t get bored over the Easter weekend. And now please excuse us – it’s time for the pond!

One. Visit Psychopath Andreas at home and rearrange his furniture. Write your will beforehand. Two. Don’t turn around. Some people only look good from behind, after all. Three. Beat our record at Non-Stop Nyan Cat. It was 2 1/2 hours. Four. Indulge in botanosexuality. For example with Billy, our first office plant. Five. Be more like Bender again. Mom will thank you for it.

Six. Listen to the new track “Wordy Rappinghood” by Uffie. Seven. Listen to the new track “Go” by Santigold. Eight. Choose one and send it to your grandma on cassette. Nine. Rent Liechtenstein. For only €47,999 per night. Why not. Ten. Sleep with your best friend’s mother. At least it’ll bring some momentum back into the dusty soap opera of life.

Off the Street: We Are Betahaus NowWe Are Now Betahaus

We actually did it. Off the street and into happiness. Or something like that. After a long one-day search and an illegal tour, everything was clear: Wenke and I belong in the Betahaus. Shared workspace is what they call it these days, so the two of us chatterboxes are now sitting among all kinds of passionate freelancers, pseudo-agencies, and knitting ladies.

After securing the most beautiful desk in the most beautiful room on the most beautiful floor and immediately decorating it with magazines, pen holders, and Coke bottles, it was time to finally bring some structure into the somewhat chaotic house of AMY&PINK.

Well-thought-out master plans, digital achievements, and tit-swapping via Skype have been chosen by us for one single goal: More articles, more quality, more variety, more more. And every now and then we grin stupidly at each other. Because we can. And annoy the surrounding parties immensely while doing so.

In fact, we feel enormously professional. We now go to work instead of getting drunk on beer in the park. We take lunch breaks together instead of talking to unemployed sculptors about the meaning of life at night. And we discuss the future with masterful precision instead of laughing in each other’s faces and puking that it will somehow work out.

This whole thing is financed largely by our beloved trolls, who funnel money into our coffers with every idiotic comment. They don’t even need to know how that works. Otherwise, they might stop. And that would be pretty bad for us. So keep bashing as much as you can—we still need a desk plant. And an expensive one at that. Thanks.

Ellis Scott: Not Boy George

Countdown TV: Japanese Music ChartsThe Japanese Charts

[flv:cdtv_2011_04_03.mp4 cdtv_2011_04_03.jpg 940 529]

TheFiXFiXFiX: Summer Ride

Rafale: Everglades

[flv:everglades.mp4 everglades.jpg 1074 604]

Mixtape: Hula Hoop Hysteria

Slowly you turn down the heating and turn up the swag. The sun’s rays lick your face. You’ve grabbed your fixie, your friends are waiting, quickly snatched the hula hoop from the storage space above the door. And off you go. Into the summer that, once again, is supposed to be the best of your life. Craft Spells, Wolf Gang and Yuksek accompany your first steps. And suddenly the world out there belongs to you alone.

Workspace, anyone? AMY&PINK Needs A New Home

We have to tell you at this point. Because otherwise tomorrow it would be dragged through the German tabloid press anyway: Mom threw us out of her basement. For reasons. The eternal cockfights combined with “Hannah Montana” on endless loop and Nutella-colored stains on the wall eventually became too much for her.

Now we’re literally sitting out on the street. And because Bridge-Bruno two blocks down has blocked his Wi-Fi for us, we now need a new, rainproof roof over our heads. With internet. And water pipes. And without a guy constantly telling us to finally apply the lotion.

That’s why my incredibly lovely colleague Wenke and I are looking immediately for two affordable desks where we can carry out our daily work on AMY&PINK. Ideally somewhere in Berlin Kreuzberg, Mitte or nearby. Shared workspace. Free office. Or a merciful agency or publishing house that would adopt us. Or something like that.

This gives you the unique opportunity to welcome Germany’s most provocative online magazine into your ranks. Which, in plain terms, means that when it comes to certain PR topics related to our content, one could certainly come to an arrangement now and then. If both the offer and the level of mutual sympathy are right. You understand. And we’re really nice.

So if you know anything about two abandoned desks waiting to be occupied, or if there’s still space in your agency, or you rent out workspaces, or you know someone who knows someone, then don’t hesitate—ask your supervisor today and send us your offers as soon as possible by email to marcel@amypink.com. Because it’s getting cold out here…

Donation Documentary: Gamers Heart Japan

[flv:japangames.mp4 japangames.jpg 940 529]

Charlotte Free: “Deadmau5 Is A Pedophile”

The Canadian electro musician Deadmau5, at 30 years old, is considered one of the shooting stars of the international progressive house scene. Songs like “Raise Your Weapon” or “Ghosts ’n’ Stuff” are played up and down in the hottest clubs of the capitals. But now, out of nowhere, it-girl model Charlotte Free has come out with the following explosive information: “Deadmau5 is a pedophile”!

On her Tumblr she writes: “I know tons of girls under 16 who were taken advantage of by him. Many people in the scene know that. Tons of girls have fucked him. All underage. Deadmau5 is a pedophile and his style is so incredibly unoriginal.”

And further: “There are so many child fuckers in the rave scene who go hunting with their fluffy cat ears and kandi and hit on stupid 15-year-olds who, because of the ecstasy, are running around in their underwear. And Deadmau5 is one of them. Except that he has a computer.”

The curious thing about it is that the 18-year-old model herself has apparently already had one or two sexual experiences with Deadmau5, aka Joel Thomas Zimmerman, since she only brought up the accusation of pedophilia after being asked what it was like with him.

Of course, there are now plenty of questions in the room. Are the little revelations true? What really happened between the two? Is dirty laundry just being aired here? And who even cares about all this anyway? But especially: Would you continue listening to his music if the accusations were confirmed? And I only just recently bought tickets for his Berlin gig…

re:publica 2011: Orgy Of Irrelevance

Imagine kidnapping the two nerds from every senior class of a German high school—the ones even the teachers don’t want to talk to anymore—putting an iPhone and an iPad in each of their hands, and locking them in a large hall for three days with beer and Club Mate. In a single sentence, that would succinctly describe the entire re:publica 2011. And that’s that.

In fact, hidden within this clumsily phrased analysis is also the big problem of the local online community and the urge to unsubscribe from it altogether. If only that were somehow possible. Because while elsewhere the creativity and potential diversity of the culturally and politically free internet are not only preached but also put into practice, the self-proclaimed elite here largely consists of uptight, out-of-touch people.

They may amuse themselves for two hours with ancient StudiVZ groups in tweet form and parties that resemble youth nights hosted by the church association of Brunsbüttel with DJ Full Throttle—but inspiring, captivating, or conveying knowledge in an interesting way is something they’d rather leave to others. Long-chewed topics merge with overly agitated speakers into a brittle orgy of irrelevance—aside from Sascha Lobo, only the international guests truly impressed with their stories and experiences.

The instruments themselves are constantly celebrated rather than what can be done with them. When prudish basement girls present painfully serious flirt tweets on a big screen (each of which basically screams incredibly loudly “Please fuck me!”), or bespectacled asthmatics lose themselves in theses about the latest Facebook features, you just want to run up to each of them, shake them, slap them, and shout: “Enough with the software incest, go out and change the damn world!” Except for Tessa, she’s great.

However, the fun ends at a certain point: when idealistic and embarrassed life failures claim the right to embody the mouthpiece of an entire community. Without anyone having asked them to. I don’t want to be directed by people who prefer to steal know-it-all wisdom about world events from Reddit and then recite it, aroused, on Twitter. Only to refresh Favstar every second afterward.

I don’t want failed personalities, who can only gain attention of their own kind through their copied image on the internet, to shape the public perception of the web. Because it’s no wonder that many Germans are afraid of the net when exclusively shadows of character—who have found no other hobby—are the ones quoted in the press.

Believe us: The apparent elite of the national web is not ours, not that of the majority. While they have devoted themselves to petty-bourgeois seriousness and can no longer look beyond the edge of their plate, most of us explore the possibilities of the networked world with far more drive, curiosity, flow, and selective reflection.

This incredible wealth of opportunity and the choice to enormously enrich one’s life through the internet—this is the perspective that must be conveyed to people who are not yet truly online. And not the image of a handful of self-important nerds stuck on a few web services, defining their dreary existence through likes and retweets.

: No Acid Until You’ve Cleaned Your Room!

What... the... fuck...

Manchester Orchestra: Simple Math

[flv:manchester.mp4 manchester.jpg 1074 604]

The End of the World:

By now I had long since resigned myself to the fact that for months I could neither really laugh nor cry. I had degenerated into a feelingless phantom in this endlessly same world, drifting from party to party, from person to person, and yet no longer truly taking part. In life. Everything had decayed into the same everyday mush. No matter how hard I searched.

And then I sit there and, in a single instant, everything changes. I do not see it. No explosion, no scream, no ending. Nothing. Only me and my head and some switch inside it that flipped. Suddenly. And that forces me to burst out of the ruined normality. Out into the night air, out of the loop that had me on repeat.

Then I stagger through the city with tears in my eyes. Not because of love. Or death. Or loss. Or wounded pride. Simply because, from one second to the next, something in me burned that I had long filed under Lost. I can’t cope anymore, don’t understand, wanted with all my might to cling to what was breaking me—and that now was gone.

Drunk and confused I call my friends, demand an order, a watchword, some kind of reason. But no one can give me that, because no one recognizes the problem, neither I nor they nor anyone. What is my problem? So at five in the morning I write pseudo-depressive texts I want to toss, MacBook and all, into a dumpster and rip to shreds.

No playlist on earth can calm me at this forgotten hour, and so I have nothing left but to wait. Whether I’m perhaps just imagining it all. Playing at drama. Too much beer. Or too much human. Or too much darkness, looking at me with a question and shrugging toward the next sunrise. That, surely, will know what to do.

Like a sad madman I now linger in my bed, rocking slightly back and forth. With this colorlessness in my gaze. Waiting for whatever may come. A sentence, a piece of information that will turn me into a furious fireball. So that at least I can still take part. In the destruction of my little universe. For in a single instant everything changes.

.

Ulrike Biets: Animal Hunter

Super Styles: Pretty in Pink


There is quite a lot about the condition of this cute young man that could bother us. The cigarette, the broken arm, but especially that absolutely ugly Mickey Mouse shirt. His parents should really be ashamed.
Suspenders have not been in style since World War II. Everyone knows that. But when they’re worn this sexy, we can make an exception and award them the label “Valuable.” With distinction.
Even the sugar-sweet tiger shirt with the yellow eyes and the beautiful pastel colors combined with the colorful pseudo-collar cannot necessarily distract from Lara’s dented nose. Oh yes, actually it can.
The right underwear as a sign of desire is the be-all and end-all for pretty girls. The pink scrap of fabric with the skin-tight cut fits just perfectly and sets thoughts free in your head. We can only say: Respect.
Our best friends Gottfried and Fridolin have pretty much done everything wrong in their lives that can be done wrong. The glasses, the clothes, the faces. Adios, you drab unjust world... Maybe next time.
Adidas Originals always works, there’s no doubt about that. Whether bags, shoes, pants, hoodies or this tight-cut dress. The brand with the three unmistakable stripes will never be out. Never.
Japanese schoolgirls in their typical outfits are the fantasy of every male individual between 12 and 89 years old. Whoever is responsible for this state-mandated fashion should receive a medal.
Some sick bastards are into watching little girls pee. Us included, of course. But if there’s something we really don’t want to witness, it’s this mess here. Mommy, where are you?!
It doesn’t take much to be cool. Just a cool board, casual shoes, a well-chosen shirt, baggy pants, a backwards cap, awesome skin tone, a confident look. We’d like to swap lives with the kid immediately.

Sasha Grey: A Porn Idol Retires

Sasha Grey was without a doubt more than just an ordinary porn star. Her collaboration with Terry Richardson, the brazen way she talked about her career and the business, the mix of implausible youthfulness and damn dirty vixen. Sasha was an idol of her time, somehow filthy, yes, but still glowing with otherness.

Now the 23-year-old has surprisingly taken early retirement after five years in the porn industry. “It became increasingly obvious that my time as a performer in adult films was slowly coming to an end,” the American writes on her Facebook page. “Don’t worry, I haven’t found Jesus. But I can say one thing: I regret nothing.”

At the tender age of 18, after several waitressing and temp jobs, the Californian deliberately entered the sex industry and quickly achieved fame and recognition there with unusual concepts, some violence, and an irresistible rockstar image.

“I was able to work with the most professional people and companies and have always greatly appreciated the friendships and relationships I was able to build there. They also continue to help me fight against HIV, AIDS, and homelessness. Now there is nothing left for me to do but thank everyone who supported me in any way along my path. You are my shining stars.”

Sasha has just released her first book, “NEÜ SEX,” together with Vice, in which she once again reviews her story in words and pictures. In the future, she would like to devote herself more to highbrow acting. Nude scenes should then count among the lesser problems.

Berlin: Karo, Janos, Paul and I

Berlin: Wenke and Marcel on ZDF

Interview: With Fatboy Slim in an Icy Igloo

As part of the Volvo Snowbombing Festival 2011, we also had the pleasure of meeting the exceptional British musician Fatboy Slim on a sunny terrace high up in the mountains and skillfully grilling him about icy gigs, long journeys, and the Berlin police.

You played yesterday in that huge igloo in front of a select audience and the people in front of your booth went completely wild. Were you 100% Fatboy Slim or more of a party DJ?

A good DJ naturally has a wide repertoire of different songs up his sleeve. The mood in the room determines which track I’ll play next. Yesterday was, of course, a special gig. Fired-up Brits with plenty of alcohol in their system—they wanted to party. So I gave them what they demanded, and I had a lot of fun too, as you may have seen.

Did you go out partying somewhere after your set or did you take it easy?

No, no, I got cozy in my hotel room with a hot cocoa. What looks like partying to other people is, of course, hard work for me (laughs). And after every gig, there’s usually another one the next day. I have to stay fit.

What have you been up to lately? It’s been a bit quiet around you.

I was just in Chile for Lollapalooza and in Brazil for the Pop Festival, now Austria and then Slovenia, the USA, Indonesia. I’m traveling a lot at the moment—maybe that’s why you haven’t heard much from me (laughs).

If you’re touring so much, when will you be back in Germany?

I love Germany, and I was with you just last year. Unfortunately, my performance at the Berlin Festival was canceled because the police suddenly showed up and shut the event down. I really hope I can come back to Germany very soon.

What about new musical stuff? Album, collaboration, ideas?

At the moment, I’m producing a bit less. But that can change quickly. I just need the right idea to come flying in at the right time. I also just had another baby at home. I try to be with my family as often as possible during the week—that’s very important to me. But who knows, maybe the next album isn’t that far away after all.

Alexander Bergström: Bare Facts

Meat Monster

Burger King is now offering the Meat Monster in Japan. Two beef patties, two slices of cheese, three strips of bacon, chicken, and plenty of lettuce, tomatoes, onions, and sauces. I want to have it, take a bite, and simply die...

re:publica 2011: Nerd Festival 2011 – So Many Nerds in One Place

Tomorrow in Berlin, Germany’s biggest nerd festival kicks off once again. Completely without bands, tents, and clogged portable toilets, but instead with plenty of more or less interesting people who all have something to say. re:publica brings together slimy social media experts with self-proclaimed Twitter celebrities, bloggers plagued by self-doubt with curious corporate envoys.

Over the course of three days, lectures and workshops about the internet will take place in and around the Friedrichstadt-Palast, supported by numerous speakers. The enchanting Teresa Bücker will philosophize about love, Sascha Lobo will dive deep into the non-existent intelligence of local trolls, and our old veteran Heiko Hebig will chatter about party pages, pearl divers, and pony porn.

Of course, Wenke and my humble self will also be on site, first to provide you with comprehensive coverage of the earth-shattering events of the net conference and second to hopefully have just as much fun, fun, fun as last year. Or even more.

If you happen to see us jumping around somewhere, just talk to us using the ultra-secret code word “Bananarama,” and afterward you can choose between a few AMY&PINK stickers or a French kiss with my well-mannered companion. Recommendation: Better take the stickers...

And because we’re incredibly diligent and not lazy at all, we’re now going to make a list of the performances that really interest us—and of course we’re asking ourselves: Are you coming too? Are you even interested? Aren’t blogs dead anyway? And so on.

Cintia Dicker: Pretty Is Everywhere

[flv:cintia.mp4 cintia.jpg 940 529]

Rania Matar: A Girl And Her Room

: Link’s Death

He died like a hero.

Mixtape: Musical Revelation

The best music is heard naked and alone. Because it has been scientifically proven that auditory vibrations optimally hit and glide along the human body when it is not covered by any disturbing clothing. And when there is no one else in the room with whom we have to share them. For example, the great songs by MDNR, Pretty Lights and Scott Matthew. So take your shirt off and turn the speakers up so that not a single note gets lost.

: Peter Vs. Mr. Washee Washee

Family Guy meets Street Fighter II.

Volvo Snowbombing Special: God Shave The Queen

One week of Volvo Snowbombing 2011 in Mayrhofen lies behind me, and what I had planned in advance as a pseudo vacation quickly developed into a stressful yet incredibly fantastic mixture of work, alcohol, and music. The English festival fans were, no matter how drunk they were, without a single exception always polite and courteous; the international team of press people and PR agencies were fantastic and overly friendly.

The sexy mixture of snowboarding, après-ski, and fabulous live acts combined into a single festival is probably unique worldwide, and although the focus leaned more toward British taste, I had more fun with the colorfully mixed bunch of journalists and music fans than I had in a long time. Permanently drunk in a whole new dimension.

Between the excessive parties, I had the luck to meet, among others, Mark Ronson, Ms. Dynamite, and Fatboy Slim and to squeeze a few answers out of them to hastily put-together questions. In the evenings, the big names then took to the various stages of the event.

The Prodigy gave it their all as usual, 2manydjs brought the hall to a boil, Magnetic Man were in no way inferior. My personal highlight, besides the extremely talented one-man entertainer in the bar of the Hotel Neue Post, was especially Pendulum, because they delivered the only performance that I can still mostly remember clearly. Black Bull stole the rest from me.

On Saturday at 3 a.m., we all threw ourselves straight from the Fatboy Slim gig onto the shuttle to Munich airport. Exhausted and unapproachable, but with four beers in hand each. Because of the hectic rush, I left half of my clothes and other crap in my hotel room, but at that moment I somehow didn’t really care.

I now send a proper greeting to all those who sweetened my week in Austria in their own individual way and can recommend to anyone who is even remotely into good music and proper winter sports (and is fed up with all the usual summer festivals) to be there next year as well. It’s worth it, because what you experience here you definitely won’t find anywhere else. And never forget: ask for “Coke” first – and then for Pepsi.

Adam Green: The Wrong Ferrari

[flv:ferrari.mp4 ferrari.jpg 940 529]

Negoto: Charon

[flv:negoto.mp4 negoto.jpg 1074 604]

Mark Ronson: Just Three Questions (Only Three Questions)

On a sunny Thursday afternoon at an altitude of 2,500 meters, the slightly buzzed Mark Ronson crossed our path. Shortly before he delighted a select group of young people as a DJ god at the Volvo Snowbombing Festival, we grabbed him and, for our new section “Only Three Questions,” politely and not at all embarrassingly asked him the following.

Your last album “Record Collection” has a permanent place on my iPod. Calling it love would almost be an understatement. Do you already know what the next single release will be?

Yeah, I’m glad you liked it so much. Because the album was received so well, we’re currently producing a remix version of it. So the next single will definitely be from my new baby, after all it’s bursting with collaborations and you’ve got to make the most of that.

Yes, you really worked with a lot of big names. Wasn’t that an enormous amount of responsibility for you?

It wasn’t always easy, but it was a lot of fun. Whether Boy George, MNDR, or Ghostface Killah… they’re all absolutely fantastic people. We worked on “Record Collection” in Brooklyn. The creative vibe in that place was simply out of this world.

So you’re completely satisfied with the result?

Definitely. In my opinion, it’s my best album so far. And I’m really looking forward to the remixes; they’re going to blow everyone away. You too. But now I can hardly wait to get on stage. Enjoy the awesome weather and hopefully you’ll like my performance. Have fun!

Volvo Snowbombing Special: School Trip 2011 – Getting High, Table Football, School Trip

Press trips are usually exactly what the name grandly promises. You meet up with a few representatives from print, radio, and digital media for what is often a rather colorless firework of consumer terror. Car brands, fashion shows, or in this case a week at the Volvo Snowbombing Festival.

In reality, though, this trip feels more like a school excursion on speed. On the bus from Munich to Mayrhofen, the first beers were already emptied; my pseudo-classmates a colorful mix of music editors, winter sports specialists, and PR managers. Add Wilson Gonzalez Ochsenknecht and his somewhat crazy fiancée Bonnie Strange, and the temporary clique is complete.

So you mix memorable drinks together on the hotel bed, bond with English security staff over table football, and smoke yourself silly on the balcony at sunset. After that, of course, it’s time to party extensively.

In Mayrhofen there are ten party locations that the crowd of drunk and costumed English people drags itself between in every possible direction. The place to be is the Racket Club, a converted sports hall of superlatives. The festival’s most well-known DJs perform here. Mainly drum ’n’ bass.

We went to see Pendulum. On the first evening, we almost died they were so incredible. Professor Green, Ms Dynamite, 2manydjs. At Volvo Snowbombing, quite a lot is happening, and we really couldn’t complain about a weak lineup so far.

Today we’re heading up the mountain. Mark Ronson is DJing in a sunny palace made of ice. With a lot of imagination. By the end of the week, The Prodigy, Fatboy Slim, and Jamie Woon will really heat things up for us. And we can hardly wait. Volvo.

Birdy: Skinny Love

[flv:birdy.mp4 birdy.jpg 1074 604]

Ecstatic Truth: Hungry Hungry Hobos

Countdown TV: Japanese Music Charts – The Japanese Charts

[flv:cdtv_2011_04_01.mp4 cdtv_2011_04_01.jpg 940 529]

CockNBullKid: Asthma Attack

[flv:asthma.mp4 asthma.jpg 1074 604]

Snowbombing Special: The Mountain’s Calling Zillertaler Schürzenjäger

Hello. While you’re reading this pseudo-article, yours truly is on the way to the Volvo Snow­bombing Festival somewhere in the Austrian Zillertal. For a week. In the mountains. Cold. And snow. No wonder Wenke dragged me all across Berlin on Saturday afternoon to outfit me for winter. Of course, we spent the whole day getting drunk on random playgrounds, but at least I managed to grab a tube of sunscreen that was on sale.

Mark Ronson will be there. And The Prodigy. And Fatboy Slim. And Jamie Woon. And of course plenty of English people who will transform the wooden huts and mountain trails into a loud orgy of alcohol, music, and snowball fights. Little Marci right in the middle of it.

If, against all expectations, I survive the first night and dare to step outside my hotel room despite the icy cold and drunken island monkeys, I’ll go in search of familiar faces in order to ask stupid questions in the form of hastily babbled interviews.

So wish me lots of fun and send me an occasional email with tips on preventing alcohol poisoning. If I’m of sound mind, I’ll post photos on Facebook, publish whining on Twitter, and of course keep you updated right here on AMY&PINK about how this mountain adventure is turning me into a better and tougher person. Rhubarb!

Navigational Aid: Trend Indicator AprilTrend Indicator April

We asked 100 people: What can this bustling month shine with and what is rather for the trash. After one half of them wished us back to Yugoslavia and the other could barely get out more than “Where is the Brandenburg Gate here?”, we preferred to sit down as a small team and discuss together the strengths and weaknesses of April.

Good: Throwing loud school classes out of the train. Not paying attention to whether the socks match. Indie people. Sparkling wine on ice. Short hair with long beards. Kreuzkölln. Couples in love. Stuttgart. Frankfurt. Snatching cigarettes. Stealing bikinis in the sauna. Red-and-white sneakers.

DSLR cameras. Pastel/coral nail polish. White eyeliner and lashes (we’ll see them at Fashion Week). The new old Fanta Mango. Pink hair. The waffle shop “Kauf dich glücklich”. Photo booths (can never go out of style). Second-hand. Racing bikes.

Bad: Face tattoos. Leggings. iPhones. Jokes about nuclear disasters. Skinny jeans on guys. Pretending to be “trash” and actually being bourgeois. Unkempt feet. Being cheated on because of something like this. Bad-smelling people. Comeback albums by ’80s synth bands. Fashion trends on “Taff”.

Artificial fingernails in French-nail style. Nerd glasses on faces that are too nerdy. Wearing pumps where the ground is sand. Imitating “Berlin Calling” in private life. Blue eyeshadow. Cabbage soup diet. Androgynous men with deep-cut shirts. Rollerblades. Cigarette rollers. Emos. Batik look. Fun drinks. Garlic breath. Chuck Norris jokes (but still liking to tell them). Teleshopping. “For reasons.”

Mixtape: Nudy Kitty

Once again no boyfriend, dog or massage wand at hand to shake the hard everyday life off your body? Then the stuffed animals will have to suffer. Just like back when you were 5. So drag the dusty critters out of the closet, light a few candles and off you go with the delicate fun. We’ll also deliver the right musical accompaniment for this playful violation. This time featuring: Frank Ocean, Massive Attack and Paul Kalkbrenner. Don’t forget to clean up.

Bryan May: Restless Legs

Thieve: Way To Go

[flv:waytogo.mp4 waytogo.jpg 940 529]

Sandra Torralba: Estranged Sex

A&P Magazine: We Are Print, Bitches!

Okay guys, we haven’t been this excited since our first sexual experience or our final exams. Because what we’re allowed to present to you today has been under the strictest secrecy for months. We weren’t even allowed to tell our parents or our dealers about it.

When the lovely people from Burda Publishing invited us over and told us at a big table with lots of snacks and expensive mineral water that they wanted to fill a publication gap that didn’t even exist yet, we weren’t quite sure what we were doing there in the first place. Then they blurted it out and the egg got stuck in the oviduct: They want to turn AMY&PINK into a magazine. A real one made of dead trees and meant to be touched. Print, bitches!

And because magazine titles are traditionally kept nice and short and there wouldn’t be any space left on the fancy cover for the important things in life otherwise, your new bible was promptly shortened to “A&P.” Sounds simply brilliant, don’t you think?

The topics are of course the same as on the website. Music and life and sex and art and Pokémon. Just more detailed. And larger format. And with a small gang of international and more than sexy correspondents who will skillfully make our existence easier.

In mid-May, the bilingual test issue will be available in a limited edition for €3.50 in various magazine shops in Germany and Austria. How and what and where exactly, we’ll of course let you know, giving you the chance to grab one of the coveted issues while we’ll probably buy up the rest ourselves to guarantee the next edition.

We are more than curious to see how our excursion into the analog realms will be received and whether we can really close a print gap with “A&P” that no one had believed in until now. Wish us good luck and feel free to be euphoric.

The Dø: Too Insistent

[flv:tooinsistent.mp4 tooinsistent.jpg 940 529]

Adidas Megalizer: These Boots Are Made For Dancing

After the massive "All in" campaign by the hip clothing manufacturer Adidas, the Franconians now seem to be launching a direct attack on the enemies at Nike. They’ve been putting cutting-edge technology into their “Free Run+” products for passionate runners for quite some time, and that lead is now supposed to be caught up with.

With the "Megalizer," Adidas now presents a shoe created especially by and for breakdancers, rappers, and hip-hoppers. Sensors on the soles of the sharp kicks transmit every movement wirelessly to the nearest laptop and construct completely individual beats from it.

The French guys from Les Twins, Bboy Lamine and Mounir, demonstrate in a more than fulminant way what’s possible with the “Megalizer.” If you’re good and somehow have the skills. The only question now is: Will this be the next hot shit, or are even little ghetto kids with rolling light-up sneakers superior to this certainly not entirely cheap piece of technology?

Sexual Incidents: Illegal Desires In Your Head

Recently, there was an interesting discussion on the social news site Reddit, the content and arguments of which are still on my mind today and leave me without clear answers. It revolved around the interconnected mixture of society’s most explosive topics: homosexuality, pedophilia, and even a bit of people fucking animals.

The core of the thread, which amassed over 3,000 comments, can be summarized objectively and roughly as follows. Gay men and lesbians did not choose their sexual orientation. That is well known. But what about pedophiles and zoophiles? After all, they too cannot help their psychologically driven urges.

Of course, it is perfectly clear why the practice of homosexuality is permitted in this country, while the other two orientations are largely not. Because assaults on children and animals involve a ruthless abuse of power by other people that cannot be accepted under any circumstances. Whereas homosexual love is based on consent and takes place between individuals who legally live out their mutual sexuality. So far, so understandable.

But let us set this aspect aside for a moment and focus solely on the equivalence of the three inclinations. None of these people chose their sexual preference. It takes place in the mind; it is an urge. Yet while gay and lesbian sex is (thankfully) practiced in all variations in Germany, pedophiles and zoophiles must restrain their drive with sheer mental strength.

Because of the law, society, pure logic. Otherwise they face state-mandated therapies, enraged mobs, and the constant hammering into their heads that one must not be attracted to children or animals. Because that is damn well evil. And unnatural. An argument similar to the one homosexuals likely had to endure a few decades ago.

How difficult must it therefore be for such people not to collapse and snap under this mental pressure, while at the same time having to watch enviously as everyone else is allowed to fuck around freely and uninhibited? To fear any contact with children, because in the end you might no longer trust yourself? And at some point to curse yourself for not simply being normal?

There is no solution to this problem. Because neither can people who are attracted to children or animals indulge in the false hope that their inclination will one day be legalized, similar to that of gays and lesbians, nor is it possible to fundamentally rid them of their drive.

Medical professionals assume that the development of sexuality is largely completed by the end of puberty and that a fundamental change is no longer possible. And before pedophiles and zoophiles are socially accepted, the Pope will convert to Islam.

Of course, we all agree on the important points. It is wonderful that homosexuality in this and many other countries is no longer regarded as a disease that needs to be somehow fixed. Because that is complete bullshit. And hopefully this trend will also prevail in nations that currently do not exactly shine with acceptance toward gays and lesbians.

It is equally clear to all of us that children and animals must under no circumstances be coerced into sexual acts. Because that counts among the most disgusting crimes imaginable, and any other view on this simply deserves to be beaten up.

And yet I sometimes wonder what it looks like inside the minds of the people whose fantasies and inclinations revolve precisely around these taboo topics. Day and night. And who can do absolutely nothing about it. And whether it is in any way possible to transform them from the instinct-driven monsters of the media landscape back into what they actually are and always have been: human beings.

Mary Robinson: My Little Sister

IAMX: We Have Tickets For You

The more than eccentric Chris Corner has, as IAMX, over the years played his way into the hearts of cute emo kids and alternative dark hipsters and has long since grown beyond the niche. His punchy songs immediately stick in your ear; the lyrics about life, death, and sex will haunt you even in your darkest nightmares.

On April 14, the adopted Berliner will be at the Astra, performing a mix of old and new tracks. Possibly “Spit it out,” “Kiss & Swallow,” and “Missile,” but who knows for sure. What we do know for sure, however: you can be there!

We are giving away 2x2 tickets for IAMX’s exclusive capital city gig. All you have to do to get your sweaty hands on these things is leave a comment with a valid email address by Friday, April 1, and with a bit of luck you may soon be able to sell your little souls to the British prince of the night. Live.

Rawn: Do The Mario

Marteria: Win A Meet ’n’ Greet

On this small planet, only three laws exist. And they are important. First: a Sterni always works, no matter how much you’ve already had. Second: electro is techno. Or vice versa. And third: all girls are into Marteria. Without any exception.

And regardless of whether you’re female and in love or male and bursting with respect: we are giving you the unique opportunity to meet Marteria. Live, in color, and in person. At a Meet ’n’ Greet as part of SONY Q Music Unlimited on March 31 at HBC Berlin.

Not only will the charismatic Rostock native be there, but also the wonderful Cassandra Steen and the sexy blonde MTV powerhouse Palina Power aka Palina Rojinski. And you little rascals can be right in the middle of it!

All you have to do to win the Meet ’n’ Greet with Marteria and tickets for the party is leave a comment with a valid email address. And because the event is already on Thursday, you need to be quick and complete your duty by Wednesday evening. And if you want to be on the safe side, you might also be able to snag tickets here or here with a bit of luck. Good luck!

Fat Montana: You’re So Mature

Countdown TV: Japanese Music Charts

Preview: Our New Team

We searched for them in the deepest corners of the web. On overlooked blogs, chirping services, and dirty mattresses. From a sea of stories and self-portraits, we gradually pulled out those we deemed worthy. As our new authors.

As already announced, we want to increase the diversity of topics at AMY&PINK. The competence. With people who truly know about the things we can only smile at in disbelief. And you know us: we don’t do things halfway, we go all in. With L.

So we carefully laid out all the interesting subject areas like music, fashion, and politics on the floor and threw an admirable candidate onto each of them. And we can already reveal one thing: every single one of them is cool as hell. With talent. And expertise. And character.

Whether it’s an enchanting Turkish fashion girl with schizophrenia, the perverse spawn of God in the form of a bastard, or the tattooed blonde gem of a well-known German music channel. AMY&PINK has never been as diverse and exciting as it is today.

Over the next few weeks, we’ll introduce our new authors to you in bite-sized pieces and here and there toss their first articles and outpourings into the digital space. We’re excited and have one or two incredible surprises in store for you. At least. So that world domination can finally be within reach again.

Mixtape: Ordinary Evening

Good music is hard to find these days. Record labels without conscience, supermarket radios without a sense of timing, friends without taste. It takes a gift personally bestowed by God to supply your comrades with the good stuff. Like every damn evening of the week. With Friendly Fires, for example. Or Justice. Or Lykke Li.

: Game Deaths

We have died many times before. (via DVICE)

Rick Genest: The Zombie Guy

Anyone who has once decided to dedicate their entire body to the art of tattooing submits to permanence. And not infrequently to the outsider life of a walking freak show. Especially when you don’t just have colorful little pictures without concept or meaning immortalized on your skin, but systematically pursue the existence of an undead monster.

Rick Genest is a model, described by girls as cute and handsome, and looks like a zombie. With the top of his skull cut off. And a decayed lower jaw. And the matching brand somewhere between all the applied bones and fleshed-in horror visions.

Out of consideration for his conservative parents, the Canadian native didn’t get his first tattoo until he was 16. Shortly after finishing high school. Over the next four years, Rick invested more than $7,000 in his new body-enveloping hobby. Most of the work was done by Frank Lewis, a tattoo artist from Montreal.

“I started out as an extra in various freak shows,” the 25-year-old tells us in a calm, gentle voice. “We traveled all over North America and I was always the tattooed guy. The fire-eater. The fool. But at some point I’d had enough and wanted to start my own thing.”

For the fashion industry, Rick is currently the male counterpart to Charlotte Free. The darling, the exotic one, a handsome, shy man somewhere behind the depths of his permanent mask. Rumored to be Lady Gaga’s new best friend, he has already walked in various shows. Then the glossy magazines also took notice of the bashful boy from Montreal.

Today he is the face of Thierry Mugler, works as a model at Fashion Weeks in Paris and Milan, and is considered a role model of a new full-body tattoo movement. The stars are aligned for Rick Genest—but probably only until the fashion circus and commercial pop icons grow tired of his unchanging appearance and look for a new freak to use for their own self-promotion.

Steve Aoki: Wake Up Call

World Map of Breast Sizes: Bazookas From RussiaRussia Has the Biggest Ones

If this multifunctional map is to be believed, then travel-loving individuals of both genders will know from today onward where their next vacation should take them. Provided, of course, that one has a certain preference when it comes to the cup sizes of the esteemed ladies.

It seems that Asia, Africa, and isolated parts of Central America are home to the flattest chest regions on the planet, while Russian and Scandinavian beauties have been equipped with atomic warheads of the highest order.

And our local girls from Germany, Austria, and Switzerland are also quite well positioned, with C- and D-cups as the average size. Somewhere on par with the United States, Iceland, and Venezuela. What an incredible commonality.

I personally always waver in my preference for secondary sexual characteristics somewhere between cool little breasts and proper whoppers, so I’ll probably start my world tour somewhere with Asian ladyboys and then fight my way through to the Swedish supermodels with their very special arguments. And you?

Flower Warriors, Forward! Sunflower Guerilla Day

It’s quite astonishing how different some types of people can be. With some, you’re ashamed that they share the same vertebrate species as you do; others you just want to hug, love, and respect for what they do. For example, the people who go out and beautify the city. Without being paid. Or being asked to. Knitting covers for street lamps. Cleaning public toilets. Or simply planting flowers.

On Friday, April 15, the Sunflower Guerilla Day will take place worldwide. Urban residents are called upon to do something good for their city—by first buying sunflower seeds and then scattering them on this special spring day between buildings, streets, and leashed dogs.

Just imagine it. How wonderful it would be if enough guerrilla fighters joined in and Berlin, Hamburg, and Munich were submerged in huge yellow blossoms in a few weeks’ time. So pull yourselves together, stumble into the nearest flower shop you trust, and stock up on all sorts of strange seeds that you can soon sow. Flower warriors, forward!

James Blake & Lupe Fiasco: Suck My Dick, Douglas Burgdorff

High Tunes: Drugs Original SoundtrackSoundtrack for Drug Consumption

Of course, in this instruction manual for cheerful listening while injecting, snorting, and swallowing, we could also have devoted ourselves to the more exotic substances. Sniffing cat urine. Licking toads. Having your 10-year-old idiot brother explain the pilot test to you.

Instead, we’re once again catering to the absolute mainstream and offering you, in a level-based list, competent tips and tricks on how to best musically underscore your expensive trip. Starting with easy, laid-back intoxication all the way to the absolute finale of your much too short life. So that the exchange of money for dubious substances is really worth it.

Level 1: Wine and Beer

Most mind-altering substances should not be consumed alone. That’s shabby and only reinforces suspicions of a galloping addiction. Meet up with good friends for a bit of illegality, preferably at home at first. Conscious intake. In a relaxed atmosphere.

For this prelude, we recommend a bit of beer and wine to get you in the mood. Drugs alone must not be the reason to meet up. After all, you don’t first become addicted to the substance itself, but to the good time you experience through it. The soundtrack playing in the background should not be aggressive electro but music with melody and charm. For example, "She Was Coloured In" by Solar Bears, "The Richest Man In Babylon" by Thievery Corporation, or "Insides" by Jon Hopkins.

Level 2: Weed

If you want to switch off and slow down time, light up a joint properly. Try to get the good stuff and avoid the filthy recycled-paper collection in Berlin’s parks. The effect and the taste are simply better, and you won’t get headaches from it either.

In keeping with the cliché, chill tunes should sound in the background to calm you and intensify the waves of happiness. Reggae, ska, and relaxed hip hop. "Carboot Soul" by Nightmares On Wax, "Inspiration Information" by Shuggie Otis, or if you want to take a really embarrassing trip down memory lane, then "Legend" by Bob Marley & The Wailers.

Level 3: Speed, MDMA, and Coke

Not sleeping but artificially cranking up the number of revolutions per second is the guaranteed effect of MDMA, coke, and its welfare substitute speed. Usually snorted instead of the old-fashioned pre-drinks or directly behind the closed doors of certain clubs, the white powder can even make the dullest Hugo lose his mind.

Since nose gold is all about party, party, party—and in the end about hooking up—the beats and basslines can go wild here. "4x4=12" by Deadmau5, "Junior" by Röyksopp, and "Pillowface And His Airplane Chronicles" by Steve Aoki will whirl you around nicely.

Level 4: LSD, Mushrooms

Even Steve Jobs could not resist traveling into the colorful world of hallucinogenic drugs and regularly embarked on a bright, multicolored voyage through his head. Whether pills, mushrooms, or blotters—if you want to catch pink unicorns spraying each other with rainbows in shimmering forests, you should give one of these products a chance.

It’s best to listen to feel-good songs that enhance the visual sounds and make the neon green taste even better. Melodic electro with a warmth guarantee, psychedelic pop, or Japanese children’s songs. "Walking on a Dream" by Empire of the Sun, "Bright Lights" by Ellie Goulding, or "Sakura Saku Machi Monogatari" by Ikimono Gakari. The happier, the lower the chance of bad trips.

Final Boss: Kiss Of God

Only very few of us have ventured into the cave of the final boss, and once you’ve decided that everything else is nothing but gray boredom and that you want your life to depend on a small needle, you can first draw up your will and then devote yourself to heroin. Somewhere beyond the golden shot and an inglorious end, the legendary kiss of God is supposedly waiting for you.

In this dark, sad world, the only soundtrack should consist of train station announcements, toilet flushes, and the quiet whispering of the junkie next to you. But if you still don’t want to give up musical sounds even on your last opium trip, we recommend Burial, Salem, or the depressive pieces by Massive Attack. Sleep well, my prince. You have completed life.

Tang Ting: Shanghai My Love

TV On The Radio: Will Do (My Love)

Something on the Internet: Digital Down-To-EarthnessDigital Down-to-Earthness

In Berlin-Mitte, you are considered practically non-existent if you don’t work on the Internet. In a digital agency. As a freelancer. A social media consultant with a tendency toward hipster mania. Twitter, Facebook, and the dashboard of his digital projects always ready at hand on mobile.

Brainstorming PR campaigns in trendy cafés. With a Mac and iPhone. Discussions about the latest Quora feature, the sense and nonsense of the anti-analog bohemia. The more money you earn networking international IT systems, the more respected you are in this microcosm of mutated nerds. Construction workers say: What?

In the Bavarian backwater where I grew up and experienced the most corrupted years of my youth, you are already considered secure for the future if you have survived Facebook registration without major problems. Or if you have even discovered the site at all.

When my little cousin asks me via ICQ what I do so as not to be unemployed, and I answer her Berlin-style with a wink, “Something on the Internet,” I am met only with questioning silence and can practically see her facial expression before me. “Yes, but what exactly?”

And then I have to break it down as much as possible. SEO, online marketing, WordPress, social networks, digital communication, public relations combined with independent blog and webzine know-how? No chance. Um… I… design websites? Here… Lokalisten and stuff? OnlyParty? That works, even cute country girls understand that. At least I no longer have to say that I draw flyers. Like a few years ago…

Often I’m no longer entirely sure whether I’ve simply become detached and lost my down-to-earth nature in this bubble-like universe of status updates, software updates, and Apple products, and whether I’m well on my way to completely trading real life for an existence without meaning.

Or whether the world that ends somewhere around the center of Berlin is years behind and will only discover all the junk I’m currently toiling with once I’ve already fused my crippled soul with a mixture of smartphone, cloud, and brain implant.

Perhaps I should occasionally just let UMTS rush past me without logging in. And do something analog. That would give my battered mind a break and probably save me from the looming quarter-life crisis. And the next time my cousin asks me what I do, I could simply tell her: “I lay on a sunny meadow and read a book.” After all, everyone can understand that.

Sonic For Hire

Sonic used to be my great hero and many times cooler than Mario would ever be. But apparently that didn’t help him much. (via eayz.net)

Karl, We Love You!Karl, we love you!

[flv:karl.mp4 karl.jpg 620 496]

You little rockstar, you.

Muscles: Girl Crazy Go!

Why Only Girls Moan: Honey, Do You Have Asthma?

Porn actors seem to go through three courses in their two-year career to become master fornicators, in which they learn the basics of their profession. First: Always be hard and open. Second: Don’t have pimples on your ass. And third: Moan until the gravel truck bursts.

And while in dirty videos pretty much everything that is physically capable of it pants, sighs and croaks, the volume level in German bedrooms tends to be rather one-sided. If anyone moans at all, it’s the girls. Guys prefer to keep quiet. Gentlemen, after all.

Which, however, raises two questions: Why don’t the lords of creation make a sound from their oral opening—except for the pitiful whimper when they finally reach climax? And why are women the ones panting themselves into a frenzy throughout the whole procedure, until Rüdiger is finished and falls asleep exhausted next to them?

Of course, I only have an answer to the first question: Because we have to concentrate like hell. It’s not exactly child’s play to find the right balance between giving up and coming, to maintain it, to build it up. In the process, an entire library of images and stories, memories and bits of attention is rummaged through in our heads until we finally get closer to our goal. And any fake sound would only be distracting.

Which brings us to the mystery of female moaning. Because perhaps the physical exertion is so strenuous that girls have to breathe loudly in and out with every up and down, every in and out. It doesn’t distract you from the images in your head. Because multitasking. Or it’s all fake. And merely serves as automatic animation for the gentleman sliding around on top of you.

Moaning is important. In the right measure. Too much is bad, and anything fake even more so. And while you girls probably wish that we guys would open our mouths once in a while during sex, we’re still wondering why you absolutely have to be so loud. Surely because we’re that good. Or because Mrs. Meier next door urgently needs to know that you’re having sex again.

Manglo: Little Horror Shop

Skins 5: A Dwindling Love

Let me get one thing straight right away: I love “Skins.” Never before has a TV series fucked me up as much as the one about a bunch of teenagers from Bristol. What the creators built, ruined, and captured there can hardly be described as love anymore and already drifts into outright worship.

The first two generations of protagonists were a roller coaster ride through emotional hell. Psycho Cassie and loser Sid. Suicidal Effy and junkie Freddie. Gay Maxxie and his unstable stalker. It was hard to breathe under so much emotional beating. In every variation. Tears, laughter, swallowed.

Unfortunately, the spark didn’t really carry over in the new season, which ended last week. The stories were too childish, the relationships too superficial. Some scenarios were simply hard to comprehend. The only one I fell in love with was Liv. Head over heels.

Because she seems to be the only three-dimensional character. The one who truly suffers. From all the shit that happens to her. And her episode was a dirty mash-up of all the facets that made me lose myself in “Skins.” Sex and drugs and love and pain and puking and good music and those scenes that blur somewhere between dream and reality. In your face.

So I quietly and curiously say goodbye to the fifth season. With the song from the finale by Dog Is Dead. “Glockenspiel Song.” My personal favorite scenes. And all the unanswered questions. Who ends up with Franky. Whether Mini is a lesbian. And why Matty only has one damn facial expression.

[flv:skins5.mp4 skins5a.jpg 620 349]

Mixtape: Horse Party

When I was a little girl, I always wanted to have a pony. But we couldn’t afford it. Because we preferred to trade all our savings for my masculinity. So I had to live out my fondness through Wendy, cartoon series and visits to the stables, just to work toward one event: A party with a horse. How amazing would that be—just imagine it. With Girl Talk, Rainbow Arabia and Kleerup playing. Oh God, I’m so excited about it!

: Nuclear Boy

Now everything is clear to us. It’s just plain shit! (via Interweb3000)

On Our Own Behalf: What’s Happening Right Now

I thought long and hard about whether I should write this entry. Because it’s about hurt feelings. Dirty laundry in public. Differences of opinion. Because a disturbing mixture of these ingredients is impossible to describe or even to control. And no matter how hard you try to put what happened into words, you can only fail at it. Which is without a doubt what I will do with this text.

But I keep receiving a lot of emails, tweets and comments from people who want to know why our team has diminished so rapidly in such a short time. Where Ines and Mischa have gone. And why Hannah in particular, after more than five years by my side, is no longer there. The short explanation would be: Because this is life. Because people change. Because nothing lasts forever. But I know that you want more details. And that you also have the right to them.

Everyone who writes or has written for AMY&PINK loves this site in their own unique way. This project. And what these colorful letters stand for. We have always relied on personality and character. People you can love. Or hate. So it’s no wonder that a change of authors is so drastic.

Ines always had very little time. The full-time job, the distance university, everyday life. I never understood how she balanced this incredible package on her shoulders, but I admired her for it. When she then also received the offer to work on her own book project, it quickly became clear: Now priorities have to be set.

The decision was made in favor of the book and against us. Which was absolutely fine. In her place I would probably have acted the same way and I’m full of anticipation for the result. But it was the beginning of a break that hadn’t been intended like that.

Hannah left AMY&PINK a few days after Ines. Voluntarily. Because we had an argument. Because we’re human. But we both realized: Somehow it just doesn’t fit between us anymore. It was simply one conflict too many. So Hannah drew the consequences and stepped out. I didn’t fire her. Or push her aside. Or persuade her to leave.

On the contrary: My repeated attempts to stop her from making this decision were blocked by her. She wanted to go; it just wasn’t fun for her like this anymore. So I accepted that. But it also meant that she is no longer involved in anything that is happening with AMY&PINK now. Logical.

After that everything happened very quickly. The balance was gone. Asumi was struggling with stress at university and no longer had time. Mischa was busy with poetry slams and readings, Raphaela found it difficult to find her place. Which was my fault. The to-do list kept getting longer and longer and the upheaval took place behind my back. I decided to continue running AMY&PINK for the time being alone with Sara, so that I could finally think clearly and breathe again.

I loved my crew. Very much. They are great people with dedication, depth and warmth. All of them. And many of the problems that occurred in this story have their origin in me. Because I often didn’t find the time to give each of them the attention they undoubtedly deserved. Because AMY&PINK simply takes a lot of time. Every day. And every opportunity, every contact, every decision has to be weighed carefully.

Screening topics, writing texts, contacting agencies. Negotiating advertising budgets, solving technical problems, making design adjustments. Filling social media channels, translating articles, researching images. That I make mistakes in the process—and often—is hardly avoidable. But that’s my job. And every stress factor that is spared to me in this respect is a welcome one.

That’s precisely why I find it very unfortunate that personal details are now beginning to be discussed publicly. And one-sidedly. When hurt feelings and broken friendships are taken as an opportunity to incite others. Against AMY&PINK, against Sara, against me. Just because someone has gotten lost in a manifest victim role. Much of it simply doesn’t belong before a broad audience and is often neither relevant nor correct, but simply nonsense.

I therefore vehemently plead that private matters remain private. That we don’t turn what we have created here into a burning kindergarten. And that Hannah and I somehow manage to resolve all the fuck internally. Without immediately threatening each other with a lawyer. After all, in the past five years we have shared so much more than just AMY&PINK. And I would simply find it a shame if we threw away this friendship over such bullshit.

: Here We Go…So That’s How It Happens…

Join the AMY&PINK Team! Party, Poke and PassionParty, Fucking and Passions

Of course Sara and I could pollinate the internet all by ourselves. No problem. After all, we have both the mental and the physical requirements for it. But honestly? A bit of thematic variety would do us all some good. With people who actually understand what they’re talking about. Expanding the range.

Because out there is a ton of great topics that we both have absolutely no clue about. But that are damn interesting and worth reading and exciting. Fashion? My gray hoodie has been in style since 1965. Games? I have a Wii. Literature? Do sticky porn magazines from the ’80s count? Politics? Uh…

That’s why we’re looking for young people who have a passion. Or several. Who are really deeply into something. Into fashion. Or into games. Who go to good concerts and want to report about them. Play with life verbally. Read fabulous books, travel around, scan and reflect on political events, work in the horizontal trade, have a Pikachu tattooed on their right toe, live on the moon. Something monumental, simply. People who have a damn personality and can press it into vivid, direct and expansive texts. With soul. And heart. And kaboom.

In return, we offer you a platform here that is second to none. AMY&PINK. The most controversial online magazine blog thing in Germany. With masses of critical readers up to the rafters. Who will praise you to the heavens if you’re awesome, and spit you into the ground if you fail. Basically the ultimate challenge for you, the mega stage, the chance to make something of yourself.

So don’t hesitate long, throw a crisp sample text and a few pretty photos of yourself into an email, send it digitally to bewerbung@amypink.com and convince us of your incredible mix of verbal talent and godlike character. Go!

Disasteradio: Gravy Rainbow

: Good Morning!Good Morning!

: Stevie, Stevie, Stevie!

This is what Stevie from “Malcolm in the Middle” looks like today, by the way.

Nathanael Turner: Bloody Brooklyn

: Die Antwoord & Harmony Korine: Umshini Wam

Get up, Ninja!! Fuck you...

: Ke$ha In A BikiniKe$ha in a Bikini

Would you still do her?

: Save A Lollipop…

...suck a clit.

: Adidas

God, we love this company.

Torrent Instead of Telly? Internet Killed The Video Star

My personality was shaped neither by fatherly role models nor by idols of flesh and blood. But solely and exclusively by television. It is the result of a circulating mix of American model families, exaggerated cartoon characters, and the desire to be part of this interchangeable, flickering world.

While my mother was at work and my friends were under house arrest, the TV set was my upbringing. All day long. It taught me what is good and what is evil. What I should and shouldn’t do. And how to divide life into small episodes in order to solve your problems within them – and then grin toward the closing credits.

That was back then. Because while as a child I adored the channels and their protagonists and knew the program schedule for the next six months by heart, today I hate nothing more than German television. What once was a colorful and healthy mix of entertainment, information, and culture is now nothing more than a disgusting mash of qualitatively inferior factory-made sameness.

In an unbelievable rotation, superstars, top models, and Z-list celebrities are being burned through. “Mitten im Leben,” “Verdachtsfälle,” “We are Family,” “Niedrig und Kuhnt,” “K11,” “Familien im Brennpunkt”... The private channels put some random lowlifes in a prefab housing block, film them having crises, and sell it as entertainment. And the worst part: it works. So how stupid must Germany be?

And the public broadcasters stand by, waving their educational mandate around and quietly retreating into the layer of the almost-dead. Which can’t defend itself anymore anyway. Television is dead. And it literally makes my brain go soft.

While I’m mentally smashing my once so beloved TV with a sledgehammer, my laptop blinks at me. The first episodes of “Mad Love” have been successfully downloaded. A series that will come to Germany in a few years. Maybe. If we’re lucky. I’m happy. It goes straight into my folder. Somewhere between “Bored To Death,” “Skins,” and old “O.C.” episodes.

Why should I waste another thought, another minute of my life on television when I can enjoy all its advantages and much more online? Whenever I want, whatever I want, as much as I want? Uncensored, fast, divisible into portions. And in incredible quality?

Of course, in my one-sided logic I completely ignore the fact that the programs I myself consider worth watching somehow have to be financed. And that it almost borders on a blessing that the majority of the population can’t get past Facebook and Flash games on the internet, has no idea about torrents, ports, and PirateBay, and therefore remains dependent on the program directors of FOX, ProSieben & Co. For now.

Because the reign of television is slowly coming to an end. It’s only being kept alive by a pathological mix of habit, money, and greed. And the generations to come will be shaped solely and exclusively by the internet. Whether that’s actually a good thing, however, remains to be seen.

: Something SweetSimply Something Sweet

So that you can finally have a little joy in life again.

Jamie Woon: Lady Luck

Snowbombing Festival: Austria, Here We ComeAustria, here we come!

For an entire week, the quiet little town of Mayrhofen somewhere in the middle of Austria will transform into a blazing volcano of music, winter sports and good vibes. Because once again this year, from April 4th – 9th, the Snowbombing Festival will take place there, crowned by the British Independent as the best European music spectacle of all.

Joining the lineup are such outstanding acts as The Prodigy, Fatboy Slim, Fergie, Jamie Woon, Ms Dynamite and Yasmin. On top of that there’s plenty of snowboarding, parties, road trips and a view that normal festivals—usually drowning in rain and sinking into giant muddy fields—can only dream of.

The popular car manufacturer and event sponsor Volvo was kind enough to invite us for the entire week of blazing alpine madness, and so we will fulfill our damn duty and keep you updated on all the action there. From Monday to Sunday.

So if you still have some time, cash and energy left and you’re into snowy musical dreams with a panoramic view, grab one of the last available spots and then celebrate with us by blasting a few holes into the Alps. Austria, here we come!

: Jenna Rose – My Jeans

And you thought Rebecca Black was bad… (via Buzzfeed)

Shaunte Denee: Dispatcher

: Friedhelm Ernst for President

The funniest people in the world are sitting in the FDP. Vote for them. (via Spreeblick)

Delicious Monotony:

Modern television shows have rediscovered the simmering humor and intelligent subtlety that once seemed forgotten. The long-awaited death of intrusive background laughter is here, signaling the end of sledgehammer-induced punchlines. This refreshing trend is gradually, but unmistakably, seeping into animated art as well. Thank goodness.

Among all the Simpsons, Griffins, and Smiths of this world, one exceptional gem has firmly established itself as a Sunday evening staple in the American television landscape: Bob’s Burgers by Loren Bouchard. The charmingly absurd story of a small snack bar owner and his delightfully chaotic family. Somewhere along the East Coast.

After a series of failures in the restaurant business, Bob Belcher decides to put everything on the line. This time, it has to work. A new opening, a fresh start. But what initially seems like a straightforward venture quickly transforms into an odyssey through the trials and tribulations of animated madness.

One savory misadventure follows another. From jealous health officials accusing Bob of using human flesh in his burgers to bizarre mishaps like Bob getting stuck in the walls for inexplicable reasons. Add to the mix fake robberies, kissing contests with cows, and eccentric dance instructors. These punchy episodes evoke the nostalgic charm of classic Nickelodeon cartoons.

Bob’s wife, Linda, is an overenthusiastic dreamer with a flair for theatrical antics. Meanwhile, their three children are a chaotic whirlwind of eccentricities. Gene is a lovable, self-indulgent slob with zero sense of shame, while his younger sister Louise is a pint-sized schemer and every therapist’s dream—or nightmare.

An then there’s Tina, with her raspy voice and boundless enthusiasm for ponies, is basically your Uncle Harry, but with a pair of breasts. The fact that most of the adorably characters are voiced by men lends the series a peculiar monotony that feels soulful and heartfelt in its own twisted way. Welcome to the bizarre world of Bob Belcher and his insane family.

.

Anja Konstantinova: Boring Afternoon

: Femen

We have absolutely no idea what these graces are trying to tell us. But… it doesn’t really matter anyway.

Katy Perry & Kanye West: E.T. (You’re An Alien)

: Spend It Wisely

I laughed.

: Remake?

Which game absolutely deserves a remake or even a sequel?

: Russian Kids TVRussian Children's Television

This character from Sesame Street exists only in Russia. He is called Pryzhki Shary, which roughly translates to “Bouncing Balls.”

Mixtape: Night Will Be Forever

Do you know that undead time between night and morning when you’re just stumbling out of some shitty party? The world seems deserted, as if it belongs only to you. The dark sky streaked with red rays heralding the new day. You’re still somehow feverish, yet drained, once again having learned lessons for life that you’ve already forgotten by the time you wake up, unable to calm down but just wanting to die.

Then this is your mixtape. “Night Will Be Forever.” The sonic remnants of partying still ringing in your ears, yet the soothing tunes of drunkenly stumbling home already kicking in. Toro Y Moi, Radiohead and Little Dragon will skillfully escort you all the way to bed.

: Which One?Which One?

Marie-Monique Robin: Poison In Our FoodOur Daily Poison

That the food industry is screwing us over nonstop should really be no big secret anymore. For decades they’ve been pumping our food full of toxins, sweeteners, and flavor enhancers, stuffing the junk into sexy colorful packaging, and we consume the crap like livestock.

Because harmful food is just one of many problems we should actually be dealing with, and we long ago lost track of what we’re supposed to fight against next. And who wants to be an uncool organic hippie who swears off the urban mass consumption of McDonald’s, Maggi, and delivery services and from now on lives at the health food store?

But maybe it’s about time to put down the bag of chips and the bottle of cola and listen up for a moment. Because Arte will be airing the film "Our Daily Poison" by investigative journalist Marie-Monique Robin on Tuesday, in which she takes a very close look at what’s actually in our meals. And the results are (who would have thought) alarming.

Many meals, fruits, vegetables, and even drinks contain substances clearly classified as toxins. Pesticides whose residues are still carcinogenic. Aspartame, the pseudo-sugar, the sweetener with the fancy name “NutraSweet,” which only became part of our diet because its manufacturer falsified internal studies about the substance’s harmfulness. And bisphenol A, found in plastic bottles, which turns you into pregnant monsters.

All of this was tested on animals, which shortly afterward developed cancer and died. If you apply that to humans, you can first imagine how things may end for us in the coming decades, and second, understand why cancer has become such a major issue in the Western world.

Marie-Monique provides evidence for this assessment as well. She traveled to the Indian state of Orissa, where residents have not yet adopted the Western lifestyle and grow and harvest their own food. There, cancer and obesity are virtually unknown.

Maybe we should simply become aware again of how much junk we stuff into ourselves every day and whether it wouldn’t be smarter to give the food industry the finger. Glass bottles, organic fruit, no processed foods. There are plenty of options. We just have to use them.

: PonyCraft 2

The "StarCraft 2" trailer. With little ponies!

: Saturday NightSaturday Evening

Then let’s get started.

: Young Princess Zelda

Sweet <3 (via Kotaku)

: Rebecca Black – Friday

In some countries you’re still allowed to beat your children. Now I know why...

Peter and Kerry: On My Knees

: Super 8 Trailer

This movie could actually turn out to be great.

Win Tickets and a Cell Phone: See Robyn Live in HamburgRobyn Live in Hamburg

It’s that time again. The popular phone provider with the striking magenta logo is sending exceptional Swedish artists into the race for the favor of local listeners with its Street Gigs and will have the well-known singer Robyn perform in Hamburg on March 15. In the stylish Hamburg TV Studio 5, the 31-year-old songwriter will play an unforgettable concert, and since we’re just that generous, you can once again win a pair of tickets and a nifty phone package.

And you’re really lucky, because tickets for the show were actually only available to win on the official Telekom Street Gigs website. And they’re long gone. Except for two. And we have them. On top of that, we’ll shove the awesome Mobile Music Pac - Street Gigs Edition III incl. Nokia 5230 down your throat. It not only features a large touchscreen with an 8.1 cm diagonal and an excellent music player with plenty of stamina (up to 33 hours), but also includes a “Street > Gigs - Best Of” DVD Vol. III with highlights from gigs by Clueso, Razorlight, Polarkreis 18, Fettes Brot, and Jamie Cullum, among others.

All you have to do to get 1x2 tickets and the massive Music Pac into your cold little hands is leave us a comment with a valid email address here by Sunday, March 13. And with a bit of luck, you won’t just see Robyn live, but also get a new phone on top of it. Hooray!

This is a sponsored article by Telekom.

: BavariaBavaria

This is exactly what it looks like in my old homeland. Every single day.

Asumi in Tokyo: Earthquake Hits JapanWhen the Earth Shook

As you may already have heard, Japan was struck today by a severe earthquake measuring 8.9, and tsunamis are sweeping across the country. It is one of the worst disasters the country has faced in decades, and when we heard about it, we immediately tried to get our Japan correspondent Asumi in Tokyo on the digital line to see if she was okay and what Japan is going through right now. The Skype connection kept dropping, but we were still able to gain a good insight into what the 21-year-old experienced over the past few hours.

What’s going on over there?

My friend had just picked me up from university and we were about to go shopping in Takeshita when suddenly the earth started shaking. That’s usually nothing unusual for us, but it lasted unusually long and was very intense.

The ground and the trees started swaying and people ran out of buildings. After about one or two minutes it was over. We didn’t say a word and just looked at the passersby on the street. “That wasn’t normal,” a man said to us, and I tried to reach my mother on my phone, but first the network was down and then she didn’t answer.

And what happened then?

I wanted to take the subway home, but it was closed, so we took a taxi as far as we could. When we finally got home, my little brother Kotaro and one of his friends were unharmed in the apartment watching the news. Then I finally managed to reach my mother at work; everyone there was fine, but the power had gone out and she’s trying somehow to get home.

How did your brother react to the quake?

He’s pretty brave. They had an earthquake drill at school just last month and were prepared. He told me they first hid under a table when the shaking began, but then decided to run out of the house. Just to be safe.

Is it calm now?

No, there are still larger and smaller aftershocks. An oil refinery is burning in Chiba, and the top of the Tokyo Tower is apparently slightly tilted since the quake. Helicopters are circling over the entire city. Public transportation has come to a standstill and the airports are closed. In the northern and eastern regions, severe tsunamis are raging, entire cities are flooded, and people have already died.

We have relatives in Sapporo whom I’ve been trying to reach since the earthquake, but no one is answering. I hope they’re okay.

What happens next?

I don’t know. I mean, it’s not our first earthquake, but it was pretty intense. We’ll stay home tonight and watch the news because more tsunamis and earthquakes have been announced. But don’t worry about us, we Japanese have survived worse.

If you would like to stay informed about the events in Japan, you can do so via the Japanese national broadcaster NHK or the live stream of Al Jazeera. If you are looking for people in Japan or have information about missing persons, we recommend the Google Person Finder.

Those Dancing Days: Reaching Forward

Super Styles: Pretty in Pink


Since fixies are pure suicide machines and not many consumers are still alive, it’s all the more astonishing that Stephanie hasn’t suffered any serious injuries yet. Instead, she’s wearing a “Where’s Waldo?” memorial T-shirt and blue shorts.
If we’re honest, there are enough ugly children out there. So why not spare them the pain of being laughed at by simply pulling a bag over the little brat’s hideous face? That way parents can finally be happy again, too.
Anklets have unfortunately fallen a bit out of fashion in recent years, even though they make every slender female leg absolutely perfect during the warm summer months. Karla knows that too and hardly wears anything else anymore.
It takes quite a bit of courage to still show up in camouflage in 2011. Respect to Kalle and Rüdiger! We’ll skillfully overlook the other minor fashion faux pas.
Workshop Willi must be incredibly proud of his latest female conquest. The hair, the tattoos, the studded accessories… But actually we’re just insanely jealous because we’re not allowed to sleep with Thunder Doris.
You’ve just gotten used to the approaching darkness when suddenly the sun appears in front of you again. The yellow hoodie, the blonde hair, the heartwarming smile, the voluptuous fireballs… Let there be light!
If you’re neither emo nor hipster nor a fish, then ghetto clothes usually work pretty well on you. But don’t overdo it. Just follow Smoking Steve and the world will lie at your feet. Guaranteed.
Do you also have the problem of looking so insanely hot that complete strangers constantly take photos of you out on the street? It doesn’t have to be that way! With this shirt you make it very clear: put the camera away, asshole!
Vintage will never go out of style. Just visit grandma again, plunder her old wardrobe, and then make a run for it with graceful floral dresses like this burgundy gem. That’s how modern fashion becomes fun.

Bieber Slayer

You can own it for $20.00.

Arctic Monkeys: Brick By Brick

AXE Excite: Date Josipa in Monte Carlo – Gambling with Josipa in Monte Carlo

I have actually only been to a casino once in my entire life. And I lost everything. Well, it was only 30 euros, but still, I could have bought 8½ döner kebabs to survive on with that. I probably would have been much more successful at the casino if I had shown up there with a sexy red-haired angel. For example, with Josipa.

Do you remember the cute angels who fell to earth at the beginning of the year and conquered your hearts in a flash? Exactly, redhead Josipa is one of them, and after getting comfortable on our planet, they are now looking for love.

AXE Excite is giving you the chance to meet one of these beauties live and is raffling off an unforgettable date with an angel. Rock out with Frances in London? Tuning with Magda at Formula 1? Boxing with Sara? Or would you rather go gambling in Monte Carlo with our enchanting Josipa? The choice is yours! Simply select one of the girls, take part by April 30, and with a bit of luck you’ll soon experience the hottest date of your little existence.

And to shorten the waiting time for your romantic trip and to get you in the mood for gambling, we’re raffling off among all comments with a valid email address until Sunday, March 20, 2011, a fat poker case from Dilego so you can skillfully take us to the cleaners afterwards.

This is a sponsored article by Axe.

Nazi Culinary Studio – The Nazi Cooking Studio

Skinhead Markus and follower Ingo from the NPD are two likable Nazis who enjoy cooking together. Only the salt shaker—even the midwife with no name finds that really stupid at the end. Understandable. Evil spices, out of our fascist kitchen! (via Hirngerechte Gestaltung)

Countdown TV: Japanese Music Charts – The Japanese Charts

American Apparel: Dov Charney and the Girl – Dov Charney and the Girl

I have always been a big fan of men who, through narcissistic drive and a pinch of creativity, have created something of their own and overturned the economic environment because of their uniqueness. Of course because of the role-model function they represent for me. Because they are living my dream. Steve Jobs with Apple. Karl Lagerfeld with himself. And Dov Charney with American Apparel.

The latter company was always a prime example of the “fuck you” lifestyle for me. Not because I particularly liked the clothes. Or just because of the naked girls on the posters. But because the company completely followed the line of Dov Charney, who literally shit on the conservative rules of the fashion industry and did what he thought was right.

With campaigns like Legalize LA and Legalize Gay, the Canadian-born entrepreneur advocated for the rights of American immigrants and homosexuals, whose T-shirt proceeds went to aid organizations. He paid his employees an above-average salary, skillfully blurred the lines between respectability and pornography, and even stripped naked himself if necessary.

That Dov Charney is a perverse pig is hardly a secret in the fashion circus anymore. It’s the same game as with Terry Richardson and actually makes him more likable to me. There have been numerous allegations of sexual assault; the mixture of youthful amateur models and professional porn actresses in the bright advertisements shapes the image. But now he seems to have finally gone too far.

Irene Morales from Brooklyn was an employee at an American Apparel store and is now suing its boss for 250 million dollars. The 42-year-old is said to have invited the student to his home shortly after her 18th birthday and sexually abused her there for several hours, after previously stalking her constantly and forcing her to take nude photos.

If the New York court rules in favor of the teenager, this would probably mean the end for American Apparel or at least for its CEO. After the company has not turned a profit for years due to mismanagement, the industry is speculating about Dov Charney’s imminent departure if the label does not want to go down with him. And that would somehow be tragic after all.

Happy Bunny Pussy

So, who is the happiest cat in the world? Yes… whoooo is the happiest cat in the whole wide world?! Okay, okay… definitely not you. (via Front)

Eine Hommage: I Love My NeighborsI Love My Neighbors

Wedding in Berlin is a pulsating melting pot of cultures full of fun, good vibes, and interesting people. It constantly smells like a mixture of dog shit and döner kebab, the bums are nicer than elsewhere, and cellphone shops and betting offices line up door to door. I live right in the middle of it. On the second floor of a multi-family pseudo–old building near the ghetto center.

And anyone who thought that after Sara and Paul moved away from this urban paradise I would get bored is mistaken. Thanks to illustrious housemates who care deeply about my well-being and peace of mind, I’m always having a great time. Today I’d like to introduce you to the most outstanding of them. A tribute to my loving neighbors.

Above Me: Hulk & Hulkia

In the late ’80s, the construction worker couple Ulrike and Ferdinand Kastrowski fell victim to a terrible gamma bomb accident somewhere on the A3 between Oberhausen and Aschaffenburg. Since then, they have been eking out their loveless existence in the apartment above me as giant green monsters.

Due to too many “Twilight” posters on the wall, they don’t feel capable of waking up before sunset and usually begin shortly after midnight to throw furniture, anvils, and airplane wreckage onto the cheap laminate flooring, while wearing iron shoes and steel knight armor as they perform the dance of their Czech ancestors—until the sun sends its first rays toward Central Europe and, thanks to sleeping pills and a family pack of earplugs, I finally fall asleep.

Next to Me: The Prtzuioplsxvbmd Family

Shortly after finishing his early shift at the Weißensee animal incineration center, the foreign-born Mr. Prtzuioplsxvbmd comes home to scream his family and the cat into the ground and then loudly beat them one by one in the living room.

His average screaming time (without taking a single breath) is about four and a half hours, and in the millisecond when he can no longer think of any inhumane insults, Mrs. Prtzuioplsxvbmd seizes the opportunity to read him the riot act with frying pan and shrieking voice, while daughter, son, and pet pounce on him. The massacre usually ends half an hour before Hulk and Hulkia wake up and repeats itself until Mr. Prtzuioplsxvbmd is fired one day or there are no more animals left to burn.

Below Me: The Diddl Nazis

Chantal is actually quite sweet. Pretty fat and short and ugly, but she likes Diddl mice and watches RTL real-life soaps all day because she dropped out of school at 15 and since then has neither found nor wanted to find a job or training.

She doesn’t make a peep until her Nazi boyfriend Rolf and his Nazi buddies come home with a 94,000-watt sound system and turn the pink apartment from Monday to Sunday into an underground Ballermann party dome, where racist rock crap or the “20 Zentimeter” techno version blares on rotation. Always with such insane bass that I have to hold onto the window frame so I’m not catapulted out of the second floor. Every now and then a baby screams at Chantal’s place.

In My Head: Swedish Hipster Fashion Models

Elin and Hanna are two young, Swedish, blonde twin sisters who live somewhere in my head and earn their money by modeling—and modeling some more. When they get bored, they call me over, bake cookies, and splash each other with milk while laughing before we have naked pillow fights listening to ABBA.

When we’re done, they switch on their telepathic abilities, make the heads of the Kastrowskis, the Prtzuioplsxvbmds, and the Diddl Nazis explode, and thanks to their physical attributes persuade the property management to fill the now-vacant apartments with cute (and willing) fashion girls who crown me their king for life.

Dominique Young Unique: War Talk

Andrea Olivio: Casting Couch

: Power Rangers Overkill

Which season of the “Power Rangers” was your favorite? Doesn’t matter at all, because here literally ALL the Power Rangers that have ever existed are fighting against some drunken aliens. I was the Red one (third row, back left...)!

via io9

We’re Giving Away Tickets: Jägermeister Wirtshaus Tour 2011

Hey, do you still remember the Jägermeister Wirtshaus Tour in Berlin that Udo and I attended and had an incredible amount of fun with great music and delicious drinks? Yes? And you couldn’t be there because you live in a completely different city? Yes? For example in Cologne? Yes?!

Well then by reading this article you’ve hit the absolute jackpot! Well, almost… because the next stop of the hearty alpine bash will take place on March 17 at the Cologne tavern “Dom im Stapelhaus.” Joining the fun: the two brilliant bands The Subs and Proxy, who will set the air on fire and make your ears explode. Or something like that. And of course we wouldn’t tell you about this event if we weren’t simultaneously offering you the chance to be there.

You can win 1x2 tickets for the truly limited party extravaganza to play illustrious pub games with the bands and then howl at them from in front of the stage. Simply leave a comment with a valid email address by Sunday, March 13, 2011, and you might soon be bringing Cologne to collapse. And if you want to play it safe, you can also try your luck on Facebook.

This is a sponsored article by Jägermeister.

Mixtape: The Face Tracks

Be glad that you’re (still) not deaf, because once again this mixtape is a golden shower over your stressed soul. A warm summer rain straight into the blossom of your face. Gold Panda is on it. And The Go! Team too. And Neon Hitch always works anyway. So close your eyes, let it happen, this moist fertilization of your primary sensory organs, so that this mixtape settles on and inside you—for ever and ever.

: The Breakfast Club

The original trailer from 1985. And yes, I know, I should have had a crush on Molly Ringwald… but Ally Sheedy appealed to me more.

via Lost At Eminor

: Soup For Sluts

Cheap, fast & easy.

Cokehead Hipsters: We Will Rock You

: Attack The Block!

Hehe, some crazy aliens crash into a London housing block. The teenagers there fight back and turn their neighborhood into a fortress.

AMY&PINK TRASH: All The Garbage

While I was pouring red wine and shoveling a few leftover pieces of sushi behind the tie tonight between ancient Arte Tracks episodes and the first season of "Bored to Death," yet another message from Facebook fluttered into the house saying that one of the images we uploaded on the AMY&PINK page had violated certain rules and had to be deleted.

If something like that were to happen again, they would block us. Unfortunately, they never tell you which images exactly have violated decency and personal house rules, but it wasn’t the first time, and so we had to come up with something.

That’s why from now on there is AMY&PINK TRASH. A bundled collection of garbage that we would otherwise have posted on our Facebook page, with videos and images and short sentences and finally also naughty stuff. Completely without American censorship and not always suitable for minors. Because if social networks think we’ll let them screw us over, then they’re mistaken.

Countdown TV: Japanese Music ChartsDie japanischen Charts

Katy B: Broken Record

Charlie Sheen’s Pornstar Girls

Which ones?

Wu-Tang Clan ♥ Super Game Boy

Shiny Toy Guns

Shiny Toy Guns reunite with their former singer Carah Faye and celebrate the end of winter.

Americans Learn German

Akila Berjaoui: Vanessa At Home

More SQ: Music From Videogames

When it comes to Nintendo and Japanese music, I am the absolute nastiest nerd west of Asia. Or east, whatever. The combination of these two terms into the ultimate onion squeezer makes my fattened heart skip with joy. On my iPod, alongside other cultural delicacies, sound classics from the 16- and 32-bit era pile up. “Chrono Trigger,” “Final Fantasy,” “Napple Tale” – or, expressed in composers: Yasunori Mitsuda, Nobuo Uematsu, Yoko Kanno.

And this obsession is no great miracle. While other kids were playing in the sun or showing each other their body openings, I chained myself to my video game consoles at home and played one damn role-playing game after another. Again and again, and every piece of trash I could get between my slippery fingers.

In the heat of battle or while wandering through dreamy villages and magical forests, these melodies were always swirling around me. Sometimes fast, sometimes slow, sometimes bombastic and then again gently straight into the soul. And I remember every single one of them. Forever.

Even if at some point I forget the names of my children and no longer know exactly how to keep my urine in: play the underworld melody from “Terranigma” and I’ll stand at attention like a Chocobo and whistle the thing for you through my dentures.

That’s why it’s absolutely fantastic that Square Enix grabbed some of these admittedly somewhat dusty songs and, after Love SQ, catapulted them straight into the 21st century with More SQ. Electronic, modern, and yet with such a high recognition value that the little Japanese guy inside me would most like to turn into a singing fireball and storm out of me.

A few weeks ago, a live concert took place at Shimokitazawa Garden in Tokyo featuring artists like Rocketman, Sakerock, and Jabberloop, who had poured their combined creativity into the project. And how should I put it: anyone who can’t relate to the whole thing can at least enjoy the mix of acoustic electro, classical compositions, and fresh jazz.

But anyone who, like me, grew up with these very melodies and still listens to them today in order not to destroy the entire world in a frenzy of rage and retribution will be lying on the floor in nostalgia and euphoria, calling for their mommy. And their Super Nintendo.

From Old to Old: Which Relaunch?

We received a whole lot of emails, comments, and tweets from you about our latest relaunch. And although we had already mentally prepared ourselves to be completely dissed by you, positive and negative voices were balanced. Surprisingly. But one thing kept coming through regarding the design: somehow bold, somehow good, but mostly inconsistent, too big, too cluttered, too unsuitable for a site like AMY&PINK.

And you weren’t entirely wrong. It was an experiment, a break for freedom – especially for me. To really let loose with things that no one had done before – which in the end didn’t particularly surprise anyone. But it was important. For me, for AMY&PINK. To get out of the rut, to throw up a little, to try something out. And then to pull ourselves together again and move forward with new energy and fresh ideas.

So yesterday Sara and I met to once again decide where the journey should lead. With us. And with you. Content-wise, everything stays the new old. Finally great stories again mixed with all kinds of nonsense, photos, videos, nipples. The only question was the framework in which it should all take place, and based on your feedback and our own squishy brains, we weren’t entirely sure. Until now.

So we grabbed the tried-and-tested bang design, thoroughly violated it by candlelight and some soft rock music, and hereby present you with a look that will (hopefully) survive the next 36 years. Once again something between blog and magazine, but wider and clearer and everything else. Hooray.

In plain terms, that means we can finally focus again on what really matters: writing, blogging, putting things out there. Because I can tell you one thing: that’s definitely more fun than constantly worrying about a failed design. So eyes open, feed reader on, and milk your thoughts. And whoever started the rumor that AMY&PINK was dead and finished should come see us to receive their well-deserved beating. Thanks.

Update: All right, after endless back and forth and because we finally want to move forward: we’re sticking with the old design for now, and I’ll improve and adjust it step by step over the next few weeks. And now that’s enough.

We got a lot of emails, comments and tweets because of our recent relaunch from you. And even if we were already preparing mentally to be dissed by you because of it, positive and negative voices balance each other. Surprisingly. But one thing about the design was mentioned again and again: Somehow bold, somehow good, but mostly inconsistent, too big, too complex, too inappropriate for a site like AMY&PINK.

And it was quite true. It was an experiment, a way out – especially for me. To try new things, which never have been done before. Not quite surprisingly in the end. But it was important. For me, for AMY&PINK. Get out of the rut, vomit around, try something. In order to start over again with new energy and ideas.

So Sara and I have met yesterday to talk about our journey. For us. And you. In terms of content, everything remains the new old. Great stories mixed with all sorts of nonsense, photos, videos, nipples. The only question was: In which context this all should be done. Until now.

So we grabbed the best bang-design, raped it with relish by candlelight and some soft rock music and hereby provide a vision that will (hopefully) still survive the next 36 years. Again something between blog and magazine, but wider and clearer and in any case. Yeah.

This means in plain English, that we can finally concentrate on the essentials: writing, blogging, cut out. Because one thing I can tell you: That’s definitely more fun than always thinking about the design. So keep your eyes open, start the feed reader, and milk your thoughts. And who has set the rumor that AMY&PINK is dead should come to us to be punished quite hard. Thanks.

A New Beginning: Suddenly We Weren’t A Blog Anymore

We are writing the morning of February 28, 2011, and the aftershocks of a destroyed era are still palpable. Hannah and Ines are gone. They left out of discontent, and the others followed them. It was the calm before the storm that screamed at me soundlessly, and which I defiantly laughed at. Out of fear. Out of shame. And out of arrogance. My name is Marcel Winatschek and every word I utter at the moment can safely be described as literary trash.

AMY&PINK began as a rebellion against loneliness. We didn’t know what to do with our thoughts and our anger and our appeals. So we wrote everything down and uploaded it into the world. So that everyone could read it and some might even understand it. But with our openness came pressure, money, and opportunities.

I often think back. To the time when all of this was still fun. And not every word we said was weighed on a gold scale. As our audience grew, expectations became bigger. And the voices louder.

Suddenly we were no longer a blog, but a service provider. Trapped in rules and obligations, neither forward nor back. In panic, Hannah and I tried to bring order to the chaos. To make space for the things that truly mattered to us. But by then it was already too late.

A flood of emails, opinions, and appointments broke over us and buried our small world. Quite honestly: we were completely overwhelmed. Excitement turned into routine and joy gradually into hatred. A bloodbath in a cheap hourly hotel would have been the only conceivable ending to this chapter if we had continued like that. So we gave up. And we broke apart.

My playlist and an unnaturally large amount of red wine were all that kept me alive last week. And the knowledge that it couldn’t end like this. I had failed, and so I had no choice but to begin again. With hope in my heart and Sara by my side.

It was madness that drove me. That allowed me no sleep. The screen my canvas, the feeling of a new beginning my heroin. I wanted to be free again. No constraints, no texts without meaning or reason, no restrictive framework. Only in the early morning hours of the last day could I see what survived the firestorm of my rage. And what did not.

There it was. The new AMY&PINK. A mixture of blog and magazine whose only goal is to make us look better. We can publish endless sentences, or just a photo of last night. A song, a video, with as many or as few words as Sara and I want. From now on, nothing counts except the sheer sum of freedom, personality, and soul-fucks.

In my mind stood Ines, Mischa, Asumi. And a little bit Raphaela too. I wanted to thank them. For the texts, the parties, the nights, the memories. It was great. Always. And then there was Hannah. I love you very much and every moment we experienced and endured together over the last few years meant more to me than you might believe. But it goes on.

As a child of the past, I often understand nothing of what I do, but I know that Sara and I can keep on fucking the internet if we just approach it the right way. To 9 years of AMY&PINK, to the drugs, the sex, the stories, to us.

Internet Hate: Do You Want To Bym? Up for Some Bym-ing?

I had an incredibly disgusting dream last night. Your mother and I were bathing in a small pond. The sun was shining, we were having a good time. With Langnese ice cream and radio jingles and FKK nymphs on the shore. Smiling, I swam from one end to the other, feeling really damn good. Until this swarm of piranhas appeared. There must have been hundreds, thousands. They surrounded me, I screamed and thrashed wildly in the water. No one could help me.

But instead of gnawing the fat flesh from my bones, they babbled stupid nonsense. And wore limited H&M collections. And photographed each other with oversized DSLR cameras. I jolted upright in a cold sweat, almost pissed myself in fear, and could only say one thing before I fainted out of bed: BYM sluts…

For over a year now, the "Fashion Blog Discourse & Criticism Thread" has been playing a terrible game with aspiring bloggers and exhibitionist free spirits who sometimes unfortunately reveal a bit too much, too stupid, too ugly of themselves and put it online. And then get torn apart.

“Terrible hair, terrible complexion, terrible tits,” writes Neroli about a Norwegian blogger. “Holy shit, how ugly is this Kissies chick?!” Noir continues to rant. “She must have body dysmorphic disorder!” Or they tear into a 15-year-old girl from Kulmbach because she presents herself a little too freely online: “They should rather get upset about the parents who let their daughter pose on the internet in hold-up stockings and all end-lolita-like. And she’s holding her bra up to the camera. Ugh!”

The hate tirades of the pubescent fashion pussies are feared and loved online in equal measure. Not even the admins of the Brigitte spin-off were able to successfully put a stop to the excessive rant thread; it has become too powerful and too high-traffic. And the digital henhouse doesn’t spare AMY&PINK either: “They’re getting more and more shabby… if that’s even possible.”

A foreign blogger who became the butt of BYM jokes because of her disproportionately large bust writes in tears: “First the Germans killed my great-grandfather and now they’re coming after me…” And an agitated father says: “You are the reason my daughter wants to jump off the balcony every few weeks.”

So you definitely have to have a bit of a masochistic streak and a swollen self-confidence if you read through the views of this fashion 4chan or even find yourself in the crossfire of the fashion junkies. Because sometimes you don’t even know whether to puke or get turned on by all the verbal shit. Kind of like on AMY&PINK.

But even for us there is no other option than to admit: we’re into the hate-fucks of the walking menstruations and it would be a shame if this hotbed of unrest were razed to the ground. Because the "Fashion Blog Discourse & Criticism Thread" is a prime example of freedom of expression on the internet. Even if you’d sometimes prefer to punch those Topshop brats in the face. Out of love. Or something. And now, unfortunately, we’ve run out of insults.

Party Review: Jägermeister Wirtshaus Tour 2011

Since Thursday is known to be the new weekend (ever since the late 80s...), sexy Udo and I were at the Jägermeister Wirtshaus Tour 2011 in Friedrichshain last week. Once there, we checked out We Have Band and Yuksek live, sweetened the mood with free drinks, and afterwards more or less babbled stupid comments into the camera of the most enchanting mop-top this side of the Spree. Here you have a few impressions of what went down that evening, including the video by Isa and Norman. Thanks, by the way, to the two dusty mustaches, and if you feel like it, you can keep partying on March 17 in Cologne. Tickets are available online.

This is a sponsored article by Jägermeister.

Life Tips From an Anorexic

Samantha will come of age in April and hasn't eaten anything in over 48 hours. But she hasn't thrown up either. She lives in a large detached house in one of Berlin's nicer, greener neighborhoods, and when I visit her after school to get her advice on nutrition, her best friend is sitting in the kitchen doing homework. "This is Sandra. We're actually together every afternoon." She's probably here to keep an eye on me. In case I want to fuck Sam. After all, you can never be too careful. We go up to her room. Everything in it is white, a colorless, girlish world without feelings. No photos, no posters, a large mirror on the wall. She lies down on the bed with a full 2-liter bottle of water, which she will empty during the conversation. Sam's long blonde hair keeps falling into her face, but she manages to brush it aside gracefully. Somewhat awkwardly, I stand in the middle of the room until I spot the desk and sit down on the chair in front of it. How much do you weigh? 43.5 kilograms and I'm 1.65 meters tall. That corresponds to a current BMI of 16. But that's not enough for me. My dream weight is 38 kilograms. I'm working on it. After all, other sluts have managed it before me, and they were only half as motivated as I am. What motivates you? My boyfriend at the time broke up with me when I was 15. We had been together for almost three years. First love, first time, blah blah blah. At some point, he started making weird comments about my figure. That I had a fat ass. That my baby fat would never go away. And that my belly button was horizontal instead of vertical. But I wasn't even fat, I looked at photos. Well, I wasn't a model, but I wasn't fat. He broke up with me shortly after that and slept with this beanpole. I cried over him for months and couldn't eat anything because of my grief. That's when I lost the first few pounds and I just didn't start eating again. Isn't the temptation to eat something great? A full fridge, cravings, McDonald's? Here's my folder. In it, I have plans for how and what I'm allowed to eat and when. And I stick to it. I started with the ABC diet. Ana's boot camp. Then I moved on to Giovanni's 30 and now I'm trying the Russian Gymnast Diet. Basically, they all work the same way: eat lots of fruit and vegetables, drink plenty of water, combine that with exercise, and always try to stick to around 500 calories per day. On weekends, it can be 700. Swimming, jogging, gymnastics. The longer you do it, the easier it gets. Just give it a try. Your parents must have noticed that you're losing so much weight. Don't they say anything about it? They're rarely at home, and my mother is naturally very thin. They probably think it's hereditary, and I don't exactly try to walk around in front of them in my underwear or bikini. Only my little brother knows about it. One evening, he came running into my room crying and said that some boys in his class had called him “fatso.” Since then, I've been helping him lose weight. It's going pretty well and is kind of like our secret pact. Do you have any other friends who are losing weight with you? I used to have a best friend who started the whole thing with me. Kathi. We were blood sisters, with kitchen knives and big talk. We meticulously monitored each other's meals, cried together when our periods stopped and we were afraid of getting pregnant, and stuck our fingers down each other's throats when we let ourselves go a little. But at some point, she snapped. One night she stood drunk outside my window and shouted up: “If you get fat, I'll kill you!” She ended up in one of those clinics for eating disorders in Bavaria. At first I still visited her, but if you stay down there for more than two hours, you start having suicidal thoughts and become depressed. I have no idea how she is today. Or whether she is still alive. How important is the internet when it comes to losing weight? I have met many girls on the internet who suffer from the same problem. We exchange ideas on forums and blogs, meet up in real life, usually on a weekly basis, and encourage each other not to give up. Without my girls and the internet, I often wouldn't know what to do. Recipes, photos, vomiting techniques. There's nothing you can't find there. That you should swallow extracts from bitter oranges. You always have to scrub yourself properly in the shower, because even dirt and dead skin cells weigh something. And oversalt your meals if you have to eat something cooked. Then it tastes awful and you eat less of it. A lot of things are quite logical, but you have to come up with all this shit first. So you admit that you have a problem? Of course. It's not natural to want to be so thin at all costs. Most of us aren't stupid. We know that models on magazine covers have been heavily edited with Photoshop. Or that we can get spots, bad breath, and chemical burns to our esophagus if we continue like this. And many have already died from it. But we don't give a damn. I want to be happy with my body, have a flat stomach, and prevent my thighs from touching when I stand naked in front of a mirror at all costs. That's all. I hardly ever throw up anymore, I just eat less. That calms me down quite a bit. But it is and remains an illness, and there's nothing I can do about it. How can you withstand this psychological pressure? Everyone deals with it differently. Many cut themselves in places that no one else can see to compensate for their desire to eat. And they brag about how many days it's been since they last threw up. Anorexic guys fuck all kinds of chicks because they think it distracts them. I used to cut myself too, but I'm a bit of a coward and can't do it anymore. So I've adopted the boys' technique, but I don't sleep with just any guy who comes along, only with my boyfriend. And as often as possible. The pressure just has to go away, but it keeps coming back. And what does your boyfriend say about your extremely thin body? I don't know, we don't really talk about it very often. I think he just thinks it's cool to have such a pretty, slim girlfriend and shows her off at school and on the street. When he does say something, I change the subject. I make him something to eat or have sex with him. Then he's happy and keeps his mouth shut for a few weeks. However, my breasts have become quite small due to anorexia. There's really only nipples left. Even the children's sports bras from back then are too big for them. My boyfriend doesn't touch them or play with them anymore, he completely ignores them during sex. That makes me a little sad. What are you doing today? Sandra and I are going to Alexa. We need new clothes because spring is coming. And you want to look sexy, after all. It's a shame she has such fat legs, otherwise it would definitely be even more fun. But she can't walk past a snack bar without stuffing herself with fast food. Totally stupid. Because as I always say: less is more. Or no, scratch that. I always say: if you give up, you can never win. Yes, exactly, that sounds better.

Mixtape: Sister Love

Kanye West: All Of The Lights

Protests in Libya: Gaddafi’s Bloody Revenge

All right. After the demonstrations in Tunisia and Egypt ended positively for the people, things are now boiling over in the Arab world. The people in Jordan, Bahrain, and Yemen have also begun, on a larger scale, to voice their discontent in the streets of their hometowns, and the eyes of the world are currently fixed on Libya. Because there, the current head of state Muammar al-Gaddafi is by no means willing to accept that a few random protesters would question his more than 40-year reign. That is why in these days he is unleashing a large contingent of soldiers, mercenaries, and thugs on his fellow citizens, who are said to have already killed more than 200 people.

Meanwhile, Gaddafi’s son Khamis is leading a murderous elite unit, while helicopters circle in the sky and fire at the protesting crowd. “I saw with my own eyes how a tank drove toward a car with two people inside. It simply crushed them, even though they had done nothing to anyone,” describes the cleric Abellah al-Warfali of his impressions. As usual in this attempt at a revolution, telephone lines were cut. The internet does not work, mobile phones are dead. Libya itself blames foreign organizations for the uprisings. Tunisia, Israel, Sudan. They are all in it together. Due to the blocked communication, only very little information is getting out.

But a few cities and regions are said to already be in the hands of the rebels; shaky amateur videos from the country’s opposition give reason for hope. It is a historic sensation that is currently taking place in the Near and Middle East, and we can be proud to witness it—even if we cannot intervene directly. What we can very well do, however, is acknowledge the courage and strength of the people who are protesting for peace and democracy and are risking their lives in the process, and spread this worldwide through the net. Because one thing is certain: the opportunity for a better world will not present itself so often again.

Johnny B! Bits Of Tits

His name is Johnnie and I don’t even know his last name. But that’s not so important. What matters is that he takes photos. Of dogs that don’t know what’s happening to them. Of black men rubbing themselves in the bathtub. And of girls with exceedingly hairy forearms. After all, here and there it gives us exquisite pleasure to watch him at his craft. Even if we have no idea who the guy actually is...

Your Weekend: Ten Little Missions

Sometimes it only takes a single night to permanently change everything around your little person. And yourself along with it. That can happen through your own doing or unexpectedly come crashing down on your pitiful head. And then you stand there. And don’t know where to go or what to do next. To counteract that, there are the “Ten Little Missions.” Because they are your personal guidelines to take life into your own hands.

One. Darken your room, open a bottle of organic red wine and watch the new “Skins” episode with Liv. Two. Watch it again right away because it’s unbelievably good. And heaven help you if you don’t cry from happiness or sadness or whatever. Three. Buy a few Beyblades and show the little brats who the king in the hood is. Four. Move to Berlin. If you’re already here, then move away. Five. Attend any event with Yuksek. The guy just has it.

Six. Check off every single position depicted on Street Boners and TV Carnage. Do not injure yourself or other family members in the process. Seven. Finally throw away the damn keepsakes from your ex-partners. They only weigh you down anyway. Eight. Drink a liter of milk all at once. The full-fat kind. Nine. Prepare for the return of Jesus. As a holy super zombie! Ten. Come up with three life-improving rules. Break all of them in that one single night.

Blumen, Chocolates and Double Dildos: Valentine’s Day

Valentine’s Day is the cruel scourge of humanity. A perfectly balanced climax of civilized brown-nosing that pulls the hard-earned money out of the pockets of happy couples. For enchantingly fragrant flowers. And damn delicious chocolates. And green double dildos. And it pulls the hard-earned money out of the pockets of happy singles, too. Because in all their frustration and surrounded by temporarily fucking lovebirds floating on cloud nine, they can’t think straight and end up buying the double portion of vanilla ice cream with chocolate chips. Or a pet. Or an Uzi.

Of course we lonely people living alone also wish for nothing more than finally being in an intact relationship again. With trust. And love. And regular sex. A living pussy that suddenly gives life meaning again. Because no matter how much shit you mess up, you always know: Hey, I just wiped out half a nation plus flora and fauna, but over there my girl is waiting and she loves me very much. Despite fatty liver and a mini-penis.

Walking through the park together, kicking little dogs into the lake, screaming at the sun. Meeting the potential in-laws, explaining with tomato-red cheeks what you actually do for a living (something on the internet) and, out of gratitude for the most embarrassing fifteen minutes of your entire life, immediately taking a dump on their toilet seat.

We would ignore life and spend years only in bed. Natasha Khan and Amy Winehouse would be our silent witnesses as we tried out all the dirty things we learned from ex-partners and Flash movies on the internet. The neighbors knock, the doorbell spins, the pillow bursts. One week at McDonald’s, one month in Harry’s wine cellar, one year above the rooftops of Berlin.

With bloody lips and soaked pants we would stagger through the city, hardly able to grasp our happiness. That we found each other among all these people. And learned to love. Love. I look deep into her ocean-blue eyes and could vomit into her face out of happiness. Let me be a little Stan. We belong together, baby. Forever. She nods, smiling.

Of course the stupid slut cheats on me a few weeks later with her sports teacher and flees with him to Belgium in a cloak-and-dagger operation, but hey: happens. At least I got to suck on her delicious toes while she did her homework. And show her my recordings of self-made grasshopper porn. Possibly not exactly conducive to a happy future.

So here I am hating Valentine’s Day because no stupid cow sends me a handmade card including declarations of love and nude photos. Because others are happy and in love and fucked. And because there still seems to be genuine affection out there. So go ahead and celebrate the most disgusting holiday of them all and pump yourselves full of flowers, chocolates and double dildos: I’m going to a dating agency now. And then I’ll set a few hipster kids on fire.

Radiohead: Lotus Flower

Gregory Bojorquez: Los Angeles Rules

East Los Angeles is known and notorious for its social problems arising from the melting pot of different cultures living there. Gregory Bojorquez lives right there and started early on photographing his neighbors and acquaintances. It didn’t take long before the L.A. Weekly noticed his mostly black-and-white works and published them. Today he mainly devotes himself to American youth, but also photographs celebrities, hip-hoppers and singers. And on his website he gives practical tips for life. A new one with every reload.

via Empty Kingdom

We Heart Anime: Kickers Vs. Tsubasa

All of this happened in a faraway time, when the international fun industry had not yet figured out how to squeeze money and souls out of us kids with inferior trading cards, spinning tops and merchandise crap. Back then it was ultra-cool to plop down on your five butt letters in the afternoon and watch a few pubescent Cheshire cats intertwine love, suffering and shots on goal in one match after another.

I never came closer to sweaty sports than with the guys from “Tsubasa” and the “Kickers,” without being groped by senile gym teachers or beaten up by hooligans in tight sports shorts. And yet I could never really decide which of the two teams I should support more. Tsubasa or Gregor. Although in the original he was surely not called Gregor. More like Satoshi. Or Mamoru. Or Tsuyamauchiyoshitiu.

Tsubasa and his big crew were of course better known. And bigger and cooler and somehow more important. Tsubasa – that stood for team spirit. And morale. And damn well winning! The Kickers were the country bumpkins from the village who were lucky if they managed to beat Grandfather Takada in the backyard. Even Mila Superstar and Mrs. Jo and her cheerful family would have wiped the floor with them.

But, but… The Kickers… they are eleven friends who get along just fine. Whether they cry or laugh, it’s honest, whatever they do. Whether on the ground or on top, there never was a better team, never was. Whether they fall or run, they are friends who never part. And before heading home, they shake each other’s hands and have learned something. Hip, hip, hip, hooray!

Let’s be honest, the little softies were a thousand times more likable than the highly bred pros of Tsubasa. With their disgusting drawing style and perfection on the ball. The Kickers… they were lovable snoring birds, just like us. They played to have fun. And to chat a bit on the field. And because of little nerdy girls. Because even if Captain Tsubasa won more and more important matches… only one single team conquered my heart.

Felix Cartal: World Class Driver

Trash Tuesday: Robo Geisha

Solo Sex Songs: Touching Music

All right. Computer on, pants down, internet at full throttle – and the rubbing begins. Here: “Russian Teenagers Gangbang In Summer Camp.” Or there: “Black Girl Choky Loses Virginity To Four Strangers.” No, better this: “Asian Barely Legal Street Porn Traveling.” Yeah yeah whatever, click it, load it, here we go. I don’t have forever to come, I still have to go to the doctor.

It wouldn’t really be a big problem if it weren’t for that annoying 90s porn music in the background. I’m not at a kids’ disco. And that fake moaning. My grandma coughs sexier. And what kind of crap is the cameraman always babbling into the mic? He laughs so stupidly too… Okay, no other way: sound off. Just the moving image and my dirty thoughts.

Yeah, that works quite well… Damn, now the neighbor starts hammering. And a baby is screaming. Did a cat just get run over? Damn it, what now? All right, music on. Music, music… What do you even listen to while jerking off? Regina Spektor… no, certainly not. She only plays for two people – or more. Harder. Rammstein? Wtf… no. Uffie, Snoop Dogg, Kleerup? Yeah, something like that.

Gangsta Luv and booty banging. Kind of fits. Focus now. Did I charge my iPod? Shit… plug it in. Whatever, that little Thai girl over there is really working hard, so pay attention. The remix by Mayer Hawthorne is better than the original anyway. FFFFUUUU! Better download it right away. Great, the video is off. Everyone came – except me.

Head on the desk, wrinkled beet between my legs, black screen on the monitor. Ejaculation aborted. No more desire. And who’s to blame? The music. After all, when making out with myself I can hardly fall back on my standard sex playlist. Bat For Lashes doesn’t work here, I need something a bit harder. But what… What do you listen to during solo sex?

Androp: Mirror Dance

[flv:mirrordance.mp4 mirrordance.jpg 940 529]

What Are We Supposed To Do?! Suggestions For A Better Life

If you don’t just pour cheeseburgers, marshmallow cream, and sugar syrup into yourselves and politely look left and right and left again before crossing the street, you have about 30,000 days to make something out of your little life. And the world out there offers plenty of opportunities to creatively and excitingly fill these empty containers from Monday to Sunday.

Unfortunately, most of the time we just sit around rather stupidly, staring holes into the air, the laptop, or the television, instead of lifting our asses and seizing the opportunities that crafty marketing people and eccentric spirits of nature have prepared for us. Because one thing is certain: when we are lying on our deathbed and life flashes before our inner eye, we surely don’t want to see only the browser history of the last 60 years.

Of course, there is only one single reason why we do so little. Not because we are lazy little idiots by nature. Or because we are under house arrest. Or because we can’t be lifted out of bed without a crane. It’s actually like this: if we only knew what would really be worth leaving the house for, then we would do it. Without a doubt.

Existence is over faster than we think, and this is exactly where you come in: What, for God’s sake, must one absolutely have done at least once in a lifetime? And how and when and where? Skydiving with a tiger, having sex with Angela Merkel’s mother, skillfully kicking Hansi Hinterseer between the legs? Make your and our days something truly special with your magnificent suggestions, because you know: time is running!

Leah Meltzer: What If This Is It?

Mixtape: Happy Family Time

Your parents can’t stand you, you have no friends, and the girl you secretly have a crush on doesn’t even know you exist. But that doesn’t matter at all, because here at AMY&PINK we are all three at once: family, friends, and love providers. And what could be nicer than spending a really great time together with us? With delicious food, profound conversations, and great music. Like the one in this mixtape featuring Bloc Party, James Blake, and Hercules and Love Affair. Happy Family Time!

In Our Own Interest: Save The Columns

For 34 years now, we have been offering you, on our little coffee trip through the abysses of the internet, life-affirming and depressingly crumpled insights into the strangely appearing cunt of the internet. And how do we do that? Exactly: by mixing wildly jumbled articles about music, art, and spiritual deflowerings with carefully and more or less weekly appearing columns. That’s called variety and goes down well with big and small trolls alike. But this balance is now in serious danger.

You might remember that we recently had quite a heated discussion about the appreciation of columns and decided together: fuck yeah, we need them, we love them, we would mount them if that were even remotely possible. And over the past years we have really tried out a lot of shit when it comes to these serial little gems.

In the "hardcore contact ads" we matched up you basement kids with sexy characters. In "Favorite Game" and "We Heart Anime" the nerd level rose rapidly as we philosophized about Pikachu and Japanese pseudo-hentai films. And in the "Trend Indicator" we meticulously listed what you have to do and what you have to avoid in order to become a better person.

But columns come and go. Either because they were not maintained enough or because they somehow didn’t fit. The latest example: the death of "Dead Girls." Sure, sexy girls without clothes: exactly our thing. But without meaning or reason and then topped off with that bad copy of a moist BILD-style text? No, that couldn’t possibly go well for long.

That leaves only "Lost in Blogs," "Mixtape," and "Pretty in Pink" temporarily alive. Because "Ten Little Missions" has also been on the brink since yesterday. But the week doesn’t just have three days, it has seven, and that’s why you now have the unique chance to change and improve the existence of AMY&PINK.

We want to know from you: which columns do you find awesome, which ones suck? Which section should perhaps be prayed back from the afterlife, or do you maybe have ideas for completely new columns that you consider absolutely essential for this site? So go ahead!

Théo Gosselin: While You Were Sleeping

Hany Adel & Amir Eid: Sout Al Horeya

[flv:freedom.mp4 freedom.jpg 940 529]

Your Weekend: Ten Little Missions

This is a section that is meant to improve your life. Make it more beautiful. So that you experience great adventures. Instead of hanging around at home. So that you are given a sense of purpose. So as not to despair in emptiness. And so that you can pursue a goal. Or two or three or ten. So that at the end of the weekend you can say: "Yes, I achieved something! And it was awesome." This is... "Ten Little Missions."

One. Take in President Mubarak, buy him some gummy mice, scratching posts, and Whiskas gourmet packs, and thus offer him an optimal home where he can peacefully spend his retirement. Two. Touch yourself to the video "Get Your Body" by Bigga Threat. After all, that’s kind of fitness too. Three. Sign up at the Social Media Academy and let us make fun of you mercilessly afterward. Maybe they offer seminars there on how to endure that without crying. Four. Stop showering. It’s just a waste of water. Five. Search for and find Elvis.

Six. Demonstrate for a women’s quota in the horizontal trade. Then realize that it’s an even bigger waste of time than simply standing on a traffic island. Seven. Give up red foods. Eight. Maintain closer physical contact with your best girlfriend and let others watch. So everyone gets something out of it. Nine. Send your parents a postcard and write to them about how beautiful the sun is shining and what you’ve been up to the last few days. Ten. Take it in your mouth.

Raphael Saadiq: I'm A Good Man

[flv:goodman.mp4 goodman.jpg 940 529]

Yeah Sara! This Is Our New Author

No one who thinks anything of themselves on the internet can get past her: Yeah Sara. The native Hessian and adopted capital city brat convinces both fans and critics with her direct, hard-hitting, and often contemplative manner, has conjured one digital rebellion after another with DragstripGirl, Finding Berlin, and what feels like five thousand other projects, and until recently was a writer at the well-known blog Spreeblick. But she felt the urge to move on.

After turning her back on her old home Germany and searching for herself on an inspiring and exhausting journey around the globe—though not quite finding herself—she has now surprisingly returned and, right after arriving, made what is probably one of her best resolutions in a long time: to become an author at AMY&PINK!

So what belongs together finally comes together, and we are looking forward to absurd stories about growing up, familiar insights into the life of a hipster by choice, and unusual truths from the person who made foreskin tubes, “Fight Club” quotes, and an unparalleled love for Berlin socially acceptable in the first place. So give Yeah Sara a warm welcome, and if you want to know more about the 22-year-old, you can stop by here and work yourself up in anticipation.

Where Is My Better Life? New Year’s Resolutions

Our beloved 2011 is growing and thriving and, with its already 41 days under its belt, can no longer be counted among the youngest. It was supposed to be different, better, more important than all the years before. Because whether it was career or love or body: on New Year’s Day we had set ourselves high goals. The list of good resolutions on paper was quickly crumpled up, the one in our heads gave way to everyday stress. Time to briefly take stock of whether we’re still on track toward our better life — or whether we’ve already pushed everything back to next year. Mentally and all that.

So I stand naked in front of the mirror and search deep within myself. Figuratively speaking. Point 1: Career. In the past month and a half you could have busted your ass to open the gates to a whole lot of cash. Going on tours to some totally important design and web conferences, for example. Or groveling in front of potential clients to show them how amazing you and your amateur skills really are. Reciting Photoshop and social media and the Apple product range by heart. Or at least putting together a portfolio. But nope.

Okay: career already screwed. Point 2: Love. To answer that question, I only need to look at the wedding photos of me and my hairy right hand on the shelf. But that’s not my fault at all. Where is my personal mix of Emma Watson and Megan Fox complete with reddish-blonde hair and freckles and a C cup and flat stomach and flowery scent and puffy nipples and Parisian flair and artist and old apartment in the neighborhood? Genetic scientists, anyone?

So sex isn’t happening either. Point 3: Body. At the thought of it my gut is already laughing up its sleeve, the thousand and one bags of chips from around the world sing in chorus, Vienna sausages with curry ketchup and fries with mayo are flying around. Döner, cookies, fat pig. The strong will toward vegetables and raw food and healthy alternatives has thrown itself into the Happy Hippo organic trash — you can forget swimming and running, my bike is broken anyway and the weather, oh people: sports in this weather? Not happening.

So here I am sitting in my pseudo-social housing in Wedding instead of wasting my precious time in a 200-square-meter loft in some arbitrarily shitty trendy district, forced to keep ordering Vaseline and rubber vaginas for myself on Amazon and having to climb over my own fat belly just to even reach the damn thing. And now tell me, please, that things didn’t go any better with your resolutions!

Social Stalking: Twitter Girls I’d Like To Fuck

William Fitzsimmons: The Tide Pulls From The Moon

[flv:tide.mp4 tide.jpg 940 529]

Alex Guiry: Farts Then Pukes

Tokyo Freeters: Rebellion Of Japanese Youth

No other nation in the world has internalized the virtues and duties of a hard-working society as much as Japan. The baby boom generation that set out a few decades ago to create something through its own efforts brought the country wealth, economic strength, and confidence in its own abilities. They traded individuality and freedom for fixed work structures and emotional self-sacrifice; corporations became families, colleagues became brothers and sisters.

If you do not work, you are practically nonexistent. Career is everything, the company is everything, consumption is everything. But with today’s emerging youth, the Land of the Rising Sun is facing ever greater difficulties in maintaining what it sees as these correct values. They are rebelling against the outdated system of flawless integration and distancing themselves from their position-hungry fellow citizens.

Following this anti-culture, three different types of people have formed, whose apparent value per class decreases rapidly and whose position downward is proportional to the likelihood of suicide. While those at the top are the ones who, through competition and good grades, have secured a permanent place in companies and corporations, many citizens who think differently are forced to eke out an existence as “freeters” or even “NEETs.”

Rejected by the rest of society, freeters keep themselves afloat with temporary work and odd jobs — NEETs refuse employment entirely. With them, a growing underground movement has formed. Because these young dropouts have almost no money to live on, they dwell as net refugees in internet cafés that are open around the clock, devote themselves to art, write books.

“I myself was once a freeter,” Karin Amamiya tells us, former singer of the punk rock band The Revolutionary Truth and face of the new Japanese labor era. “That time was emotionally very stressful for me. I was a disposable employee and replaceable at any time. I had no money and was psychologically unstable.” At the age of 25 she published her first book: an account of suicide.

“I had witnessed that many people killed themselves. This is not an individual problem but one of Japanese society.” Together with the Association of Freeters, Karin is committed to putting an end to the black-and-white thinking of the public and ensuring that psychological career pressure, excessive consumer frenzy, and working oneself to death will soon be a thing of the past.

It was therefore only a matter of time before excessive globalization and economic oppression led to a counter-movement among the youth and shook a system devoted entirely to economic self-sacrifice. What is also interesting is whether such a rebellion against entrenched forms of the economy could also occur in Germany, or whether the youth in our country simply lack the mentality and the courage for it. We rather suspect the latter.

Tabi Bonney ft. Lykke Li: Where We Gonna Go

[flv:tabi.mp4 tabi.jpg 940 529]

Mixtape: Broken Soul Journey

As you all of course know, beloved Monday is our regular mixtape day. But since you can’t help the fact that we simply closed up shop for a short while, here and now you get “Broken Soul Journey.” A lovely trip through twenty breathtakingly good tracks. Sometimes up, sometimes down, sometimes remix, sometimes original. The usual shit, basically. Because if we couldn’t sweeten the start of your week, then at least we can sweeten your Tuesday evening. Olé.

Ready for Offspring? Wanna Have A Mini-Me?

There are certain scenarios in life that can happen to all of us. Sooner or later. Getting run over by a bus, for example. Or winning the lottery. Or having a child. One, two, three… Provided you’ve already reached the stage of puberty and still possess one or two primary sexual organs. Whether you classify this twist of fate as more of an accident or a jackpot is, of course, up to you.

I personally am firmly convinced that having offspring is an essential part of our reason for existence. Sure, you can postpone it for your career. Or because the potential father is a well-known junkie around town. But sooner or later, doesn’t everyone want a few annoying brats running around them? Something you can pass on. To a new person. Even if it’s just the ugliest elbow in the world.

Thanks to the latest findings in aging research, we know that we should tackle the plan of spreading our seed—or having a sticky mass of it injected into us (depending)—somewhere around the age of 50. As long as we’re still physically capable. Oliver Geissen recommends paternity tests, guidebooks suggest bizarre positions that supposedly increase the chances of fertilization, and stoned eco-hippies advocate abstinence. You want to bring a child into this corrupt world? Shame on you, you selfish assholes!

So we sit there with our bodily openings and stems and ask ourselves: Where to put it. And when? And how? Plan everything meticulously or just wait until it happens on its own? Because the condom tears. Or the pill fails. Or because we’re little disturbed psychos who stick needles into condoms to bind our unsuspecting partner to us. Well, that’s an option too…

But with whom, anyway? And all the responsibility and money and social consequences. How soon can we even afford all that crap? Kindergarten, diapers, toys, school trips, pocket money, child support, an apartment, life. And time. The screaming, pooping, cursing-in-its-own-language thing devours more time than fruit purée. And pukes on your parquet floor while doing it.

I’m 27 years old now. By that age, some Neukölln secondary school students have already given three bastards up for adoption and retired early afterward. So is it time to start thinking about Mini-Mes? And tell me, what would you do if you or your beloved suddenly got pregnant? Keep it or abort? Or do you already have children and have figured out the secret of the perfect age for uninhibited reproduction? Because I, my dear friends, haven’t the faintest clue.

Wildfox Couture: Vive La France

[flv:wildfox.mp4 wildfox.jpg 940 529]

Your Weekend: Ten Little Missions

Many of you have eagerly awaited this moment. Finally quitting time, finally the weekend, finally a new episode of the popular family show “Ten Little Missions.” Only here do you have the opportunity to successfully complete all ten tasks and turn your days off into something truly special. Take one more deep breath, start taking your sweet lives seriously again, and then let’s get going with plenty of good cheer.

One. Why not travel to Egypt again and take a look at the pyramids? We hear it’s supposed to be quite magnificent there. Two. Return the deposit bottles you’ve been collecting for months. Otherwise they might take over your neighborhood. Three. Grab a cute girl with a little mustache on the street, shave it off, and then give her a sensational French kiss. Everyone wins. Four. Count the advertised products in Avril Lavigne’s new video “What The Hell” and punch her for it if you see her somewhere. Five. Sneak your way into our favorite thread at Bym.de and skillfully tear apart every blogger who gets on your nerves.

Six. Throw an LSD party for you and all your little friends. Invite grandma too; she’ll be thrilled. Seven. Grab a loaded handgun of your choice, lock yourself in an adjacent room, and then listen to the new song by Indira Weis. Let’s see what happens. Eight. Buy yourself a urethral vibrator and make all your previous sexual partners look old. Nine. Stop whining, go to Mc Café, and change your life. Ten. Upload nude photos of yourself to MySpace. Nobody notices there anymore anyway.

Emilio Rojas: Ex-Girlfriend

[flv:exgirl.mp4 exgirl.jpg 940 529]

Friends: How You Doin’?

Alright, this proves it: In this life, there are only three facts that apply to every single human being out there. First: Double cheese on a pizza is always, ALWAYS, better than just one layer. Second: At every good party, Ladyhawke has to be played at least once an hour. And third: “Friends” is by far the greatest series in the world. Still. Forever. Well, besides “Skins.” And “O.C., California”… You know what I mean.

I haven’t been out that much in the past two weeks. On the one hand because of the lousy weather here in Berlin, on the other because of totally important projects… and stuff. Oh who am I kidding, I’m just a loser without friends who would marry and impregnate his laptop if that were (already) possible. So I—now pay attention, this is important—watched ten seasons of “Friends” in one go. TEN seasons! In one go! And now I’m kind of stuck.

The theme song has burrowed into my watery brain like a lost tapeworm. I’ve started turning on my IKEA lamp with “How you doin’?” And just last night I dreamed that I was on an adventure-detective train ride across the Orient with the entire cast. Complete with sandwiches and murder and guitars. Okay, at some point Mischa Barton came running in and tore her dress off, but that’s standard for me.

Back then, my best buddies and I had obviously seen every episode and assigned each other roles. Ham-Eniz was Joey, Mille turned into Chandler every evening, and I got to play the dorky Ross. But at least he got Rachel.

No other TV series in the world (does “Scrubs” play on this planet?) has taught me as much about life as this one. About six crazy people in New York City. That friendship and love are the most important things of all. That most problems should be solved within one episode. Through conversations and hugs. And that you always have to be a little bit Joey.

If it had been up to me, they would never have removed “Friends” from the TV screen. Really. And let’s please forget that total spin-off disaster with Pizza-Harry in Los Angeles. That doesn’t count. Let’s just agree that everything that clung to our hearts after this epic masterpiece was merely a reheated mutation of the Central Perk clique, and that our quality of life rises dramatically when we hear the following words: “I’ll be there for you!” Because it’s true.

Toro Y Moi: New Beat

[flv:newbeat.mp4 newbeat.jpg 940 529]

Donkey Kong Country Returns: Monkeys, Bananas and Giant Octopuses

Do you remember the good old days when every grimy village supermarket had a Super Nintendo where annoyed parents could dump their offspring to get at least a few quiet minutes while shopping? The games in the console were only changed once every puberty, but after “Super Mario World” and “Castlevania,” one day “Donkey Kong Country” was suddenly inside—and when you turned it on, our snot- and mayo-covered heads literally exploded. It was that beautiful.

In my never-ending search for the feeling of those days, I spent the entire night playing through the sequel to the successful series: “Donkey Kong Country Returns” for the Wii. Once again, some creatures steal a bunch of bananas, once again it’s 2D, and once again there’s the fat ape and the little one with the red cap. Ah, just like back then.

Of course, everything is enhanced with much fatter effects. The levels are often difficult, but never unfair, the enemies are creative, and there’s so much going on in the background (which can kill you if it feels like it) that you just sit there in awe and pray to the Banana Bird Queen. Still, dying is on the daily agenda. And as always, playing through it once isn’t enough. Bonus coins, extra levels, secret puzzle pieces—there’s plenty to explore for people without lives.

When I bought the disc, I was really afraid it would be another typical rehash of a once-grandiose game, lacking soul and passion. Especially since Rare isn’t involved anymore. But that’s not the case. “Donkey Kong Country Returns” is a worthy revival of the legendary Super Nintendo series, full of charm, wit, and skill, and it’s genuinely fun. If you’re into monkeys. And bananas. And giant octopuses.

Adolf & Maniac: Cold War Kids

We’re Giving Away Tickets: Jägermeister Wirtshaus Tour 2011

Are you also bored of those sweat-soaked underground clubs where good atmosphere no longer matters and it’s only about cramming as many pseudo-cool kiddies as possible into a basement on the edge of town and subduing them with low-quality alcohol and wannabe bands? Then join us on the Jägermeister Wirtshaus Tour 2011 into the hearty world of a very special event.

The former vinegar factory with the humorous mascots mixes the flair of rustic coziness with modern indie and electro acts and will soon travel across the nation with its flying tavern. The next party takes place on February 17 at 10:00 p.m. with the London disco-rock trio We Have Band, producer Yuksek, and the DJ team Trashpop at the Berlin Jägerklause.

The best part: You can be there live and not only listen to the acts play, but even play cards with them in a boozy tavern session, beat them at Doppelkopf and darts, or simply chat with one or the other at the bar. Plus there’s the finest herbal liqueur and beer and fun and good vibes and everything else.

250 lads and lasses can fit into the tavern, and we managed to snag 1x2 exclusive tickets for you. If you want to win: simply leave a comment with a valid email address by Sunday, February 6. And if you want to be on the safe side, you can also try your luck on Facebook or at Electru.

This is a sponsored article by Jägermeister.

Those Dancing Days: I’ll Be Yours Forever

[flv:illbeyours.flv illbeyours.jpg 940 529]

Trash Tuesday: Inglorious Zombie Hunters

Sex and Blood: My Life As a Brave Pirate

It went like this: I met this girl. Luxury body, slightly dark, no kids. She loved my humor. And the way I quoted Charlie Harper. We both had a thing for Nora Tschirner, philosophized about what she might be like in bed. Laughing, teasing, making out – the usual routine. Her name was Lena and she wanted to come to my place. Or Lara. Clara? Let’s call her Girl. Lucky for me I had disposed of my collection of filled trash bags and the dirty dishes had blown themselves up out of sheer agony.

My fat head was filled with protein-rich thoughts; only out of politeness did I not already spray in her face in the stairwell. And because of Mrs. Böhmer from the third floor, who’s a bit slow in the head and in the legs and wished us a merry Christmas ’39. Chuck Norris himself couldn’t have opened my apartment door more stylishly, we throw ourselves onto the bed, I dive down and suddenly find myself in a sticky lake of blood. Chucky, killer doll, end of life.

Okay okay, all right. Period, menstruation, strawberry week. I know it, I’m not 12 anymore. Doesn’t matter to me, I’m horny right now. Shock overcome, let’s continue. Tongue applied, from the breasts down to the navel, temporary stop, Girl throws me off the bed. I land roughly on the dumbbells that are standing around purely for decoration. As if I’d ever used them. “Shit, what are you doing?”

“We can’t fuck, I have my period.” Thanks for the info, sweetheart. You might as well give me last Wednesday’s lottery numbers. Slowly. And with suspense in your eyes. “Girl, now listen,” I kneel beside her thoughtfully. “I’m not like that. You know what they say: A brave pirate sails into the red sea. Hey ho, let’s go!” Maybe I shouldn’t have shouted the Ramones’ rousing call out loud.

Girl pulls her pants up, kisses me on the forehead, calls a taxi, disappears into the darkness of the night, RTL isn’t even rerunning “Mitten im Leben!” yet, it’s that early. Am I some kind of monster because I don’t let blood fucks spoil my enjoyment of physical love? Sick, barbaric, does nobody else do that? One week break, every month, hole closed? And why did the flesh-and-blood leak even come home with me? What did she think we were going to do? Ski jumping?

Even my illegal seahorse porn can’t cheer me up now. I lie down on my blood-splattered bed, press my head into the pillows and my manhood into the mattress. Neverland is red tonight. Seas of life juice, Super Meat Boy, chunks, tampons, sky of fire, lava palace. And right in the middle of it I stand. With an erection and without a girl. And the question of whether I’m the only brave pirate in this country.

David Richardson: Love Will Find You

Egypt’s Media Revolution: Fuck Yeah, Fox News!

In Egypt, tens of thousands of enraged people are still taking to the streets to protest against President Mubarak and his freedom-hating regime. And the whole world is watching – as best it can. Because thanks to the modern media landscape, it is no longer so easy to get an objective and well-researched picture of the overall situation, especially on television.

While German news channels like n-tv and N24 would rather air documentaries about excavators, the jungle camp, and the Mississippi than report on a revolution in which people are dying and whose positive or negative outcome could determine the course of global change, even American viewers are slowly beginning to realize that beyond Fox News, MSNBC and CNN there seems to be a higher level of quality journalism.

The key broadcaster of the revolt is without a doubt the Arab network Al Jazeera, whose office in Cairo was violently cleared yesterday. Its employees manage to report directly and informatively on the events even under the harshest conditions – if necessary via webcam and telephone. The network’s orange live stream recorded a 2500% increase in views – 60% of viewers come from the United States.

“It’s sad to see that American news channels have made themselves so dependent on ratings,” says Tyler Durden. “But if more people are interested in Lindsay Lohan in rehab than in important events around the world, then it’s not just the media that’s to blame, but especially the consumers.” No wonder many Americans are calling for free access to alternatives like Al Jazeera, BBC and CNN International in their own country. “We’re curious to see how the established networks will look once they suddenly have to compete with real journalists.”

The Egyptian revolution is therefore not only an Arab insurrection against oppression and repression, but could also lead to an upheaval in the international media landscape. Because if Fox News doesn’t even know where Egypt is located, it’s no wonder that even US President Barack Obama prefers to get his information from Al Jazeera.

But these weeks are not only a test of maturity for overseas media, but especially for domestic broadcasters like n-tv and N24. Thanks to coverage that in both timing and quality seems far below the IQ of some Sarah-whatever, the offshoots of RTL and ProSiebenSat.1 have gradually squandered their title as news channels.

Anyone who, for financial or political reasons, is unable to competently and expertly cover world-shaking events and provide their country with the information it needs to form an informed opinion should probably just stop altogether. We will therefore continue to be accompanied by Al Jazeera on Egypt’s path toward a freer nation, and while people there fight for their freedom and future, Western media can quietly go stand in the corner and be ashamed.

Mixtape: Ghetto Sisters

Whether it was still Friday evening or already Saturday morning, we’re not entirely sure anymore, but we bought this mixtape from a group of cute ghetto hipster girls. A couple of greasy cheeseburgers at McDonald’s and an extra-large Coke with a splash in exchange for a handwritten note decorated with little hearts, penises, and skulls listing the favorite songs of Lauren, Nesrin, Daria and the fat blonde one without style or voice.

Euer Wochenende: Ten Little Missions

Lately we’ve been receiving more and more emails from outraged readers complaining about the impossibility of certain missions. “Nobody can manage that,” writes Maria. “You’d have to be a demigod not to fail,” says Ingo. And “Your mothers probably have more sperm in their asses than Indira has on her face,” criticizes Penishengst34. Rightly so, we think. That’s why we’ve decided to noticeably lower the difficulty level of the “Ten Little Missions” starting with this issue. To give all willing fighters a fair chance at peace of mind. Just kidding.

One. Turn off the internet at your home and wait for the first report on CNN. Bonus points if a few civilians die in the process. Two. Jump into the bathtub together and enjoy water sex, clean toes, and ecological consequences. Three. Listen to “Chocolate Rain” again. Still a masterpiece after all these years. Four. Make fun of a few bloggers. That’s how you rake in the big bucks these days. Five. Look up the word “rake in” in the dictionary and write a two-page essay about it.

Six. This weekend, for a change, don’t get any coke. Speed is known to be much more fun. Seven. Watch all ten seasons of “Friends” in one sitting. Afterwards you won’t know which way is up and which way is down. From laughter, of course. Eight. Grab Rambo, rescue Peer from the jungle camp together and then hold him tight while whispering softly into his ear, “Everything will be okay…” Nine. Download the free Dave Sitek remix of Lykke Li’s “I Follow Rivers.” Ten. Donate 20 euros to some charitable cause. Seriously.

Lykke Li: I Follow Rivers

[flv:rivers.mp4 rivers.jpg 940 529]

Crisis in Cairo: Egypt Kills The Internet

The unrest in Egypt is growing louder, stronger and more palpable by the day. Cairo is burning, the people there are fighting for more freedom, justice and minimum wages. To protect itself from the rising mob, the Egyptian government has now taken a step that is unprecedented in the history of technological networking: they have shut down the internet. Completely.

Where other regimes facing signs of uprising had previously merely denied their citizens access to Facebook and Twitter in order to hinder coordination among themselves and to prevent the flow of information to the outside world, the providers in the African state were forced to shut down their servers and completely close the electronic data highway.

At this hour, banks, schools, companies and private individuals are offline. The economic consequences are hardly foreseeable and there is no end in sight to this anti-analog state of emergency. Only a single provider by the name of Noor Group has so far been spared the blockade and remains online. No one knows why. Hackers around the world are now threatening the government: if the country does not restore the flow of information, they will attack public websites.

The major problem is not only Egypt’s temporary isolation from the outside world, but that this unusual measure could set a precedent. Until now, countries with centers of unrest refrained from completely shutting down the internet because of the economic consequences, but as is so often the case, the saying applies here too: once one dares, the others follow. And that would ultimately be the end of the digital revolution.

via Engadget, Publique and Blogrebellen.

Wacko Maria: Pussy Hole Gang

Wenke Is Back: Resurrection of the Year

It was a cold, rainy, and certainly very dark night. And even we, known around town as rocks in the surf, were by no means prepared for what was standing there, soaking wet, in front of our basement door. Our former intern Wenke couldn’t stop crying; we asked her in and gave her a few blankets, tea, and her favorite whip. “I want to come back,” she sobbed bitterly. And how could we possibly deny her this great wish.

After a few nights full of greasy pizza, empty beer bottles, and schizophrenic house visitors, the time had finally come. The Frankenstein of blogs was born. Only prettier. And better. And less idiotic. WENKEWHO. What a name, what a girl, what a resurrection.

So don’t hesitate to fondle our new little sister with moist fingertips; after all, 2011 will be the year of Wenke-Udo-Arschaar-Harry. Nowhere else will you undoubtedly get such a competent and up-to-date selection of sparkling dance music delivered to you. Extra-long mixtapes and frivolous self-discoveries and lovely nude pictures and big little films and anyway, everything over there is wonderful. Freshly served every day at WENKEWHO. Just one click away.

Patrick Wolf: The City

Scandal on the Net: Mobbed-Up Blogs

When keeping a digital diary slowly became fashionable a few years ago and even the most diverse characters of German society began writing about pets, computers, and marital problems, many players of the net revolution soon realized that you could surely make some money with it. The first blogs with advertising banners were frowned upon, ostracized—something so private shouldn’t be monetized.

Today, advertising from companies and products on blogs is common practice. Many earn a decent bit of pocket money on the side through placing ads; a few can practically live from it alone. Advertising is accepted as long as it is labeled as such, but if professional writer Sascha Pallenberg is to be believed, the blogging scene is heading toward a full-blown advertising scandal.

More than one hundred German blogs are said to have systematically engaged in covert advertising. Paid links, hidden ads, bought opinions—all to deliberately mislead their visitors. “These are primarily blogs with 500 to 2,000 visitors per day,” explains Pallenberg. “They were supposed to write posts, for example about trips to Tenerife or hotels in Paris, and include links to the corresponding pages of well-known travel providers or hotel search engines.”

The bloggers received around 30 to 70 euros per embedded link. From a German company that specializes precisely in this dubious business. “For that they had to sign a gag contract, while the company itself presumably collected three to four times as much.” The top rule of the contract was: do not talk about the cooperation. Anyone who broke the agreement would have to pay around 5,000 euros in penalties. Everything served only to boost the Google PageRank for buyers.

Pallenberg has both the gag contract and a list of the purchased blogs, which he intends to evaluate and publish in censored form in the coming weeks. “It was like publishing a Swiss tax CD,” he writes. “We received countless emails from bloggers who turned themselves in and regretted having taken part in the campaign.”

It is understandable that bloggers want to be paid for their efforts and try out various types of monetization, but hidden advertising leads readers by the nose and steals credibility and freedom of opinion from the blogosphere as a whole. We at AMY&PINK also received emails yesterday asking whether we were involved in this obscure campaign.

First of all, we can confidently deny that, and secondly clarify that we label every banner and every article for which we are paid by a company as such. And there are absolutely no bought links here.

Nevertheless, we would be very interested in your opinion on this explosive topic: How bad do you really think it is when advertising on blogs is not labeled as such? Articles about great products, bargains, websites. Or do you not really care? And to the bloggers out there: do you really always mention when certain posts are paid for by companies?

Update: As it turned out, Onlinekosten.de, operator of the well-known blog Basic Thinking, is the client behind the gag contracts. However, they do not believe they are at fault.

Cloud Nothings: Should Have

Nokia Smart Styles: Models Wanted

The Smartstyles events by Nokia are entering the second round after their visit to Fashion Week in Berlin. Next, the beautiful Bavarian capital Munich will have the pleasure of enjoying young designers and selected collections. Garnished with exciting photo shoots, great people, and the unique chance to become part of a national advertising campaign.

And for that, charismatic models are still being sought who embody the style of an entire generation and are eager to live it out in front of the camera. Star photographer Yves Borgwardt will photograph good-looking guys and girls for the product promotion of the new Nokia C7 smartphone in great designs and bring their faces onto posters, banners, and television. And you can be part of it.

Just spruce yourselves up a little, put on your favorite clothes, and drop by from January 27 to January 29, 2011 at the Serie A Shop at Hildegardstrasse 2 in 80539 Munich. With a bit of luck, you might soon see your adorable face on a gigantic billboard or in a commercial. And who wouldn’t want that? The last opportunity to take part in the event will be from February 3 to February 5, 2011 in Düsseldorf. And here you can see a few great impressions from Berlin:


© Allet ohne Schminke


© Katja Hentschel


© Les Attitudes

This is a sponsored article by Nokia.

Revolution in Egypt: People Are Dying

It was only a small note on the American social news website Reddit that testified to the emergence of a revolution in Egypt. “Please help us spread this message around the world,” writes an anonymous user there. “In our country, people are taking to the streets. Twitter is blocked and Facebook will soon follow. People are dying here!” Up to that point, neither CNN nor Al Jazeera had reported on the uprisings.

Fueled by the upheavals in Tunisia, the inhabitants of the African state are seizing the moment to fight against oppression and for greater freedom in their own country. They are particularly concerned with reinstating the right to hold public assemblies. The president should not remain at the head of the state for more than two terms in order to prevent abuse of power. In addition, they are demanding a minimum wage, the lifting of the state of emergency that has been in place for over 30 years, and the dismissal of several ministers.

Tens of thousands of demonstrators took to the streets in Cairo alone yesterday to voice their demands. This marks the largest revolution in generations in Egypt, and the government knows it—blocking internet and phone connections to make coordination among the crowds more difficult and unleashing police forces on the insurgents. At least three people died during clashes with state authorities overnight, and according to unconfirmed reports, part of the president’s family has already fled to Great Britain.

The enraged Egyptians are determined to defend their lives against oppression, corruption, and unemployment, and are prepared to make sacrifices for it. Should they succeed, there will be yet another country that has made itself heard thanks to digital freedom, united and risen together against injustice. We wish them every success.

Super Styles: Pretty in Pink


Where the hell are we even supposed to start here? Maybe with the fact that half of Berlin walks around like this. The pants, the earrings, the knitwear, the beanie, the necklace… even that blue bag gets on our nerves in a skillful way. But why…?!
My call last week for the mass purchase of hoodies must have inspired dear Kelly in particular. She’s already thinking about spring and has found the perfect blend of fashion and ventilation. A role model?
Even heavily pregnant style icons don’t have to give up looking good in the months before their water breaks. Dark accessories like a bow, necklace, and nail polish go perfectly with the white top. Too bad I’m not the father.
Haven’t we all asked ourselves this at some point? Love or sex? In bright yellow? And with pink pants that try to distract from this earth-shattering message. But we won’t be deterred, damn it. Love or sex? Love? Or? Sex?!
You’re fat, hairy, and not exactly young anymore? But you still want to do well with the ladies? Then grab a stretched-out T-shirt from a popular soft drink manufacturer today and pull it over your belly.
Guys, let’s be honest. Are those black hipster horn-rimmed glasses really still in? Seriously? Uh… Oh come on… That can’t possibly be true… To calm myself down, I’ll make an appointment with the eye doctor for tomorrow…
It’s scientifically proven: anyone who wears black horn-rimmed glasses for more than two years ends up like Satoshi. So either take them off or start looking for a stylish alternative to the eye you’ll soon be missing.
Although I have no idea what Vashtie actually does for a living, I’m still a big fan of hers. Something with music and videos, I guess. And because she’s incredibly cool, she can wear whatever she wants. Forever. And ever.
The yellow pants on that long-haired Tarzan double will probably burn themselves into my sweet subconscious and haunt me in absurd nightmares. Including goth skaters and red lips. How creepy.

Massive Attack: Live With Me

[flv:livewithme.mp4 livewithme.jpg 940 529]

M.I.A. Speaks Out: My Latest Album Sucked

When British artist M.I.A. sang her way into the deepest corners of our hearts with songs like “Paper Planes” and “Bucky Done Gun,” channeling the spirit of a wild Sri Lankan renegade through two brilliant albums, it was hard to foresee that the now 35-year-old would disappoint us so badly with her third work. But now, at an official press conference, she admitted it herself: “My last album sucked.”

“I know that many of you felt that my last album titled ‘// / Y /’ was really, really, really terrible,” Mathangi “Maya” Arulpragasam began her statement. “I listened to it again recently and yes… in the end I have to agree with you. I know that I will never belong to the mainstream. I understand that. It’s time for me to return to my roots.”

We’re not sure whether we should cheer for her or take her into our arms to comfort her, but the message itself awakens indescribably beautiful feelings and hopes within us. Let’s hope that M.I.A. takes enough time and frees her mind for her upcoming fourth album—and let’s delete the trash with the worst title of all time from our music libraries today.

The Age Limit of Love: Younger Is Better?

Women grow older, men grow more attractive. A universal truth that doesn’t come out of nowhere. While the prime of female beauty hovers around their 30th birthday and after that they increasingly have to deal with wrinkles, sagging breasts, and menopause, the lords of creation mature into riper, wiser men who, with silver-shimmering hair and a sexy deep voice, make the world they walk upon tremble. Uncle Hubert with a beer belly, bald head, and potency problems excluded—he simply doesn’t count. He never counts.

Another fact of everyday life is the attraction older guys have for younger girls. And vice versa. In a relationship, the older boyfriend is still the rule, an older girlfriend rather the exception. But how far may a man lower the age limit of his beloved without summoning the warning bells of his conscience, the displeasure of society at large, or even the police at his doorstep?

Lothar Matthäus regularly gets it on with Ariadne. He is 49, she 23. Bruce Willis is 55, his girlfriend Emma 33. And Hugh Hefner, at 84, climbs on top of every stray girl who wanders in front of the steel gates of his villa. And I, now 27 years old, must openly admit that I have rarely been in bed with a girl who was older than me. Let alone in a relationship.

Why men get involved with younger women is no big secret. They are firmer, radiate more zest for life, innocence, sex. Girls, on the other hand, seek protection, experience, and—of course—money in older partners. Two worlds that seem to fit together perfectly and are socially accepted. At least as long as the age difference doesn’t go beyond a certain limit and—much more importantly—is not suddenly reversed.

Nevertheless, aside from firm breasts and tight genitals, being an aging man with an 18-year-old brat can become quite exhausting. Physically, if she is simply fitter. Mentally, if she is still inexperienced. And generally, if her curiosity- and adventure-driven horizon is not so compatible with the world of obligations and appointments that dominates her benefactor’s life.

We are therefore looking for a lower age limit that should be respected. Somewhere between child molester and granny fondler. A kind of self-control for love affairs. So guys and girls, what was the biggest age difference in your relationships so far? Did it work or not? Are there—despite all the horniness—people you left standing at a party because they were objectively too young or too old, even if subjectively it felt different? Or is all of this irrelevant and you take whatever you can get your hands on—whether it’s a one-night stand or a relationship?

Sam Hiscox: Shoot Me In The Face

Jake Davis: One Day In Your Life

[flv:oneday.mp4 oneday.jpg 940 529]

The Issue with Drugs: When Uniqueness Becomes Habit

In Berlin there are three sights to see. The TV Tower, the Brandenburg Gate, and dealers. Once you have truly arrived in the city emotionally, it doesn’t take long before you meet someone. And that person knows someone who knows someone. Before you know it, you find yourself with two or three people at a guy around the corner. He smiles kindly. We chat a bit about life and girlfriends and death, he presses a few little bags into our hands and swings onto his bike. Until next time.

In 2009, 1,331 people died from drug abuse. The capital ranks at the top nationwide year after year. Of course, that doesn’t stop anyone here from consuming them anyway. The party nights in the trendy districts of the once-divided metropolis are exhausting, loud, draining. Without speed, LSD, or ecstasy, no one can endure that for long. Illegal or not—you just have to know where to get it. And how.

No one sees themselves as addicted. Popping pills or snorting powder through various bodily openings is simply part of it, like holding a Red Bull Sugarfree in your hand and having falafel in your stomach. To get pumped up, okay. To feel good. To drive away the fatigue. In the heart and in the head. Lying destroyed in a corner as a junkie—that doesn’t fit the imagined epic night. Yet each of us knows former friends who didn’t make it out and ended up as soulless victims trapped in the clutches of mind-altering substances.

To demonize drugs as a whole and label them as a niche product for addicts and losers seems easy, but it doesn’t do justice to reality. They are firmly anchored in every layer of society and have been tempting people for thousands of years in a wide spectrum. Whether as beer, cigarettes, or heroin. The intention to deny them power may be well meant by law, but it only elicits a tired smile from many.

A little experimentation is fine. We only live once, after all. What’s the worst that could happen? Once this, once that. It can’t hurt. It becomes problematic when that uniqueness turns into habit. Regular uniqueness. When we’re already snorting a line Tuesday morning with our fruit muesli. Just to see what’s up. When we misuse funny smiley pills as motivation aids just to finally get off our asses again. Or when smoking weed takes up more time than cooking, doing laundry, and masturbating combined.

As with all potentially addictive traits of this existence, it is important to maintain balance. Between trying and consuming. Between playing and needing. Between living and dying. Because if we entrust our future to a power that can permanently fuck up our consciousness, we not only have to be ready to bear the consequences. We are also obliged to constantly maintain the balance. Between uniqueness and habit. And not just for ourselves.

Mixtape: Back To Summer

It felt to us as if summer this year had only taken possession of a few short days. Sunshine, heat waves, skimpy tops—all of that once again belongs to the past. Because winter is knocking at the door again. So there’s nothing left for us to do but bring the tropical months back to mind with evening RTL2 shows and the mixtape “Back To Summer.” Featuring Miike Snow, The National, and Mark Ronson.

The Naked And Famous: All Of This Forever

[flv:allofthis.mp4 allofthis.jpg 940 529]

Your Weekend: Ten Little Missions

While Fashion Week is currently raging in Berlin and stylish gentlemen and soulless hipsters are shaking hands, we’re sitting on the second floor of our three-euro residence with cheap wine and greasy pizza, watching “Ghostbusters,” “Misfits,” and the weather forecast. Suddenly a man with a beard and no pants storms into the room, holding two tablets in his bloody hands and shouting at the top of his lungs: “Behold, these are your ten commandments! For the weekend. Fulfill every task and you will go straight to heaven! And now hand over the pizza.” You heard the man, let’s go.

One. Bid on the domain nerdcore.de on eBay and turn it into a specialty shop for organic fruit from South Africa. Two. Get on the next subway wearing shorts, sandals, and holding a vanilla ice cream, and spread a bit of summer feeling. Bonus points if you’re a mobile kid and play some reggae. Three. Don’t touch yourself all weekend and experience a more intense orgasm on Monday. Does not count with multi-sexual options. Four. Buy a few Furbys at the flea market and set them on fire in the street. Five. Look at Indira’s boobs while they’re still good.

Six. Suck a little on your armpits. Supposedly the new trend in Sweden. Seven. Acquire a piece of land far outside the city, build yourself a fallout shelter there, and then wait for World War III. We can throw epic parties there on the weekend. Eight. Kidnap Lykke Li and make her perform at a private concert until the police storm your basement. Nine. Sleep with a buddy and then whisper in his ear, “Your lips tasted like döner and were as soft as warm flatbread.” Ten. Plant a tree. You should at least be able to manage that.

Nintendo 3DS: Touching Super Mario

Before I held my first Mac in my hands, Nintendo was my one true religion—our ethics teacher Mr. Schubert couldn’t change that either. Every beautiful memory that had nothing to do with baked cheese, colorful drug trips, or sexual experiences was somehow connected to the Japanese company. Whether it was the cheering applause in the backyard when we caught our first Kangama. Or the rage over the power outage just before defeating Koopa. Or the joy of pushing your closest buddies into the abyss in cold-blooded routine. With Sheek, that is.

Yesterday, in a large live broadcast (which is probably still running in reruns), Nintendo officially presented the successor to the DSi, the Nintendo 3DS, to the North American and European public. Handheld, two screens, with a 3D effect. And without needing special glasses. Sounds good, apparently looks good too, and will be released in Germany on March 25, 2011 for a price somewhere between 199 and 250 euros.

Shortly after launch, not only brand-new games like “Super Street Fighter IV,” “Kid Icarus: Uprising,” or “Pilotwings Resort” will be available. Nintendo also announced that top titles such as “The Legend of Zelda - Ocarina of Time” and “Lylat Wars” will be re-released with updated graphics and a 3D effect. In addition, you can play old DS games on it, and thanks to the “Virtual Console,” you’ll also be able to download classics like “Tetris” and “Super Mario Land” for a fee.

Personally, my fingers are already tingling at the thought of this little gem. Nintendo promised to hold events across Europe as soon as possible, where curious gamers can witness this built-in three-dimensionality for themselves. Now the only question left for us and you is: Buy—or not?

She & Him: Don’t Look Back

[flv:shehim.mp4 shehim.jpg 940 529]

Yorick Nube: Beauty Redefined

Nokia Smart Styles: Models Wanted

You have always been envied by your fellow students for your pretty face, the legendary figure wrapped around your soul makes even seasoned bus drivers crash into traffic jams, and when you look into a mirror, it simply melts away because of your incredible grace? Then you’re exactly right here. Because Nokia is looking for you.

From January 20–22, one of three Smartstyles events will take place in Berlin on the occasion of Fashion Week. Hip designers and young talents will present their clothing collections there, and at the same time Yves Borgwardt will shoot a fashion spread for the Nokia C7 smartphone. And for exactly that, they still need remarkable models who can represent the brand and feel like being part of a nationwide advertising campaign.

Do you feel addressed? Then simply drop by on one of the three days in your favorite outfit at the Nokia Pop-up Fashion Café at Torstrasse 114 in Berlin and have yourself immortalized in professional photos. You might soon see your face on posters all over the country. And that alone makes the short visit worthwhile. So get going.

This is a sponsored article by Nokia.

Jogger: Nephicide

[flv:jogger.mp4 jogger.jpg 940 529]

Skins USA: Americanization Of A Masterpiece

Yesterday MTV presented the first episode of its version of the British cult TV series “Skins” under the sharp eyes of fans, critics, and TV sluts. Including the promise that it would be in no way inferior to the original. First season. Same story. Different characters. And that even though the series had already aired in the USA. Back then still on BBC America.

The modern saga about a group of crazy teenagers fighting their way through parties, sex, and everyday problems is considered a digital snapshot of an entire generation. So it’s no wonder that fans revolted when MTV announced it would reheat the series and serve it up again. Because that’s simply all it is.

Of course, we couldn’t resist taking a personal look at the horror. And after nearly an hour of déjà vu, including what felt like twenty commercial breaks, we’re left with a queasy feeling in our stomachs. Basically, it’s the same story all over again. Just with different people. Minor changes and less soul.

Many dialogues are exactly the same, swear words are stylishly bleeped out, and you search in vain for boobs. Emotions are zero. Effy has been turned into a blonde milk-faced girl. Cassie has dark tousled hair. And the gay Maxxie now has a pussy. Why, nobody knows. As a fan of the British version, you really only have one big word in front of you: “Unnecessary.”

In fact, this fake “Skins” is aimed solely at American teenagers who want to experience nipple- and fuck-free television together with their parents—without character, epicness, or soul. It’s not quite as bad as other MTV programs à la “The Hills” or “Jersey Shore,” but it won’t come close to the quality of the original even in a thousand years. There are worlds between them. Real fans would rather look forward to the fifth season of the British “Skins” coming out at the end of January and steer well clear of the castrated version of a true masterpiece.

Nerdcore vs. Euroweb: The Great Blogger Fisting

Dear internet, you’re always good for a surprise. You slave away for years with your own blog, make it big, pour your heart and soul and your ass sweat into the thing, and then some [legally completely reputable and never even once misbehaving] company comes along and slices you into pieces with a samurai sword. That is exactly what is currently happening to uber geek René and his Star Wars zombie music and awesome-shit site Nerdcore.

He once had a cunning legal dispute with the company Euroweb because he called them “ass violins.” They sent him a cease-and-desist letter, and he didn’t take care of it. As of just now, the domain nerdcore.de belongs to them. No one knows why. René himself states via his Twitter account: “Just to make it clear: Euroweb is right and this is all justiciable whatever and it will be GREAT!” Whatever that may mean.

As a blogger who has invested years of his life into such a project, I personally would have turned into a bursting fireball after this move, responding with the full force of the law, terrorist special units, and disgusting pizza pranks. What exactly happened between Nerdcore and Euroweb is probably known only to the two of them. But we are sure that these chunks of secrets will soon be uncovered. Until then, you can reach Nerdcore at Crackajack.

Knocks the Internet Out: The Triforce Guide For Blogging

Thanks to AMY&PINK, I’ve already experienced many great adventures, met a bunch of amazing people, and earned more and more cash. Trend for all three points: rising. That’s why many people want tips from me. How to do it right. How to blog. What the optimal path is to turn your website into something big, outstanding, and commercially successful. And I can only say: I have no idea. But I know how it worked for AMY&PINK.

That’s why I want to explain to all of you who are planning to launch an awesome blog the three points that helped me immensely. All the crap I spout here semi-professionally comes solely from my own experience. It doesn’t come from any social media expert. Or SEO clown. Or internet guru. Although I’m probably slowly mutating into a gruesome and fat hybrid of all three.

Don’t take everything literally. Because anyone who wants any kind of success online has to find their own way. Always. Every tip is just meant to give you guidance and show you how it worked for AMY&PINK — and still works. And if you’re wimps who absolutely insist on having an independent blog without commerce and advertising and outside influences, then I forbid you to read any further. This guide is only for people with balls who want to make damn money with their project, build contacts, and make something happen.

THE THREE GOLDEN POINTS

Burn these three golden points into your brain, tattoo them on your genitals, staple them on a big sheet of paper above your bed. Because they are important. Probably the most important things after your family and world peace. Try to internalize and execute all three as optimally, individually, and with a clear conscience as possible. They are the be-all and end-all for a blog that crushes the fat asses of your competition into the ground. Guaranteed.


Before you even think about sidebars, Facebook integration, and valid code, you need to hammer out a solid image. This undertaking is divided into two steps. The first step is your own image — how should people on the web see you? The second step is the image of your site — how does your blog come across? Both images go hand in hand but should still be distinguishable individually.

YOUR IMAGE

Anyone who wants to make something happen on the internet has either developed a certain image over the years or adopted one right away with which they roam around online. Marcel is the trash-talking asshole, René the all-knowing uber-nerd, Clara the wired-up drug chick. No one presents themselves on the internet exactly as they really are. And that’s not a bad thing. Of course, you can consciously break this image from time to time, but it’s really fun to create an online identity out of your personality mixed with wishful thinking, expectations, and sex appeal.

What are your hobbies, preferences, what city do you live in? What kind of people do you like to surround yourself with, what music do you listen to, what films do you watch, what’s your favorite food? Build an image out of every tiny detail of how you want to present yourself online from now on. It should fit you. Be interesting, but not seem too forced. Internalize it, but remain human and believable. That’s important. And have fun. That’s even more important.

THE IMAGE OF YOUR BLOG

This is totally simple. Because: 1. The image of your blog has to align with the one you just created for yourself. Obviously. Otherwise it gets ridiculous. 2. Create a simple positioning triangle. Educated people know this from school, losers are learning it now. Draw a triangle on a sheet of paper and put one selected blog you think is awesome at each of the three corners. Or a website. Or a magazine. All three must differ thematically. Otherwise it’s pointless.

For example: at the top a big music blog, on the left a trendy hipster magazine, on the right a pseudo-serious article publication. Then simply place your new blog in the center. From now on, this is your world, and the boundaries of the triangle are yours as well. From this point forward, your pitiful life consists of sucking up the best from all three corners, chewing it up again, polishing it, coating it with your own slime, and blasting it back out into the wide world.


Your design is the first thing people notice about your presence. And that’s damn important. For two reasons: 1. For visitors, who need to be blown away by what they see. So they come back, tell their friends and contacts about it, link to it, and proudly say: “Dude, I totally discovered that, so awesome.”

But especially for the people who want to throw money into the web at all costs. And want to use your site for that purpose. Agencies, companies, millionaires. Each of them gives your blog exactly one chance to make cash. They want to advertise with you or sell something or raffle something off. That’s why your site has to look awesome every single second. It has to appear in the browser and immediately be in your face. Understood?

The name is also important. Write a few compact ideas on a piece of paper. Possibly a mix of two hip words that reflect your identity, sound great, and are easy to remember. At the same time, always check whether that name is still available as a domain. For example at GoDaddy. Get yourself a .com domain + webspace. For example at 1&1 or Strato.

Look around at website galleries like CSS Drive and Urban Trash to see what you like. Do you want more of a blog or a magazine? Light or dark? With bright colors or not? That’s all up to you. The main thing: it burns itself into your visitors’ eyes and has high recognition value. And in a positive way. Sketch a concept on paper, then design it nicely in Photoshop and show it to people who know their stuff. By the way, I recommend a healthy mix of blog and magazine.

Rent some webspace. With PHP5 and that kind of stuff. Blogspot and the hosted version of Wordpress are for softies. Or for totally cute fashion girls (so I don’t ruin my chances with them now...). Then download a proper Wordpress package, upload it to your server, and install it. Competent help is available in the Wordpress forum.

If you have no clue about all the technical stuff, then get someone who does. Because if you’ve never heard of FTP, CSS, and PHP, then someone has to step in and turn your Photoshop file into functional code. Pay that someone. Or give him lots of beer. Or let him sleep with your girlfriend. Provided you have one and she’s pretty.


Once you’ve built yourself an image and a design, the biggest hurdle comes — the one where 99% of your competitors (or fellow players, however you see them) fail: consistency. Success doesn’t come overnight. The better you’ve implemented the previous two points, the more upward momentum you’ll get. But staying at the top — that’s on you.

Get yourself a feed reader (e.g., Google Reader or Vienna) and fill it with blogs and sites that cover your thematic world quickly and consistently. Preferably foreign ones, that’s where the freshest input comes from. Organize them into categories like fashion, music, art, etc. From now on, go through them several times a day and pull out the articles you can reuse.

If you look at successful blogs like Spreeblick, Les Mads, and Nerdcore, you’ll notice one common feature: they constantly put out new content. Imitate them. Ideally, you should publish 3–5 articles per day. Spread out over the entire day. On weekends you can ease up a bit. But be careful: don’t become a mindless content-dumping blog. Give your articles a soul, add your own style, and rotate topics nicely. Never three music videos in a row.

Sometimes a text, sometimes a photo spread, personal, objective, long and short. It always has to keep moving, always be varied. Find your own rhythm in writing. And stay true to your defined thematic world. Otherwise your identity will blur. Create your own page on Twitter and Facebook to increase your reach and communicate with readers.

FINAL WORD

Now comes the usual blah blah. You have to enjoy what you’re doing, love it, always strive for something higher. Otherwise it won’t work. If you don’t love your blog, don’t live it, then you’ve already screwed up. You need to dream about your logo, touch yourself while looking at your site, want world domination. And much more. Try your luck, be diligent and good. And bless the blogosphere with a new, well-thought-out, never-before-seen project that we’re happy to welcome into our ranks. If you don’t have what it takes: better just leave it.

Super Styles: Pretty in Pink


Above the waist she looks pretty cute. The sweet hairband and the shirt. In combination with the black jacket. Below, horror awaits. White pulled-up socks, a big tattoo, her legs really tight. Comes from cycling.
With braces I was never quite sure. Are they pedophilic, ugly, cute? A mix of everything? At the latest after Lisa Plenske, all 12-year-old pimple faces were proud of theirs. So let’s just give it a thumbs up.
In autumn 2007 half of Berlin wore a gray hoodie. That was before pseudo-hipsters invaded and turned horn-rimmed glasses, patent shoes and zombie bodies into a cult. That was a great time – for girls and for boys. So buy more hoodies. Please.
The guy with the red tie is called Jerry. I know that. He doesn’t understand much fun, but places great value on his appearance. Kind of like SpongeBob SquarePants. And then you’ll quickly guess who the one next to him is.
These enchanting legs in these even more enchanting sneakers. Oh God, I would also throw myself at the dog first before I’m allowed to lick her sun-tanned stilts. Really. Give me the dog!
Christo’s big brother is into hairy lumberjacks, loves cozy walks together on the beach and will also unexpectedly drop his pants when you just turn around briefly. Although… Christo doesn’t even have a brother.
Hehe look, a walking palm tree. Oh he’s cute. Okay, okay. Actually I’m just insanely jealous because I was a fat little kid and this cork here spoon-fed awesomeness and probably still gets to nurse at mom’s breasts.
Her look reveals that she has cried, the pose is hurt, protective, her soul broken… But let’s rather talk about her shirt. It’s so beautiful. Blue with red accents and white lines. Divine, I simply have to have it.
Okay, everyone stay calm now. Yes, she’s probably the most beautiful girl in the world, but that doesn’t mean you’re allowed to drool all over your mobile devices. Besides, this is about styles and we’re only discussing her pink top.

Axe Excite: Even Angels Will Fall – Leads Even Angels into Temptation

[flv:axe.mp4 axe.jpg 940 529]

Yesterday our uberbuddy MC Winkel premiered this awesome new AXE commercial “Leads Even Angels into Temptation” on his site and when we look at the enchanting girls in the clip, our mouths are still hanging open. Unfortunately, we’re arguing intensely internally about who exactly is the hottest of them and that’s precisely why we’re now leaving this extremely important question to you. So: Which of the angels do you like best?

Simply copy the name of the one you find the hottest into the comments and among all submissions, including a valid email address, we’ll raffle off 100 euros. Cash in hand! Closing date is Sunday, January 23, 2011. And now go: Who is the hottest angel?


Magda Klebanska
Iva Grdic
Josipa Jankovic
Betty Adewole
Sara Sampaio
Frances Phillips

This is a sponsored article by Axe.

Amanda Palmer: Map of Tasmania

[flv:amanda.mp4 amanda.jpg 940 529]

Mixtape: Never Wake Up

What could be nicer on a Monday morning than going to work or to university? Exactly: washing dogs, kicking traffic lights, fighting Scientology, washing shirts, gluing plates, setting clocks, filling cupboards, drinking vodka, smoking shisha, organizing folders, playing Wii, messing up kitchens, kissing people, making beds, storming swimming pools, peeing on streets, kicking Nazis, watering flowers, quitting jobs, having sex, experiencing adventures. Or simply: listening to mixtapes.

Nicki Blue: One Virgin Less

Tomorrow is not just any random Saturday. No, what are you thinking. Tomorrow is the day Nicki will be deflowered. And live. On the internet. And the whole world can watch. The event is a tricky promotional stunt by the American porn site Kink.com, whose founder Peter Acworth is a crazy eccentric.

Nicki “Nikki” Blue herself also has quite a shadow. According to IMDb, the blonde thing is already 33 years old and has already appeared in various hardcore anal films such as “True Anal Stories 3” and “Euro Angels 10: Anal Decadence” in various open supporting roles, but is still basically a virgin.

If that’s not suspicious enough for you, you might enjoy the fact that shortly before the act a technician will insert a camera into the soon-to-be-non-virgin’s vagina so that the curious public, which previously chose the potential rammer by voting, can watch the bursting of the hymen live.

With this story, the internet has once again proven that it is capable of more than just engaging in political bashing and spreading unfunny memes across the wide world. Or something like that. So if you want to be there when an old hag is deflowered live on the internet and don’t care about getting enough sleep, you should get enough body lotion ready and click around on Saturday night at The Upper Floor.

Update: According to The Upper Floor, Nicki is only 21 years old.

Michael J. Fox: Back To The Future

Euer Wochenende: Ten Little Missions

We are writing the 23rd of August, 2076. The war over the last can of Red Bull has brought misery and death to many peoples out there. Udo and I have joined a rebellious sub-organization of the pink unicorn to fight for peace and justice in Radio Active City. Our last chance: the search for the holy stake. We are sending this message into the past to remind you that this apocalyptic future could be prevented — if you successfully complete all ten missions this weekend. We believe in you!

One. Report your ex’s new boyfriend to the police as a suspected terrorist. Hero bonus if you don’t do it anonymously. Two. Hand out free condoms at the retirement home. Don’t be averse to a live demonstration. Three. Remember the good old days when you used to get wet panties from American Apparel ads. Four. Finally earn some money and give some of it to your mom. Five. Adopt a child and name it Borgius. Then take good care of Borgius.

Six. Take off your clothes. Seven. Check out the latest trailer for the new season of “Skins” and boycott the copied U.S. version with all your might. Eight. Eat more tomatoes. The whole world should eat more tomatoes! Nine. Send the nearest teacher little love letters on a regular basis. Mean it. Ten. Ring the doorbells of Jehovah’s Witnesses holding the current issue of the official “DSDS” magazine in your hand. Then ask them if they believe in Bohlen.

Dirty Vegas: Electric Love

[flv:electriclove.mp4 electriclove.jpg 940 529]

Relationship Killer: What’s Cheating For You

In each of my previous relationships, the term “cheating” was given a different meaning. On a hot summer day, I once rode my first great love Jasmin’s best friend home on my bike. Her name was Tina and she lived in a high-rise complex on the outskirts of town. We gave each other a small kiss on the lips and she disappeared into the hallway. I was 15. And my relationship with Jasmin was over.

My next girlfriend Susanne and I would have been grateful for any simple kiss that might have saved our relationship. During our entire time together, we cheated on each other into the ground. Out of revenge. I no longer remember exactly who started with the extramarital sex, but in the one and a half years we fucked our way through school trips, tutoring sessions, and hotel internships with friend and foe alike — only to swear eternal love to each other again in the evening and think about the chances of the future.

Breaking up with her in my early twenties wasn’t easy, but distractions followed in abundance. And whether it was Sabrina, Regina, or Steffi — each of them had a different definition of “cheating,” which I, thanks to my often very erratic nature, fully tested. “You thought about someone else?” Over. “You held her hand?” Over. “You slobbered over her genitals?” Over.

No wonder so many relationships fall apart when no valid boundaries are set and learned patterns of behavior are reset with every new commitment. Jasmin never forgave me for the kiss with Tina, Susi eventually won the cheating marathon with a grin on her face, and Sabrina, Regina, and Steffi still don’t speak a single word to me today. So if I ever start another relationship with a girl, I already know the question I will ask her on our first date: What is cheating for you?

Simpsons Porn: Yellow Cartoon Sex

[flv:simpsonsporn.mp4 simpsonsporn.jpg 940 529]

Soundcheck: Albums Of The Week – The Albums of the Week


N.E.R.D. - The Best Of
Pharrell Williams and his crew were the heroes of my youth. Always a few tight bitches on their arms, huge houses on “MTV Cribs,” and racy lyrics that made your grandma’s panties burst. Unfortunately, all “Best of” albums are reheated shit, but if you want to listen to the fattest hits from N.E.R.D. once again, this record gives you the chance to do so.

Amazon | iTunes


JJ - Kills
The Swedish indie band has never been particularly skilled in terms of craftsmanship. However, JJ convinces more through powerful lyrics, selected samples, and incisive melodies. And so we have no choice but to sit in front of our speakers and pray. For world peace. A better future for our children. And sex. Or something.

Free download


Gorillaz - The Fall
The new record by the exceptional group Gorillaz was produced exclusively on Apple’s penis extension, the iPad — and that’s exactly how it sounds. Not a single distinctive song, not even an approximate masterpiece like “Clint Eastwood” or “Dirty Harry.” In return, they’re giving the thing away for free. A successful compromise, but for good music we would have gladly put something on the table.

Free download


Chromeo - Business Casual
The guy with the long beard and his somewhat nerdy buddy are among the electro faces of the moment — even though they pump out pussy tracks nonstop. The entire album “Business Casual” is a cheerful bang for having fun. In the club. At home. With the family. It’s kind of fun, but in the long run you just want something harder.

Amazon | iTunes


Salem - King Night
Anyone who puts on “King Night” should prepare for a direct trip to hell. This genetically modified creature of rough electro and raw voices slaughters any life around you and captures you with its pure soul-fuck. Once you’ve listened from start to finish, you will never enjoy your existence again. Promise.

Amazon | iTunes


Peach Kelli Pop - Peach Kelli Pop
The 22-year-old peach-faced girl named Peach, Kelli, or rather Allie has made her own album. With sweet tracks that make your genitals want to puke and send every music critic to the grave. But that’s exactly what makes “Peach Kelli Pop” and probably what makes it seem so special. Not a must-have, but a gem that’s worth it. In a strange kind of way.

Order now

Gotham High: Batman’s Recess – Batman’s Big Break

Bruce is brand new at Gotham High. His acne is giving him trouble, he spends his nights tossing and turning with daydreams, and his fascination with technology quickly turns him into the nerd among his classmates. His guardian Alfred Pennyworth knows about the great potential of the future Batman, but first he is forced to face his biggest adventure yet: surviving life at high school!

What sounds like the secret wish of a neglected pizza-face in one of those disgusting MTV reality shows could almost have become reality as a comic series. The concept for “Gotham High” was already in place, the story, the first artworks. Everything came from drawing gurus Celeste Green and Jeffrey Thomas, who almost managed to convince DC.

All the villains and friends of the future superhero would have been reduced to cute students with strengths and weaknesses. Cheerleaders, outsiders, sluts. And as long as they didn’t also randomly start singing songs about their painful heartbreak or the upcoming music festival in the hallways, I would have somehow found the whole thing really awesome. Unfortunately, the project sank and was never realized.

via The Daily What

Deerhoof: Super Duper Rescue Heads

[flv:deer.f4v deer.jpg 940 529]

Super Styles: Pretty in Pink


Oh my God, if any girl loves mirrors, then it’s definitely this specimen here. It’s probably because of her white top. Or the huge pants. Or the small breasts. Or maybe she’s simply just conceited.


Okay, girls. It’s up to you. Who’s allowed to squeeze your cat? Left or right? Who should father your children? Left or right? Or even better: who is less repulsive? Left? Or right?


If we had to squeeze the coolness of an entire style generation into one person, then this human here would have optimal chances of being it. The hair, the little legs, the look. It hardly gets any cooler. But maybe it’s just the weather.


My ex-girlfriend once had a German Shepherd. His name was Rex. One evening I burst into her room and caught the two of them in an unfavorable position. She told me she was checking him for ticks. But I didn’t believe her.


We honestly can’t decide whether we find this cute or simply label it as creepy. Dead rabbits. Emergency medical eye patches. A fluffy tail. All right. It’s creepy.


The darkness slowly settles over my heart and shrouds my soul with the scent of impending death. Surely I press the shiny blade into my flesh, the veins pulsate, the blood splashes... I need to get out of here.


New Jersey sluts practically overflow with style, sublimity, and virginity. Their internationally recognized naturalness is surpassed only by their unique way of suggesting shame and modesty. And nobody in their vicinity considers their life-sized tattoos cheap. Um… fuck?


The hot button is about to strike. So, people: what does this girl have on her T-shirt? Come on, guys, 250 euros could be yours! We’re playing for only 34 more minutes. The hot button could go off at any moment. Okay, we’re raising it to 500 euros. We just need the answer. Go!


Pink hair only looks good on three percent of the population. Unfortunately, punk grandmas, Marzahn Mandys, and rutting Rolfs don’t stick to that. They think a pink hairstyle makes them look younger and more individual. And not simply ugly and embarrassing.

Foxx on Fire: Vicious Satellite

[flv:foxx.mp4 foxx.jpg 940 529]

Mark Zuckerberg at the End: Facebook Dies in March

This news spread across the internet yesterday like wildfire and, alongside laughter, also caused tears and anger. “Facebook has gotten completely out of control. The stress of running this company has ruined my life. I have to end this madness,” Mark Zuckerberg is said to have stated, according to the satirical magazine Weekly World News, announcing March 15, 2011 as the date for Facebook’s end. All photos, videos, and messages are to be deleted. “Anyone who wants to keep their data,” said Avrat Humarthi, Vice President of the technical department, “should remove it from the web.”

The fact that the source had previously been known for headlines such as “Aliens will attack Earth in 2011” and “Megan Fox is a man” did not stop thousands of users from venting their anger about the impending shutdown of their favorite website. “What the hell am I supposed to do now?” student Denise Bradshaw is quoted as saying. “I spend ten hours a day on Facebook. I can’t even handle that much impending free time.”

In order to quickly get a handle on the rumor, which had been cobbled together from dubious Google trend analyses, Facebook has now playfully denied the fake interview: “We were not informed that we are shutting down and have a lot of work to do.” Five hundred million Facebook junkies are likely to receive this news with relief and gratitude, yet the question remains: Would we survive an abrupt end to the successful network right now?

Mixtape: Fire In My Hand

The blue sky is vomiting itself over Berlin and the weekend—dominated by expired Federweißer, funny paperbacks, and lesbian pasts—is gently and quietly bidding farewell to the afterlife. The perfect moment, then, to give yourselves a proper scrub behind the ears and venture back out into that little world out there. Ideally with our mixtape “Fire In My Hand” in your ear canals—however you technically manage that.

Eudes de Santana: The Fat Years Are Over

Your Weekend: Ten Little Missions

At last those stressful Christmas days are over. And holidays. And birthdays. Now there’s almost a whole year of nothing but work, routine, and dull highlights ahead. And you’re right in the middle of it. To sweeten your weekend at least a little and give it some meaning, we’ve dragged the “Ten Little Missions” out of their winter break and are giving you a new chance to check off all ten points over these two and a half days. The more you accomplish, the more karma and physical love you’ll receive. I swear, dude.

One. Build a time machine and travel straight to the year 1937. Show Uncle Adolf a full episode of “We Are Family” and he’ll reconsider the whole world war thing. Promise. Two. Steal a grand and surprise Sara during sexual intercourse in Australia. Imagine the look on her face. Three. Publicly and indulgently sniff a few wholegrain rice cakes. Breathe loudly and filthily while doing it. Four. Throw a few Chicken McNuggets onto the local main street and then shout loudly: “When will this mass animal extinction finally stop?!” Drop to your knees to heighten the drama. Five. Buy the old new Juli album “In Love.” I like Juli.

Six. Take a few high-resolution nude photos of your current girlfriend. You never know when it might be over. Seven. Immediately send the snapshots to us. Eight. Beat up a few Nazis. They deserve it in winter too, after all. Nine. Check every now and then whether your secondary sexual organs are still there. They steal just about anything these days. Ten. Don’t forget to watch “Deutschland sucht den Superstar” and “Jungle Camp.” Including reruns. And interviews. And follow-up reports. Your life will become so incredibly much better because of it…

Vinnie Who: Accident Or Will

[flv:vinniewho.mp4 vinniewho.jpg 940 529]

Destroyer: Kaputt

[flv:destroyer.f4v destroyer.jpg 940 529]

Happy Birthday Ines: This Lady Gets Old

One joyous day is chasing the next around here. After I myself took a big step closer to death yesterday, our little Ines isn’t holding back and, cheeky as she is, is trying to catch up. Our young lady turns 21 today—and let’s be honest: her best years are now behind her. Stretch marks will soon be knocking at her front door, while in the background the clock is ticking and menopause casts its threatening shadow over her future.

I want to use this moment between fading youth and everlasting old age to thank you. In many ways. For the articles about destroyed Tamagotchis, kissing girls, and dripping terror anxiety. For giving me an unforgettable autumn in Munich. With fucked-up village parties, alcohol in rough quantities, and crushing filthiness. And for the short time in which we were more than just fellow human beings who happen to share the same span of time on this planet. In which we were awesome.

So let’s all welcome Ines together into the club of grown-ups and congratulate her so overwhelmingly for her birthday as is customary at AMY&PINK. With dirty greetings and sincerely meant marriage proposals and lots of love and nasty teasing and pure admiration. Happy Birthday. Drink a big glass of vodka-O for me.

[audio:please.mp3]

Nokia Smart Styles: Designers Wanted

Here it comes, now it’s here. The opportunity for all aspiring fashion designers who no longer want to hide behind the stove but finally want to take their careers into their own hands. After all, the fashion industry is madness; it shines and is full of possibilities to make you really big. And with Nokia we’ve found a partner who can bring you a huge step closer to the goal of a dazzling future in the clothing circus.

You’re young, talented, and have already designed at least four outfits that you’d like to present over a total of three days as part of the Nokia Street Styles at the end of January and beginning of February in Munich, Berlin, and Düsseldorf? Or you know young designers and fashion school graduates who are simply so brilliant that they finally have to be dragged into the public eye? Then take photos of the collections and your best pieces and throw them into an email with a concise description and send it off to Mail.

With a bit of luck and skill, you and your friends will be invited by Nokia to properly present your work. There will be a big shoot with the gifted photographer Yves Borgwardt, plenty of food and drinks for free, and you might even become part of the next huge advertising campaign that will be launched nationwide and beyond. In plain terms, this means for you: a firework of opportunities that won’t come around again anytime soon.

So show what you’re capable of and soon tour the country with your magnificent pieces. From January 20–22 in Berlin, January 27–29 in Munich, and February 3–5 at a furious finale in Düsseldorf. You can find all further information on this stylish website, and now all that’s left for you is: get up and join in!

This is a sponsored article by Nokia.

Soundcheck: Albums Of The Week




Robyn - Body Talk
The Swede has finally managed to manifest the three EPs she gradually catapulted into the wide world over the past year onto a single album and add a few bonus tracks. Anyone who never particularly liked Robyn won’t change their mind this time either, but for everyone else, “Body Talk” is pure electro-pop ambrosia.

Amazon | iTunes


Ellie Goulding - Bright Lights
Sweet as sugar, rich in melody, yet quite demanding, Ellie Goulding from England burst upon us last year and gave us the pop album of the year with “Bright Lights.” Now a special release of this gem has appeared with plenty of bonus and live tracks. And once again, the 24-year-old skillfully transports us into a luminous musical future. Enthusiastically, we go along.

Amazon | iTunes


Ghostface Killah - Apollo Kids
Okay, if you’ve had enough of pop wimps and indie sluts, you can dive into the ghetto with Ghostface Killah’s new record. Onto the streets. Into the hood. Or something like that. With “Apollo Kids,” we revive the heyday of the Wu-Tang Clan. Haunted by heavy beats and venerable mixes. Perfect for a trip into the problem districts of your state capital.

Amazon | iTunes


Regina Spektor - Live in London
What more can be said about the woman who, with “Samson,” made me lie in bed crying and chew on the blanket in pain. She is great, so great—the voice, everything. “Live in London” isn’t one of those unplugged shams where you constantly hear coughing and murmuring in the background. It’s simply insane. This woman… is insane.

Amazon | iTunes


OFF! - First Four EPs
Buy yourself a studded belt, dye your hair bright colors, and screw the establishment—the anarchy is back! Da fuck! Hard-hitting punk that instantly blasts all the Dieter Bohlen mass-produced crap out of your brain and brings you back down to earth. But you’ll have to crank “First Four EPs” by OFF! up to deadly volume yourself. Until the neighbors bleed.

Amazon | iTunes


Solar Bears - She Was Coloured In
If you’re really fed up and the loud, dirty world out there is seriously getting on your hairy nuts—then put on “She Was Coloured In” by Solar Bears immediately. Atmospheric doodling at its finest. Chill, electronic. Easy listening until you melt away and wish yourself back into your beloved mama’s womb.

Amazon | iTunes

Discodeine: Synchronize

[flv:synchronize.f4v synchronize.jpg 940 529]

Street Styles: Pretty in Pink


Why spend loads of hard-earned money on ridiculously expensive designer clothes when you can simply hang shopping bags on your steely body? Add a hipster beard and chunky shoes and your trendsetter is complete.
She’s afraid of life, you can see it immediately. A protective helmet on top, two huge airbags in front, and her hands almost fearfully held in front of her face. The only question is: who would want to hurt such a pretty girl...?
Snoop Dogg not only teaches the youngest in the country important details about life through his activities in cult porn films, but once a month he also slips into the role of Count Number. And then it begins… 1, 2, 3…
After we stopped selling our parents and relatives for their phone numbers (Grandma is now in a better place), we quietly fell asleep and dreamed of another life in which we’re allowed to smile at her face.
God, I would kill for hair like that. Play with it all day long and only after three hours realize that she’s wearing a naked woman on her shirt. And not exactly a polite one.
Faces, faces, what are faces anyway. The shirt somehow looks stylish, and anyone who has breasts and nipples like that is allowed to hide from the cruel public once in a while. We’re not like that.
I could complain throughout his entire puberty about what went wrong with this boy. The hair, the Hello Kitty necklace, and is he wearing makeup? But you have to give him one thing: the kid has abs...
Stole grandma’s jacket, the jewelry too, probably not the headphones. But that smile, the cigarette casually in hand, roots showing and blue… you just have to melt away.
The dog—do you see the dog too?! Hehe, the way he looks. And with his red shirt. I wonder what he was thinking? How stupid do I look. Probably. Oh, and there’s a pretty cutie hidden somewhere as well.

Majora's Mask: The Best Zelda In The World

Of course, the story of little Link with the green cap and his beloved princess is the greatest video game series the world out there has ever seen. Generations of players had to fight their way through enchanted forests, castles, and water temples in “The Legend of Zelda” on numerous consoles until they finally held the Triforce in their hands, awakened a whale, or simply saved the magical world of Hyrule. And each of us considers a different episode to be the best part of the series. Usually led by “Ocarina of Time,” “A Link To The Past,” or “Link’s Awakening.”

Unfortunately, there are only a handful of people out there who honor “Majora’s Mask” for what it truly is in my eyes: the most creative, most inspiring, and most alternative installment. Because it’s by no means about the 08/15 task of rising from little nobody to brave warrior in order to rescue the princess. The inhabitants of Clock Town have very different problems. The moon is falling on their heads! The Skull Kid is to blame. A nasty character.

It’s about plenty of enchanted masks and four ancient giants and a huge world called Termina waiting to be explored. Link has only three days to fulfill his missions before everything is over. He jumps through time, has to complete numerous side quests, and thanks to his ocarina, keeps starting over again in the glow of the first rays of sunshine. But that alone isn’t it.

Never before was the atmosphere of a “Zelda” installment so apocalyptic; never again did I feel so comfortable in a city doomed to destruction. So many people from different races, all going about their daily lives and trembling with sympathy. Secrets at every corner screaming to be uncovered. The guy who was stuck in the toilet and whom I still dream about to this day.

I lift the ocarina to return to the first day before the sky explodes above me. Always with the knowledge that all these people will suffer a painful death in just a few hours—and that I can’t tell them. Because they may already know and still bravely look forward to the carnival that heralds the end of everything. How bittersweetly romantic that is.

“The Legend of Zelda – Majora’s Mask” for the venerable Nintendo 64 lives only a niche existence among fans and critics of the series—and completely unjustly so. After all, no other installment bursts with so many ideas, wonderful possibilities, and charismatic inhabitants. It’s high time to polish up its public reputation and honor it for its striving for more indie spirit in the video game industry—before the GameCube ruined everything.

Julie Simon: With Your Eyes Closed

The Naked And The Famous: Young Blood Forever

[flv:youngblood.mp4 youngblood.jpg 940 529]

Berlin: City Of Hookers

I have never been with a prostitute. Either I always found it morally reprehensible to pay women to sleep with me, or I simply never had enough cash. Sure, there was always some money left over for movie tickets, alcohol, and gifts, but to access my bank account so directly, so without detours, purely for sexual intercourse itself—that has never happened in my life so far. No pimps, no red-light district, no hourly hotels. Not very rockstar-like.

Nevertheless, at some point I got used to the sight of the prostitutes on Oranienburger Straße, and I was really only surprised by their pretty faces. A few days ago, after visiting a pizzeria, I was strolling along the sidewalk there with a good friend and her little sister, while from all sides the tired eyes of women stared back at us—women who let more dicks be pushed inside them in one night than an average Central European woman in a year. Short and long, crooked and straight, thick and thin.

The little sister’s name is Alina and she is eight years old. After she asked what all the pretty girls in the white boots were doing there and whether they weren’t cold, I answered her in child-friendly language. Those are hookers, and yes, they are cold. “What are hookers?” Her tiny voice was quite loud, the streetwalkers grinned, one of them looked at me angrily. “They love men for money.”

This sentence has been buzzing around in my head for several days now and just won’t come out. “They love men for money.” How unbelievably sad that thought is. For both sides. For the hookers and their clients. How girls slip into this hopeless situation and offer their genitals for cash on a limited basis. And how miserable the lives of those guys must be who spend their monthly salaries just to get laid once in a while. Or is each of them a Charlie Harper and everything in their colorful world is sunshine and rainbows?

No one can tell me that the job brings these tin cunts with flip-up lids any joy, or that during Girls’ Day at school they dreamed of screwing on the street with some sixty-year-old fatso who has Gertrude at home and a rash on the head of his dick. Or does the oldest profession in the world perhaps have more pride and enthusiasm than I can imagine?

Mixtape: Set Yourself On Colors

Mondays suck, we all know that. The wonderful weekend on the couch or the village mattress now fades into a pale memory amidst all the work stress and the dance with educational institutions. But we here at AMY&PINK are saving you. Because we personally left a burning bag full of dog shit on the doorstep of the god of categories and blackmailed him with spicy photos from the last Christmas party to win him over for our mission: to make your life more beautiful.

And how do we do that? Exactly: by making sure you at least have good music in your ears while you have to get through your life’s crap. For this reason, from now on our mixtape will always be released at the beginning of the week. With the best hits of the 80s, 90s, and today. Every Monday, forever. Or something like that. We’re kicking things off in style with “Set Yourself On Colors,” which includes tracks by Agnes Obel, Two Door Cinema Club, and Bat for Lashes, among others. So absolutely nothing can go wrong anymore.

Fuck You 2010: One Good IntentionOne Good Resolution

Okay, let’s admit it: 2010 was a shitty year. As always, there was far too little sex and love and passion and sports and fun and magical moments that we can tell our grandchildren about someday. If we ever have any, that is. So after everyday stress and general weariness with life, we gather our last bit of strength to promise ourselves that next year everything will be different. Just like the year before. And the year before that. And the one before that. It’ll work out.

The gut has to go. And the cigarettes. And the unhealthy food. The job has been pissing us off for a long time, and the relationship is more shitty than passionate. Jogging every morning, yeah, that would be something. And traveling more—seeing more of the world out there. This constant grumpiness really gets on your nerves. The eternal grind, the same thing every day. No, it just can’t go on like this. Fuck you, old life. And hello, you sexy future.

But over the course of our lives we’ve learned that too many good resolutions are more of a hindrance. Too much is never good. You have to decide. Quit smoking? Lose weight? More partying? Tell people to their faces more often that they’re shit and should please jump from the fifth floor if they have nothing better to do at noon? The choice isn’t easy, of course. But one goal is easier to pursue than five.

So there we sit. With our list of possible life-improvement methods. We think and prioritize and cross things out. And in the end, one thing remains. The right one. That’s what we’ll tackle. But for real. Everything else is bullshit anyway. We take the note and hang it above our bed. Supposed to help. Or swallow it. Which good resolution did you choose?

Skins 5 Preview: Let’s Get High

[flv:skins5.flv skins5.jpg 940 529]

Japayork: Teenagers

[flv:teenagers.mp4 teenagers.jpg 940 529]

Steven Meisel: Super Mods Enter RehabSupermodels in the Madhouse

Review 2010: Best Articles Of The Year

Mixtape: The End Of Everything Is Near

The last mixtape already feels like it was millennia ago, and since we’re currently reactivating dusty categories that at some point fell under the table, we’re doing it just like great blogs such as Wenke Who. The ultimate mixtape for the death of 2010 is therefore called “The End Of Everything Is Near,” and I painstakingly stole all the tracks on it from all the cool kids running around in the capital who, just like me, left the central districts of Berlin over Christmas. So if you have to work, study for exams, or train your eardrum for serious business: this playlist will sweeten many a lonely hour for you.

Smith Westerns: Weekend Forever

[flv:smith.mp4 smith.jpg 940 529]

Bag Raiders: Sunlight

[flv:sunlight.mp4 sunlight.jpg 940 529]

Blogging, Anyone? Hitler, Coke And Foreskin

Even a hardened asshole like me becomes reflective at this contemplative time of year. Or better yet, melancholic, nostalgic, almost a little depressed when I think about how we all started with this internet shit. None of us knew each other personally, everyone did their own thing with some cobbled-together snippets of code, and nobody had a clue what the hell a blog even was. When was that, 2003?

We were a small tight-knit internet clique that got to know each other through dusty link lists instead of minimalist status updates on Twitter or Facebook. A surrogate family that more or less got us through disgusting heartbreak, botched school exams, and stress with our parents—and where we knew: somehow something connects us, even if it’s just enchanted bits and bytes and semi-nude photos of the few female protagonists.

A motley crew of weirdos who had failed in real life or were simply too ugly, too fat, too different for the society out there. But I loved every single one of them in a very special way because we rode through the same shit together on our self-designed donkeys. Only at some point, everything changed. Whether gradually or abruptly—I have no idea. The internet was suddenly different. It got worse.

As I dig through long-deleted articles from a time when singles were bought on CD, the Dreamcast was in, and the first penetration wasn’t that long ago, I only now truly realize how glad I am to have experienced that time. When nobody cared if you ranted for ten paragraphs about your best friend’s ugly tits. When you could build cunts, Hitler, and gay Smurfs into a self-invented story without immediately getting letter bombs from youth protection officers, feminists, and brick-shitters delivered to your mom’s basement. And when you could insult your twelve visitors a day into the ground just because you missed the last episode of the second season of “O.C., California.” Because a retarded chimney sweep on coke had torn the antenna off the roof.

The majority of that former association for moist and merry PC use long ago found a real job as construction workers or tax advisors—or committed suicide. The main thing: away from the internet. The sad remainder was swallowed by the horde of fashion girls and Twitter pseudo-celebrities and now leads a tragic existence between follower counts, social media assholes, and comments from shitheads who don’t matter one bit. And with terms like that, I always cry a little.

Only a few remain. Ines now lives in Berlin and only writes sporadically in English. No envy there—she’s basically living my life. Marcel is pursuing the dream of a self-proclaimed internet god and is gathering more and more Wichmann zombies around him. The envy is limited; sooner or later we’ll have to attempt an assassination on him anyway. Sara has said goodbye to masturbation orgies, fat foreskin tubes, and unfaithful Australians and set off on a big trip around the world. The envy is immeasurable—after all, she was the one who first gave the internet its coolness, and now she’s sailing from one sun-tanned body to the next. And who wouldn’t want that?

I copy my favorite articles from back then into an empty Word document, close the browser, and think for a while about where I’d be today without those deranged people from back then. And I have absolutely no idea. This whole fucked-up world keeps changing, and if you can’t handle that, little Marcel, then you really have problems. So I wipe a little eye-urine from my face, tell myself that back then wasn’t nearly as awesome as I always like to imagine (quite the opposite), and suddenly I’m back in the here and now. Unfortunately.

[audio:fucku.mp3]

Megan: Dead Girls

JJ: Let Them

[flv:letthem.mp4 letthem.jpg 940 529]

Wood Or Steppe? Kitty On A Pussy

After lots of red wine and loose conversations about her deceased brother and her roommate’s delicious lasagna, when I open Theresa’s pants and slide my hand between her legs, I feel my right hand sinking into a thicket of pubic hair. Curly, stubborn, bushy. It seems like no razor has wandered down here in years. And I find it hot.

Back in the day, removing the beaver fur was a necessary evil to defend oneself against lice and other parasites; today, however, it hides behind a socially more than trendy compulsion under the guise of the modern ideal of beauty. If a girl wants to appear sexy, young, and desirable, she’d better shave and wax and pluck away everything Mother Nature provides during puberty. Today’s pussy has to be smooth. Without bumps or stubble.

The trend toward complete body hair removal also seems to have caught on among the men of this world—and not just among competitive swimmers or professional cyclists. Once the bush is gone, the thing in between is supposed to look much bigger anyway. An athletic body is hairless, the sack shaved, no complications for women’s mouths.

As I see Theresa lying in front of me with her legs spread, I try to imagine what she would look like hairless. And I can’t. That bundle of hair between her thighs suits her, makes her a desirable woman, and for the first time in a long while I don’t feel like a child molester just because I usually slide around on flat genitals.

This shaving and waxing compulsion is bullshit. That 12-year-old girls get panic attacks because hair suddenly grows on the most remote parts of their bodies and they’re afraid of being mocked by their classmates is simply sad. That boys and men loudly boast about only fucking perfectly smooth elf pussies is just as bad.

It’s morning. When Theresa gets out of bed and gets dressed, I mention her lush pubic hair. “Your ass isn’t shaved either,” is her curt reply before she jumps into the shower. I nod. Makes sense. While I walk her to the subway, I pick a few of her dark brown strands of hair out of my teeth. She disappears from my life with a mischievous smile, and I just think to myself: What a woman!

Sasha Borodinova: From Russia With Love

Personality Copy: Parasite LoveLove Your Neighbor

I don’t divide my own life into age segments. Or school grades. Or years. The life of Marcel Winatschek so far is shaped and parceled out by the girls I’ve chased after. Who thrilled me. Or hurt me. Female creatures, companions for certain phases of life, with whom I spent months and years until they tore my heart out. Or vice versa. And no matter how saintly or slutty these bitches were, they proved one thing to me: that I always need a girl by my side who somehow inspires me or kicks me in the ass — regardless of whether we’re together or not.

Sometimes I feel like a damn Care Bear whose colorful beams of happiness never stop flowing and therefore have to be directed at the next best person so they’re not completely wasted. Love your neighbor. And once I’ve met a vagina-being whose creativity I can parasitize, then I suck and slurp until there isn’t a shred of muse left. What music do you listen to? What sneakers do you wear? Which series do you watch? Oh yeah, those? Awesome.

Sometimes I’m not even sure anymore how much of my messed-up personality is really still me and which of my habits, hobbies, and preferences once belonged in their former existence to one of my numerous playmates. After all, I associate the majority of bands, films, and books with a girl, whose faces immediately appear before my eyes.

I only listen to that schmaltzy band Muse because of Ana, no question. Adidas Superstars? Chrissy always wore those too. And that habit of hurling verbal feces at cashiers for no reason? Clearly Jenny’s signature. Like a red thread, the characteristics of past love affairs run through my life story and will probably never let me go.

But maybe I’m overreacting with my fear of a falsified personality and the urge to exploit girls creatively. After all, each of us may come into the world as an original, but we die as a copy of a thousand others. And isn’t it much better to absorb and carry on the most inspiring traits of pretty girls than to have them suggested by impersonal Amazon lists, fake friends, and loveless relatives? I say yes and am already curious about the next chick whose life content I can gradually enjoy piece by piece.

Jamie Woon: Night Air

[flv:night.mp4 night.jpg 940 529]

Beatsteaks: Milk & Honey

[flv:milkhoney.f4v milkhoney.jpg 940 529]

The Death of Delicious: Trust VolatilityInstability Is to Be Expected

Nothing lasts forever. You notice that nowhere more than on the internet. News becomes old iron in the blink of an eye, blogs come and go by the second, and many a promising service doesn’t even survive its first year. We’ve experienced the highs and lows of quite a few digital giants firsthand. Whether AOL, Lycos, or MySpace — often all that’s left for the corporations is one loud convulsion before their anti-analog death.

That Yahoo! has increasingly lost relevance after Google’s rise to dominance is no longer a secret. Revenues are falling, user numbers are shrinking, and functions are being cut. The once so important search engine is losing its limbs before finally drifting off into nirvana. The announcement to shut down the popular bookmark service Delicious has caused great excitement among many digital natives. There, savvy users could save important and interesting links and share them with the world. For free. Now the outcry is huge.

The news of the closure spread rapidly across the international web thanks to Facebook and Twitter, and now millions of users are worrying about their beloved links. Almost in panic, (sometimes even fee-based) alternatives are being sought, petitions against the shutdown are being signed, and people are desperately lamenting. And the first are already fearing for the last good Yahoo! services.

But the uproar is incomprehensible. Everyone should be aware that services you use on the internet can never be permanent. Social networks are changed like scratchy underwear, search engines are used based on functionality, and blog hosts have to keep up with current trends — otherwise users are gone in no time.

So anyone who uploads photos to Flickr, moves videos to YouTube, or archives links on Delicious must expect that these services are neither immortal nor here forever. That’s called common sense. Because no matter how sad the death of Delicious may be, on the web, as in real life, only one sentence counts: Rely on others and you are abandoned.

Skins 5: Who Is The New Generation?Who Is the New Generation?

Anyone who hasn’t spent the last few years in pre-trial detention or their childhood in the basement of a neighboring country should know that “Skins” is by far the best series in the world. Without any doubt. The chaotic stories about British teenagers ruining their futures with alcohol, drugs, and lots of unprotected sex have left a bigger impression on us than all educators, priests, and bottom-poppers combined.

After the series has now survived four seasons and two insanely likable generations, the new faces are standing at the door, having been revealed in detail yesterday here. Among them: cuddly blondes, slimy psychos, and tough machos. What do you think of the new cast, who do you like best and least? And do you believe these eight numbskulls can measure up to Effy, Sid, and Tony? If you have no idea what we’re even talking about, jump straight to the video at the end of the article to see what has happened so far.

Frankie
She looks like a snotty nerd, but there might be more to Frankie than you’d think at first glance. The little arsonist set her school principal on fire at the autumn festival, loves stories about Joan of Arc, and holds the wonderful political view that shit still stinks even in suits. Frankie could be the little psychopath we’ve missed so much since Cassie.

Alo
According to his own statements, the redhead can identify the nationality of any homemade porn within seconds, without even turning on the sound. And that’s saying something. The English usually have ugly teeth, Americans get down to business hard, and in Germany you see plenty of fat asses. He likes his weed, his van, and his dog and sleeps with pretty much anything he can get his hands on. That’s exactly what Aloysius looks like…

Rich
The guy is only 16 and plays the long-haired metal rocker. He hates Linkin Park and despises My Chemical Romance even more. His favorite motto comes from Doug Stanhope, who once said that life is like animal porn and just not made for everyone. Rich is always right, even when he happens to be wrong. We’re looking forward to the episode in which the gel-haired psycho chick burns the greasy hair off his head and they then perform hot bald love.

Mini
The sweet little thing Mini McGuinness doesn’t just look adorably cute — she is. Her initials are M&M, and why? “Because I’m the sweetest girl you’ll ever meet.” She prefers to drink one apple martini after another, hops around college with her BFs and BFFs, and would kill herself if she ever had a BMI over 19. We hope she breaks something during yoga or Pilates, but that would be stupid, because honestly Mini is the hottest of the new generation. So she should stay alive.

Liv
At first glance Olivia seems to be the later counterpart to Jal, even though she doesn’t play an instrument or have an ultra-rich producer as a father. At least we think so. She’s into the good shit: Die Antwoord, “Kids,” and “Gilmore Girls.” And when Mrs. Malone once again suffers from attention deficit syndrome, she pulls off one crazy dance move after another on the nearest dance floor. Even if she sometimes looks like Uncle Udo during a colon cleanse — with Liv you can definitely have a lot of fun.

Grace
Opinions differ about her. Anyone who starts conversations with “Okay-dokie” must have a screw loose — and not in a good way. Grace collects coins, would love to talk to animals like Dr. Doolittle, and is the best friend of super blonde Mini. If she were an ice cream flavor, it would probably be vanilla. Honestly? We’ve got a really bad feeling about her…

Nick
The guy screws Mini. At least we think so, since he’s her steady boyfriend. He’s the doer, the boss, the leader. No half measures, you pussies. Just come in, bam bam! Rugby, sex, and alcohol — that’s little Nicky’s life. He has no time for books. He’ll read when he’s dead. He’d like to bang Cheryl Cole. We think he might just manage that. What a man…!

Matty
The poet entered, quoted Friedrich Nietzsche and William S. Burroughs before our eyes, and then started talking about his socks. Why he likes to wear other people’s foot warmers. It’s complicated. It’s about him. And somehow not. David Lynch inspires him. And he’s fascinated by Josef Fritzl. With Matty we’ve probably found our potential mass murderer…

[flv:skinssex.flv skinssex.jpg 582 436]

Pikachunes: Just A Boy

Tron Legacy: Game Of Your Life – The Game of Your Life

When Disney announced that it would revive the nerd classic "Tron" nearly 30 years after its premiere, mixed feelings bubbled up among the surviving geeks. From anticipation to fear to outright blasphemy, everything was represented, after all there were many indications that "Tron Legacy," following "Star Trek," "Karate Kid," and "Alice in Wonderland," would once again be nothing more than a reheated but profitable heartlessness that robs the classic of its soul and sinks into insignificance.

We were allowed to preview the long-awaited sequel with our own eyes and see whether the film lives up to the original and is also worth watching for those who had no desire to go to the cinema in 1982 – or simply were not yet born. What immediately stands out, apart from the story or the characters, is the breathtakingly awesome visual aesthetic that instantly pulls the viewer into this unique blue world. Everything seems animated with love and care; you constantly feel the influence of the first film.

Whether the light cycles race across the smooth surfaces of the digital world, the protagonists’ suits glow in bright colors, or the oppressive atmosphere of the program affects your mood – "Tron Legacy" is without a doubt one of the best-looking films of this year.

The story is quickly told, but no less exciting because of it. Sam sets out to find his missing father Kevin Flynn and ends up in an artificial world dominated by bits and bytes, where deadly competitions are the order of the day. Together with the beautiful Quorra, father and son travel through the dangerous cyber universe to find a way out of the anti-analog hell – preferably without dying in the process.

Unfortunately, the actors are less convincing. Of course, Olivia Wilde (known to many as the tough lesbian from "O.C., California") is pure sex appeal, and the rest of the cast with Jeff Bridges, Garrett Hedlund, and Bruce Boxleitner is objectively well chosen, but somehow in all their dialogues, actions, and gestures you miss the love for the film. Often it seems as if they are either not fully present or do not really grasp the depth of what they are doing. A bit more character strength would certainly have been desirable.

This is only redeemed again by the monumental soundtrack of the French band Daft Punk. The tracks are a golden mix of orchestral film music and futuristic sounds – simply perfect for exactly this project, and after we were also handed the record, we were able to convince ourselves at home of its phenomenal quality.

All in all, "Tron Legacy" is a bombastic film that impresses with opulent visuals and great music, but due to the weaknesses of the actors and the overly perfect backdrop, it does not quite reach the charm of the classic. You should definitely watch it, even if you do not know the original. And if you cannot warm to this nerdy battle of digital powers at all, at least give the soundtrack a chance. After all, you can enjoy that on its own.

The Dø: Slippery Slope

Hattie Watson: Interview With A Nude Ginger – Nude Redhead in Interview

Photo model Hattie Watson from somewhat prudish Texas, with her young age, red hair, and that magnificent number of enchanting freckles, is currently one of the darlings of the visual scene. Her broad portfolio includes all sorts of well-known names, in front of whose cameras she has already gone a bit over the top and for whom she was not too shy to show more skin than necessary. Now the 24-year-old speaks exclusively with AMY&PINK about her American childhood, nerdy preferences, and masturbating fans.

As a model you travel a lot around the world. Where have you been so far and what crazy things have happened to you on your journeys?

I have been on the West and East Coasts, traveled through the Midwest, and found myself in the South. At the moment I am in London and this is my first time overseas. It would be nice if I could travel even more while I am here. But nothing too crazy has happened to me yet. It is rather quite normal. Drinking, friends, dancing, lots of shoots. Once I got into a fight with a guy at a show in Seattle – but that was it.

How did you get into modeling and what made you decide to be photographed without clothes? Do people criticize you for it and how far would you go with it all?

I actually always wanted to do it. When I was younger, I had to choose between modeling and sports – and I chose the latter. Later I worked in a photo studio and the photographer suddenly wanted me to step in front of the camera as a model. I did not immediately start letting myself be photographed without clothes and I do not actually do that many nude shots. It also happens rather rarely that I am criticized for my work, and little by little I am moving away from presenting myself unclothed. I want to move more into the fashion and magazine field and would like to work with various designers.

Do you think it is easy money to be photographed nude or does it take more than many people think? And do you not find it strange that strangers masturbate to your photos?

I definitely do not think it is easy money. It depends on who you are as a person. Some people can present themselves naked over a long period of time, others cannot. I actually feel quite comfortable with it, but you can only do so many nude shoots before it becomes boring. For me personally, it has slowly reached its limits. And whether I turn guys on with my photos? Honestly: men get turned on by everything somehow. They are men! That is not difficult; I would only have to put a cigarette in my mouth or have pigtails braided and they would go crazy. And that even with clothes on. Everyone has their specific preferences and nudity is not the only thing men love and that turns them on. You would be surprised how many like completely different things besides being naked.

I love red hair and freckles because they somehow make girls look more natural and special. Were you always proud of how you look or were you teased for it when you were younger?

I have always loved my red hair. That was less true for my freckles. I actually always wanted to have clear porcelain skin. But perhaps they are what give a person character. And of course some children made fun of my distinctive appearance when I was quite young. But honestly, I believe that these traits have given me more advantages than disadvantages.

You have many great tattoos on your body. How many do you have exactly and do they have a special meaning?

At the moment I have nine. But not all of them have a special meaning. They are simply part of my personality, of the things I like and enjoy. They do not carry any specific message. Once I have more money, more will of course be added. I would love to have both arms tattooed and have a vulture immortalized on my thigh. My first tattoo was the one on my stomach: "Go big or go home." Very Texas-like, I think.

What is it like living in the USA and what do you like most? Could you imagine living somewhere else?

Well, it is the USA. I do not really know how to explain it more precisely. I have traveled a lot and no place here has disappointed me so far. I simply love how the landscapes constantly change here. More than anything else – and the weather. I am into national parks and would like to visit many more of them. I really need to take more time for that on my travels. I could also imagine living here in London or somewhere else in Europe. But I have seen too little of this part of the world to really say that.

What are your favorite bands and do you like watching movies?

So at the moment my favorite bands are clearly Tom Waits, Cat Power, Band of Horses, Bon Iver, Beirut, and Air. Movies… hm… To be honest, I have not watched a single one lately. The last ones I somehow liked were "Cashback," "Me Without You," and certainly a few others that I just cannot remember right now.

What does a perfect night look like for you?

I am a totally relaxed person and love to chill. So if it is not just about having a drink and meeting up with my friends, I also really enjoy going out dancing with great people. But I also really enjoy sitting at home like a little nerd at my computer. I miss my video games…

How important are your fans to you and what does it feel like knowing that so many people out there like your photos? What kind of emails do you get?

My fans are the most important thing in my life. All my little creepsters… Without them I would not be where I am today. I love so much that so many people support me and appreciate my work. And sometimes I even get emails from girls. They are usually very nice and polite. Unlike the perverted guys who constantly send me dirty stuff. But I usually just laugh about them and then delete them.

If you could choose the perfect shoot for yourself, what would it look like?

I would really like to do something for magazines or small stories with someone. Either totally simple or really crazy and creepy. Totally ugly photos are cool too. Of girls who look stunning and then do things no one would have expected from them.

What are your plans for the future and what would you advise girls who want to follow in your footsteps?

At the moment I am working on being photographed more for magazines and maybe even appearing on their covers. That is kind of a goal for me. I would also really like to work for various fashion labels. And to other girls I can only pass on what Winston Churchill once said: "Never, never, never give up!"

We thank Hattie Watson for this great interview and anyone who wants to learn more about the enchanting redhead can stalk the American day and night on Tumblr, on Twitter or via Facebook.

Dimitri Karakostas: Together We’re Nothing

Scissor Sisters: Invisible Light

We Heart Anime: Dragon Ball

No animated series that was broadcast around the turn of the millennium stood more for the stupefaction of an entire generation than “Dragon Ball.” The adventures and battles of the little monkey boy Son Goku, together with his partly extraterrestrial friends and relatives equipped with various superpowers, were considered to glorify violence, to be dull, and unbelievably limited. And all of these accusations were correct.

Yet everything had begun so legendarily and creatively. In the first season, dreamy landscapes, charming characters, and likable villains competed for the audience’s favor. The search for the seven Dragon Balls turned out to be an exciting journey through a Japan of another dimension. The old men were perverted, the dialogues witty, and the secrets enormous. It could have gone on like that forever, but then the letters of terror arrived and transformed the series into a paradise for combative simpletons.

With “Dragon Ball Z” and “Dragon Ball GT,” the image of the once so inspiring anime source changed into an endless exchange of blows between Son Goku and random aliens whose only desire from then on was to subjugate the planet. Episode after episode, the opposing sides kicked, punched, and blasted each other until even the last blockhead had no desire to follow these boring tournament fights.

For my part, I will always remember the little monkey boy who absentmindedly grabbed Bulma between the legs, flew around on little clouds with his staff, and transformed into a hairy monster in the moonlight. Without earmuff-style hats, without battles that sometimes stretched over several sagas, and especially without Frieza, Cell, and Buu. Puff Puff forever!

New Author: Raphaela: Fashion Is In The House – Fashion Comes Into the House

If you have had an internet connection for quite some time, you might remember that for a while we were looking for a fashion girl in order to finally be able to cover this topic competently and extensively. We received plenty of submissions from young, enchanting, and sometimes rather eccentric people, but what we ultimately found was even better than anything we had imagined. Because suddenly Raphaela jumped right into our sights.

Her name actually has seven initials and in full reads: Raphaela Maria Elisabeth Michaela Victoria Tiziana Anouk. She was born in Vienna in 1992 and wouldn’t know where to go if she were to emigrate, although Iceland is always an option. She likes lambs, bears, and everything with soft fur – fawns are fine as well. Furthermore, she is enthusiastic about poetry and prose that some might consider risqué. She loves to recite “Ich bin so wild nach deinem Erdbeermund” in the bathtub or indulge in the word aesthetics of Arthur Rimbaud.

One of her goals is to complete the Woody Allen film collection she has begun. She has a weakness for Winona Ryder and Angelina Jolie in “Girl, Interrupted,” as well as for Penelope Cruz and Scarlett Johansson in “Vicky Cristina Barcelona.” She is fascinated by boarding school aesthetics for girls (“Cracks” with Eva Green) and appreciates films of the Nouvelle Vague. She could constantly roam the streets with “Bist du nicht müde?” by Wir sind Helden, yet she also likes French artists such as France Gall, Mareva Galanter, or Carla Bruni… She appreciates the ambiguity of Stereo Total just as much as the straightforwardness of Element of Crime, and very often she likes Soap&Skin, deep and long. Au Revoir Simone, Beach House, Best Coast, Fever Ray, First Aid Kit, Get Well Soon, Hilmar Örn Hilmarsson, Jónsi & Alex, Lykke Li, as well as Max Richter are part of her playlist.

She likes shirts, whether classic in Oxford blue or flannel and checked. If she had the money, she would proudly own various versions of the Birkin Bag. She has never dyed her hair, has not eaten meat for years, and likes preppy as well as boho. If her declared goal is not world domination, then at least a carefree life; she hopes to earn her money through art.

Starting today, the 18-year-old will significantly support us in the fields of fashion, life, and literature and will complete AMY&PINK with her unique, cheeky, and sometimes slightly risqué manner. So give Raphaela a warm welcome and already look forward like Udo’s dachshund to her first article. Now all we need is a strong-charactered hipster nerd to be truly happy.

Kelsey Reckling: Never Stay Still

Moths: Seacoal

Your Weekend: Ten Little Missions

And once again we’ve made it to the weekend, panting and dragging ourselves across the finish line. You may now take a big gulp of tap water and breathe deeply for a moment. Because your work is not done yet. Since today we refuse—even in our dreams—to lift a single finger, it’s Self-Made Friday. Instead of dictating which magnificent things you have to accomplish over the days off, today it’s your turn to fill our “Ten Little Missions.” We’ll give you one point, the rest gets enriched with your stuff. Life tips, events, music hints, video links, phone numbers of willing mothers… It’s your move! What absolutely must we and our readers do this weekend?

One. Stick your tongue into another man. Two. ____________________________________________ Three. ____________________________________________ Four. ____________________________________________ Five. ____________________________________________

Six. ____________________________________________ Seven. ____________________________________________ Eight. ____________________________________________ Nine. ____________________________________________ Ten. ____________________________________________

Cataclysm: Return Of WarcraftThe Return of the Craft

When I first played “World of Warcraft,” I was young, curious, and lost. My blue-haired night elf and I fighting against the evil Horde, always searching for the next quest. I spent the first weekend day and night in front of the screen, without thinking about time or the next school day, and I only stopped when I became afraid of losing my life.

The day I canceled my subscription and deleted the last files from my computer’s hard drive felt like liberation and opened the path to real adventures, deep friendships, and regular sex—not just with my right hand. But no matter how happy I am to have turned my back on Azeroth, Team Speak, and my guild buddies, in some lonely hour the faint call of the game box still seems to reach for me. And Blizzard doesn’t exactly make it easy to stay strong.

On December 7, the new add-on “Cataclysm” will be available in stores and for download, and even hardened dropouts are already trembling before that day. Because the developers are promising not only die-hard basement dwellers amazing innovations and great experiences, but especially casual gamers and former players for whom “World of Warcraft” had become too monotonous. The entire game world is supposed to be revamped, the boring areas turned upside down, and the temptation to dive in once again thrown wide open.

And the timing couldn’t be better. While Germany sinks into snow and families would rather hole up at home anyway, re-entering the magical world of warcraft is naturally all the more enticing. The only question is: Will we be able to resist the temptation, or will we once again surrender to the digital adventure of the Alliance versus the Horde, battling each other to the bitter end?

The Killers: Boots For Christmas

Youth Protection and Us: Simply Getting LegalJust Getting Legal

Everything used to be better. The grass was greener, the oaks were harder, and on the internet you could still get away with any kind of fun. That was partly because politicians didn’t even know how to spell the new medium (which hasn’t changed much) and partly because only two or three drinking buddies and the jealous ex-girlfriend were hanging around on your own blog, so you could upload homemade amateur porn, bloody schoolyard fights, and private life secrets into the virtual cloud with full hands and nobody really cared.

Life, however, is no barn party, and so we too have to slowly face two important changes: the laws on the web are getting stricter, and more and more people are reading us. So far, so good. But since the very beginning of AMY&PINK, alongside wonderfully researched articles and lovingly told everyday stories, you’ve occasionally been confronted with swinging genitals, mutilated animal carcasses, and emaciated half-ghosts. And that’s exactly where we now have to step in.

To protect our underage readers and still avoid serving them nothing but colorful Teletubby crap—or losing them in the afternoon to shooter games and RTL daytime programming—we’ve hired a competent youth protection officer who thoroughly examined AMY&PINK and explained what we are allowed to do and what we are not.

To make it short, among other things the following are now taboo—even if it’s not particularly surprising: penises with more than a 45-degree angle of elevation. Penises with less than a 45-degree angle but clearly considered erect. Vaginas of any kind. Close-ups of sexual acts. Glorification of anorexia. Erotic youth stories. Links to porn sites. And sexual depictions of girls whose age could be misunderstood—even in hentai.

We’ll skip mentioning child pornography, Nazi stuff, or bestiality at this point, because that kind of shit has never been and will never be on our site. Sorry, Uncle Klaus. We will also classify ourselves as at least FSK 16 after the big cleanup, which isn’t too bad since future filtering systems will only apply in schools or through activated parental controls.

So in the coming days we will remove everything from AMY&PINK that does not comply with the law and/or could get us into serious trouble—and you’re allowed to help us. Take a look around our site, and if you discover any stiff stems, opened slits, or other malicious things that might give Grandma Gerda a heart attack, drop the links, image addresses, or descriptions into the comments of this article (or send us a mail), and soon we can skip hand in hand across a meadow garnished with unicorns and rainbows.

Rainbow Edition: Pretty in Pink


Cosette (19) In front of the brightly colored wall, the Swede almost looks plain in her purple clothes from Gina Tricot, Hettemarks and New Yorker—if it weren’t for her red hair.
Andre (8) We strongly doubt that the Filipino is actually underage, but thanks to the sweater from Forever 21 one might almost get that impression. He’s probably just gay.
Juliett (23) The rather conservatively dressed Pole looks delightful and describes her style with the words “Katy B feat. Ms. Dynamite.” We somehow found that fitting and stole her jacket.
Shihoko (28) As is well known, the clocks run a little differently in Japan, and in this outfit from ANAP she could almost attend her grandparents’ funeral. Okay, that was a lie.
Lily (21) Anyone who studies design at Saint Martins College is allowed to sensually slide a banana into herself without us having dirty thoughts. Okay, that was also a lie.
Kadeem (21) He’s a freelancer and lives in the Bronx. So anyone walking around New York in Cheap Monday and Uniqlo is cooler than ice. And for once, we absolutely mean that.

The Streets: Too Numb

[flv:toonumb.mp4 toonumb.jpg 940 529]

How the Government Is Tearing Us Apart: Youth Protection Hates Us

There has been a sense of doom in the blogosphere for several days now. Due to the new regulations in the Interstate Treaty on Youth Media Protection, which is set to come into force next year, all providers of information on the web are being shackled with nonsensical restraints and guidelines that apparently pursue only one single goal: to bombard cultural diversity and development on the internet. Because they are determined by people who have no idea how the web works. Because they contain extremely vague wording that amounts to nothing more than costly traps. Because they not only fail to protect young people from harmful content, but actually undermine that very purpose.

While some of our fellow campaigners have already closed up shop, no issue currently concerns us at AMY&PINK more than how to deal with these new laws. Through this opaque "minefield," we see our future on the free market as more than endangered. Of course, it would be easy to classify our entire site as 18+, since the majority of our readers are already adults anyway, but that option is unacceptable.

Anyone with even the slightest understanding of the internet knows that splash pages of any kind have catastrophic effects on perception, readership, and visitor numbers. Potential as well as long-term advertising clients will hardly want to advertise on what appears to be a “porn site.” And we don’t even want to start on the damage to image and reputation.

It is particularly outrageous that portals such as Spiegel Online or Bild do not have to comply with the new laws because they are of “general interest.” Whatever that is supposed to mean. They may continue publishing whatever they like, while we, as an online magazine, must subsequently review every article, every image, and every comment for compliance with youth protection requirements. This is both economically unviable and legally highly uncertain.

To be honest, we are somewhat at a loss as to how we should act if foolish people really push this foolish law through — and that seems more than certain. Should we classify our entire content as harmful to minors, make it accessible only from 10 p.m. to 6 a.m., or simply delete everything that might in any way be considered suggestive? We could also shut down the shop, emigrate, or win the lottery in order to pay any fines coming our way, no matter the amount.

With the new Interstate Treaty on Youth Media Protection, the German government once again proves that it has no understanding of new media. And if it weren’t so incredibly sad, one could almost laugh along. Unfortunately, this is the greatest intervention in digital culture in the history of the Federal Republic, and all we can do is complain loudly and look courageously toward the future. Because even if the road becomes rocky and tough, we will survive it. Even if it means having to turn our backs on our homeland.

Alexander Alekseenko: Analog Rebellion

The Boundaries of Love: Too Small, Too Crooked, Too Wonky

As Dieter laboriously rolls off Sandra and lies down exhausted beside her, she is close to tears. For months she had courted him, teased him, loved him — won him for herself alone. She dreamed of romantic trips to the beach, a grand wedding with all friends and acquaintances, and of little lookalikes soon frolicking around in the neatly trimmed front yard. But now Sandra lies rigid, eyes wide open, staring in shock at the ceiling. “And how was I, darling?” Dieter groans with his last bit of strength. “Small.”

We do not love our partners only for their looks. We adore them because of their personality, the memories, the future. A deep connection that no one can destroy so easily, a thick bond of trust. Together we are strong. Two people against the rest of the world. But often even small things can cause that very bond to tear. Very small ones. Or flaccid ones. Or crooked ones. Or strangely smelling ones.

When we unwrap our conquest for the first time like a Christmas present and run our hands along their bodies full of anticipation, we certainly do not want to witness that the dear Lord has allowed some of our attached body parts to go astray. Your penis is degenerate art. Much too small and crooked and bent. Your breasts are degenerate art. Much too saggy and flat and misshapen. Your vagina is degenerate art. Much too wide and odorous, with those scraps posing as labia.

How do we react when, beneath the warm protection of clothes and the illusion of expectation, we bring things to light that far exceed the limits of our sexual confidence? The smell, the shape, the feeling — how disgusting.

Or should these aesthetic flaws play only a subordinate role in choosing a future partner, since we are supposedly drawn primarily to a person’s inner values? Perhaps in the end we even fall in love with the creative quirks of the opposing organs and would miss them in time if they were gone. Small penises are made for anal sex — everyone knows that.

Sandra has, for the time being, overcome her shock and made friends with Dieter’s mini-willy as best she could. After all, you hear everywhere that it’s not about size but technique. Love overcomes all boundaries. Even the physical limitation of incompatible genitals.

Dylan Forsberg: Going Somewhere

Your Weekend: Ten Little Missions

It’s snowing! Have you seen it? Outside! White stuff, not coke, cold, wet, somehow homogeneous. That means you can finally go skiing again. Or sledding, making snow angels, temporarily immortalizing your name with the help of urine. Not in the mood for that at all? You’d much rather let us dictate what you should be using your limp muscles for this weekend? No problem! Here once again are “Ten Little Missions” that will give you a cozy warm feeling even on the coldest days — and are almost not illegal at all.

One. Create your own island on "The Settlers Online" without taking a break. It will make you more addicted than heroin and crack combined. Two. Buy all the singles of “Last Christmas” so no one else can, then burn that crap in a nearby forest. Start sincerely crying once you realize that iTunes still exists. Three. Measure the length of your genitals again with a ruler. Maybe they’ve grown a bit due to the earth’s radioactive radiation. Four. Sign up for Diaspora, only to return to Facebook shortly afterward, whispering softly into its ear: “Glad you exist, baby.” Five. Visit the grave of a close friend or relative. You haven’t done that in a long time. Shame on you!

Six. Save a few horses. Seven. Turn the song "Pink Fluffy Unicorns Dancing On Rainbows" up loud and hop around your apartment like an idiot. This track is invincible. Eight. Call your ex-partner and sleep with them. Sex with the ex is still better than none at all. Nine. Wish for a little sibling for Christmas. After a short pause, shout “Just kidding!” and give your father a high five. That kind of thing brings the family together. Ten. Masturbate to Playboy and thus become part of the lifestyle of a long bygone generation. Stop after fifteen minutes because it’s just not doing anything, and then visit Motherless instead.

We Heart Anime: Princess Mononoke

Shortly before the millennium, the anime craze had just broken out in Germany. "Sailor Moon" had come to a furious finale, "Pokémon" and "Dragon Ball" were waiting in the wings, and AnimaniA was becoming the bible for all Japan nerds, cosplay fetishists, and manga readers. In 1999, the doors to AnimagiC opened for the first time, the largest (and at that time the only) German anime convention, and while I felt like I was in seventh heaven among all the freaky people, someone pressed a ticket into my hand: "Mononoke-hime." In the cinema. Original version with German subtitles. My heart stood still.

The story of the cursed warrior who, on his agonizing journey, meets a wolf princess and joins her in fighting dark forces, greedy washerwomen, and drunken bandits, only to end up in the arms of God himself, was not just an animated film – it was an epic. The rousing music, the fabulous style, and those tiny, cute forest spirits; I was overwhelmed by so much love and drama that the two hours burned themselves deep into my heart – while my mother next to me had already fallen asleep after ten minutes.

No matter how many wonderful films Studio Ghibli produced afterward, and regardless of how magnificently beautiful titles like "Spirited Away" and "Ponyo" were – whenever I think of "Princess Mononoke," I am overcome by a feeling of monumentality that far surpasses the significance of any other anime. And that despite Disney trying to boycott this masterpiece as much as possible. Quality always prevails.

Creaky Crater: Girls Take A Bath

Win a Massive Nokia Phone Package: See Wir sind Helden Live

It’s that time again. The popular telephone provider with the striking magenta in its logo is sending another exceptional German band into the race for the favor of potential new customers with its Street Gigs and is letting the well-known group Wir sind Helden take the stage on December 9 in Würzburg. In the cozy country inn “Zum Alten Gut,” the four Berliners will play an extremely intimate concert, and since that’s just how we are, you can once again win a few tickets and a snazzy phone package.

However, the coveted tickets are so strictly limited this time that Telekom didn’t want to give us any. After all, only 80–100 spectators will be allowed to witness this event. Admission is granted exclusively via the official website of the Telekom Street Gigs. What we’re stuffing down your throats instead is the massive Mobile Music Pac – Street Gigs Edition III including the Nokia 5230. It not only features a large touchscreen with an 8.1 cm diagonal and an excellent music player with impressive stamina (up to 33 hours), but on top of that you also get a “Street > Gigs - Best Of” DVD Vol. III including highlights from gigs by Clueso, Razorlight, Polarkreis 18, Fettes Brot, and Jamie Cullum, among others.

All you have to do to get your hands on the monstrous Music Pac is leave us a comment with a valid email address here by Wednesday, December 1. And with a bit of luck, don’t forget to secure tickets for Wir sind Helden at the Telekom Street Gigs. Good luck!

This is a sponsored article by Telekom.

Is It Permissible to Ban Erotica? How Europe Is Stealing Our Passion

The time we live in is becoming increasingly suspicious. Terrorist attacks here, food scandals there, and plenty of pedophilia in the deepest corners of digital networking. To finally get a handle on it, the European Union has come up with something incredibly clever: from now on, it will not only prohibit the creation and distribution of child pornography, but also everything that even remotely appears to look like it.

Exposed breasts of 21-year-old women who give the impression of being underage are prohibited. Erotic, but fully clothed activities by youthful-looking men are prohibited. Even drawings of people who are in fact long of age but appear underage are prohibited, criminalized, and can land their creators as well as viewers in prison. Of course, this is complete nonsense and helps no exploited child in this world if adult people are forbidden from viewing adult erotica.

The numerous problems with this nonsensical plan are obvious, because the new regulation opens the door wide to arbitrariness. Who is supposed to determine which individuals look underage – and which do not? Even many youthful 30-year-olds often give the impression of being adolescents. Which judge in this world is supposed to render a fair judgment on that? Here is a quote from attorney Dr. Helmut Graupner to illustrate the seriousness of the situation:

"The new directive removes the concept of pornography. In the future, member states must criminalize depictions of sexual acts (or even just genitals and the female breast), regardless of whether they are ‘pornographic’ or not. There does not even have to have been an actual sexual act. Simulated sexual acts by persons under 18 (or adults who look under 18) must also be punishable. The only requirement is that the depictions serve ‘primarily sexual purposes,’ whatever that may mean. Even (non-pornographic) merely erotic depictions will likely fall under this."

If the European Union succeeds with this absurd plan and Germany goes along with it, our lives will soon be only half as sexy as before. Without resistance, we are sailing toward a dictated future whose leaders, under the guise of fighting pedophilia, will intrude deeply into our social lives without helping a single tormented child.

We hope, by all that is sacred to us, that this confused stubbornness will quickly be put to an end and that reason will prevail. Otherwise, it is clear what catastrophic consequences a ban on erotic depictions of adults will have for both digital and print media. A new illegal market will emerge, educational literature will return to the Stone Age, and the free development of one’s own sexuality will increasingly come under pressure.

This does not protect or help children in any way. As Dr. Helmut Graupner rightly predicts: "Law enforcement authorities will be burdened with more and more pointless criminalization of actions that have nothing to do with child pornography, leaving them with fewer and fewer resources to combat real child pornography. Child pornographers can rejoice." So let us put an end to this madness before it begins to rage wildly.

The Streets: The Day After The Day Off On One

[flv:streets.mp4 streets.jpg 940 529]

Navigation Aid: Trend Indicator November

All right. We have gathered all the nuts, hidden them in a carefully selected tree, and in a few days we will retreat into hibernation. But before we drop fat and tired into a nearby cave (with cable connection), we would like to slip you our monthly navigation aid, with whose revolutionary and never-before-seen two-phase technique you can find out insanely fast what’s currently hot among the cool kids in the schoolyard and which evil devilry you should rather keep your hands off.

In: Terror, grapefruit in the morning, Donkey Kong, looking forward to the next Fashion Week in Berlin, seeing the whole gang again, curry-mango sauce, Bill Murray in every situation in life, declaring schnitzel day sacred, the joys of a functioning washing machine, not letting yourself be distracted by loud music, Skyping with Hannah, defeating sumo wrestlers, sleeping with older women, hymns of praise to the Pixel, when parents give education as a gift, already writing year-in-reviews now, laughing about falling children, reading from right to left, feeding the animals again, cracking bad jokes, positioning dumbbells next to the bed, destroying the Internet.

Out: Terror, the moment of reunion, Internet memes, clandestine friendships, Twitter charts, Google Street View, immature citizens, too much sleep, ex-girlfriends with big breasts, not being allowed to touch them anymore, city rankings, scratches on the MacBook, Christmas markets, giving pop no chance, taking a ride-share again, button eyes, empty threats, lumbago while masturbating, magazines pretending to be the Internet, overexposure, yet another existential crisis, neighbors who roll dice with iron blocks, the darkness of the moment, the envy of the lower class, the rebirth of unwashed dishes, sexism, thinking you’re something because of the iPhone, confusing love with security, apartments styled like an orthodontist’s office, your mother on Facebook.

Temporary Love: Just Break Up

Jasmin can’t pull herself together. She cried on the way home, sobbed her heart out in the kitchen, and is now bawling her eyes out on the couch at her best friend Ulrike’s place. Only three hours have passed since Mike left her for the fiery daughter of Bolivian immigrants. Amid the wailing and sniffling, only fragments of words can be understood. Ulrike listens attentively. “Bigger boobs…”, “Never really loved…”, and “He just screwed me over…” rise like trembling air bubbles and then gently dissipate in the Ikea-furnished room. Jasmin has a long road ahead of her, one that will drive her to the brink of psychological madness. But for now, she is busy trying not to choke on her own tears.

But why all the fuss? The rapid switching between different partners and relationships is more socially accepted today than ever before. Life partners, one-night stands, divorce lawyers… nothing in the 21st century points to permanence and eternal love anymore. We hop from bed to bed, from in-laws to in-laws, from circle of friends to circle of friends. And we spit venom and bile when we are left behind. Are our feelings no longer fit for the future?

A near-future revolution of our outdated expectations, emotions, and worries could save us a lot of heartbreak weight. Why desperately bind one person to us for as long as possible, only to wake up afterward in a nightmare of broken hearts? Wouldn’t it make much more sense to finally throw the inherited ideal of everlasting love overboard and start enjoying the limited time we experience with someone to the fullest, to devote ourselves completely and intimately to that phase of life, and then part ways without arguments and resentment?

Our lives are constantly changing in modern times. We have to be spontaneous, unattached, and independent. So why should different rules apply to our relationships? “Till death do us part” – what nonsense. We enter partnerships because we want to be swept away. To experience something new. To be carried off into someone else’s world. Our hearts crave momentum, temperament, and enthusiasm. But that doesn’t last forever. Once the inevitable decline of a once-vibrant relationship has set in, each of us faces the question: stay or move on? But forcing ourselves to stay together benefits no one.

Imagine a world in which we could honestly and lovingly end a relationship without a guilty conscience, free of torment, self-sacrifice, and suicidal thoughts. It would be a much better world. But we can only achieve that if society finally deviates from outdated expectations and the idea of free love 2.0 begins to sprout in our minds. There are so many people out there whose stories, ideals, and fantasies are incredibly impressive and waiting to be discovered and made our own. So why waste time with just one of them? Perhaps we should wait a little longer before telling Jasmin about our helpful theory – for now, a tissue will do.

Misfits: Petty Criminal Superheroes

Falling in love with a new series requires time and openness. After all, we’ve already taken so many TV characters into our little hearts and identified with them that it should probably be closed due to overcrowding. “Misfits” was sold to us as a drastic alternative to “Skins” and had already earned all our hatred before we even watched it. With a lot of effort and plenty of alcohol in our blood, we finally gave the first season a chance over the weekend and felt confirmed, disappointed, and surprised.

The story is simple and far-fetched. A group of teenagers is sentenced to community service at a municipal community center for various minor offenses. There, they are struck by lightning, which gives them partly ridiculous supernatural abilities. Curtis can jump around in time, Simon is occasionally invisible, and anyone who so much as briefly touches Alisha immediately wants hot and passionate sex with her. Right away.

In the very first episode, the boys and girls kill a street worker who has gone mad, after which his surviving girlfriend turns into a little detective. It’s about rejected love, absurd what-if stories, and sexual intercourse with old grannies. And about the broken lives of young outsiders who don’t know what to do with them.

“Misfits” is not a gem of the British TV landscape, and yet the series has generated a certain goodwill. Somehow, you are curious after all. What is happening there, why, and especially how? Unfortunately, the producers partly cast disgustingly unsympathetic actors, 98% of the story takes place in this cold community center, and none of the characters really manage to sweep you along.

Nevertheless, the somewhat absurd mix of youth drama, science fiction, and crime is worth a look for anyone who is into this particular E4 style and isn’t put off by incredibly ugly blondes with hooked noses. The second season of “Misfits” has been airing in Great Britain for several weeks now. Nice series – but it doesn’t come close to “Skins.”

[flv:misfits.mp4 misfits.jpg 582 327]

Married To The Mob: Holidays Are Getting Hot

Your Weekend: Ten Little Missions

Hooray, it’s Friday again. How nice is that? Finally sleep in properly, get completely smashed until you can’t breathe anymore, plunge into moist orgies full of former female teachers, Asian priests, and untouched virgins, and at some point on Sunday afternoon be rescued from a nearby river with a big grin on your face. What’s that? You do that every day anyway? Because you belong to the students, retirees, or unemployed? Then you’re exactly right here. “Ten Little Missions,” the spicy kick for the holy days. And here we go.

One. Dress up as an unattended piece of luggage and position yourself preferably in front of train stations, airports, and Christmas markets. An explosive atmosphere for the whole family is guaranteed, and then Dad can finally play the hero again. Two. Marry a Barbie doll. They’re pretty and (usually) keep their mouths shut. Three. Water your plants again. So they don’t expose you as the culprit of their suffering and do terrible things to you at night. Four. Sit in front of the programming of the channel NICK for a whole day and be happy that you’re no longer a child. Five. Finally offer Hannah a role in a bloody zombie horror film. Otherwise she’ll never stop whining.

Six. Squeeze a hefty portion of Heinz curry-mango sauce onto each of your meals. The quality of every dish will rise to immeasurable heights. Seven. Sleep with Kate Middleton now and draw the hatred of an entire nation upon yourself. Eight. Ask your trusted dealer for a receipt — so you can return the goods if the quality is subpar. Nine. Eat nothing but vegetables for a year, force diarrhea through alcohol, and in this way become lean and slender like Marcel. A different Marcel. Ten. Buy yourself some new Chucks. It’s about time.

No Joy: Hawaii

[flv:hawaii.mp4 hawaii.jpg 940 529]

We Heart Anime: Love Hina

In almost every cheap anime it always seems to be about the same story. A small, shy student with a bowl haircut and untouched genitals is suddenly pulled into the adventure of his life. The next time he opens his eyes, he either finds himself in an enchanted world, has to fight cursed aliens with giant robots, or — as in this case — ends up in a house full of girls. And from about that moment on, “Love Hina” had me convinced.

Keitaro is a pimple-covered nerd, and his greatest dream is to be admitted to the University of Tokyo. He once made this promise to his sweet childhood friend, who disappeared in a mysterious way and has never reappeared since. Upon arriving in the capital, for inexplicable reasons he becomes the manager of a pseudo-brothel and immediately falls for the blonde Naru, who is no less hot than her numerous fellow players.

The charm of “Love Hina” only unfolds after you’ve zipped your pants back up and realized that the series is not a sleazy hentai offshoot with lots of tentacles and screaming underage girls, but rather a truly enchanting saga full of profound love, hilariously funny roommates, and malicious robot turtles. And boobs.

It’s almost blasphemous that this jewel of Eastern animation never enjoyed the attention in Germany that it undoubtedly deserved. But at least it gives you the feeling that you’re one of the few guys who were able to fall in love again and again with one of the many pretty and diverse ladies. The tomboyish Naru, the dangerous Motoko, or perhaps the perpetually stoned Mitsune? It doesn’t matter, as long as you keep your hands off Kaolla — that would be downright pedophilic. Or something like that.

Cold Edition: Pretty in Pink


Pinkspider (25) If it’s cold anywhere in the Western world, it’s in Vancouver. There Pinkspider stands in her shirt from Lanvin Loves H&M and waits, because she can.
Bobby (25) Jeans by Levi's, blazer by H&M, shirt by Garcon Chic. That’s a very good way to survive autumn in Brooklyn. But what we really love, of course, is his awesome beanie.
Celia (21) Why shouldn’t you go swimming in winter, too? With this sexy swimsuit by Blackmilk combined with Chucks and a safety helmet, it’s no problem at all.
Jon (29) Who the hell is Jon? We have absolutely no idea, but he looks exactly like his little sister, wears her clothes, and almost blows just as badly as she does.
Karolin (14) Isn’t she absolutely adorable? The way the Swede stands there in the snow? Shoes by Vagabond, leggings by Monki. Nothing more to say. (Will someone please get her some tea?)
Oleg (25) With those red pants, Oleg from Moscow shouldn’t run around in the white forest, otherwise he’ll be easy prey for drunk hunters. Vodka, Russia — you get it.

JJ: You Know

[flv:youknow.mp4 youknow.jpg 940 529]

Anastasia Kochetkova: Little Life Of Nastya KThe Little Life of Nastya K

The End of Sex: You’ve Got Something In Your FaceHoney, You’ve Got Something on Your Face

Kathi and Nils are living the dream of a newly in-love couple. He had asked her at the office to spend a rather unforgettable evening with him. Quite charming and a little cheeky, of course. The way good men do it. Enchanted by the new Sofia Coppola film, they skipped tipsily to the Italian restaurant of the moment, only to stroll along the Isar embraced tightly and accompanied by moonlight. In front of her apartment door came the obligatory question about coffee, mediocre sex was already in full swing when Nils suddenly spins his beloved around and, shouting loudly, squirts into her face. Moaning, he collapses next to her. Silence. The end of an act.

In this new sexuality, cumshots belong just as much as duck-shaped vibrators and diaper fetishes. The glorious finale of a porno chapter has burned itself irrevocably into the minds of every pubescent little snot. Churches, health authorities, or feminists — no one can forbid a trembling testosterone hero from enjoying facial ejaculation. But why go to the trouble?

What makes it so appealing to fling your egg salad straight into a girl’s freshly made-up face instead of emptying it naturally into the bodily containers provided for that purpose? Is this act the crowning achievement of the masculine urge for female domination? Has normal sex been practiced so often that new paths to orgasm must constantly be invented? Or do men simply enjoy turning any kind of work into a huge mess — and women are into it?

Kathi, at least, seemed prepared for the spontaneous foam party: firstly, there was a pack of lemon-scented hygiene wipes next to her bed, and secondly, the two of them are already celebrating the third anniversary of their solid relationship next week. And we assume that Nils hasn’t had to say just once: “Honey, you’ve got something on your face.”

Fashion Victims Beware: Asos Gives Away CouponsAsos Gives Away Coupons

Suddenly nothing was the same as before. Fashion bloggers freak out, piggy banks are emptied, postmen collapse under the enormous additional workload. What had happened? The new ASOS online shop had finally launched in Germany and immediately captivated everyone who is in any way concerned with fashion, clothes, or not being naked. And after just a few short weeks, the thing has already become one of the most popular shops in the nation.

And what do good companies do when they want to maintain the loyalty and appreciation of their many customers? Exactly: they throw vouchers out into the wide world. And they don’t lure you with pseudo-discounts or minimal-value coupons with which you can just barely snag half a costume-jewelry earring — instead, they’re giving away massive 100-euro chunks!

All you have to do to get your hands on one of these valuable chocolate-factory tickets is take part in a giveaway on the Glam website, and with a bit of luck you’ll soon be able to shop in a giant dreamland full of shirts, dresses, and shoes from over 850 brands — absolutely free! Sometimes life is just too good to be true.

This is a sponsored article by ASOS.

Brett Nelson: Ride In Peace

Ein ♥ für Blogs: Welcome To The InternetWelcome to the Internet

When Kai from Stylespion launched an initiative called “A Heart for Blogs” last year, he did so for honorable and sympathetic reasons. The plan was simple: people should recommend good authors, little gems, and big favorites and thus find one another on the internet. No other campaign in the German blogosphere was as successful as this charismatic mass link exchange.

But the problem with it was quickly identified and won’t change even after several changes of patrons: as honorable as the plan with the red heart may be and as much as small and large websites may refer to one another, in the end it’s primarily the hosting blog that benefits from the campaign. With every article about “A Heart for Blogs,” you’re not pushing yourselves or your digital favorites, but first and foremost the one who called for it.

So think carefully about whether you as a blogger want to take part next Monday in the copy of what was once a wonderful intention and thereby function merely as a welcome and predictable link machine. After all, who needs a fixed day to share their digital treasures with the world? Be free, be independent, and make every day your personal “A Heart for Blogs” — without being exploited. Welcome to the internet.

Surviving the Weekend: Ten Little Missions

Cold, gray, and wet. Wait a minute… didn’t we already have that last week? Yes, Germany seems to be stuck in a nasty, colorless November that sucks the joy of life out of your heads with its gloomy mood. And before you throw yourselves out of the third floor of your duplex in a fit of dark thoughts, only to live a sad existence in a wheelchair and without functioning sexual organs, here — as promised — is a new round of “Ten Little Missions” that you can devote yourselves to this weekend. Are you clever, brave, and crazy enough to complete them all successfully? We’re curious.

One. Barricade yourselves in bed with a hot-water bottle, chocolate cake, and a good-looking partner in this hideous weather and wait until spring arrives. You may gladly double the number of one of these utensils. Two. Grab a Lady Gaga song and sing it so unbelievably badly that the entire internet makes fun of you. Three. Punch every passerby who so much as thinks “Alaaf.” Four. Sleep with a man with a mustache. After all, next week is the official “Have Sex With a Guy With a Mustache” day. That applies to everyone here, by the way. Five. Mold a few one-eyed trouser snakes.

Six. Invent the successor to the internet and then buy Facebook, Google, and Olli’s Tits-Fiesta site for 3.50 euros with your newly acquired wealth. Seven. Hug a tree again — they’re having a really tough time right now… Eight. Listen to all songs by Regina Spektor on repeat. You won’t know whether to laugh or cry. Nine. Sleep with Ke$ha. If you dare. Ten. Buy up all the bananas in East Berlin and thereby create a lovely wave of nostalgia. The lonely housewives will just have to switch back to zucchinis for a while…

Me In My Place: New InnocenceThe New Innocence

We Heart Anime: Crayon Shin-chan

I don’t have very many role models in my life, and I certainly don’t let some random cartoon character dictate one to me. Sticking to this well-intentioned resolution had always been fairly easy — until he appeared on the scene. A loudmouth. A little dirtbag. A kindergarten kid. Shin Chan. And suddenly everything changed.

The adventures of the little pervert and his crazy friends brought so much joy, fun, and irreverence into my gray everyday life that at times I could have died from a laughing fit — and I wouldn’t regret it in the slightest. Every episode, complete with freaking-out mothers, grinning grandfathers, and groped teachers, overflowed with charm, and anyone who was never allowed to dance the Butt Boogie Woogie has my endless and sincere sympathy.

And that’s exactly why the news hit me personally so hard that his creator Yoshito Usui lost his life while hiking last year — and with him, the little boy inside all of us died as well. But we should pay no attention to that truth, because Shin Chan and his adorable sexism will live on forever. In all of us.

id="">

Florrie: Give Me Your Love

[flv:florrie.mp4 florrie.jpg 940 529]

La Geisha: Freja Beha Erichsen

Sandy Kim: I Hate School

Shit Robot: Take ‘Em Up

[flv:shitrobot.mp4 shitrobot.jpg 940 529]

We ♥ Marcel: Return Of Intimacy

It has almost become good form that after a night of heavy drinking with a girlfriend, beer and a skillfully rolled joint, you end up talking about the big things in life. The meaning of it all, the desire for goals, your own interpretation of joy and fun. And some thoughts just keep spinning in your head until they slip away through action.

All of us here have made AMY&PINK what it is today. And I am very proud of what we have achieved and curious about everything that is still to come. What began as a private blog with texts about heartbreak, parties and the everyday life of a devious outsider has developed into an entire magazine. A company with advertising clients, rules and deadlines. With topics, several authors and an image that I alone can no longer even fully grasp.

And sometimes I simply miss publishing videos and photos of the things that happen to me or mean something to me. For this reason I have set up my own little blog at marcel.amypink.com, where from now on I can pour out my soul at random. This is by no means about stealing the personal and detailed articles from AMY&PINK, but about securing a pretty little island for myself where, for a moment, I can be free and random.

With slender articles about warm cheesecake, Japanese pop music and bouncing breasts. Friends, women and fails. And of course a lot of me. A small oasis of eccentric intimacies. And if you have the desire and time, feel free to visit me there and share one or two cold blond beers with me. Over there at WE ♥ MARCEL.

Surviving the Weekend: Ten Little Missions

Cold, grey and wet. No, this time we are not describing neglected genitals or undead dogs, but the terribly disgusting weather we have had to fight our way through for the past few days. The subways are crowded, people are hectic, the flu wave is near. None of this is any fun. How good that with our “Ten Little Missions” we once again have ten happiness-makers ready for you, for whose positive implementation you have the entire weekend. Give it your best and make us proud.

One. Try to make it onto the front page of Bild. However, without physically injuring anyone. Or screwing a celebrity. Or polluting the Gulf Stream. Two. Open a gym under the name “Fitness Fitch” and thereby earn endless respect from us and Wenke Who. Three. Unroll the banknotes in your wallet after you are done doing coke. Otherwise you will only reap horrified looks from your parents at Sunday lunch. Four. When flying, dress up as an old man, change your clothes in the airplane lavatory and then return to your seat as if nothing had happened. Five. Visit a brothel with your friends again in a proper manner and leave half your monthly salary there.

Six. Commit a breathtakingly good suicide to Patrick Wolf’s new song “Time Of My Life.” The track is that beautiful. Seven. Stop smoking. It’s all pointless anyway. Eight. Grow big breasts. That way you’ll get further in life. Much further. Nine. Teach your little sister Chinese in the Shanghai dialect through painstaking work and prank your parents with it on April 1st. Whether three years of nerve-racking effort are worth the small gag, we’re not entirely sure. Ten. Watch the documentary “Influencer” and let it inspire you to great deeds that will change the world. So that we no longer have to do the dirty work…

Twitter: Who Do You Want To Be Today?

Annegret has just run over a hedgehog. She is crying. And she shares this with her readers on Twitter. Quite upset, she immediately starts a discussion with Lisa and Hannes about what she should do now. Whether she can still attend her best friend’s birthday party under these emotional circumstances and what she should order at Starbucks to strengthen her wounded soul. And everyone reads along. Hot chocolate or perhaps a latte?

The micro-blogging service from the USA is used in as many ways as there are people. Some try to squeeze top-class word art out of the 140 characters available, others generally only share information and news, and those who don’t see it quite so strictly just babble into the blinking box about everything they experienced on the way from the train station to the outdoor pool. Lost water wings, found condoms – whatever, someone will surely be interested.

We at AMY&PINK also tweet. Or rather: I do. And while I used to not hold back with personal details either, nowadays it is becoming increasingly difficult for me. Because I no longer see the account as a personal nonsense box, but as the official mouthpiece of an online magazine. Its followers are by no means concerned with which pizza topping I find delicious and what kind of girls are coming and going in my life. And no one probably wants to witness an extended chat with Paulchen and Angela about the breasts of their best friend.

Which naturally raises the question of whether there is even a right way to use Twitter. What should the perfect tweeter look like? What should he write, when and at what intervals? Personal, distant or with masses of replies and retweets into the sheltered nest? Or does the answer perhaps depend on the medium attached to it… company, magazine or private individual? And what do you expect from AMY&PINK’s Twitter account? How personal should it be, or do you really just want hot links and new articles and the person behind it is irrelevant to you?

Perhaps one should also avoid turning every new medium into a science. Nothing is worse than people who act like professionals in a microcosm whose reach extends no further than the next Twitter wall. And if you look at it that way, it probably has no apocalyptic consequences if you occasionally tweet about your favorite pizza topping, as long as you remain interesting, worth reading or sexy. And ideally all at once.

Steven Meisel: Organized Robots

Kevin Hayes: Dirty Little Rainbow

Slash Feat. Fergie: Beautiful Dangerous

The Urban Idyll: Town And Country

I grew up in the countryside, far away from here, somewhere in the south of Germany. We still had to wander for hours across wide fields and through dark forests until we reached some boozy farmers’ party in rusty construction trailers. Only to pass the time there with home-distilled spirits and pubescent dialect sluts. We gently led cute calves through the barn of our future father-in-law and then howled in one of the huge sunflower fields because we had to watch them being slaughtered.

Everyone knew everyone in this small universe full of beer tents, regional trains and the smell of liquid manure. And whether you liked each other or not, you were either related to everyone anyway or some kind of deeply rooted hole-friendship entwined our fates together. No wonder that at some point I’d had enough of monotony, village mattresses and only one proper street and moved out into the big wide world. Berlin swallowed me quickly and anonymously.

But when I fight my way through all the nameless passersby, lost tourists and washed-out shadows in this city of millions, I sometimes feel a bit homesick. This fast-paced world seems to burn through friendships, trivialize depth and drown the willing resident in possibilities. A rush of speed, then, that pretends to offer freedom and choice, yet still leaves us with loneliness and unhappiness.

My dreams are rooted, my future unwritten. And yet I am torn between the eternal question of which of these two extreme worlds a person might live more happily in. In the big city paved with opportunities, offers and fellow human beings, or in the miniaturized idyll of the past, where depth instead of superficiality always had top priority? Until I have personally answered that question, I will get myself a city cow, which I will carefully lead across Alexanderplatz with a well-groomed portion of country love while gently patting her head.

Isabel: Hardcore Personal Ad

Name: Isabel Age: 20 Height: 1.64 m Residence: Munich Occupation: Student Zodiac sign: Gemini Works well: 3-day beard, hoodies, steaks Doesn’t work at all: Ugly text messages, imitating dialects I flee from: Stupid people I can: Cookie Monster cupcakes My best friend says: Nothing, she’d find this totally embarrassing. My ex says: When are we seeing each other? I say: Nothing either. I believe in: Myself

I need a guy, not a male vegan indie chick who can’t decide between a Tocotronic and a Hugendubel tote bag and orders low-fat lattes at Starbucks. Instead, you should know damn well what you want and not be some pot-smoking fun student who can only decide which brand his next pair of sneakers should be. Decisiveness would also be practical when it comes to my lack of jealousy, because if you maybe prefer someone else after all, I’m gone pretty quickly, without drama. That’s also quite good for long-distance relationships, which I happen to find great.

I won’t ask you whether I look good, am too fat or what I should wear—I can decide that perfectly well myself. But if you don’t wear the shirt I gave you, if your hair is hanging around in the sink or you reject my calls, that could lead to domestic violence. Overall, I’m not a romantic girl. If you give me flowers, they’re dead after two days anyway, and if you want an electric toothbrush for Christmas, I’ll gladly give you one. But then you have to expect that I’ll craft school cones for you at the start of every semester, even if you’re not studying at all.

If necessary, I can discuss not only the current league leaders or the last relegation matches of the 3rd division with you in quite a qualified manner, but also the Eintracht–Offenbach derby of 1959. At this point, thanks to my ex-boyfriend for two almost frozen toes and a broken nose in football stadiums. Nevertheless, I am an incredible girly girl, own 92 different nail polishes and 12 pairs of wedges alone. And if you’re thinking of potato wedges instead of shoes right now, then you’re definitely the right one.

Why I’m doing this here, I don’t really know myself, because actually I never have no one, but always someone, which my mother has lovingly tried to dismiss as “flighty” all her life. Maybe I’d like to have a someone, not just anyone. And anyway, I don’t need you forever; it’s always been clear that I’ll marry my best friend. Just for now, because it would simply be nice at the moment.

If you want to get to know Isabel, then just send a nice mail or write something lovely in the comments. If you’d like to take part in the hardcore personal ads yourself, then send your meaningful text and a snazzy photo by mail to us.

Johnny Knoxville: Detroit Lives

What a guy. After sweetening night after night for years with daredevil stunts, insane actions and disgusting excesses, Johnny Knoxville has said goodbye to the small screen and is now causing trouble around the world in three dimensions in “Jackass 3D.” And not only that. With the film “Detroit Lives” by Palladium Boots, which has been circulating on the internet for several weeks, he is also roaming through one of the most legendary American cities of all time.

Always in search of honest stories, interesting people and the occasional peculiarity, the film is a tribute to a long-forgotten metropolis that deserves a fresh start and whose legacy is a rebirth of creativity, inspiration and drive. Detroit lives. And the viewer feels that a little more with every passing minute.

If you haven’t seen this little masterpiece yet, you should watch “Detroit Lives” as long as the film is still available online. After all, afterwards you’ll see both Johnny and the city of rebirth with completely different eyes. And as you can guess from the photo above, Michigan also happens to have the most beautiful girls on the East Coast. Or something like that.

Munk: Violent Love

We Heart Anime: One Piece

Enjoying the endless vastness of the ocean, feeling a cool breeze in your manga hair and sailing across continents with good friends in a small nutshell of a boat. Who among us hasn’t wished at least once to lead an exciting life as a beloved and at the same time feared pirate? With “One Piece” and the Straw Hat crew, we were able to feel exactly that thrill afternoon after afternoon without having to get our hands dirty.

While elsewhere people were playing with boring card tricks or inferior spinning tops, not a minute passed on the legendary Grand Line without busty redheads hurling gold treasures across the plains, enchanted reindeer fighting giant snow rabbits, or cool cooks with even cooler cigarettes in their mouths being shot into the realm of the clouds to fight against God himself. Everywhere it teemed with sympathetic enemies and recurring friends. Endless secrets, desert peoples, old men stuck in treasure chests.

Every episode was a firework of emotions that made us burst out laughing when Monkey D. Luffy once again rushed headfirst into trouble, or miserably cover our fish sticks with salty tears when Nami spoke about her cruel childhood on a lost island. If we were allowed to wish for just one alternative life, we would dive into the colorful world of the Navy’s opponents with a wide grin on our faces to finally become King of the Pirates.

Win Tickets and a Phone: See Juli Live

Just a few years ago, German bands didn’t have it particularly easy in this country. The charts were flooded with English babble, cuddly boy bands and dubious cover versions. But then a huge wave broke over us—the perfect wave. Today, the band behind it, Juli, is bigger and more well-known than ever. They fill their fans with joy at concerts and festivals, trill sympathetic and relatable lyrics and also happen to look pretty good while doing it.

You lucky ones now have the chance to experience the five charismatic Hessians live on 05.11 in Erfurt as part of the Telekom Street Gigs and, in addition, to snag the Mobile Music Pac - Street Gigs Edition III incl. Nokia 5230, which is more than a grandiose mobile phone. It not only has a fat 8.1 cm touchscreen, but also an excellent music player that survives up to 33 hours. And it doesn’t just consist of a great phone, but also a “Street Gigs - Best Of” DVD Vol. III (highlights of the gigs from Clueso, Razorlight, Polarkreis 18, Fettes Brot and Jamie Cullum and many more), two free ringtones and a CR-119 car holder.

All you have to do to get 1x2 tickets for Juli at Hangar 2 of Erfurt Airport plus the Music Pac into your cold little hands is to leave us a comment with a valid email address here by Tuesday, November 2. And if you want to give your luck a little boost, you can also grab a few tickets on the Telekom Streetgigs website. Good luck!

We’re Looking for You: Attention Fashion Girls

The art of dressing beautifully remains a topic that makes history and draws its strength from a multitude of blogs. What enchanting faces like Jessie, Vanessa and Lene have achieved and experienced in the fashion industry is astonishing and admirable and inspires us again and again. That’s why it’s almost a shame that we only cover this vast world full of outstanding outfits, beautiful people and wild parties in fragments, and if so, then rather amateurishly, with our articles.

Despite our clumsiness when it comes to the fashion circus, we’ve made a name for ourselves with labels, agencies and designers and are invited weekly to a whole host of great events, showcases and meetings that we consider important and exciting—but none of us really has any proper clue about the subject matter. Although I personally enjoy moving among all the pretty models and fashion bloggers, as soon as I’m asked about collections, cuts or the history of a trend color, I have to politely and somewhat embarrassedly decline.

For exactly this reason, we are looking for a new member for our team who will primarily take care of fashion and its excesses. This is by no means about photographing yourself in your new H&M dress in your childhood bedroom, but rather about reporting on trends, happenings and events in typical AMY&PINK style—cheeky, sexy and subjective. In return, we’ll send you to high-profile fashion events, present your texts to a huge audience and give you the opportunity to make a name for yourself in the industry.

So if you’re interested in fashion, an alert girl full of ideas with a damn good writing style and preferably based in Berlin, because that’s where most of the events take place, then get in touch with a meaningful sample text and a few pretty photos and send the whole package to marcel@amypink.com. We look forward to you joining us soon in the pink world of fantasy. Or something like that.

id="">

Lykke Li: Get Some

[flv:lykkeli.mp4 lykkeli.jpg 940 529]

Cameron Smith: Naughty Kids

Natasja Maria Fourie: My Little Diary

We Heart Anime: Sailor Moon

While today’s kids are bombarded with tons of cheap anime crap, all neatly divided into genres of sexual preferences, lousy knock-offs or Korean copies, back in our day there was only one masterpiece to which we remained loyal until the bitter end, and which united all the great things in one adventure. Because we were in love, enchanted, and deeply impressed.

With “Sailor Moon,” a world of talking cats, likable arch-enemies and gigantic eyes opened up before us. The story of the planetary girls who could transform into superheroes in sailor suits with the help of blinking dildos captivated us season after season. And we didn’t care at all whether the story was ridiculous, childish or simply bad. It was all we had—and it was bombastic.

Afternoon after afternoon we ran home from school to fall in love with a different model-like Sailor warrior episode after episode, to most of all want to smack Chibiusa, and to catch a glimpse of the girls’ nipple-less breasts when they once again transformed in the name of the moon. But even after almost 20 years of “Sailor Moon,” one question remains unanswered… which of the pubescent warriors was actually the hottest?

Skins USA: Wrong Reality

[flv:skinsusa.mp4 skinsusa.jpg 940 600]

The End of an Us: Drifting Apart

The moment hits us hard and unprepared. We were a team, a collective, a unit. You and I against the rest of the world. Night after night we nestled up to each other, drank cheap red wine, laughed, lived, loved. The city was ours—what am I saying—the country, the world, eternity. I looked into your face and suddenly everything around me was better than before. The painful death of all worries had begun. But before we could fully put the plan to build our new utopia into action—we drifted apart.

It is hard for us to accept that everything is constantly in motion. Nothing stays the way it is. We have less and less to say to each other, the looks change, the opinions, you, me. The feeling of constant connection gives way to a sickly atmosphere full of misunderstandings, jealousy and finally indifference. Hard to believe that we once shared heart and soul, when today we cannot even talk about the weather without feeling disgusted and alone.

The time has come to cut the remaining nerves of our former bond. To no longer stand in the way of progress. And although with every painful cut tears well up in my eyes, memories break forth and the certainty of a failed togetherness manifests itself, it cannot wait any longer. We simply have to admit that it will never be what it once was.

Now I sit alone in this room filled with ghosts soaked in pity and rummage through the remaining witnesses of a better time. Photos, papers, reminiscences. I say goodbye to you quietly but firmly, leave the room that has turned into a mausoleum of temporary immortality, and take a deep breath. The sun briefly tickles my face and I realize that what just happened is not that bad. And that we will see each other again someday. In another time, in another reality. I like you, take care.

Nude: Hannah Holman

Sound Attack: Sounds Of The Week – The Albums of the Week

Like little greedy wolves, week after week we wait for the owners of grimy record stores to throw one new album after another at us. Because we are addicted. Addicted to the freshest sounds, the hottest images, the most life-affirming tracks. To give us these unique feelings, we have once again sent three artists into the race with their latest releases and we are more than curious to see whether they can satisfy our desire for uniqueness.

Mark Ronson And The Business Intl - Record Collection: The new album from the English super-producer could have become a milestone of modern pop culture; after all, “Bang Bang Bang” and “Lose It” practically blew us away. Unfortunately, this digital record collection does not quite live up to its reputation. Good songs, nice beats, beautiful collaborations. This album is thoroughly good—no more and no less. Recommended tracks: “The Bike Song” and “Hey Boy.”

Deine Jugend - Wir Sind Deine Jugend: With these three firecrackers from Mannheim, Germany has been gifted with top-class, likable club pop. Laura’s voice combined with pounding melodies is especially fun live, but also comes across perfectly on “Wir sind Deine Jugend.” There is no doubt that we will be hearing a lot more from this band. Recommended tracks: “Deine Maske” and “Mama Geht Jetzt Steil.”

Die Antwoord - $o$: Torn apart by critics, loved by fans. Ninja, Yo-Landi and Hi-Tek stir up the music world on their raid through it and continue on their first album what they started with “Enter The Ninja” and “Beat Boy.” This work, however, is not really convincing; many of the songs seem to function only with a pounding music video and Yo-Landi’s bouncing breasts. In its pure form, the horniness unfortunately gets lost mercilessly—but luckily they do not take it seriously anyway. Recommended tracks: “Evil Boy” and “In Your Face.”

MTV Game One: Masters Of Gambling

It doesn’t matter at all whether you constantly play the latest franchise titles, got stuck somewhere in the past during the Nintendo-Sega war, or have absolutely no clue about games. Out there are a few guys who make our hearts happy and your consoles glow. And it’s time to thank them with every fiber of our softened retro bodies.

For years we avoided any kind of social contact that could have ruined our afternoons and evenings spent watching GIGA. People who had no clue why every fifteen minutes we watched pimply nerds assaulting controllers and keyboards and posted our inferior mustard in the attached forum about why Lara Croft is a slut and that Goombas have much more soul than their armored colleagues.

After the collapse of the gaming channel, the wailing was loud and the arteries on our wrists deep. Where were we supposed to watch a six-hour special on “Warcraft III” in one go—something that didn’t even really interest us? How were we supposed to keep following the digital war between n00bWARRIOR and IlseKannNilse? And why should we hold on to our childhood at all when everything melts away in our hands anyway? But salvation was soon to follow…

Today Budi and Simon and the old recruited faces have found their permanent place on MTV with “GameOne” and spread exactly the same charm that once came in green. If, like us, you have no friends and watch Nils, Eddy and Etienne fight, talk and curse for hours, you always feel like you’re sitting among your best buddies and shouting along. And it is exactly for this emotion that we want to thank you today, and we can wholeheartedly advise everyone to hop on the gamer bus of good vibes.

id="">

Ibis Cerimagic: Tryin’ Mess My Imagination

Best Coast: Boyfriend

[flv:boyfriend.f4v boyfriend.jpg 940 526]

Jonathan Safran Foer: Eating Animals

The consumption of other living beings has always been a topic that divides opinion. What should one eat, how healthy is meat, and what kind of suffering may one inflict upon one’s future schnitzel? To get to the bottom of this question, I spent the weekend reading "Eating Animals" by Jonathan Safran Foer, who, in the glaring light of factory farming and from the standpoint of his own convictions, set out to search for—and in part find—answers.

Beautifully packaged in a story about his Jewish grandmother and chicken with carrots, he sets off to uncover the truth about an issue that has split humanity into two camps. Meat or no meat—that is the question here. He speaks with farmers who still know their cows by name, breaks into a turkey factory at night, and bombards the willing reader with data that should really make the chicken wings stick in one’s throat. Should.

Yet with his highly acclaimed work, Jonathan has not revealed or accomplished anything that people who are even slightly interested in the topic did not already know. Factory farming is death for us all, large corporations care only about money, grandmothers cook best. It is a nice attempt to show the world the right path, but it gets hopelessly lost in a sea of educational videos, PETA propaganda, and failed self-discipline.

While he describes how pus-filled pigs are executed with metal rods and then fed through the meat grinder, mutant chickens drown in thousands of pits of excrement, and cattle are impregnated and abused over and over again, I calmly stuffed myself with a portion of tortellini in ham-and-cream sauce. That’s how numb I already am.

But there is one thing I took away from this journey through barns, slaughterhouses, and memories: that it is often not the whole, but the detail that matters. That one does not have to follow Jonathan’s path of vegetarianism completely, but perhaps more often. And that one always has a choice about what one buys, consumes, and ultimately eats. And that small spark of awareness ultimately grants "Eating Animals" its justification for existing.

Interview: The Ting Tings

The British band The Ting Tings, with their punchy sounds and colorful performances, are among the most likable pop sensations of recent years. Last week, Katie and Jules returned to their former adopted home of Berlin for the LOUD campaign by Tommy Hilfiger, and shortly before their lively performance at E-Werk we had the opportunity to meet them at Soho House to chat about cheap sunglasses, creepy girls, and small penises.

After working on your new album for a year, you’re finally back on stages around the world. How important are concerts and live gigs to you?

Katie: They are the most important thing of all for us. We really enjoy performing live, and the feeling of standing on stage is one of the most exciting you can have. We’re not a band that just wants to earn a lot of money and otherwise be left alone. We love performing.

As teenagers you were members of a punk band called TKO. However, you had neither a record deal nor success. Are you still in touch with your old bandmates, and do you think they are jealous of your success?

Katie: No, unfortunately we’ve lost touch and don’t really have any contact anymore. But I don’t think they’re particularly jealous or envious. After all, they’re working on their own projects, have started families, and lead very different lives from mine.

Since your debut album “We Started Nothing” in 2008, fans around the world have idolized you and crowded you at shows. What are the craziest things that have ever happened to you with fans?

Katie: At one of our concerts, this guy suddenly ran onto the stage, pushed past the bodyguards, and stumbled toward me with his arms wide open. My heart nearly stopped, but at the last second one of the security guards managed to throw himself at him and pin him to the ground. I was in shock for a while after that.

Jules: For me it was this girl. She was maybe only 15, but she followed us from gig to gig and often stood alone in freezing cold under bridges or by fences. One evening we saw her standing alone behind a factory and told her it was dangerous to be there alone in winter. She looked at me, pressed a box full of sunglasses into my hands, and ran away when I said I couldn’t accept that. When I looked at the glasses more closely later, I realized they were all broken and damaged. That was pretty creepy.

Jules, since you just mentioned your fondness for sunglasses—you really have quite a collection. Where do you get them all?

Jules: Yes, that’s true, I really own a lot. I like buying them in a small shop in New York, but I actually prefer the cheap ones. The expensive ones always disappear suddenly, break, or get stolen. You just have to leave them on a table in a restaurant for a moment and they’re gone. That doesn’t happen with the inexpensive ones.

What about fashion in general, besides sunglasses?

Jules: I prefer it simple. At the moment I’m into corduroy pants and plain T-shirts. Combined with a selected pair of sunglasses, you always make a very good impression.

Katie: Experiments are great. Trying out what suits you and what you like. Right now I enjoy wearing Creepers (Katie sticks her feet up in the air). I don’t care whether they’re in style or trendy. Susie from Style Bubble recommended these to me from a British brand. I’ve also started my own small fashion blog, Stop That Car!, where I can let off steam.

And musically? What are you listening to on your iPods at the moment?

Katie: Pet Shop Boys.

Jules: French for Beginners.

Do you remember the moment when you realized things were suddenly taking off for you, when success came knocking at your door?

Katie: We were at this great party and handed a DJ friend our demo tape. Apparently he liked it very much, because a few days later, while Jules and I were drying dishes in the kitchen, our song “That’s Not My Name” suddenly started playing. We dropped everything and jumped around the apartment. That’s a moment that’s burned into my memory.

How did you come up with the name “Ting Tings”?

Katie: I stole it from a girl I used to work with in a clothing store. Her name was Ting Ting, and she told me that in Chinese it refers to old park stages and means “listen, listen.” We also found out that it implies the sound of innovation. There are two of us and we’re very rhythm-driven, so it fit quite well.

You’ve traveled a lot around the world thanks to your success—Japan, USA, Germany… Where did you like it best and why?

Jules: That’s really a difficult question. Sometimes we travel through three different cities in one day and often don’t even know exactly where we are, or we simply don’t have time to go out and get to know the place. I still remember Jakarta very well. We were told it was very dangerous there. Our hotel room was constantly inspected and we were only allowed to go into the city with bodyguards. But once you talk to people and learn a bit about Jakarta, you realize it’s actually quite nice.

Katie: Yes, there was a man at the market selling rabbits. He held a small, cute baby bunny up to my face and I immediately fell in love with the little fluffball. It almost broke my heart that I couldn’t take it with me. But I also remember Istanbul, for example, because there are so many young people there who seem to be partying day and night. A great city. And of course Berlin, because we lived there for almost a year.

Is it true that your band name means “small penis” in Japanese?

Jules: Yes, that’s true… (both laugh) But it actually means “sweet penis”—which is a little better.

We thank Katie and Jules for the lovely conversation and eagerly await their new album. If you can’t wait that long, you can exclusively download their new song “We’re Not The Same” for the current Tommy Hilfiger campaign here for free and have a lot of fun with it.

Surviving the Weekend: Ten Little Missions

We, too, have missed our favorite column at the grand gate of the weekend. And because we know that for weeks you’ve been languishing on bread and water in front of your computer monitors, waiting to find out what to do with those free days between your lousy office job and your career as an assistant lifeguard, today we’re once again pumping you full of ten new missions that need to be mastered. For the good of your soul and to keep the earth in balance.

One. Let the upcoming flu wave hit you and drag as many of your acquaintances and friends down with you as possible. Afterwards, celebrate a collective sick party. Two. Dig 200 meters down into the warm earth and wait for CNN to report about you. Three. Draw a mustache on your face with a permanent marker and yell at anyone who won’t let you have your fun. Four. Move your ass. Five. Run your own video game company and dump on Nintendo.

Six. Cry in the street again. Afterwards you’ll feel relieved. And embarrassed. Seven. Dress entirely in black. It’s winter after all and you don’t wear colors, damn it. Eight. Sleep with Avril Lavigne. Everyone does it, after all. Nine. At the next shared apartment party, pee on your girlfriend’s dog and then chase it through the apartment. A cozy smell will make the room shine. Ten. Listen to the new song by the Crystal Fighters for an entire day and once again become aware of how important and wonderful swallowing really is.

Naked: Marie Keeler

Family Planning: Brothers And Sisters – The Curse of Siblings

I am a spoiled only child. Without manners, respect, or consideration. While my friends had to share everything with their older brothers and younger sisters, I could eat the cookies by myself, send Mario alone into the race against Bowser, and occupy a room all to myself. Sharing was a foreign concept to me, as was the feeling of a sibling bond.

How I would have loved to have a little side-Marcel in the evenings, someone with whom I could have zapped through the TV program of another generation. An older guardian who would protect me from the dangers of the street and who truly cared about me. Or a whole horde of similar DNA partners who could have entertained me, beaten me up, hugged me, taught me, fed me, changed me, held me back, laughed at me, strengthened me, praised me, and made me cry.

I never got to experience the curse of siblings, and deep inside I often wonder whether I missed out on a great deal because of it. Or maybe not. How much have your siblings shaped you, or could you have easily done without them? Are they annoying, important, or simply just there? Share your experiences and stories with your brothers and sisters with us, or are you even happy to be an only child as well? Curse or blessing—that is the question here.

Ériver Hijano: The End Of A Chapter – End of a Chapter

Grab Them Now: Yeah, Sticker For Y’all! – Yeah, Stickers for Everyone!

Time and again, you little trolls ask us how on earth you can get your hands on these extremely hot AMY&PINK stickers that keep getting slapped onto bare breasts and dirty trash cans. After all, there’s still a whole box of the pink goods sitting around here—and that’s why we came up with something incredibly simple to satisfy your deepest and most secret desires.

Just send us a sufficiently stamped return envelope to Marcel Winatschek at Brüsseler Straße 48 in 13353 Berlin. Then we’ll easily slip a handful of stickers into it and promptly send it back to you. Completely simple, no problems—that’s how fast it goes. If you don’t know what a stamped envelope is, read this article. If you don’t know what the post office is, go to this website. If you don’t know how to visit a website, then ask your supervisor in room 213a on the second floor for help.

And of course we’re insanely eager to find out what you’re actually planning to do with these things and what grand photos you’ll end up taking with them, which you’ll then naturally send to us by mail. Are you wallpapering your dog, girlfriend, grandma? Terrorizing the city cleaning service? Or covering up your most recent body parts with them? Throw your ideas into the comments!

Hurts: Stay

[flv:stay.flv stay.jpg 940 529]

The Winners Have Been Announced: Beck’s Music Inspired Art Label

A few months ago we pointed you to a contest by Beck’s in which you were supposed to design and submit your own beer label. Many of you followed the call of the popular brewery and, as requested, poured yourselves into designing magical little bottles. Now the three winners have been chosen, and not only do they get to pocket one or two hefty cash prizes, they also get to decorate a huge party in the Germans’ favorite capital with their submissions.

The winners were selected by three influential figures from the glamorous world of glossy magazines. On board were Sven Fortmann from Lodown, Francesca Gavin from Dazed & Confused, and Simon Beckerman from PIG Magazine. And it quickly became clear to them who would be taking home the big cash suitcases along with the exciting trip to Berlin.

Following in the footsteps of Phoenix and Ladyhawk, who once also designed labels, are now Marie Schacht from Dresden, Thomas Gnahm from Weimar, and Franz Stämmele from Stuttgart, all of whom impressed with inventive and extraordinary designs. You can view them on the Beck’s website, and we’re already looking forward to the massive winner’s party with the Ting Tings, Phoenix, and Paul Smith on November 6 in Berlin.

Long-Distance Relationships: Far Away From You – Why Are You So Far Away?

You’ve finally found someone who triggers deep inside you hot feelings of happiness full of fun, life, and eroticism—and then that certain person is sitting hundreds of kilometers away. Long-distance relationships are an affliction full of ambivalence, compromises, and sacrifice. No spontaneous pouncing on each other after work, no tender and less gentle touches on your best friend’s living room floor, only rarely that look, that scent, that voice—without digital assistance.

Skype, Facebook, and the telephone have to serve as substitutes for all the boozy and pleasurable activities you could be indulging in if you weren’t living on opposite ends of the world. What are you doing right now? Where are you? Is the connection bad? Something about fucking.

Your life suddenly takes on an endless waiting position full of doubt. Waiting for money that you’ll blow on plane and train tickets. Waiting for weekends when neither of you is tied up by work, obligations, and family. Waiting for a seemingly final solution that in the end still results in sorrow, anger, and regret.

Long-distance relationships gnaw at us and keep putting us to the test, until at some point they spit out one big question: Does any of this even make sense anymore? The sacrifice of closeness, sex, and spontaneity because the person you believe you love is simply too far away and might be searching for the same answers? Distant intimacy simply cannot function without an extra portion of trust, reliability, and vivid memories. And yet it usually fails because of the temptations right outside your own front door. Or have you had different experiences?

id="">

Sinikka Konttinen: Drawing With Light

Crystal Castles: Baptism

[flv:baptism.mp4 baptism.jpg 940 529]

Mariam Sitchinava: Ethereal Teenager

Bob Renno: Glorious California

Apply Now! The Brand-New AMY&PINK Network The Brand-New AMY&PINK Network

For us personally, networking and the regular exchange with other blogs has always been our top priority. For this reason, exactly one year ago we introduced the prototype lil.bit as the first participant in our AMY&PINK Network. Today there are already five blogs publishing under our flag everything they consider creative, worth reading, and indispensable. We think that’s so fantastic that we now want to further expand this platform and make it more accessible.

We have completely redesigned our network and from now on offer new participants a unified but incredibly attractive design that can be customized depending on the direction and image of your blog. Never before have consistency and inspiration been presented in such an appealing way as with the new AMY&PINK Network. And the best part is: you can be part of it!

As usual, for our little digital orgy we are looking for the most creative, radiant, and hottest minds who feel like running their own blog on our Boat of Love while simultaneously getting an imaginary AMY&PINK tattoo on their chest. After all, this opens doors for you that you may previously have only dared to dream about.

What we offer:

- A free blog in our network
- A blog.amypink.com address
- Unlimited storage space for your photos
- Import of your old blog articles that you may have elsewhere

What you gain:

- Regular promotion on our site, Facebook, and Twitter
- Linking in our blogroll and on our network page
- An easy start, strong visibility, many readers
- You (of course) retain the rights to all your publications

What you must offer:

- Charismatic personality and creativity
- Interest in fashion, design, culture, music and/or nerd stuff
- Desire to write regularly and well

Why we do this:

Together with likable and worthwhile people, we want to create a network that, through an inspiring exchange of ideas and joie de vivre, grows into a well-known and influential oasis of creativity in the digital world. Why try to change something alone when together it is many times easier? This is your chance to be part of something big. In return, we will place an advertising banner to offset our server costs.

If you feel addressed and would like to become part of the AMY&PINK network, please send us a meaningful application with photos to marcel@amypink.com and you may soon be holding your exclusive AMY&PINK blog in your hands. And that would truly be phenomenal. If you have any questions, please ask them in the comments.

Yelle: La Musique

[flv:lamusique.mp4 lamusique.jpg 940 529]

Sophie Van der Perre: A Place I Call Home

We Heart Anime: Earth Maiden Arjuna

The world as we know it is close to the abyss. Deforested rainforests, polluted oceans, and poisoned food. No place that is not sullied or out of balance. A planet that, with our greed and addiction to more and faster, we are pushing into the abyss more quickly than we would like. And our only hope for salvation lies in the hands of a 16-year-old girl from Japan who died in a motorcycle accident and meets her fate in the afterlife.

"Earth Maiden Arjuna" is an anime that not only carries the message of a better future and warns us about our current lifestyle, but also presents these qualities in a lavish and sympathetic way. While you cry and tremble with the protagonists until the very end, wondering whether they can still stop the darkness that has settled over all of us, watching unleashes a true flood of epic moments, captivating music, and enormous imagery.

Governments, industries, and also we as consumers are criticized so intensely in the 13-part series that attentive viewers will never again want anything to do with state systems, liars, and convenience foods and will want to retreat to a lonely mountain as quickly as possible. Arjuna reveals many truths to us that one only needs to listen to with an open heart in order to change something. Whether we are willing to put them into practice, however, lies solely with us.

Die Antwoord: Evil Boy

[flv:evilboy.f4v evilboy.jpg 940 526]

Uffie: Difficult

[flv:uffie.mp4 uffie.jpg 940 529]

Digital Breakups: Let’s Stay Friends

There was once a time when breaking up was still relatively simple. Either we confessed to the love of our life that the feelings were dead, that Ferdinand was better in bed or that Ulrike had bigger boobs, or we were caught after P.E. class letting more than just shampoo and shower gel touch our hairy parts in the shower. For example, the substitute teacher. In both cases there was a war of roses afterward, malicious phone calls and poisonous looks on the street, but basically it was over after that. Nowadays the whole thing works a little differently.

No matter whether our heart was ripped out or we finally gathered the courage to separate from our stinking better half – afterward a mountain of digital decisions awaits us. After all, in blind romantic fury we didn’t just interlink our genitals, but also every social website existing on this planet. Facebook, Twitter, StudiVZ, Lokalisten, Last.fm, Skype, ICQ, MySpace, Flickr, Bebo, Netlog… the list is long and cruel.

Ending digital relationships gives us a headache, because if we’ve been hurt, the logical decision is to beat the fucking counterpart into the ground. Even if it’s only on the internet. Friendships are deleted, people are blocked and accounts unfollowed until the keyboard glows. With the sole aim of gleefully sticking it to the ex-partner and showing them: “Hey, I don’t give a shit about you and I don’t need you – especially not online. And now cry your eyes out because your timeline is so cruel and lonely without me.”

Who is the loser in this game? The one who pulls the anti-analog emergency brake and cuts and walls off wherever possible, or the other side, who gleefully watches the jealous and hurt brat defame themselves and mutate into a social beast? After a breakup, should you also end contacts on social networks in order to protect yourself from new information, staged party photos and the next relationship status update, or is all of it pointless anyway? Because no matter how much has changed in the age of the internet, one thing will probably always remain. The phrase: We can still be friends.

Deine Jugend: Mama Is Going Wild Now

[flv:mama.m4v mama.jpg 940 529]

Nude: Janine Henkes

The End of Music Television: Who Killed My MTV?

There have always been two kinds of people in this world. The giggling prole wimps who consumed Blümchen, Tokio Hotel and Roxette on VIVA, and the hard, stinking bastards for whom MTV, a bottle of Jacky and the dead Kiss revival band under the bed meant everything. Battle of the music genres, fat versus stupid, ass-ripping festival air-guitar-hotel-room-wrecking fuck rock versus softwashed pussy pop from Cologne. The winners were clear back then, but now the only flagship music channel seems to be catching up with the abrupt end of a Kurt Cobain, Brian Jones or Jimi Hendrix. Too bad they just barely missed the exit to the Forever 27 Club.

Starting next year, the Berlin branch wants to disappear completely from free TV and mutate into a pay channel. Because of money, because of growth, because of some kind of manager bullshit. From then on, VIVA will be the only free music channel and will pump our youth full of David Guetta, Sarah Connor and Justin Bieber. In general, the step from former music giant into the brave new paid world would of course be an outcry, a death blow to our childhood, a sad end to all coolness, if… yes, if MTV hadn’t long since lost its profile and defamed itself into a faceless and superfluous piece of the past with Jamba!, mother dating shows and marketing wankery.

So we think back wistfully to the good old days when at three in the morning, with cheap wine and heated spirits, we gathered in front of the television and on the last bastion of coolness indulged in the rousing sounds of Metallica, Nirvana and Weezer until we fell asleep entwined and pseudo-pregnant. Thanks MTV, for all the wonderful time with you. And now buzz off. We still have to go to YouTube today and impatiently wait there for the rebirth of VIVA-ZWEI.

Photo Album: Boobs, Drugs and a Guinea Pig

Over the weeks and months, a whole lot of digital pictures accumulate here, in which we have captured our excursions into the fairy-tale forest, rapes of unsuspecting travelers and exposed secondary sexual characteristics for all eternity. And at this point we offer you lucky bastards a small glimpse into mommy’s family album. Whoever spots a “Wizard of Oz” poster, by the way, wins a trip with Ines to Lesbos.

In Our Own Affairs: The New Sobriety

After we reported last week on the more than harsh deployment of police against the opponents of the new Stuttgart railway station, praise and criticism rained down from all sides regarding the fact that we once again dared to look beyond the end of our noses. Uncharacteristically, we did not philosophize about outstanding photographers, captivating music videos, or the brainfucks of everyday life, but instead wrote about current and political events in our own country. But do statecraft and tits go together?

While many readers appreciated that we addressed the nation’s flashpoints, others responded with scorn. The criticisms were loud, direct, and all conveyed the same message. From “Combining breasts and politics on one page is something only BILD really manages…” to “Shoemaker, stick to your last! Please no more unreflected political articles on AMY&PINK!” to “Keep your hands off that stuff and write about tits and Lindsay Lohan’s rehab again. That’s nice too.”

Our initial speechlessness gave way to calculated sobriety. Because of course AMY&PINK does not live solely from cultural fashion, current lifestyle, and exposed genitalia. Instead, we reflect and create the trends that currently interest our generation—and us authors—the most. And when children and young people are injured, reporting is boiling over, and an entire state seems to be teetering, then those are topics that are relevant to us as well and that by no means attack our profile as a taboo-free online magazine.

“Stuttgart 21” shows that current affairs are also interesting and worth discussing for us and especially for you. Therefore, we will of course continue to present these kinds of events on AMY&PINK and will not allow ourselves to be squeezed into a corset tailored by upstart journalism students with sticks up their asses or petty mama’s boys with a penchant for trolling. For diversity, for freedom of opinion, for the new seriousness.

The Good Natured: Be My Animal

Favorite Game: Chrono Trigger

It Gets Better: Gay Teens

After a teenager in New Jersey threw himself off a bridge a few days ago after a video on YouTube showed him having sex with another man, a new discussion has flared up in the United States about the integration of homosexual youths into the supposedly well-guarded and normal society. Whether on major talk shows, in political debates, or chatting with the neighbor—many are asking how to take away the feelings of loneliness, despair, and distress from gay and lesbian teenagers and replace them with courage, pride, and confidence.

The idea of a new project called "It Gets Better" has quickly spilled over to us as well. Its goal is to inspire children and adolescents with homosexual inclinations toward a better future in which they receive acceptance and can remain true to themselves. In many videos, adult gays and lesbians speak up to encourage their younger kindred spirits with fearlessness by sharing insights into their own experiences.

And anyone who takes a closer look at the project will realize that these short clips are not only helpful for young people with a different sexual orientation, but also show all of us that many problems and decisions that seem difficult today are not so terrible after all, that others have already successfully mastered them, and that the time ahead of us offers more freedom and possibilities than we sometimes imagine.

We’re Giving Away Tickets: Hilfiger Denim Loud

Jules and Katie are once again touring the country as The Ting Tings, proudly presenting their new album “Kunst,” which they recorded entirely on their own and without parental supervision in Berlin. As a thank-you to the city and its small inhabitants, the two will return in the middle of the month as part of Hilfiger Denim LOUD and throw a massive premiere party at E-Werk together with Peaches DJ Set, Michi Beck, Treasure Fingers, and Fan Death. And the best part: you can be there!

The two Brits have collaborated with Tommy Hilfiger and wrote the corresponding song “We’re Not The Same” especially for his new fragrance “Loud for her and for him.” They also perform it in the official LOUD TV spot. Now they will be playing on October 14 at E-Werk here in Berlin to live up to their title as Live Breakthrough Act. And for this unforgettable evening, we are giving away 1x2 exclusive tickets right here!

All you have to do to see the Ting Tings and their best friends live is leave a comment with a valid email address here by Sunday, October 10. And if you want to play it safe, you can also grab a few tickets at the Hilfiger Denim Store at Rosenthaler Str. 38, Berlin Mitte, or at the box office. Good luck!

Wolf Parade: Yulia

Stuttgart 21: What’s Happening Right Now

Students, university students, and attentive citizens are currently protesting against the monster project S21 in Stuttgart, which not only devours enormous amounts of taxpayers’ money but, in the view of many residents of the Baden-Württemberg capital, is also completely unnecessary. That is why thousands of them gathered today in the Schlossgarten to show that they do not agree with what the state is doing to them. The police, however, do not seem to like that at all.

They are using the full force of the state against the peaceful crowd and are clubbing, like in their best May Day riot years, anything that has not yet silently collapsed to the ground. Water cannons, weapons, and riot squads are being deployed against people who merely wanted to protect a few old trees that were to be felled for the construction project. Among them are many children and young people.

You can stand on the controversial project however you like, but this clearly goes too far. Having helpless and peaceful citizens knocked down without warning because they insist on their right to free expression is not acceptable and will hopefully have consequences for those responsible. More on the topic can also be found at Spreeblick, Nerdcore, Spiegel Online, and Taz. Only Bild is keeping its mouth shut.

Update: Lisa has informed us that Bild is now (finally) reporting on the incident. However, only briefly in the news ticker. Jan noted that the counter-violence by demonstrators must not go unmentioned.

Ruth Swanson: Boozy Scandals

id="">

Facebook: You’ve Been Deleted

It’s quite a small shock when you wake up in the morning next to all the beer bottles and random leg prostheses and Facebook has sent you a stylistically impeccable message in which they ruthlessly explain that you have just been deleted from their site. Because you allegedly violated their terms of use. As someone who lives and earns money digitally, this email is comparable to a police squad offering condolences at your front door or the mass extinction of your favorite people.

Of course I neither praised the Führer nor spread drug use, violence, or child pornography. Some exposed tit must have ushered in the downfall of my internet existence and informed me in international gibberish that the next logical step would be to jump off an apartment building in Marzahn. Well Marcel, you can’t get away with everything.

So now I’m sitting here comfortably drinking my orange juice, sticking colorful buttons to my window and embarking on a traumatic search for a replacement network that might take me in. I’ve heard StudiVZ is actively looking for new members and Lokalisten is said to be a bright star in the anti-analog sky of bits and bytes. Or should I go back to picking up Jappy sluts?

No more trips to my Farmville, no more obsessively stalking ex-girlfriends (and their new studs) and especially no more posting cute cat photos, delicious lunches and sweaty party pictures. I am free, oh my God: I am free! But… what am I supposed to do with my strange and newly gained independence? I’ll probably go beat up a few nerds in a civilized manner. Yes, that seems like a good idea. Fuck you, Facebook.

Styles of the Week: Pretty in Pink


Taylin (16) Of course this shitty T-shirt has long been out, but the American can wear whatever she wants. Even a disgusting red plush bear and a coffee mug.
Nick (17) Fixie, sunglasses from H&M and a black tank top from Gucci? Yes, that’s how you can live in Prague. We’ll just have to talk again about that neon print on the chest.
Maria (23) This dead Nirvana smiley somehow always works. Add virginal white knee socks and the model from Uruguay is done. The cow shoes, however, are shit.
Dapper (23) Who has more fashion sense than Dapper? Exactly: nobody! Paul Smith, Ray-Ban, Zara: everything combined. And the light blue bow tie even matches the shoes. Insane.
Ashley (23) Hail fashion! The drunk and stoned something sips her way through many a party and is dressed entirely in elegant black. Somehow suits the hobby Hitler quite well.
Marina (18) Of course we’re in love with Marina. The flat-chested New Yorker looks simply delicious in her Marc Jacobs outfit. Double peace, sexy sister!

Las Amigas De Nadie: Mis Bordes En Las Llamas

Nintendo 3DS: Pimp My Game Boy

Of course Nintendo only makes cute children’s games with red magic mushrooms, kidnapped princesses and giggling villains, but what our favorite company from Japan is launching now is supposed to prove that the Satoshis, Shigerus and Hitoshis of that little island have a lot more up their sleeves than that. At their own lavish conference, they skillfully handed out kicks in the ass to the competition and presented a new Game Boy. In 3D. With games.

Nintendo 3DS is the name of the cute device that looks like a pimped DS with color confusion and is set to be released in early 2011. Everyone who has held it so far has literally had their head explode. Three dimensions. And on the go. It’s magic. On board are classics like “Street Fighter IV,” “The Legend of Zelda – Ocarina of Time” and “Mario Kart.” If that doesn’t immediately bring out the little sixth-grade brats in us, then we don’t know what will.

The digital gem is supposed to cost around 250 euros and tear us away from the clutches of the big consoles. And we expect great things. Ash Ketchum better catch his creatures in 3D from now on. Old classics should be available for download and play. And we damn well want to be able to scream our characters into the ground when they screw up again and leap headfirst into the abyss. And they better cry while doing it. Are you getting one?

Harper Smith: Chelsea and Kelley Ash

Party Review: The Brick House

So that you can get a little insight into what we actually do when we’re not sitting in our dark basements churning out continuous streams of text, let’s open the family photo album wide. At the end of last week, our friends from i-ref Magazine and the British fashion company Ben Sherman invited us to the lavish “Brick House” party and filled us up in a pleasant location with plenty of beer and vodka. There were also loads of shirts as gifts, and of course Berlin’s digital hipsters couldn’t miss that. Among those present were Paulchen, Malte, the Hundertmarks, Katja, Markus, Suz & Claudio and I even saw Anna running around somewhere. Special thanks go to Wenke Who, who let us crash at her place after the boozy night. Be glad I didn’t puke full force into your bed…

© Ben Sherman / AMY&PINK Global Porn Foundation

We Heart Anime: Neon Genesis Evangelion

About ten years ago, a Japanese animated film aired every Tuesday night on VOX. In the original language with German subtitles. I remember that very clearly, because at the time I was attending a language course nearby and recorded every episode on VHS since I had to go to school the next morning. I would run home, turn on the TV, get soaked. And I stared spellbound at the title: “Neon Genesis Evangelion.”

Every episode was a revelation to me. It’s about giant robots. With humans inside them. And an underground organization fighting alien angels. Tokyo after the near destruction of the entire world. The sexy redhead Asuka from Germany, the shy Shinji, the constantly recloned Rei and the beer-drinking, rough-and-tumble Misato. And the penguin. Cities constantly explode, God himself seems to hate every creature and more and more secrets from the Bible and the disgusting past of the individual protagonists come to light.

In the end everyone completely loses it and the final episode is nothing but a psychological maze of catastrophic lines, disturbing images and bloody mindfucks. Parents, children, love, meaning of life? All totally fucked. The fans cried during the credits, the director hated the fans and then released a movie afterward in which he simply killed everyone. So that there would finally be peace.

Never again did an anime take me from behind as much as “Neon Genesis Evangelion.” With its convoluted story, its lovingly crafted characters and the insanely awesome giant robots. And I was in love with Asuka like Rudolf. Oh my God, if I could bring even one imaginary person to life and drag her to Las Vegas, it would be Asuka. Ah, just commit me to the loony bin already.

Nude: Raquel Zimmermann

Balthazar: The Fury

[flv:thefury.mp4 thefury.jpg 940 529]

Wenke Who: The Lost Daughter The Lost Daughter

Do you still remember the two hot interns whom we first took firmly to our hearts and one month later dropped like hot potatoes into a deep pit of sulfur, damnation and expired Pepsi? No? Not so bad. But if you still haven’t burned your Max and Wenke autographs out of pure love and hope or given them to the bum on the corner for his birthday, you might be pleased to hear that at least the girl has made it back to the surface. And now she wants revenge.

The 23-year-old blonde learned quite a lot with us—besides making coffee and waiting under the desk—and is now launching her own success blog with Wenke Who. Expecting her to follow an actual concept would be too much to ask, but instead you’ll get heartwarming stories about drugs, artistic excesses, and the occasional gay feeling. And we love it.

So if Twitter hasn’t completely fried your brain yet and you still remember what blogs actually are, then you should quickly follow our little party aunt on Wenke Who and keep a very close eye on whether she does her job as a blogger justice. Otherwise we’ll simply delete her from the internet—and as you know, that happens faster than you think.

Nick Tulinen: Pussycats

El Guincho: Bombay

[flv:bombay.mp4 bombay.jpg 940 752]

DragstripGirl: Goodbye SaraFarewell to Sara

No one understood this city and its countless secrets as well as she did. The people, the clubs, the atmosphere. For two years she absorbed all that which others were too blind or too timid to see. She immersed herself in a wicked world full of freedom, lights, and stations, and gave every experience, every feeling back to us—filtered and refined. With Sara’s departure from Berlin, the capital loses not only one of its most charming daughters, but also a great deal of vibration, life, and soul.

For a long time, the 22-year-old had remained true to her dream of one day leaving Germany in order to look beyond national borders and embark on a journey around the world. That required not only a strong will, but also the sacrifice of money, fun, and luxury. Yet Sara persevered and showed us how to achieve one’s wishes and goals without betraying oneself or getting lost. This perseverance makes her something truly special.

While Berlin and all its inhabitants shatter into a thousand pieces behind her, Sara proudly walks along the path she has chosen for herself. And especially because I have had less and less time for her lately, I will miss her all the more in this maelstrom of discarded nights, worn-out parties, and insane conversations. Take care, Sara. Take care and bring each of us a unique experience back from your journey. The world belongs to you. To you alone.

[audio:psalm.mp3]

In Our Own Interest: Long Live The ColumnsHail the Sections

We once again need your help regarding our daily business here at AMY&PINK. After all, you are the readers and we are not. It is indeed appropriate from time to time to check on the well-being of our favorite trolls, whom we bombard day after day with all kinds of texts, photos, and videos. And here you have the (once again) unique opportunity to take part in shaping the appearance and content of your favorite whatever-magazine. Self-reflection 2.0 or something like that.

This time it’s about the weekly sections, of which we’ve recently had quite a few. “Pretty in Pink,” “Lost in Blogs,” “Blog Babes,” “Consumer Goods,” “Favorite Game,” “Hardcore Personal Ads,” “Asumi in Tokyo,” and whatever else they’re called. Each one costs the respective author a whole lot of brain cells every time, because he first has to knock back some red wine or vodka-O before he can even utter the word “research.” With these sections we want to emphasize the magazine style of our pseudo-blog a bit more. But week after week, the question naturally arises: Do you even want that?

So help us find the right flow in this matter and tell us whether you’re into the weekly features at all, or whether it’s more pleasant for you to throw all topics into the wide crowd in a colorful and unsorted way and forget about the sections altogether. Or do you have ideas for more, do you want more, do you want less? Which ones do you like, which ones wouldn’t you look at even with your backside? You are being asked to make AMY&PINK a little more lovable once again. So: Sections, yes or no?

Dominique Young Unique: The World Is Mine

The Modern Woman: Dirty BitchDirty Little Piece

When I meet Sarah for coffee to talk a little about the dark psyche of today’s women, she makes a very nice and sympathetic impression. Pretty, blonde, a student. No signs of physical decay, bright blue eyes. Like an ocean. During the conversation she occasionally chews on her fingernails, uses every ray of sunshine to quickly light a cigarette outside. It’s about feminism, femininity in general, and sex.

“You know,” she begins, after we have philosophized for almost an hour about her blue pants and the meaning of egg salad, “we women always just pretend that we’re not perverted. But we’re the biggest pigs.” Sarah takes a deep sip of her cold coffee and continues. “We’re into having a threesome with two men. When we get dirty things whispered into our ears. And when we have hard sex. I. Like. Hard. Sex.” She looks deep into my eyes, I swallow audibly and am almost embarrassingly flustered, but grin like Joey.

In my head I paint the wildest stories about what this inconspicuous girl must have already endured. Or been allowed to endure. Or been able to. The next round of coffee arrives. “I promise you. Every one of those small, sweet, and polite girls out there is in truth a dirty little piece. They’re nothing but boys. Just without a dick. But that only makes them more unpredictable.” She seems to enjoy my irritated look.

“You don’t believe me?” I croak out a “Yes” and watch the waitress walk away. “Last weekend I slept with seven different people. Within 48 hours, my boy. And two of them were my best girlfriends. We do that more often.” The Hollywood machine in my head was now running at full speed. “A threesome with Mexican exchange students, once with my brother’s best friend in an elevator in Marzahn. Yeah and otherwise just standard stuff in the bathroom at Tresor or in our shared apartment.” I had to get out of here. Immediately.

When I pay for both of us and wonder why I don’t just grab her and do it right here and now, she gives me a kiss on the cheek and I still hear her shout something about “I’ll write you!” before she hops onto her rickety bicycle and rides off. I stare after her spellbound for several minutes. Images in my head—there was nothing I liked more than girls like that.

Once at home, she sends me a photo of her pussy rather unexpectedly. On the right edge of her mound of Venus she once had a small black heart tattooed. I like the sight. After treating myself to a hot bath to physically process the revealing hours with the amateur nymphomaniac as well, I dry myself off and send the photo to Sarah’s boyfriend. I smile like a little devil and treat myself to a beer. Dirty little piece.

Owen Pallett: Lewis Takes Off His Shirt

Blog Babes: Girls On The Internet

No guy would behave like a complete idiot on the internet if he didn’t know full well that one or another female creature was watching him. That’s why we post edited profile photos on more than one boring social network, boast about high scores in Helly Kitty Online, and acquire one mobile receiving device after another. Complete with touch screen. We do all of this for the girls on the internet. For girls like these five. This time on “Girls On The Internet”: colorblind fashion fans, underage photographers, and exemplary nude models.

Angela

Who is she? The 17-year-old from Viersen not only has the biggest breasts in the world, but also impresses with her Asian-inspired talent. Her passion is photography and late-night Skype sessions with local nerds. Where to find her? You can find photos of Angela at Bplaced or Flickr, her small collection at Tumblr, and snappy messages on Twitter. Did you know? On the internet Angela Nguyen goes by the pseudonym Emilia Coeur.

Lea

Who is she? The Munich native Lea Rieck not only wants to convince us that pale is a color, but with that claim also drives the fashion world and everything around it a little crazy. Where to find her? Together with Sylvia Weber, the 23-year-old runs the fashion blog Pale Is A Color and previously caused a stir with Lea Loves. Did you know? The young student is especially into small designers and unknown shops.

Teresa

Who is she? The 26-year-old counts among the most enchanting redheads of the national blogosphere and has already turned the heads of more than one digital native. Where to find her? Teresa Bücker not only writes extensive texts on Flannel Apparel and Knicken, but also makes her presence felt at Freitag and Blank Magazin. Did you know? The likeable Berliner still owes one of our authors a more than moist kiss.

Jessie-Lynne

Who is she? The 25-year-old model from beautiful Chicago earns her money in the traditional way—by taking off her clothes—and thus lives the wet dream of every backyard Cindy. Where to find her? Jessie-Lynne not only regularly fills her own blog, but can also be found at Gods Girls, Zivity, and Dangerous Dolls, among others. Did you know? The drinking nude model used one of the popular AMY&PINK themes for her blog a few years ago.

Juliane and Anna

Who are they? The two charismatic Berliners don’t miss a single fashion show in order to always stay up to date with what’s happening in the business of beautiful people. Where to find them? Juliane and Anna jointly run the fashion-industry-recognized blog Reigen, where they profile models, designers, and themselves. Did you know? We couldn’t decide which of the two we found more charming and simply featured both.

Do you also want to become a Blog Babe? Then send us a meaningful application with some pretty photos by mail and maybe you’ll appear here soon.

id="">

Charlie Le Mindu: London Nudie Week

New York Fashion Week has just ended without any major scandals, and already in London a crazy designer shocked visitors, colleagues, and the press with his interpretation of style, fashion, and good looks by simply sending his models down the runway naked. He was proud as punch, the crowd laughed, and the women on display visibly wished the ground would swallow them up. But what won’t you do for money.

Charlie Le Mindu is no unknown figure in the fashion circus. The 24-year-old hairdresser and wig maker from France recently caused a stir with his real-hair fur coat, which Lady Gaga also likes to wear. He tours around with Peaches and passionately crafts hats. So it’s no wonder that he sent his top girls onto the catwalk wearing nothing but his own products—after all, additional clothing is not part of his collection.

Perhaps I, too, should have become a fashion designer so I could exclusively create clothes that expose the primary and secondary sexual characteristics of the most beautiful women in the world and push them onto the stage like that. We’re curious to see what women’s rights activists will say about why Charlie didn’t provide the neatly groomed madame with any panties and whether the models will need psychological treatment after this ordeal, or whether professionalism, drugs, and a bit of backstage sex have already made them tough enough. As far as we’re concerned, this sort of thing can happen more often.

Navigational Aid: Trend Indicator September

The month is almost over again, but that’s no reason for us not to shove the current ins & outs for the dying September right into your morning face and give your parents a tip on what they’d better not buy you for the looming Christmas celebration. At least not if you want to keep your friends. If you even have any. This time, your trusted navigational aid includes: nachos with cheese and minced meat, masochistic elementary school teachers, and good old nuclear power. Let’s get started!

In: Misusing Skype as a substitute for sex, sauerkraut, destroying Twitter, pudding, the new season of “Two And A Half Men,” Cintia Dicker, nose hair, pixels, ordering link cables, trampolines, nachos with cheese and minced meat, Tittefotzearsch, animals that look like Hitler, getting pregnant from fisting, special kisses, rice, Shin Chan in the morning, bomb threats at the Eiffel Tower, pirate treasures, friends with benefits, vodka and asparagus, Sasha Grey, kiosks and bakeries in Ottensen, TV Tokyo, outsmarting death, sending Barack Obama nasty emails, Ayumi Hamasaki, living your grandfather’s dream, planting trees, more breasts, mushroom kingdoms, pushing projects forward with heart and soul, the Virtual Console, drooling girls, being able to eat cosmetic products as well, leather jackets, nibbling on nipples.

Out: Dog trainers, traffic jam tweets, X-Factor, spouting off slogans, autumn, this constant tiredness, trolls, Apple fanatics, dehydrated plants, not owning a dishwasher, severed body parts, trashy RTL shows, school shootings, thick polyps, always sleeping, that everything has an end, animal cruelty, showering instead of bathing, sex accidents, when friends get weird, thinking boys are stupid, do-gooders, tinnitus after concerts, nuclear power, not having an English Garden in Berlin, when your résumé rapidly goes downhill, VIP cunts, gray clouds of doom, disgusting muesli, not having best friends, masochistic elementary school teachers, sex with your ex-girlfriend (if you’re not involved), anorexia.

Eliza Doolittle: Rollerblades

[flv:rollerblades.mp4 rollerblades.jpg 940 530]

Mr. Glass: Heels And Candy

Promotion: Essentials

When the postman rings three times, we know it’s time again for plenty of letters, parcels, and packages containing nothing more than inferior press releases, useless promotional items, and boring pleas. Only very rarely does something like a smile cross our faces when opening them—and this category is dedicated precisely to those moments. Here we present the items made available to us that genuinely pleased us. If you think you can manage that too, then get in touch by mail or take a look at our media kit.

Zippo: Back in the good old days, if you were one of the big shots in the schoolyard and had a certain reputation—whether you smoked or were a little arsonist—you grabbed your Zippo, flipped it open as coolly as possible, and used it to light a cigarette, your ex-girlfriend’s Fiat Punto, or even your stepparents’ entire house on fire. And it didn’t matter whether it was storming, raining, or snowing: this top-class lighter withstood any weather. And this magical little piece of metal from the United States can still do that today.

The Sonnets – Western Harbour Blue: That the Swedes are largely responsible for the best music in all of Europe should no longer be a secret. The latest export from the northerners is charmingly called The Sonnets and, with their album “Western Harbour Blue,” they present a sexy, charismatic mix of musical past and light pop. Ideal for the relaxed hours of life, afternoons for two, and that easy feeling of being in love. These Swedes really are great people…

Front: The latest issue of our favorite magazine Front has just been released, and we were kindly allowed to take a little peek inside. This time it features Kayleigh and her busty friends—the hottest students in Great Britain—a fat article on how to make other people your friends and then exploit them by any means necessary, and a brand-new section with the enchanting redhead Alex Sim-Wise. As always, we are more than enchanted.

Save the Poor: Do You Believe in God?

The big macho at the edge of the universe has always united within himself the greatest questions of life: Where do we come from? What are we doing here? And where do we all end up when the tour bus from Neckar runs us over? Nothing is responsible for more wars, suffering, and dead people than belief in a god. Or several. Or the Flying Spaghetti Monster.

Now a very important survey has revealed that the poorer people are, the more strongly they believe in a holy power. Leading the way: people from Bangladesh, Niger, and Yemen. Exactly—countries in the Third World that are miles below the poverty line rely on God with everything at their disposal. In contrast, in nations like Sweden, Japan, and England, faith is nothing more than a Sunday hobby to impress the neighbors.

And we know it from ourselves: the hotter the fiery breath of merciless fate burns our balls, the more likely we are to fall to our knees and beg the big boss to let us get away with it one more time. The affair shouldn’t be discovered? The tax evasion shouldn’t be reported? The lung cancer should disappear again? God will sort it out. Somehow…

So how about you? Do you think there is a direct connection between the level of income and belief in the church? Do you believe in an old man with a white flowing beard who watches you every day doing all the filthy things you get up to in the back room? And do you still regularly go to church, or has that sect-like organization always been a thorn in your side? Higher power, papal bootlickers, antichrists? You’re being asked!

id="">

Muse: MK Ultra

Favorite Game: Secret of Mana

Blogwall: Lost in Blogs

Surviving the Weekend: Ten Little Missions

The weekend is just around the corner. That means you hard-working defenders of the system are once again getting two days of free roam, which you will, as usual, spend in overcrowded mass discos, on short trips to Tropical Island, or racing go-karts on “Olli’s Loser Track,” all while hating a few foreigners and complaining about the weather. But it doesn’t have to be that way. We’ll show you Jappy fanatics how to skip the trashy nonsense and still have a little fun. With our ten little missions. Everyone join in, this is the hit.

One. Go buy plenty of chips, popcorn, and cola right now, because next week the fall TV season starts in the U.S. New episodes of “Two And A Half Men,” “The Simpsons,” “The Big Bang Theory,” “How I Met Your Mother,” “Family Guy,” and “Glee.” It’s all there, The Pirate Bay is your friend. Two. Download the soundtrack to “The Legend of Zelda – Ocarina of Time” for free and wallow in nostalgia until you burst into a thousand pieces. Three. Deflower Sasha Grey. Four. Buy the new album by… oh whatever, they’re all crap. Five. Invite the pedophilic truck driver Udo into your bedroom and then confess to him that you actually just want to have a long conversation about rampant labial fungus.

Six. Follow us on Facebook, too. Once we reach 2000 fans, we’ll delete Hannah’s bra. Six. Always wear sunglasses. Even in autumn. That way you look damn cool. Seven. During sex, just before ejaculation, suddenly stop, pull out, and shout: “This semen is not available in your vagina!” Eight. Only drink fruit juice mixed with sparkling water. It instantly makes you feel healthier. Nine. Live your dream and become a firefighter. Ten. Illegally download the first “Harry Potter” movie and then, in tears, turn yourself in to the police.

id="">

Johanna: Sticker Girl

Styles of the Week: Pretty in Pink

You don’t have to be a Belgian farrier to notice that the days are getting shorter, the corners of our mouths droop lower, and the temperatures are steadily dropping. Almost in tears, we begged summer to at least stay until the season finale of “Grey’s Anatomy,” but it was ruthless, spat on our heads, and disappeared without saying goodbye. And to make your disappointment a little easier to bear, here are the fashion tips to match the last rays of sunshine this year. Because from now on it’s going to be pitch dark. Promise.

Juliett

Poland is surely a wonderfully beautiful country, as long as you’re not going there to grab cheap cigarettes or to endlessly search for your missing Mercedes. After all, the 22-year-old Juliett lives there, and in her autumnal outfit she probably boosts the appearance of her homeland by at least half. We say yes to so much eastern beauty and hope that for every stolen automobile, a Juliett is returned in exchange.

Romina

15-year-old Romina from gloomy Germany defies the approaching cold season with plenty of kitsch and bright colors. Whether it’s her heart-shaped glasses or her flashy stockings from We Love Colors. With less black and a lot more good cheer, many a grumpy face on the slippery streets can be turned into a warm smile. And these days, that’s more important than ever.

Bobby

Not only half of class 9a at the John Lennon High School in Berlin-Mitte would let Bobby from Brooklyn have his way with them — so would we. All of us. Without exception. Wrapped entirely in clothing from H&M, the scraps of fabric not only reveal his strong upper arms and masculine chest, but also the many tattoos adorning them. Take us, Bobby, take us here and now!

Mindy

Mindy from near San Diego not only knows that original Chucks are still the best shoes in the world, but also that black clothing can be more than stylish on a dark autumn evening — as long as you stay completely faithful to the color. And she does everything right: black shoes, black pants, black hoodie. Who could resist such a consistent line?

Coury

You should enjoy the last warm rays of sunshine of the fading year to the fullest before Father Frost visits entire families. 29-year-old Coury from Los Angeles has taken this to heart and demonstratively poses in her vintage clothes in front of the hot fireball, as if to say: Stay a little longer, you stupid bastard. And she’s absolutely right.

Pokémon Reloaded: Misty Is a Bitch

After discovering an old, gray Game Boy and the corresponding blue edition of “Pokémon” at a flea market a few weeks ago, it was all over for me and I immediately fell back under the spell of that little time sink. As you may remember, shortly afterward I called for the ultimate Pokémon Reloaded Tournament, which you all have to take part in. And to show you my arduous path to becoming the absolute PokéKing, I’ve launched this weekly insight into my journey through the most beautiful gray-green pixel world of all time.

It began on my long trip home from Munich to Berlin and was crowned shortly after the start when I undoubtedly chose Charmander as my first Pokémon and practically slammed Gary’s stupid Squirtle into the ground. Of course I was the hero of the town, the little asshole cried for his mommy, and the dumb professor rewarded me for pulling his grandson’s pants down by throwing me out of Pallet Town and into the tall grass.

Brave as I am, I immediately caught a fat Pidgey and an ugly Rattata there, to turn them into a team of pure apocalypse with a bit of skill. I barely even noticed the first Gym Leader Brock, thanks to my enormous intelligence in wiping out every forest and meadow Pokémon to level up my creatures, and just like that I had my first badge.

I made an old geezer happy with coffee. Then it was on through the creepy Viridian Forest, where every Easter Bunny had to challenge me to a fight and which I left behind in annihilated emptiness. In Cerulean City I lost what felt like 50 times to the bitch Misty because I was simply too lazy to build a proper team before catching Mewtwo.

Sad and angry, I am now on my way to the seaside cottage, where one fat bug catcher after another is pawing at me. My current team: Pidgey (L13), Geodude (L14), Clefairy (L10), Charmeleon (L28), Paras (L8) and Zubat (L10). Playing time: 2:45 hours, Badges: 1, PokéDex: 10. My journey continues — stay interested or, even better, just join in yourselves. But you might as well forget it, because I’m going to crush you all anyway. Seriously.

Want to take part soon in the big “AMY&PINK Pokémon Reloaded” tournament? Then grab a Game Boy and a red, blue, or yellow edition right away and start training!

[audio:vertania.mp3]

The Ting Tings: Hands

Blog Babes: Girls on the Internet

Where the internet used to be an excellent retreat for stressed-out family fathers and unwilling masturbating experts, more and more women of creation have gradually discovered the alternative world bursting with bits and bytes and quickly begun to spread across it. Today, this place is practically teeming with people without penises, and we’ve compiled the five most worship-worthy specimens in this hard-hitting list. Whoever falls in love first loses.

Ivy

21-year-old Ivy Behrens is the absolute embodiment of a fashion girl. She presents sexy garments in the garden, posts meaningful music videos, and sells the occasional discarded item on eBay. And what sets the young woman from Hamburg apart from all the other H&M sluts? Our Ines would give her last shirt to fuck the more than sweet Ivy across a cheap hotel room for just one night. And that’s saying something.

Filippa

It is our sacred duty to write about Filippa Smeds from Sweden at least once a month. Because we’re really just hoping that one day the favorite redhead will replace Lil’ Amy as our mascot. But until then, there’s big news from our model of trust. She has turned her back on her beloved Radar Magazine and started a new blog at Lost. We’re faithfully switching over and hoping for a visit to Berlin soon.

Jasmin

There are probably thousands of girls out there who would kill to look as good as 23-year-old Jasmin Arensmeier from Stuttgart. That goes for us too. Tall, blonde, slim, and always more than stylishly dressed — who can claim that? No wonder Jasmin runs several sites with Stuttgarterstr. 34 and the Style Blog, which are soon supposed to bring her national fame. We’re curious.

Rachel

If there’s a girl really turning our heads at the moment, it’s 19-year-old Rachel Lynch from Chicago. On her blog, the model not only posts outstandingly good photos of parties, friends, and her hometown, but also extremely hot shots of herself. Sometimes even in skimpy lingerie or swimsuits. Minus points only for her stupid habit of digitally removing nipples or even vital slits from time to time. Naughty Rachel!

Jessica

If we’re constantly talking about fashion girls and good-looking clothes, then of course we can’t forget the queen of fashion blogs herself: Jessica Weiß. The enchanting Berliner is known throughout city and country for her mega project Les Mads and has already anchored her success in countless little fashionistas’ minds. We have more respect for no fashion lady than for this 24-year-old and simply say: Keep it up!

Do you want to become a Blog Babe too? Then send us a meaningful application including some pretty photos by mail right away and maybe you’ll appear here soon.

Gravitonas: Religious

id="">

Ren Hang: Chains Of My Homeland – The Chains of the Homeland

Win Tickets and a Phone: See Madsen Live – Experience Madsen Live

Unfortunately, there are still very few German bands out there to whom we have truly pledged our hearts and who captivate us again and again with their music and lyrics. Since 2004, one of them has clearly been the group Madsen from the small town of Clenze, who rock one festival after another while still finding the time to wrap incredibly good melodies around very clever lyrics. And with AMY&PINK, you now have the chance to experience them live and exclusively.

On September 25, the guys will be performing at the climbing hall in Ludwigshafen as part of the Telekom Street Gigs. Joining them will be the Scottish insider tip Martin & James. And for this special event, we’re giving away 1x2 tickets as well as a fantastic “Mobile Music Pac – Street Gigs Edition III,” including a Nokia 5230. It not only features a large 8.1 cm touchscreen but also an excellent music player that lasts up to 33 hours. On top of that, you’ll get a “Street Gigs – Best Of” DVD Vol. III (highlights from gigs by Clueso, Razorlight, Polarkreis 18, Fettes Brot, Jamie Cullum, and many more), two free ringtones, and a CR-119 car holder.

All you have to do to grab these hot prizes is leave a comment here with a valid email address by Sunday, September 19. And if you want to play it safe, you can also try your luck on the Telekom Street Gigs website, where you can still get limited tickets for the concert. We wish you the best of luck from rainy Berlin!

Kopf unter: Getting Along Again – Getting Back on Track

We all know the feeling. Thoughts are raging in our heads. Important problems circle endlessly, small and big worries rob us of sleep, even grand ideas want to be realized. Everyday life, drama, existence. Dreams, nonsense, the past. When our heads feel like they’re about to burst because they’re pumped full of all kinds of crap and we can’t form a clear thought anymore, it’s time for a mental restart. But what can we do to push the dirt out of our upper chambers and regain some control over the chaos of imagination?

For a quick shock in between, it’s sometimes enough to properly separate yourself from whatever is currently turning your brain to mush. Whether it’s work, school, or that familiar feeling of the walls closing in: just get up, stick your head under cold water, indulge in some quality sex with yourself or your temporary better half, or go on an extensive shopping spree—sometimes that works wonders. But on more serious days, even that is just a drop in the bucket.

When it comes to serious problems, only one decision remains: flight or fight. Of course, it’s more logical and often more effective to face the pile of worries—but who is always the best version of themselves? Sometimes we have to muster enough strength just to be able to run away. A short trip far away has resolved many a traffic jam of thoughts, and if you want to go to extremes, you can always move away entirely to escape the psychological vicious circle.

But the choice of the right mental reset or fresh start is as diverse as the people on this dreary planet. So our question to you: What is the most effective solution for you personally to free your head from annoying and oppressive thoughts and to become clear again about what truly matters and what doesn’t? A long walk in the woods, abusing drugs, or perhaps a proper one-night stand? Sports, alcohol, Nutella? Help us finally blow the gray fog of mental decay into thin air!

Aaron Feaver: The Girls And The Brain – The Thinker and the Women

Seasons: Light, Lost

[flv:lost.mp4 lost.jpg 940 529]

Promotion: Essentials – Consumer Goods

Week after week we’re bombarded with an almost endless number of press releases, promotional articles, and prostitutes, and although most of it can easily be thrown at Grandma Erna’s mangy old dog, there are still the occasional pearls that positively surprise us and are far too good to disappear into the trash can of eternity. We’d like to introduce you to the best three of them here, and if you’d like your own products to appear in our “Consumer Goods” section, then send us an email and really make an effort by delivering above-average persuasive work. Let’s see if you’ve got what it takes.

Circus Bookazine: The team around Rebecca Sandbichler and Inga Schörmann has created a mammoth work of analog art and presents, with the first issue of their Circus Bookazine, a 350-page bilingual bible about fashion and everything behind it. Among those featured are industry greats such as Agyness Deyn, Horst Meier, and Anne Feldkamp, all of whom philosophize in an extremely likable way about Chinese models, the globalization of fashion, and the love of wool, while also offering insights behind the scenes of the circus and into themselves.

Ali Love – Love Harder: Anyone who grows up in one of the crazy alternative worlds of dropout artist communities either goes completely nuts or makes music. Or both. That’s exactly what happened to Ali Love, and his new album “Love Harder,” together with the sexy track “Smoke & Mirrors,” is a successful journey through modern disco and dance that likely convinced his current girlfriend Mischa Barton of him once and for all. On September 24, the English-born artist will perform at the Moondoo Club during the Reeperbahn Festival.

T-Post: The people at T-Post from Sweden have been proving since early 2004 that magazines don’t always have to be immortalized on plain paper. Every month, they craft from beautiful motifs and great stories one worship-worthy T-shirt after another, each telling far more than their boring, everyday counterparts. Every single one is a limited edition of an entire magazine. And the idea seems to be going down a storm around the world. Totally crazy and yet so stylish.

Andrea Olivo: Bosom Buddies

Robyn: Sounds Of The Week – Albums of the Week

Everyone knows that music is our life, and that’s why we throw ourselves greedily like starving wolves at every newly released record—especially when it comes from our favorite acts, is highly praised by critics, or completely torn apart by them. Nothing relaxes us more than the right sounds at the right time, and that’s why today it’s once again time for the three best albums of the moment. This time featuring Robyn, Matthew Dear, and Sufjan Stevens.

Robyn – Body Talk Pt. 2: Splitting a single album into three parts, selling each part at full price, and putting only eight songs on each may sound like an unforgivable marketing gimmick—but Robyn is allowed to do that. Because she’s Robyn, and we love her. And that’s exactly what “Body Talk Pt. 2” sounds like. Like Robyn. Nothing more and nothing less. Electropop at its finest, catchy melodies, few daring innovations. Recommended tracks: “Hang With Me” and “In My Eyes.”

Matthew Dear – Black City: Rarely has an album title matched the work beneath it as perfectly as “Black City” by Matthew Dear. Every single track pulls us into a dark corner of our existence where hardly any hope prevails. The distant laughter and the disturbingly sincere melodies lie to our faces. There is nothing left to do but move from one place to another. And eventually collapse in tears. Recommended tracks: “Soil To Seed” and “Gem.”

Sufjan Stevens – All Delighted People EP: Superman is back. And he’s brought all his friends along. The ones in his head. Melancholic, calm, yet never cheesy, Sufjan Stevens tells the stories of his past and thereby clears them away before his real new album “The Age of Adz” is released next month. “All Delighted People” is cohesive and perfect for this messed-up season. Recommended tracks: “From The Mouth Of Gabriel” and “Enchanting Ghost.”

Concerns of My Youth: That Thing Called Defloration

The schoolyard was the battle arena of modern times. If you weren’t tough, you were mercilessly laughed at; if you didn’t act cool, you were considered a loser; and if you didn’t know what the words tits, fucking, and blowjob meant, you might as well sit in the classroom for the next ten years with a pink arrow through your head. Kids were tough—we were tougher. Of course, at home we cuddled up in our Power Rangers bed sheets, dutifully sat in the bathtub on Saturday evenings, and were soaking wet with joy whenever we caught a new Pokémon. But outside, in the wilderness, we were small, abysmally cool fighting machines. With enormous genitals.

Shortly after puberty kicked off, the question of whether didn’t even arise anymore. It was only about how often, in what way, and with whom. Thomas was screwing blonde Jessica with the big ears on the playground, Konstanze had Fabian’s balls in her mouth, and Daniel and I had already worked our way through half the class. Just to keep the peace for a while. In fifth grade.

Fake fuck-lists, memorized technical terms, precise knowledge of female anatomy (or what we thought it was)—we were prepared for street warfare. The fact that we only knew naked breasts from torn and strangely yellowed porno magazines from some backyard stash, and that at the mere thought of hairy pussies we ran upstairs to our rooms and mounted our Turtle pillows—we didn’t tell anyone, of course. Officially, by the age of 12 we had penetrated every bodily orifice God had provided, and only a sworn affidavit could have extracted the truth from us.

My friends probably would have lynched me back then if I’d told them that it wasn’t until two days after my 19th birthday that I finally broke the annoying chains of virginity. Maria was too tense, Karina’s aunt burst into the room just before the gates of heaven, Helena seemed too suspicious. With the village slut it finally worked. No big deal—I caught up quickly afterward.

What used to give me sleepless nights sounds more like a joke in hindsight. Of course Thomas never slept with hobby-Dumbo Jessica. She slapped him when he tried to grab her ass on the climbing frame. Konstanze already knew at seven that she was a lesbian and had never had balls in her mouth—except at breakfast. And Daniel, me, and half the class don’t even need mentioning—until the graduation ball, less than nothing was happening.

But why do we lie about sex until the beams bend? How important is it really for us to rummage around in the opposite sex’s body parts, and doesn’t fucking always also have something to do with power, victory, and competition? With being able to reset the counter to zero? And hand on heart: when and where did you finally get your relieving deflowering sex over with—and wasn’t all the fuss about it somehow embarrassing afterward?

Styles of the Week: Pretty in Pink

One look out the window is enough to realize that summer has long since fled—and with it the skimpy tops, short shorts, and revealing beachgoers. Now it’s time again for muted colors, and while girls and boys in the northern hemisphere stock up on black clothes, long-sleeved shirts, and warming winter jackets, here is a new edition of “Pretty in Pink” to offer you a small guide through the pitfalls of winter fashion. This time featuring rebellious freedom fighters, blonde flower girls, and natural beauties.

Frida

The hot season may have just bid us farewell with a smile, but that doesn’t mean there aren’t brave people out there who boldly defy the changing tides and rely on the signs of summer. Just like 17-year-old Frida Johnson from Sweden. Flowers are the magic word, and besides sunshine and bare skin, these little wonders of nature are probably the most pleasing symbol in the fight against winter. The shirt is from MySpringFling.

Annika

Annika is 26 years old, born somewhere in the far north, and therefore very familiar with the misery of the cold season. Yet she (still) doesn’t hide in cozy fur coats, but looks more than good in her shirt by Johanna Vikman, the cut-off jeans by Cheap Monday, and the sexy knee socks. Let’s see how long she can keep up this daring look, complete with beanie from H&M.

Marcus

Starting tomorrow, one of those Fashion Weeks will once again take place in New York, and fashionably dressed people will be jumping around the American metropolis in droves. If you’re lucky, you might also run into 21-year-old Marcus Mason, who not only works in the great machinery of the fashion circus but has also taken along an enormous amount of style himself. His outfit for autumn: gray shirt by James Perse, self-bleached jeans by H&M, and bracelets by Armani Exchange. Add a necklace by Burberry and the stormy season can come.

Tiffany

Boycotting and changing boring and socially accepted dress codes has always been the pubescent desire of a rising generation. Tiffany from Los Angeles is doing it right, decorating her toned body with all sorts of nonsense. From huge peace signs to woolly earmuffs to a Playboy belly button piercing—everything is there that style purists despise and parents punish. We especially like the blue stripe across her face—we would do her.

Paula

While the wealthy upper class stocks up on all kinds of designer clothes to set themselves apart from the rest of the population and look superior, sometimes pure simplicity is enough to be prettier than some spoiled rich brat. Paula has a white T-shirt. No colors, no patterns, no brand. Just a white T-shirt. And she looks fabulous. More girls should dare to embrace naturalness again. As you can see, it pays off two- and threefold.

Non Tiq: Quiet

[flv:quiet.mp4 quiet.jpg 940 529]

Japan TV: I See Crazy People

Television in Japan, with all its colorful shows, perverted anime, and great music, is among the craziest media excesses of the modern world. Only there do half-naked female students rub themselves laughing with squids, tiger-striped pirates go on space hunts, and national music stars jump into an aquarium filled with jelly to the sounds of Bach.

For decades, we only got fragments of the island’s madness. Small clips from the internet, localized censorship crap, or poorly executed copies. But that’s over now, because all of Japanese TV can now be watched live on the internet in good quality and for free.

Whether NHK, TV Tokyo, or WOWOW—every station is available as a stream online. Just visit this website, copy one of the MMS addresses into the media player of your choice (preferably VLC), and enjoy badly dubbed US series, mind-shattering music videos, and disgusting insect shows today. Japan, we simply love you.

Johnny's Bird: Punk Candy

Marina And The Diamonds: Shampain

[flv:shampain.mp4 shampain.jpg 940 529]

Blog Babes: Girls On The Internet

The fact that girls can do more than just look good, talk about shoes and clothes, bring the men of the nation fried sausages with potato salad to the nearby living room table, and then have to endure a bit of pseudo-sex, is something we preach here every week in our “Blog Girls” section. Because modern women are tough career types who simply know when, where, and how to make an impression. They’re the ones in charge. That’s why in this edition: red-haired gamer nerds, singing rebels, and ultra-slim night owls.

Shelley

The 19-year-old Swede Shelley Mulshine may look like the dream come true of a bulimic boarding school girl, but the artificial redhead has achieved what others work their entire lives for: she throws her own massive parties, earns money as a model, and has built up a large fan base on the internet. They’re probably more into her thin legs and beautiful face than her character, but hey—that’s something too.

Luise

That the East doesn’t have to hide from the rest of the world when it comes to pretty girls is impressively proven by 16-year-old Luise from Dresden. The small-town Carrie posts enchanting photos of her blonde mane on her blog, writes about friends and family, and regularly wishes her visitors a wonderful morning. That’s how we imagine the perfect little girl and, as old geezers, we’re impatiently waiting for her to finally come of age.

Alexandra

Anyone who wants to win the heart of Alex Sim-Wise doesn’t just need well-shaped genitals or a sack full of money, but must also be well-versed in the nerdy realms of video games. Whether it’s “Super Mario,” “Pokémon,” or “World of Warcraft” — the 28-year-old loves everything made of pixels and polygons and is still waiting for her prince to rescue her from the horrors of everyday life wearing a blue “Sonic” costume. Off to the costume rental shop!

Luca

Luca Borowski may not have the hottest last name in the republic, but for her young age the 16-year-old student from Moers looks exceptionally good. Her own blog is then also completely centered on herself: Luca runs through meadows with cute girlfriends, Luca puts on cat makeup, Luca eats Toffifee. We like Luca. And she has great socks.

Laura

If God blessed any girl in this world with an extra portion of coolness, musical talent, and that certain something, then it’s the frontwoman of Deine Jugend, named Laura. Together with the equally enchanting Woxy, she runs the politically correct weblog The Fucking Fucks, where they alternately post sexy photos, funny snapshots, and perfectly crafted videos. That’s how the internet becomes fun again.

Schnapp' sie dir alle: Become A Pokémon Master

I was recently hit by a retro overload and bought an old gray Game Boy along with the blue “Pokémon” edition at a nearby village flea market. Why? Because I fucking love “Pokémon” more than anything. I turned it on, chose a Charmander as my first creature, and was immediately trapped again in a world full of Rare Candies, Gym Leaders, and Poké Balls. But as brilliant as this masterpiece of a dusty classic is, it has one major disadvantage: I’m completely alone. And that sucks, people.

I can neither catch all the Pokémon nor achieve top performance because I’m wandering around like a maniac alone in a universe full of dull enemies and collected monsters. In search of challenges. And validation. But that’s going to change now. After all, this game is the perfect combination of nerdism, combat, and friendship. And there must be other geeks in Berlin and the surrounding area who worship this game and haven’t grown tired of facing other geeks with a swinging PokéDex.

So what’s the plan? Grab your Game Boys, the red, blue, or yellow “Pokémon” edition, and sign up in the comments so we can soon meet in Berlin, armed with link cables, to let our monster teams battle against each other. The capital may be swallowed in a fireball of uncoolness, but I don’t give a shit, because I want to play “Pokémon” and beat you into the ground with my combination of Mewtwo, Charizard, and Articuno. And you want that too, damn it! Pikachu, Thunderbolt!

[audio:pokemon.mp3]

Röyksopp: The Drug

[flv:drug.mp4 drug.jpg 940 529]

Überleben am Wochenende: Ten Little Missions

Hello dear fanboys. It’s Friday. Time for you to put down your pens, dildos, and boomerangs and listen carefully to what we have to say here. So hear us. You out there. We have written down these ten commandments to grant you a truly divine weekend. With all sorts of fun, excitement, and naughtiness. With books and music and pseudo-nipples. Do not be averse to what we have written here and follow our ten golden rules wistfully to keep yourselves occupied before you start a revolt.

One. Fall head over heels in love with Kaya Scodelario. She’s one of the few who are truly worth it. Two. Dance to Rick Astley’s new song “Lights Out.” Even trolls need a new anthem once in a while. Three. Sign up for Apple’s new social network Ping, only to deactivate your account again two hours later. That’s what everyone’s doing right now anyway. Four. Buy a New York cheesecake at Starbucks, put it in a brown paper bag, light it on fire at the top, and place it in front of your neighbor’s door. Five. From now on, always put on a Darth Vader memorial mask when you go out with your ugly friends. That way you’ll avoid secondhand embarrassment.

Six. Get a better nip slip than Katy Perry. Hers was almost boring. Seven. Log into MySpace again. It feels like necrophilia, after all. Eight. Buy a Pikachu plush toy, tie it to a dog leash, and sneak through the trendiest clubs in your city with it. If Achmed and the bouncers don’t beat you up, you’ve just set a new trend. Promise. Nine. Read a book by Haruki Murakami. Any one. It’s definitely worth it. Ten. Buy yourself a DVD about the grand world of anal sex and enjoy the many possibilities that the sphincter offers in cooperation with all sorts of gels, vegetables, and meat batons.

Apple Goes Social: Suddenly There Was A Ping

When Steve Jobs steps onto the stage, fanboys pull out their wallets and groupies open their mouths wide to swallow everything the underweight gentleman with the colorful past serves them, then it was probably time once again for an Apple sermon in Cupertino. And alongside hefty updates for mobile phones, uglifications of portable music players, and a completely revamped television box for the television set, the company with the bitten fruit logo also presented a brand-new social network for music that could seriously light a fire under direct competitors MySpace and Last.fm.

Ping is the name of the sleek little gem. It can only be accessed via iTunes or its mobile tech zombies and is supposed to give users the opportunity to philosophize together about favorite tracks, observe each other’s music purchases—when and where they buy them—and feel closely connected to their personal stars. You can follow each other, recommend music, and of course buy a shitload of music. And that’s what it’s really all about.

What “Yu-Gi-Oh!” once was for selling colorful printed cardboard to little brats is today an apparent pseudo-network for you and your loved ones, designed to tempt you into finally shoving more cash into the rotten mouths of the struggling music industry. They urgently need your pocket money, after all.

And that’s exactly the problem with Ping: If you don’t buy music through iTunes and still constantly have the freshest tracks from your favorite bands ready and display them on the Apple catwalk, then sooner or later not only your friends and the distributors from Universal will look at you funny, but maybe our nice friends in green will show up at your door to check whether everything is above board. No matter where you got the music from.

So Ping is more for people who still buy music legally. If you still can’t keep your hands off it, then at least make damn sure who is allowed to follow you and who you let browse through your shopping lists. Not that a special task force suddenly shows up at your door. And as for the question of whether we need another social network, we can only say: we’ll see. The fact that Apple is only interested in pulling money out of your pockets doesn’t necessarily make it more likable, but first of all that’s nothing new, and secondly they’ll keep stuffing white headphones into your ears until you practically worship their ideas. Hail Steve.

id="">

Hannah on the Road: Viva Italia

Our little Montana decided to take a real break, grabbed a few of her closest buddies and fled south with them. Her secret destination: Italy. And what the runaways experienced on their trip through one of the most beautiful countries in Europe, you can see in these more than impressive photos and only imagine how much fun and freedom they must have felt on their joyride. Viva Italia!

Mark Ronson & The Business Intl.: The Bike Song

[flv:thebikesong.mp4 thebikesong.jpg 940 529]

Styles of the Week: Pretty in Pink

Fashion. An eternal back and forth of feelings. Of colors. Of shapes. For many the epitome of life, for some merely a necessary evil for the purpose of not having to go completely naked to work. We picked out five young people who are more or less committed to fashion and who once again collide with the authoritative word “fashion,” either emerging as winners or being spat out as styleless drivel. This time on “Pretty in Pink” we have bearded artists, distant Asians, and horned idiots.

Willabelle

We always have a soft spot for sympathetic Asian girls here, if only because of our obligatory logo. And when they’re sweet sixteen, from Australia, and somehow involved with fashion, the internet, and the beautiful things in life, we love them twice as much. Just like Willabelle. She looks really good in her blue blazer, the charming little floral dress, and the silver necklace. So Australia might indeed be worth more than just one trip.

Tony

If you take a look at Tony’s stylish blog, with its Parisian alternative lifestyle complete with a beautiful girlfriend, little daughter, and lots of art, you get properly jealous. And the 26-year-old also has a flair for fashion. Blue shirt, tattoo, beard… Real men don’t have to do much to appear stylish quickly and effortlessly. And while he looks good, we browse through the great photos of an even greater life. And cry a little.

Fabienne

Okay, you noticed. Fabienne is uncovered up top. That can happen to anyone. We could now focus on her firm breasts, talk about her patterned dress, or complain about her skin-colored granny bra. But all of that is as damn irrelevant as the short-lived careers of YouTube stars. Fabienne—and pay attention now—had a Mogry tattooed on her skin. Damn it, a Mogry! We want to marry her immediately, get her pregnant, and then pump her full of child support, she’s that unbelievably awesome.

Justin

Justin looks pretty shitty. Sorry, but it’s true. Who allowed this trash, garnished with colorful beads, painted fingernails, and utterly stupid horns, to decide anything about himself and his appearance? Add to that lousy facial piercings, some boring tattoo on his arm, and a clothing style that would make Ozzy Osbourne spin in his grave. Along with his entire clan. We beg you, Nick: Take it off, scrub that fake tattoo off your body, let the metal fall out, and just try again from scratch. Really. It’s for the best.

Agnija

It’s sometimes sad to see that many kids out there display a more graceful and skillful sense of style than their older sisters blessed with white boots, pink mini skirts, and disgusting hair extensions. Just like 15-year-old Agnija from Latvia, for example. She looks quite lovely in her red little jacket, the light top, and the white shoes, and many a fading widow could take a hefty leaf out of her book.

Blog Babes: Girls On The Internet

The web consists only of overweight Star Wars fans, lonely grandfathers, and devious businessmen who keep telling you how you can get rich and famous quickly after paying a small service fee? Far from it! As we do every week, we went hunting for the most worth-reading women on the big, wide Internet and once again we landed five enchanting catches who are not only changing the world with their blogs but also look more than amazing while doing it. In today’s episode of “Blog Babes,” you’ll find hardcore ghetto chicks, Bavarian specialties, and fallen celebrities.

Janina

If there is anyone on this small planet who knows how to stage herself perfectly, it’s Janina from the gracefully appearing Darmstadt. On her webspace she not only posts beautiful images from fashion magazines, naked tattoo-covered bodies, and Angelina Jolie with packing tape over her boobs, but also impressively stunning work of her own, her life, and her friends. Looking good is twice as much fun that way.

Mercedes

That there is life outside of Berlin is proven anew every day by our colleagues from DER MUENCHEN. And things are constantly heating up in the Bavarian capital. Cool bands, beautiful exhibitions, macabre parties – alternative life far away from the TV tower and Berghain is shining brighter than ever. And right in the middle of this happy future stands the author Mercedes Leona Lauenstein with a name that makes you jealous. Munich is amazing.

Cory

Cory Kennedy is dead. Well, very likely at least, because we haven’t heard or seen anything from the former It-girl of the American music and party scene in ages. The now 20-year-old was the prototype of Internet celebrities and was celebrated to the ground by pimply nerds, fallen stars, and drugged-up photographers alike. And we loved her. Very much indeed. Wherever you may be? Cory, we miss you.

Sara

If there were a ghetto in the blogosphere, then Sara would rule over a realm paved with colorful graffiti, black rappers, and loudmouthed tough guys, bursting with creativity and blasting music that never lets you go. On her blog she writes about life’s fuck-ups, the drama of a forgotten generation, and the advantages of living free. And because she doesn’t just talk but actually acts, she’s soon heading off on a big world trip, which she’ll document in detail on Finding Berlin. What a woman.

Mia

There are only very few girls in the German Internet landscape who push their projects forward so vehemently, selflessly, and skillfully while also looking so phenomenally good. Mia Bühler can hardly have time to breathe, as she writes simultaneously on UBERDING, Whatsheart, and ArtSchoolVets about creative shit, music worth hearing, and her own adventures—and will one day shake the entire web to its core. Just you wait.

Wavves: Post Acid

Backstage: Getting Personal Again

We often cry at night because we’re no longer as good as we used to be. Our personality has been lost. For a long time now we haven’t written about what we drank on the weekend, who we jumped into bed with, or why Aunt Gerlinde liked the white hat better than the green one. Instead, we constantly bombard you with these pseudo-hip music videos full of boom boom boom, throw one emotionally high-quality story after another at your ears, and would rather upload photos of girls blessed with steely bodies and sunny freckles than show our fat bellies on the digital web. But that’s over now: AMY&PINK is getting personal again.

So that even the little stalkers who don’t hang around on Facebook or Twitter can keep up with what their favorites from the pink website are up to, we’ve created a new category for you, which you can access via that dark, long bar at the beginning of this strange online appearance. Its name is “Backstage,” and from now on we’ll post the shit there that we would never ever have subjected you to in a real article. Concert visits, cheerful vacation videos, snapshots from the brothel. Yes, it’s true—there we are within arm’s reach.

And this category, personally blessed by Grandmaster Chang himself, is so top secret that it doesn’t even appear on the so popular and notorious homepage. We can hardly believe it ourselves. So if you ever want to see Hannah in a bikini, watch Mischa drinking beer, or observe Ines skydiving, then drop by the Backstage section of AMY&PINK. Where cuddling is still written in capital letters. Or something like that.

Backstage: Mr. Neumeister

Marcel and Ines wreaked havoc in Munich, picked up a Mr. Neumeister in the process, devoured various veggie burgers, and made fun of half-frozen elementary school kids. That was pretty fun. All of it. Altogether.

Favorite Game: Lovisa The Intern: Yoshi’s Story

Corinne Day: In Our Little Surprise Bag You’ll Find the Most Beautiful Treasures from the Internet

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consetetur sadipscing elitr, sed diam nonumy eirmod tempor invidunt ut labore et dolore magna aliquyam erat, sed diam voluptua. At vero eos et accusam et justo duo dolores et ea rebum. Stet clita kasd gubergren, no sea takimata sanctus est Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet. Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consetetur sadipscing elitr, sed diam nonumy eirmod tempor invidunt ut labore et dolore magna aliquyam erat, sed diam voluptua. At vero eos et accusam et justo duo dolores et ea rebum. Stet clita kasd gubergren, no sea takimata sanctus est Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet.

Surviving the Weekend: Ten Little Missions

It’s Friday, you know what that means. Fun, suspense, and a bit of penetration for the whole family. We’ve stolen, wrapped up, and translated a brand-new episode of the popular game show “Ten Little Missions” from South Korea and, as always, we challenge you: Will you actually manage to successfully complete all ten bravely assembled tasks this weekend and stand there as winners on Monday? We’re more than curious. Let the games begin!

One. Pick a fight with a few frisky feminists and their relatives. They all deserve it. Two. Follow the lazy-brained 50 Cent on Twitter. He’s furious at the world and his grandmother and better than ever. Three. Congratulate your fat cat on her birthday. But really properly. Four. Pour a little antifreeze into the cheap Aldi wine and enjoy the colorful effects. Five. Make a bet with your best friends about who will lose their virginity before prom. Lubricant-Olaf will probably win the race.

Six. Build a venerable shrine for the more-than-great Bill Murray and worship him for about ten minutes every morning. Seven. Become Harry Potter’s best friend. After all, his parents are dead. Eight. Call the official Love Parade hotline and ask when David Guetta is finally going on stage. Otherwise you’re going home now, since summer vacation won’t last forever. Nine. Run screaming into the street and digivolve into Devimon. Ten. Something with cheese.

id="">

I Blame Coco: Quicker

Twitter for Beginners: Lost in Tweets

Styles of the Week: Pretty in Pink

While we’re sweating away in Munich at over 30 degrees Celsius, one stylish beauty after another crosses our path and inspired us to bring our number one fashion column back from obscurity. Five people, five looks, five stories. And while I fill out, bag up and send off my application as the worst copywriter this side of the Andes, we present to you laid-back photographers, grinning waitresses and swinging musicians. Only here and now. In a new edition of “Pretty in Pink.”

Karin

There are two kinds of fashion bloggers. The good ones and those who stand in front of the mirror of their childhood bedroom wardrobe in an H&M top, Snoopy briefs and Roman sandals, posing like a cheap prostitute. Which group the 24-year-old Karin from Stockholm belongs to should be clear pretty quickly. After all, she looks remarkably grand in her shirt from Gina Tricot, the shoes from Vagabond and the shorts borrowed from her little sister. Denim look, baby.

Sarah

Who swings so late through night and wind? It is 16-year-old Sarah from Hamburg! Musician, student, human being. With her, at least from the waist down, the denim look strikes again. Combined with the white shirt, the eternally rebellious leather bracelets and a few piercings in her pretty face, she can probably enjoy a more than carefree school life. We wish we had been that cool at her age. But we had Pokémon, after all.

Antoine

Fashion. Important. Sure, leather jacket, cool shoes, great trousers. But Antoine is also a photographer. And what a photographer. So young and already so good. Splashing girls, provocative creations, distorted cities. Faced with so much enthusiasm for modern and traditional art, we fall silent in pure awe, secret love and endless envy, wishing that the muse would one day plant such a lasting French kiss on us as well. Absolutely magnificent.

Bianca

Dark complexion, black button eyes, hot hairstyle. With 18-year-old Bianca from gangsta-ville Toronto, we gladly overlook her threatening lady’s mustache and simply fall in love with her skillful style, consisting of a cardigan from Zara, boots from the mall and a bag from Gap. Together with her twin sister Dani, she also runs her own fashion label called Plastic Skyline. We tip our hats to so much love for fashion.

Elle

Anyone who shares a name with a leading fashion magazine automatically raises our expectations in this tough industry. And the 16-year-old ray of sunshine from Australia hardly disappoints us. We—and the rest of the fashion circus—have developed a particular fondness for flat-chested girls who wrap their non-existent busts in visible black bras, and with that Elle convinces us completely. So we’ll continue to allow the sweet waitress to grin like that.

Arctic Monkeys: The View From The Afternoon

How I Cheat on Berlin: The Sun Above Munich

As I sit in a small café at Odeonsplatz in Munich, I am overcome by feelings of both happiness and guilt. Because the seemingly impossible has now happened—something I tried to prevent with all my might. Or did I? Because yes… I have fallen in love. With the city on the Isar flooded with sunlight, classical music and beautiful girls. With the English Garden, the small alleys, the graceful style of a historical homeland that is so different from what Berlin could ever be. Blasphemy spreads. Is this it? Have my flesh, my mind, my passion changed so much? Am I getting old?

Berlin is a city shaken by upheavals and transformations. Poor, but sexy. As they like to say. Everywhere lurks attempted otherness, the tremor of modernity, the memorial of time. Three years in the capital have left their marks on me as well, marks that cannot simply be wiped away. But am I slowly growing tired of all the affected hipsters, the eternal pseudo-resistance and the particular way Prenzlauer Berg eco-families, Friedrichshain bums and Kreuzberg students seem to radiate their attitudes as if forced? Is Bavaria pulling me back?

Thoughts are boiling inside me. Friends, family. Opportunities, career. Apartment, money. Scene, future. Beer, Club Mate. Do I really want to trade hip Berlin with all its bloggers, designers and conformist rebels for an overpriced city bursting with charming warmth, new adventures and a foreign yet somehow familiar tradition that is currently turning my head? And while my thoughts cross one another, Norah Jones laments her pain away and outside a flock of blonde beauties stroll past in a mixture of traditional dirndls and incredibly tasteful street fashion, it seems as if I have almost already made my decision.

Blogger Babes: Girls On The Internet

We see it as our personal mission to keep stirring the pot. To push networking forward. To make possible the potential coitus between bloggers and readers. That’s why, on a night crackling with lightning and thunder, we created an entirely new monster. A column dedicated to the most beautiful, interesting and worth-reading ladies of the blogosphere. A column so essential in a world dominated by men and ambiguous fashion bloggers. A column for you, for us, for everyone. And it’s as simple as it is brilliant: We introduce you to five blogger babes and you can follow them immediately, write to them and perhaps even make a few sappy marriage proposals.

Catharina

The Stuttgart native living in Munich is one of the few people out there who still possess what a blog used to stand for a few years ago: a private retreat with plenty of space for personal thoughts, photos and texts. She not only looks damn good, but also knows how to present this to the world in self-made visual masterpieces. Her weblog Lashout has existed for four years now, and scrolling through it feels as if you had personally experienced Catharina’s adventures—parties, moves and fashionable excursions. We’re totally into it.

Lea

Suddenly she was there. The girl who first turned our heads with false promises of her exposed breasts and then insulted us in a sexy way. And that certain type of blogger is, as we all know, our absolute favorite. Together with Max and Alex, 22-year-old Lea runs the truly magnificent blog Abgeschirmt, which, besides the usual stuff about art, design and pop, tackles bold topics and invites the occasional well-known creator for interviews. For us, one of the most promising blogs of the year.

Lisa

Is it forbidden to find a 15-year-old hot? Oh God, yes, very likely. And we’re probably heading straight to hell for it. But Lisa Olsson is worth it. The tanned Swede is the new star in the Swedish fashion blogger sky and works as a model, student and cheerleader in her hometown of Malmö, at local fashion weeks and in international magazines. We’re curious to see what will become of this pretty face and are already jealous of anything that comes within ten meters of her—including her ugly dog.

Jana

The 21-year-old blonde from Lower Saxony has risen to become the new darling of all nerds, narcissists and jealous girls with her own blog Bekleidet, her skilled flair for fashion and her unbelievably great looks. Alongside her studies in landscape architecture, she fills her private website with enchanting photos of herself, videos of plastic dogs and some rather questionable devices. And no matter whether you’re into self-timers, spring collections or fashion victims: you simply have to love Jana—no ifs, ands or buts.

Thuy

We don’t know how she does it, but Thuy is a complete package that no one will be able to imitate any time soon. The 19-year-old not only presents an extremely positive appearance, but also takes the most beautiful photos in the world, now writes her stories from hip Hamburg and blogs not only for her own blog Shoupett, but also recently for the Otto-sponsored website Two for Fashion. We are impressed by so much commitment and are more than curious to see what else we will hear from her. We expect great things.

Adam Green: Buddy Bradley Forever

In & Out: Trend Indicator August

If you haven’t noticed yet: it’s Monday again! Another chance—or obligation (depending on how you see it)—to prove yourselves once more in the harsh everyday grind of life. And since we are your constant companion when it comes to the bright and dark sides of your little existence, we’ve gathered the ins and outs for the end of the month in our trend indicator and are guiding you back onto the right path. Past Justin Biebers, mom jokes and accidents of physical love.

In: Picking fights with feminists, sangria, flipping through old magazines, Weezer, curry ketchup, sleeping with internet girls, buying action figures of red-haired manga characters, completely throwing your life plan overboard, gray Game Boys, sharing even the strangest things with your best buddy, leaving parties to go for a walk, mayonnaise, making mixtapes, sticking stickers on breasts and taking photos of them, blue glass cleaner, Nil cigarettes, getting vegans to serve roast pork with dumplings, Munich, Pizza Hut, rocker friends, munching Japanese cookies, Fritz melon lemonade, watching old episodes of “Rocko’s Modern Life,” vacuuming spiders, phone sex, bringing up serious topics and then preferring to tell mom jokes afterward, cycling, fishing rods, understanding insider jokes, hating the internet, the new video for Toro Y Moi’s “Low Shoulder”.

Out: Having to go away, money worries, head rot, Google Street View debates, green condoms, not having Club Mate with you, Justin Bieber, the passing of Christoph Schlingensief, water without any sign of wine, the feeling of mental fatigue, nuclear power, thinking Slayer sucks, the arrival of autumn, partying while sick and then actually getting sick, cynicism under the covers, girls with principles, girls without principles, coffee or tea, falling in love with your best friend, not being able to smoke weed anymore, this damn sexism everywhere, not finding any FLV, lying next to models and wanting to “talk,” when friends start acting weird, sex accidents, Hamburg overconfidence, your mother.

id="">

Delphic: Doubt Forever

[flv:doubt.mp4 doubt.jpg 940 529]

In Our Own Matter: That Thing Called Sexism

Nothing is closer to our hearts at AMY&PINK than the well-being of our female fellow citizens and their dreams, wishes, and goals. We here are all more than big fans of the sympathetic alternatives to men, and we do everything we can to ensure that with our articles and statements we do not discriminate against anyone based on gender, origin, or lifestyle. Without the singular happiness of women, the success of this magazine would never be driven forward with as much love and passion as it currently is. Both our male and female authors can sing a song about that.

The nice girls from the shoe blog Sneaker Girls recently accused us of practicing and tolerating sexism on this site. What didn’t really bother me at first gradually began to gnaw at my mind and has since raised one or two questions that I cannot answer on my own. The most important of them all: Is AMY&PINK sexist?

On Wikipedia the following explanation can be found for this term: “Sexism refers to the discrimination or oppression of people solely on the basis of their gender.” Does that apply to us? Do we discriminate against and/or oppress girls and women on the pages of this magazine? At any point? In any sentence?

It is true that we make above-average use of the legal display of female skin. Our texts are often harsh, direct, and ironic. And AMY&PINK is designed to explain what is happening around us in a sexy way, to playfully engage with the concept of “level,” and to combine fun, stimulating entries with emotional, more serious topics. That is what defines us; that is who we are. We work hard for that.

But can all of this be reconciled with the accusation of sexism? As the lead author at AMY&PINK, I can assure you that my co-writers Mischa, Hannah, Asumi, and Ines are all intelligent, sympathetic, and experienced individuals who are more than skeptical toward prejudice, intolerance, and narrow-mindedness—and who would by no means invest so much energy and effort into a project like this if it were aimed at deliberately humiliating other people. Because AMY&PINK is meant to be nothing more than fun and food for thought.

Surviving the Weekend: Ten Little Missions

After we simply didn’t feel like ruining the rest of your lives last week, we kindly spared you a round of the “Ten Little Missions.” But things can’t continue under the motto peace, joy, pancakes forever, so here once again are ten grand missions that you must accomplish by Sunday—otherwise you will be forcibly married to your first love. No ifs, ands, or buts. Today featuring: feminine foot fetishists, red-haired ex-girlfriends, and fiery Pokémon. Have fun!

One. All of you follow Lea Sauer on Twitter so she’ll rip the clothes off her body for us. Two. Stop by the café at Betahaus Berlin. It’s pretty cozy there. Three. Let an internet site tell you what to do with your life again. You’re used to that from us, after all. Four. Break into a nearby Pizza Hut, dunk your head into liquid cheese, and die a wonderfully gruesome death. Five. Visit the blog of the Sneaker Girls again. Because we love the foot fetishists so much—and because they dumped us. The pigs.

Six. Drink lots and lots of ChariTea. Your taste buds will jump out of your cheeks. Seven. Kiss a girl with internet fame. With tongue. They’re much better than those club sluts. Eight. Buy a gray Game Boy with the blue Pokémon edition at the flea market, choose Charmander at the beginning, and then the fun can start. Nine. Together with your best friend, shove as many sushi rolls into each other’s mouths as possible and at some point shout: “First!” Ten. Don’t congratulate your busty, red-haired ex-girlfriend on her birthday. Either because she doesn’t deserve it or because you simply forgot.

Lost in Translation: The Best Movie Ever Made

It is completely irrelevant what efforts the brightest minds of Hollywood may undertake, because the fact that the best movie of all time was released in 2003 simply cannot be disproven anymore. Not by profound special effects or bombastic soundtracks. Not by embarrassing promotion or naked eighteen-year-olds. Not by a sophisticated storyline or exotic backdrops. The best thing the film city has ever produced is and remains, for all eras, “Lost in Translation.” And it wasn’t even shot in Los Angeles.

The quiet and yet so heart-wrenching story of actor Bob Harris—plagued by midlife crisis and family—and the newly married but unhappy Charlotte, who search for the meaning of the moment in Tokyo, manages entirely without sledgehammer emotions and takes the viewer on a small, intimate journey of two people who, in a very short time, have become more than important to each other and to whom the asshole called time is not kindly disposed.

A brilliant Bill Murray and the then even more than enchanting Scarlett Johansson turn Sofia Coppola’s film into an outstanding and more than worthwhile gem. For everyone who doesn’t think in just one dimension, who has devoted themselves to traumatic interpersonal relationships, or who simply loves the mysteries of Tokyo. Awesome.

The Ting Tings: Clap Your Hands

If there is one damn mainstream band I absolutely adore, it’s the Ting Tings. What Katie and Jules created a few years ago with their first album “We Started Nothing” was initially torn apart by critics and celebrated by my unmusical heart. No songs did I listen to more often than “Be The One,” “Shut Up And Let Me Go,” or “We Walk.” Except maybe the German national anthem in some idiotic Mallorca techno remix.

Now the pop lord (possibly Dieter Bohlen himself) has shown mercy and granted the two sexy English musicians an almost magnificent comeback, which they duly celebrate with their first new song called “Hands.” There’s no video for the track yet, but instead you can gently close your little eyes and imagine traveling to Frankie Goes to Hollywood. Or something like that.

Their second and soon-to-be-released album “Kunst” was recorded entirely in the most beautiful city in the world (Berlin and not Tokyo), and we’re already putting on our Adidas tracksuits in advance to line up for tickets to their upcoming tour. In the meantime, we listen to the current sounds and can only say: Wow!

[audio:hands.mp3]

No Looking Back: The City and the Girl

Wandering through the dark streets of the city with this little girl neither opened completely new worlds of my mind nor did it trigger in me a mood of resignation about the life I had led up to that point. The short yet so familiar journey simply made everything better. Everything. In her presence I fell into a state of joy for life that I had previously only known from cheap sex and high-quality wine. Or the other way around. Her unbound cuteness and the misanthropic tone of her voice somehow made me happy. I suddenly liked certain things. And that caused me an inappropriately great fear. Because opening hearts involves risks. Always.

When she wasn’t near me, my thoughts lingered in her photos, and when she swirled around my body, I could not get enough of her scent and the feeling of her presence. Pure understanding is rare these days. Days and nights turned into races against the damned time. Past Britney Spears and fainting spells, we fought a battle that could offer us nothing more than the illusion of victory. And we seized it boldly.

Kissing greedily, knowing sadly that our world—ruled by coincidences and fate—would soon collapse, we enjoyed every moment and penetrated so deeply into one another that truths lied and souls masturbated. Happiness is rare these days. And unlike with all those empty shells whose desolate femininity I sucked out as an elixir of life and whose charm and offers I obtained through tactical ignorance, this little girl already meant to me, after such a short time, an entire dimension full of clear thoughts. It was more than great.

While I follow the call into a parallel life and keep telling myself like a mantra that my few—but imperative—plans are right, she slips cheekily and lonely past the dusty stereotypes of my former life and offers me new perspectives on a nightmare that was already beginning to manifest its luckless and depressing ideals deep within me. Swallow, spit, or fuck—every form of inner violence is appropriate to defend oneself against the creeping decay of one’s own hopes. Every single one.

My future lies before me like a gray veil, and yet I thank you for holding my hand tightly just before entering a new life, to make it clear to me once again that high-quality mind-fuck can lurk anywhere, that some emotions may be far more fulfilling and alive than old-fashioned love, and that nothing beats cheese pizza, Weezer, and bloody zombies. To you and your great city: I like you so much.

[audio:put.mp3]

21st-Century Minimalists: Digital Hobos

Back when we were still analog and young, we stuffed every inch of our children’s and playrooms—covered in piss-yellow wallpaper—with boxes full of Bibi Blocksberg cassette tapes, Nintendo cartridges, and pirate Lego bricks. Each of these objects was more important to us than family, love, and money combined, and if a fire had broken out, we probably would have met a certain death because no one could have made the decision for us about what to save first.

The digital and affordable age now spares us from that imminent demise—for the time being. Because thanks to MacBook, iPhone, and the like, we always have our collected favorites with us. In our library lie heaps of legal and illegal songs and movies; old and new gaming classics experience one revival after another through programs and emulators; and all our Lego bricks will soon be found again in an adventure online role-playing game. Photos, documents. Communication, porn. Work tools, internet. Everything lies safely stored in bits and bytes on our hard drive inside a mobile device. What more could we possibly need?

In the United States, some people are already going so far as to completely sell or give away their material possessions, analog memories, and often even their apartments and houses, because nothing is more important to them than the data on their portable computer. They live as wanderers on the street because they already have everything they need with them. It’s freshly and newly called “21st-Century Minimalist.” And somehow the idea turns me on.

“I believe that giving up physical possessions could become a general trend of my generation. It will become a fact that they will be replaced by digital counterparts,” says Kelly Sutton, who is 22 years old and works as a software developer. Chris Yurista from Washington, DC, on the other hand, took the big step and canceled the lease on his apartment a year ago. “It’s kind of great to have a home, but the internet has replaced my need for an address,” says the 27-year-old.

And digital minimalism is becoming more and more extreme. The first are already dreaming of completely saying goodbye to their analog bodies and philosophizing about how great it would be to one day live inside a computer and merge their soul with the network. “Mind upload” is what Anders Sandberg of the Future of Humanity Institute at Oxford University calls it.

How far would you go? Can you understand that more and more people are selling their worldly goods in order to live only on the net? That they let go of their fixed living spaces to wander the land as digital vagabonds? Or even wish to one day merge completely with a computer? Creepy thoughts give way to curiosity, and from curiosity comes wishful thinking. Or not?

id="">

Jessica Messenger: Sticker Girl

Behind the Scenes: Backstage Booms

Beck's Music Experience: Design Your Own BeerDesign Your Own Beer

If up until now you wanted to rake in cash, girls, and something to drink, there was only one way to do it: you had to sell your soul. To dubious bosses, devious financial sharks, or corrupt scratch-card vendors. But we have recognized this dilemma and, at great expense, found a secret way for you to achieve your three lifelong dreams much more easily—and at the same time make the greatest city in the world unsafe: simply design your own beer!

Our favorite beer manufacturer Beck's is not only hosting its own show on MTV with the Beck's Music Experience, but is also shining with a design competition of equally high quality. Just like Ladyhawk, Hard-Fi, and artist Damien Hirst before you, you now have the opportunity to scribble your own Beck's label and, with consistently good quality, really cash in.

The winners can expect thousands of coins, a trip to Berlin including an exhibition and a concert by Phoenix, plus an entire original crate of Beck's featuring your creation on it. And that is truly the greatest thing in the world. If you’re already bursting with creativity and want to design a label or even a T-shirt, you can try your luck on their Facebook page or download the toolkit directly from the official website and get started. Good luck!

M.I.A.: XXXO

[flv:xxxo.mp4 xxxo.jpg 940 529]

Three Years Berlin: Night Is Our WitnessThe Night Is Our Witness

My thoughts had been thought to death. Maybe it was fear, but I called it love. On that day I am the first one on the street. To say goodbye to the city that took me into its care a long time ago. My skin chafed, my soul loved, my sorrow soothed. I think about how our existence changed in the summer three years ago and where we stand today. The past is my passion, the future my greed. I rarely drop by the here and now.

As I stroll along Kastanienallee and the murky air spreads within me, I see the faces of the people who once meant something to me here and whom I will now leave behind. Air turns into melancholy. The little red-haired girl with the overweight cats. The curly-haired ray of sunshine with as much tragedy as joy in her chest. The emotion-twister with a tendency toward self-reflection. I won them all over and forfeited them again when the time had come.

The night is our witness. You could tell she was struggling inside, repeatedly relapsing, she was taken. No kisses, just no kisses—those words were written all over her. I explored her, bit her neck, pressed her into the corner. I will never forget that evening. Fled because of grief, stayed because of the spirit, seized by the call. My curse as a wanderer of life strides steadily through the walls of others. Even those of the dead.

Is there any chance for me to ever see you again? Sometimes I would most like to scream at you… how you could dare to simply die on me. The thought gives me a headache. I have screamed, I have cried, I have accepted, I have vomited—I have been through everything, and yet this emptiness you left behind refuses to fill even a little. But I know, no matter where you may be now, since then you have been my guardian angel. And that makes me hope and smile again. You stupid cow, why did you have to die…

The morning sun shines through the treetops and tickles my face. We once made love in this light. It is the loneliest and most critical moment of the day. The moist crystals in my eyes transform into moments of happiness, and my empty mind fills with warmth.

Berlin has become my home. And yet I know that this city will not be the end of my journey. A journey full of people whom I get to know and love, and whose paths will soon part again. Because we are all restless nomads, eternally searching for happiness, reason, and truth, and will lose ourselves somewhere between love and breathlessness.

Nettie Harris: A Song In Your HandA Song in Your Hand


Bat for Lashes - Daniel


JJ - My Life / Kleerup feat. Lykke Li - Until We Bleed


Babyshambles - Fuck Forever


The Ting Tings - Be The One / Regina Spektor - Samson


The Brilliant Green - Rainy Days Never Stays


Justice - D.A.N.C.E. / Muse - New Born


Kate Nash - Nicest Thing


Robyn - Be Mine / The Smiths - There Is A Light That Never Goes Out


Adam Green - Bluebirds


Lily Allen - I Could Say / Sia - Breathe Me

Avril Lavigne: I’m With You Forever

[flv:imwithyou.mp4 imwithyou.jpg 940 693]

id="">

School of Seven Bells: Windstorm

[flv:windstorm.mp4 windstorm.jpg 940 529]

AMY&PINK Television: Our Videos Are Free Now

We really make an effort to constantly supply you everywhere with the hottest music videos of the moment and the greatest classics of humankind. And in outstanding quality and size. We don’t do this because we are evil, money-obsessed pigs trying to make a huge profit from them, but because we love what we put out here. Whether it’s Lykke Li, Bat For Lashes, or Robyn: our adoration for the artists is limited only by our language, thoughts, and gestures.

After recently presenting you with AMY&PINK TELEVISION, a pseudo music channel that is very dear to our hearts, today we bring you the latest innovation from the nationally and internationally highly respected house of bright colors. Because our dear reader Stephen was absolutely right: why should we keep these pearls of video art all to ourselves when we can simply share them with the whole world out there?

This means that as of today you can embed our music videos on your blogs and websites. Just click the code button at the bottom right of the videos, or wait until it has finished playing—then the snippet of code will appear automatically. Simply copy the code, embed it on your site, maybe adjust the height and width, and off you go. It cost us quite a few nights and bottles of Club Mate, but it was more than worth it.

Please note that this project is initially running as a test. We have no idea whether our (admittedly very large and actually quite expensive) server might turn out to be a little asshole and ruin everything. We deliberately decided against a party playlist mode, because that would practically scream for a disaster. So try it out, write to us if you find any errors or run into problems, and you can already see what an embedded AMY&PINK video might look like right here. Have fun!

Lykke Li: Little Bit Forever

[flv:littlebit.mp4 littlebit.jpg 940 529]

Surviving the Weekend: Ten Little Missions

Who turned the clock, is it… yes, it is! The weekend again, another step closer to your certain death. How can you even sleep peacefully knowing that you’ll soon all be run over by a car, carried off by cancer, or devoured by your grandchildren? You’re all completely nuts. And to satisfy your hunger for distraction from this cruel and unstoppable option, here are ten more or less well-thought-out missions that you must complete by Sunday evening—or Udo will come to visit you. And you know what that means. Compared to that, point nine is a real joke. Have fun!

One. Travel to a country of your choice and put together a playlist with really great, fresh tracks beforehand. Two. Just take a month off from the internet. That would probably do you and your family some good. Three. Become President of Haiti. Four. Smash a flowerpot and finally become famous. Five. Write a big “Five” on your palm with a fat marker and give everyone you meet a high five. Totally funny. Or something.

Six. Clean up your filthy apartment again. Maybe you’ll find the missing family from Sweden under your pile of trash. Seven. Only buy Coca-Cola bottles in 2-liter family packs and thereby mock both anti-globalization activists and nutritionists. Eight. With your next pizza order, insist vehemently that they do not use bees as a topping because you’re allergic to them. And don’t get tired of mentioning it. Nine. Examine your prostate yourself using a do-it-yourself kit and some lubricant and save yourself the doctor’s fee. Ten. Finally sleep with Ines. Before one of us does.

AMY&PINK Television: Your New Television Channel — We Are Music Television

Since today in this dump we’re doing nothing but letting ourselves be showered with new music, while Grandma Stockmeier next door bangs her wooden leg against the wall because every episode of “Sturm der Liebe” could be her last, we thought about how wonderful it is to be able to share such magnificent acoustic pieces, including video, with you. Recently also in high-quality giant format including a sexy lettering in the top right corner. But one thing made us sad: as quickly as these masterpieces fall from the sky, they also disappear just as rapidly in the ever-filling hustle of the timeline. So what to do? The rescue came from Grandma Stockmeier!

At first we thought she was completely crazy, as she rambled and drooled about a television channel that once broadcast only music videos and didn’t have to keep itself afloat with cheap dating shows and ringtones in exchange for a fish sandwich. We liked the idea, and while we rolled Stocki back into her apartment, we started building a totally crazy television channel that played our great music videos up and down.

However, we were a bit too stupid for that, so with AMY&PINK TELEVISION we present a truly revolutionary wall through which you can quickly and directly access our great music videos, and which will be updated promptly whenever we post a sounding little film. And while we click our way through a sea of Robyns, Katys, and Keles, we continue to dream of a slot on real television and hope that our server is just as enthusiastic about this idea. We are music television. Or something like that.

Katy B: Louder

[flv:katyb.mp4 katyb.jpg 940 529]

id="">

Björk: All Is Full Of Love Forever

Styles of the Week: Pretty in Pink

Fashion is a most mysterious field, subject to constant change, formatting, and development. Anyone brave enough to engage with it must prepare for stormy times with shifting colors, shapes, and cuts, whose effects are profound on the style-conscious circus of skinny girls and androgynous boys. We don’t have the faintest clue about any of it and, in today’s edition of “Pretty in Pink,” present underage rock fans, black hipsters, and colorful Asians.

Kali

What’s more eye-catching than a talking donkey, the first man on the moon, or the day our baby Jesus was born? Exactly: a bright red dress. And when it hangs so enchantingly on the bony body of 18-year-old Kali from Michigan, it stands out even more. The dress is from American Apparel, the matching striped top from Target, and the metallic thing in her nose was a birthday gift from her brother. We are delighted.

Doll

Can modern hipster style coexist with that of the emo, gothic, and vampire generation? We wanted to know and are sending Doll from Porto into the race. No idea whether the 24-year-old is really called that, but he is the perfect symbiosis of darkness, style, and a damn good haircut. And the art student is so anti that he wouldn’t even tell us who made his clothes. We say: Yeah, Dolly. You’re the greatest.

Véronika

Even tough guys are totally into the world-famous photo of the late Doors frontman Jim Morrison, and while others secretly get off on his image, 15-year-old Véronika wears it right on her chest. Together with the obligatory hipster-kid glasses, a gray cardigan, and a muscle in her mouth, it makes for a thoroughly dazzling appearance for the whole family. Being young is fun again.

John & Kuku

We don’t even know which of the two we’d rather invite home to cuddle properly. All day long, with cheesy music playing in the background while Mom offers us cookies. John and Kuku may look like they’ve completely lost it, but because of the color on their faces, the surprised expressions, and their individual charm, in the end we chose both of them. Obviously.

Karin

Look at the photo for five seconds and then tell us how many bicycles are hidden in the background. This game may not do justice to the enchanting Karin and her shiny style, but it’s more fun than pondering her shorts from Levi’s, the belt from Moschino, and the blouse from the flea market. By the way, we counted 7½ bicycles. In case anyone cares.

Olivier Zahm & Natacha Ramsay: The Suffering of Love

The saddest love story on the internet is unfolding, ironically, in romantic Paris, and like in a bad soap opera we sit in front of our monitors armed with popcorn and cola, watching eagerly to see when the estranged lovers will fall back into each other’s arms. While we cry loudly to ourselves and remember how we were left and then wrote every piece of crap onto the internet to wash the pounding pain from our souls. Mostly in vain.

Photographer and Terry Richardson’s best friend Olivier Zahm from Purple Magazine was left. His great love Natacha Ramsay dumped him after cheating on him with another man, and the two are now riding together into a summer of love, while Olivier remains alone and abandoned. Since then, he has been writing one bittersweet declaration of love after another on his blog, posting videos of schmaltzy love songs and letting a nude photo of his Natacha flash here and there.

“I asked her twice to come back,” Olivier writes to us. “And she said no twice. As you know, I always try to create and preach an alternative lifestyle of love (which I like to call ‘La Communauté des Amants’ in French). Natacha’s decision to leave me so brutally and painfully will surely be seen by conservative people as feminine revenge against this way of life that she and I shared, and I believe I am a dreamer. At the moment I am a wreck. But I hope to recover soon in order to show you many more images about love and sex.”

As you know, we like to make fun of everything and everyone, but with this tragic story about the pain of being left, even we pause. Because we know what it’s like. The sleepless nights, the loss of appetite, the silent scream for explanation, change, liberation. Nothing is as it was and everything changes after that one decision. Where are you going?

Natacha has now come back. But only to take him in her arms and comfort him. Before throwing herself again onto the warm lips of her new love. “It meant the world to me, Natacha, that you were here yesterday to see me. I now know that I have no other choice but to let you go. Talking to you, kissing you, feeling you all day long, that saved my life. I know that I will love you forever and that I will always be there for you.”

And while we sniffle through a sea of tissues in tears, slit our wrists to Roy Orbison and Johnny Cash, and occasionally glance at Natacha’s big breasts, you may keep all available fingers crossed for Olivier, that his great love will either soon find her way back to him, or that he may experience a new spring with a fresh, happy one. From whom he will hopefully take just as many great photos.

Jónsi: Animal Arithmetic

AMY&PINK Network: Wanna Fuck Filippa Smeds

How quickly time passes and our beloved little network blossoms, grows, and runs wild. While four girls write themselves into a frenzy, a little nerd shares loads of design and music stuff with us, and a charming beauty regularly supplies us with gorgeous photos of herself and from the fashion world, two new weblogs are already in the starting blocks, ready to properly shake up the blogosphere out there.

However, it’s hard for us to describe the first new participant in fitting words. The website WANNAFUCKAHIPSTER could almost be called the junkyard of AMY&PINK. A picture smeared on, a video thrown in, a short sentence scribbled down. And there you have a world full of fashionable girls, abused children, or Avril Lavigne’s nipples. And with the photo of a more than revealing use of our stickers, the anonymously operating creators immediately won us over. We’re excited to see what else might come.

Our second newcomer, We ♥ Filippa Smeds, on the other hand, is a pure photo blog, intended to properly and successfully support our Swedish favorite model. In coordination with the sweet redhead, a website personally maintained by us is being created, which will visually accompany the development of the 21-year-old and help her to fame, honor, and world domination. After all, we need a hot princess once this planet belongs to us, and until then we wish you lots of fun with our two new additions to the AMY&PINK Network.

StarCraft 2: Nerds Save the World

Dear brothers, friends, countrymen, I overslept. I overslept so massively that I not only just rolled out of bed, but also had dreadful dreams about a game that I actually only bought to bring my inner nerd household to a new level, far away from Pokémon, anime, and Game Boy. And before I turn into a wreck, I just want to tell you one thing: Keep your hands off it, or it will destroy your life!

“StarCraft 2” is the latest shoot-’em-up-bang-boom hit from Blizzard and not only turned me overnight into a first-class strategy game fan, but even invaded my subconscious. You build troops, defend your base, upgrade your battle robots, click here, click there, and the pieces start flying. Add a story set in evil outer space, rebellion against a kingdom, cool guys, sexy women. Michael, your damn game has robbed me of my sanity. And it did so with a treacherously good style.

In the end, the whole thing is so simple. One moment you plunder this planet, then you screw the arch-enemy, and if you feel like it you even dive into the memories of some ugly creatures and replay their story with dark caves and sharp zombie brides. She is a zombie, right? Zerg, no idea. Something with bones.

If life out there confuses you, if you prefer digital instead of analog pussy, and if Mommy brings you cookies to the basement every afternoon at 4 p.m., then StarCraft 2 is exactly the right game for you to properly save the world for once. Nobody gives a damn about that in real life, but it’s incredibly fun. So then, guys, see you on the Hyperion!

Britta Persson: Meet A Bear

Surviving the Weekend: Ten Little Missions

It feels like just yesterday that we defied the weekend and hid under the bed with nachos and Red Bull until those unholy days full of excess, orgies, and debauchery were over and the work-filled everyday life returned. And while we were lying there, we once again came up with ten partly magnificent missions that you must faithfully carry out tonight, on Saturday, and on Sunday. And if you fail at even one task, well then may Hannelore strike you while you’re taking a dump. Let’s go!

One. Sleep with Vicky. Because she’s hot. Two. Go outside again before nuclear war breaks out and you’re locked in the basement anyway. Three. Give your girlfriend a proper slap on the ear again. Rumor has it she’s totally into it. Four. Go into a large crowd and confidently and freely show off your goods. Doesn’t matter how old you are. Five. Take drugs. But don’t overdo it.

Six. Fly to America and eat your way through the list of the 50 fattiest dishes. If you come back without a bypass and a wheelchair, we’ll treat you to a Coke Light. Seven. Listen properly to the Logistics remix of Sky Ferreira’s “One.” It’s totally heroic. Eight. Teach your children from a young age what really counts in later life. Nine. Just order the girl next to you a Fritz Cola, put a note with your phone number on the table, and then make a smooth exit. Ten. Buy yourself a lollipop.

The Hundreds in the Hands: Pigeons Music Video

We’re Giving Away Tickets: Let’s Go To Highfield Festival

The festival summer is far from over, and the magnificent Highfield Festival at Störmthaler See in Großpösna near Leipzig is just around the corner. Performing are phenomenal bands like Placebo, Billy Talent and Fettes Brot, but also smaller shining lights like Madsen, Band of Horses or Wir sind Helden. A colorful mix for every fan of rocking sounds. And our good friends at Telekom will be there for you again, as they have been at a bunch of past events. Whether it’s chilled Fatboy lounge corners, table football, or free internet terminals. And because they’re even nicer than we already thought, they’ve thrown in a few tickets for the big music party.

Win with AMY&PINK and Telekom 1x2 tickets for the Highfield Festival from August 20–22, 2010 at Störmthaler See and be there live when Ok Go, NOFX and Unheilig rock the stages. And that’s not all—during the performance of headliner Blink 128 you’ll get access to the massive production tower in the middle, so you can watch the gig high above the heads of the other fans.

All you have to do to get your hands on the coveted tickets is leave a comment with a valid email address by August 8 and, of course, be fully prepared when the great notification of your win surprises you. We’re keeping our fingers crossed for you and wish you lots of fun at the festival. And if you’d like to know more about Highfield, you can find information around the clock on the official Telekom website. After all, they’re the main sponsor of the three major festivals Rock am Ring, Hurricane, and Highfield.

id="">

Styles of the Week: Pretty in Pink

Since the fashion police stormed our sacred halls yesterday, tore apart the entire editorial offices and pressed us against the wall while screaming something like “You idiots have absolutely no idea about fashion, stop dragging it through the mud!”, we unfortunately had to postpone the current episode of “Pretty in Pink” from yesterday to today. For us the whole thing was just as unpleasant as it was for you; after all, unlike usual, we hadn’t prepared with Vaseline and can only work standing up today. But that’s healthy, after all. Today featuring: Hairy hipsters, bleached zombies and free sexual organs in a maxi pack.

Kasia

The 21-year-old Kasia comes from a distant land somewhere in the East that was once invaded and occupied by barbaric Germans and today enjoys rich economic and cultural diversity. Poland. With her hairstyle and grin she looks a bit like Palina from MTV, but maybe that’s exactly why we would soon invite her, along with her cute bicycle, the gray shorts and the sexy black stockings, out for dinner. You’ve got our address. Go, Kasia, go!

Dorian

Isn’t it great that men don’t have to worry about Veet, razors or hot wax to say goodbye to the wild growth on their legs and elsewhere? The 20-year-old Dorian from Massachusetts therefore shamelessly throws on his shirt from H&M together with short pants in summer to tell the world: “Fuck, I’m a real man! Now hop into bed with me and rub yourselves against my endless leg hair!” Totally awesome.

Isa

Isa has understood that for mutual sexual intercourse you don’t need money, movie tickets or red roses, but simply a free pussy. With her extravagant clothing style she makes more than clear notice of that and invites many a curious Gustav to join the long-dead path of free love, to revive a new movement of bodily ecstasy and finally let loose without long foreplay or stupid chatter. Isa, for us you are a true pioneer of the modern generation.

Joely

Who does the 18-year-old Joely from London look like… Hm… Vanessa Hudgens? No… Miley Cyrus? Not really… Peaches Geldof? No, no, no… the correct answer is: puke-junkie and fashion ghost Taylor Momsen! Joely’s biggest dream is probably to look just like her possibly still-living idol from “Gossip Girl” with her shirt from Primark, the shorts from New Look and her vintage shoes. That she might look better without shoe polish around the eyes and with a little less bleach in her hair will probably only become clear to the little one in about two years.

Pizza with Olives

Oh boys and girls, you can hang as many sexy and expensive clothes on your sun-tanned and large-breasted bodies as you like and strut through the streets of the city, but nothing (we repeat: nothing) is as fashionably and tastefully in as a juicy and crispy baked olive pizza with salami and double cheese. We would love to get dirty with it and then late at night confess to Domian on the phone how ashamed we are of having committed fornication with a slice of dough — and how amazing it was.

Chad Moore: Kiss The Pain Away – Give the Pain a Kiss

We Need a New Phrase: Give Us A Super Slogan! – Udo Is Looking for the Super Slogan

AMY&PINK changes every day. Hopefully for the better. New authors, great articles, even better readers and comments. We love it. But our digital existence still suffers a little from a small identity crisis, because we lack what others have long integrated and live by: a damn good slogan. Some of you might remember our little phrase “Booms From Berlin and Munich,” which once floated around here somewhere and was meant to quickly show visitors and media partners who the hell we are. But today it no longer fits geographically alone.

That’s why we’re calling on you with expectant looks for this totally well-thought-out campaign: Give us a slogan! Think of a short, concise phrase that fits AMY&PINK, the people in and around it, like a punch to the eye — creative, innovative, novel, porno, heroic and self-explanatory at the same time — and write it into the comments here with your chest swelling with pride.

The one with the most magnificent and monumental jumble of characters in history will receive permission from us to grope Hannah’s breasts, plus a bunch of official AMY&PINK stickers (of which, as you can see, we still have plenty in stock) and the glorious honor of always being able to say: “Hey Grandma, look up there, that slogan, it’s mine.” And who among you wouldn’t want to make their grandma really happy again? Exactly. So: Strain your brains, eaten away by alcohol and drugs, and deliver a slogan that will shake the internet and its inhabitants to their very core. We’re counting on you! And who the fuck is Udo anyway?

Tegan and Sara: On Directing

[flv:tegan.mp4 tegan.jpg 940 529]

Luc Braquet: Don’t Feed The Dead Animals

id="">

Ines and Mischa: The New Crew of AMY&PINK

Ahoy you landlubbers and welcome to a new season of AMY&PINK. A lot has happened during the summer break and nothing is the way it used to be. Josh and Paula ended their relationship after the terrible incident at the lake, Tony found out that Jeffrey is the illegitimate son of Mike and Lauren, and after Brenda’s suicide attempt Scott packed his seven things and moved back to Los Angeles to make a living there as a sun-tanned construction worker. Tragic twists of fate everywhere you look.

And there have also been some changes on the official fan page of the popular soap opera, because on our cruise we luckily welcomed two new passengers on board who will work their way up from scrubbing the deck and peeling potatoes to personally entertaining the captain and his female crew. And before I drift off again into a wild odyssey of metaphors and side notes, we’d like to introduce the two new faces right away.

The 20-year-old Ines Kuchler is no stranger to the local online community, as her alluring and often even borderline statements on her Twitter account have given many a pubescent nerd sleepless nights, and she completely convinced us with her relevant text about the immature sex life of a head-teenager and why he doesn’t want to shove vegetables up certain men’s asses. So it was more than time for her to find a suitable place to spread her verbal crap in larger portions.

Mischa-Sarim Vérollet, on the other hand, is the exact opposite of Ines. The somewhat hairier writer from Bielefeld is soon moving to big Berlin, has already published several books at the age of 28, and writes so grippingly about the highs and lows of life that Hannah was left drooling on the floor, moaning his name. With so much neighborly love, it was only a matter of time before the magnificent curly head would cause some mischief here as well. We think it’s great.

So join us in welcoming our new members to AMY&PINK. We’re very happy that with Ines and Mischa we’ve found two chaotic minds who strengthen our crew in the diversity of topics and reveal new perspectives to you in the usual quality. After all, an unbeatable team is more important than ever these days to steer a fat ship like ours safely through the shark tank of the internet. On board, you deckhands — we’re about to set sail!

Robyn: Hang With Me

[flv:robyn.mp4 robyn.jpg 1074 604]

Lele Saveri: Alone With Marta

Win a Sony Ericsson W395: A Cell Phone Named Hugo

This is Hugo, the cell phone. Every day the little rascal comes by, brings a bottle of booze and then tries to earn a bit on the side with a classy striptease. Of course we don’t say no, but somehow we still feel sorry for him. No one really knows how he ended up in this desolate place. But one thing is certain: the little Sony Ericsson needs a new home. And that’s where you come in.

Win with AMY&PINK a lonely, small and extremely stylish Sony Ericsson W395 in the Telekom Xtra Pac with 15 euros starting credit in the Extreme Playgrounds Edition. Included are mobile games, song vouchers and some really cool stickers. Camera, Memory Stick and speakers of course included — Hugo is equipped with everything that turns young girls on and makes tough guys feel like heroes.

To win this chic black mobile phone, all you have to do is leave a comment with a valid email address by Sunday, August 1, 2010, and after clicking the send button, keep your fingers crossed — and everything else that’s loosely attached to your body. So that we finally get rid of Hugo Hugo finally finds a loving home. Good luck!

AMY&PINK Network: Run Away From Home Now

Our more-than-high-quality blog network seems to be slowly but surely filling up with the most diverse and coolest people the modern internet has to offer. After the libidinous and intellectually appealing girls’ clique from Stuttgart and the sympathetic uber-nerd par excellence from Berlin, today we’re allowed to present another addition to probably the smoothest digital pile in Germany: a fresh fashion girl from Darmstadt!

Janina not only looks extremely good, has excellent taste in music and manages to skillfully stage the souls of interesting people (mostly herself), but also has a highly respectable blog up and running with the catchy domain RUNAWAYFROMHOME.ORG. And that blog now belongs to AMY&PINK. There can hardly be a more important accolade.

So add sexy Janina to your overcrowded blogroll today, follow her on Twitter, Tumblr and in real life until, overwhelmed by fame, wealth and popularity, she fakes a spectacular, press-haunting suicide and takes off to Mexico with all her money. What a life. But until then, we’ll keep stalking the snazzy fashion girl into the ground and wag our tails like little puppy Wuffi that Janina is now part of us. And everyone’s like: Yeaahh!

Kele: Everything You Wanted

[flv:kele.flv kele.jpg 940 529]

God Is Dead:

A hapless drifter falls for a big-boobed girl and, during a botched robbery, meets an absurdly undignified end—shot in the ass. This bizarre opener sets the stage for the surreal anime Mind Game. After his untimely demise, NEET Nishi encounters God, who grants him a second chance at life.

Seizing this opportunity, Nishi embarks on a madcap escape alongside a failed swimmer and her tomboyish sister, fleeing gangsters, exaggerated cartoon figures, and ugly Frenchmen. Somewhere along the way, the narrative takes a turn into the absurd: A space crew feeds on alien excrement while grappling with the revelation that their salvation lies in the most peculiar of places: A vagina.

The ensemble finds themselves in a whale, where they encounter an old man and embark on a search for life’s meaning—one unbound by the constraints of logic or convention. Attempting to encapsulate Mind Game in a tidy summary is a futile endeavor. How do I capture its fever-dream narrative and eye-popping visuals?

Take Nishi, a nice loser with ambitions, who reconnects with his cute childhood crush Myon at a restaurant. A confrontation with yakuza escalates into chaos, culminating in Nishi’s death as he tries to protect Myon. But death is merely a doorway, in a surreal limbo, Nishi defies fate, impresses God, and hurtles back to life with unrelenting determination.

Mind Game’s breakneck pace, sharp cuts, and kaleidoscopic visuals burst forth in an explosion of pure creativity. The film’s audacity left me curled on the floor in a fetal position.

If Walt Disney’s Alice in Wonderland and The Rocky Horror Picture Show once pushed the boundaries of my imagination, Robin Nishi and Masaaki Yuasa’s Mind Game shattered them entirely, leading me on a breathtaking odyssey through the vast landscapes of human emotion.

A colorful masterpiece best approached with an open mind, and perhaps a hard drink in hand, it’s not for the completely sober. But for everyone else, it’s pure, unadulterated joy. Nishi, God, and yes, even big boobs forever.

.

Loveparade 2010 in Duisburg: Death Came With Music

People die every day. Whether prepared, surprised, or even voluntarily. Suddenly they are gone, never to return, leaving behind nothing but tears, pain, and despair. What is shocking about the tragic incident at this year’s Loveparade in Duisburg, where 19 people lost their lives and more than 100 were seriously injured, is not death itself, but the young age of the victims, the purpose of the event, and the fact that it could have been prevented. After all, the visitors of the music festival came for joy, love, and freedom. But what they found was the horror of an inescapable drama.

“A girl died next to me,” 17-year-old Dustin told the press, offering just a small glimpse into a night that so many young people did not survive. Because those responsible sent them in masses through a tunnel far too narrow, where they were crushed, suffocated, and abandoned. And all of this simply because they followed the call of music and wanted to experience, dance, and have fun. Who was thinking about dying? One girl reported: “Everywhere there were people with blue faces. My boyfriend pulled me over the bodies, otherwise we would have died there. How am I ever supposed to forget those faces? The faces of the dead.”

Logical thinking could have spared many families the loss of their children and saved friends, organizers, and rescuers a great deal of suffering. Large events come with great responsibility. And when we place our lives in the hands of others, we also demand a certain sense of duty and consistent safety.

The suffering of that night can no longer be eased, and the souls of the victims are long since in another world. But even the worst mistakes can yield lessons. We hope that those responsible will be held accountable and that this cruel event will serve as a reminder to seek more careful and conscientious solutions at future events of this magnitude. So that such a tragedy can never happen again. Our condolences go out to the families and friends of the music fans who have left us.

Roberta Ridolfi: I Dreamt A Dream – Dreamlike Insights

Surviving the Weekend: Ten Little Missions

Hello there! So, don’t you have a potential sex partner at hand right now either? Do you live secluded in the East Prussian backwoods? And do you still believe that the Earth is round and the moon untouched? Then you’ve come to the right place for a new episode of “Ten Little Missions,” which will sweeten your weekend in a playfully relaxed way and keep you from collective suicide. Over the next few days of peace and quiet, try to check off as many points as possible and receive an unbelievably gruesome prize as a reward! Cookies or something. What are you waiting for? Let’s go!

One. Go to hell. No, really. Go there. Two. Look for our stickers all over Berlin or join our huge campaign, take a photo, and send it to us. Three. Drink so much melon-flavored Fritz-Limo that you wish you had never been born. Four. Seduce your fat janitor by candlelight and a glass of red wine. He’ll be grateful to you forever. Five. Passionately kiss a black pimp in the street and then go get ice cream with him.

Six. Sell your computer at the next flea market and then live a poor and deprived life in Uganda. Seven. Turn up “This Language” by Staless as loud as possible while eating a blood orange. Eight. Write an angry letter to the editors of Blonde magazine and complain about why they’re no longer like NEON. Nine. Call your health insurance company and ask where babies come from and when they’ll finally be old enough to clean the bathroom. Ten. Use your little sister’s nasal spray anally and enjoy the tingling sensation. Then put it back on her nightstand and tell her she somehow looks congested.

Blood Red Shoes: Heartsink

[flv:heartsink.mp4 heartsink.jpg 940 529]

Playboy: Lara Stone Is My Drug

Renata Raksha: Click Here To Add Title

The Future of the Internet: Nerds Take Over The World

Whether Mark Zuckerberg, Bill Gates, or Steve Jobs. Our lives are ruled by the kings of the nerds who had no friends as children, sat in the basement day and night, and caught their first glimpse of pussy thanks to a company trip to a brothel at the age of 36. Computers suddenly granted international idiots without a trace of social intelligence an incredible power that they were utterly incapable of handling. Because no matter how well the modern geek knows his way around programs, firewalls, and porn sites: as soon as he is responsible for the happiness and well-being of his fellow human beings, he snaps due to his enormous incompetence toward his environment.

In real life, we wouldn’t even dream of exchanging a word with today’s computer billionaires if there weren’t something in it for us. Their strange, introverted, and self-serving nature would drive us to the brink of madness, and yet we allow these money-hungry, self-obsessed, trauma-ridden fools to determine our virtual existence. And not only that. Through the iPhone, camera, and networked game console, they are slowly becoming masters of the rest as well.

No wonder these supposedly powerful men don’t give a damn about data protection, personal rights, or customer wishes. After all, they hate you. You were the ones who snatched all the pretty girls from them at summer camp, made out with them in your parents’ Golf, and as thanks shoved the leftover nerds headfirst into the nearby toilets. If I were a first-rate basement kid, I would despise you too and take great pleasure in how I’ve earned so much money from your mental naivety that I can finance villas, women, and Game Boys out of petty cash.

So it’s high time to leave the era of greasy nerds and fat geeks behind us and appoint smart, clever, and witty people as our virtual leaders—people who will steer our digital ship into an age with insight into human nature, backbone, and honesty, in which we no longer have to worry about our individual rights and the fair power of the web. A big thank you to all the freaks out there who showed us how to turn on the computer and install the printer. You may now scurry back down the basement stairs, because we’re taking over the helm.

Cintia Dicker: Bunny Love

id="">

Styles of the Week: Pretty in Pink

Fashion itself has become rather third-rate in the new millennium. You rarely see good designers, and anyone who still dares to hit the streets in branded clothing despite KIK, H&M, and the Karstadt bargain bin shouldn’t be surprised if they’re politely asked around the corner by overzealous Ed Hardy followers. But even in the darkest hour of style insecurity, an underground movement is making itself heard in boutique fitting rooms, and we have exclusively tracked down five rebels who, at great personal risk, present fashion of the highest class in the latest edition of “Pretty in Pink.” Rest in peace, you fighters.

Sian

Let’s try to find out as much as possible about 14-year-old Sian from Australia by simply burning this photo into our minds. She seems to really adore the British Kingdom, loves ancient action flicks starring lover-zombie George Clooney and droopy-breasted Uma Thurman, and prefers drinking Coca-Cola. What an individually high-quality girl. But thanks to those awesome boots from Doc Martens, the little redhead pulls everything together and awakens deep inside us the desire to one day call such a cool daughter our own.

Mara

Sure, no one has the slightest idea where Genoa is exactly, but if girls wearing these stylish modern plaid shirts are walking around everywhere there, then we should probably organize a class trip to that not-so-small Italian town. After all, 17-year-old Mara lives there, and if she can survive there with her rather confident sense of style, then we too should be able to enjoy a few days of good and affordable fun by the Mediterranean.

Lin

If anyone knows how to captivate the men of this world with an enticing and mysterious look, it’s certainly Lin from China. Because no matter how stylish, expensive, and trendy the clothes on your body may be, if you walk around the cities out there with a facial expression like Ernie from Sesame Street, even Gucci, Calvin Klein, and D&G won’t help you. And exposed boobs never hurt either.

Donal

Donal, you lord of fashion. You father of good taste. You leader of the stylish movement. We kneel before you. Not because you’re not yet old enough to vote or because you come from beautiful Dublin. Not because of your idyllic surroundings or your dashing haircut. But simply because of that sweater. Gray. With a wolf on it. Simply genius. Where will our new king of clothing lead us next? Let’s stay tuned.

Sammie

It feels like only yesterday that we wrote about how important the right facial expression is and how modern it seems to be to simply look charmingly deranged while walking around. Just like 18-year-old Sammie from Sydney, who, despite her runs in the tights and the awesome denim jacket, leaves a high-quality impression and should serve as a style template for all designers. Because we wish that next year’s fashion show models would all appear with exactly this expression.

The New TV Series: Justin Bieber And Spaghetti Cat

]

Grab AMY&PINK Stickers: Let’s Make The World Pink

After our shipment of brand-new AMY&PINK stickers arrived yesterday, we naturally set off immediately and wallpapered Berlin’s supposedly hip neighborhoods with them to give our city the pink it deserves. But of course, not only the German capital should shine in our garish house color—the whole world should. And that’s why here and now you have the unique chance to snag official AMY&PINK stickers to beautify your surroundings. Naturally, we can’t just throw our damn expensive merchandising items at every random Joe, so you’ll have to earn our valuable trust and prove that you know what to do with the stickers.

Simply download our sticker template here, print it out, and stick it onto sexy, beautiful, or extreme places we wouldn’t even have dreamed of. Take a photo of it, upload it to your blog / Twitpic / wherever, and drop it in the comments or send it to us by email. We’ll then decide whether we should send you a bundle of official AMY&PINK stickers. Or not. The most creative submissions will be featured again in a special article.

So what are you waiting for? Use the sticker template to cover dogs, altars, grandmas, penises, schools, subways, police officers, kiosks, the blind, billboards, girlfriends, universities, actors, workplaces, beachgoers, cafés, hookers, tourist attractions, mafiosi, swimming pools, scene shops, theaters—and send us a photo of the fresh deed. That’s how you’re in. And one thing’s for sure: girls who stick the AMY&PINK sticker directly onto their bare boobs are more than guaranteed a pack of its official brothers. So: happy sticking!

Klaxons: Echoes

Marcel Moves to England: Emma Watson, Here I Come!

My life so far has been more or less chaotic. Dissolving love, dreamy success, and personal happiness—a constant rollercoaster of emotions. And of course I’m not entirely innocent in all of this, because these highs and lows paired with sexy uncertainties are the only things keeping me on this planet. A life full of compromises and everyday routines would be the worst thing I could imagine for myself—even if I occasionally get punched in the face for wanting something different. And I mean really punched.

As a child, however, I did scribble down a rough life plan on a piece of paper and tattooed it into my little brain. So I wouldn’t completely drift into emptiness and could keep certain goals in sight at the right moments—goals I can strive for and that keep me from ending up in a madhouse. At the moment, I’m somewhere in the middle of that level map. I successfully escaped Bavaria, and now my time in Berlin is slowly coming to an end as well. Because on my way to the grand finale in Tokyo, there’s only one more stop waiting for me: England.

In the fall, thanks to financial support from the European Union, I’ll be moving to the royal island for six months with a few friends. There, I’ll devote myself to extreme language courses, the occasional internship in the design industry, and hopefully a few sweet exchange students. Our landing spots will be Bournemouth on the southern coast and, of course, London in the heart of England. We’ll prepare for this journey with plenty of “Skins” and “Harry Potter,” and when the half-year is over, I hope to be ready to take my final big step: emigrating to Tokyo and properly stirring up the Japanese people along with Asumi. Adios Berlin, I will miss you. Here’s to a grand final summer.

Airy Girl Mouths: Time For A Gap – The Courage to Have a Tooth Gap

We tend to love girls with small imperfections much more than their supposedly perfect fashion dolls. Whether pointed fairy ears, brown freckles, or small boobs: it’s the unusual details that distinguish beautiful people from interesting ones. The revived trend of the sweet little tooth gap can serve as the best example of individualism’s victory. It’s not only a welcome accessory in photo shoots and on runways, but it’s also regained popularity on the streets of the world after having been battled for decades by overzealous dentists.

Lara Stone, Ashley Smith, Jessica Hart... never before have disorderly teeth been as stimulating as they are these days. After all, that dark stripe in the mouth doesn’t just radiate rebellious traits and a certain courage to ignore social conventions—it also shows the little girls born just recently that it’s a privilege to demonstrate visual uniqueness and to stand by it, to use one’s imperfect body to one’s advantage. Besides, tooth gaps are damn sexy.

So what do you think about every dentist’s worst nightmare? Can every girl really pull off a tooth gap, or does it sometimes look more like some ex-boyfriend cop enjoyed playing the piano on his former lover’s face? And would you like to have such a little blowhole yourself? We say: yes to the gap! But what do you think?

AMY&PINK Network: Design Is Nowhere

Second-rate blogs are still popping up like barely controllable mushrooms. In search of great fame, good sex, and fast money, they waste no time on passionate stories or emotional events, but instead happily parrot—complete with lousy design—everything countless others have already shouted out into the world before them. No heart, no mind, and only rarely blessed with sympathetic individuality. But not so with Paul.

Anyone who follows Paul’s new blog Design Is Nowhere not only generates their own ticket into a world full of art, music, and otherness, but will also notice that the guy truly lives the passions he hints at and reflects their current developments faster than many a degenerate and overly fat alpha animal in this dense jungle of the digital media landscape.

We are therefore very pleased to welcome this new gem to the AMY&PINK Network and not only declare an absolute subscription duty to all his feeds, but also vouch for a series of unique feelings of success that only little Paul himself can deliver. And while you now shout the moist and merry news of the birth of the blog Design Is Nowhere out into the wide world, we are already looking forward to the things still to come in our network. Because—and this much can already be revealed—there’s a lot more on the way.

id="">

Ten Little Missions: Surviving the Weekend

Since you’re all probably hanging around at the Melt! Festival anyway, witnessing certain weddings there and perhaps already casting an eye at a somewhat shabby woman in her mid-forties, you probably won’t even need our ten tips and tricks today to make the upcoming weekend enjoyable. But for every single loser who, like us, is stuck at home and searching for true happiness in the metropolis of the big city, here and today we once again have great missions for you to complete quickly and diligently. This time featuring: divine nerds, happy emos and naked Hannahs. Good luck!

One. Stand on a busy street and hold up a large cardboard sign on which you have previously written in black marker: “Honk if you have small penises!” Two. Behave the entire weekend as if you were a fuckin’ English rock star. Three. Buy yourself an entire crate of Club-Mate iced tea and fill your bathtub with it. Four. Sleep with a red-haired Japanese student. It will do your soul as well as your genitals some good again. Five. Sue Apple. Everyone’s doing it after all.

Six. Kiss breasts again for once – no matter whether you are male, female, or animal. Seven. Write something nice to Hannah on her wall. She will reward you with hot nude photos. Eight. Read a novel by arch-nerd Wolfgang Hohlbein again. Preferably something with werewolves, gods, or little boys being sucked into charred magical worlds. Nine. Give the emo around the corner a strawberry-flavored lollipop. Maybe you’ll save a life. Ten. Call your ex-partner and shout excitedly into the phone that Rudolph has finally uncovered the secret of the thousand salamis with the help of the Knöbel strudel and that the treasure has been moved to section B. Then hang up immediately and never speak a word to that person again.

Behind The Scenes: The Declaration Of Our Summer

Behind the scenes things are currently upside down and nothing seems to remain as it is. Changes, fears about the future, and personal tragedies – rarely has a month at AMY&PINK been as exciting as this one. Caro’s departure didn’t come completely out of nowhere, but it and the resulting consequences for the website were nevertheless discussed to the ground. When Hannah was visiting Berlin during Fashion Week, verbal sparks flew at night and through the exit of our little rebel we once again realized that it is time to get certain things back on course.

Culinary meetings with Paulchen, tipsy vertical action with the girls from lil.bit and sunny lectures from Katja brought us new ideas, fresh insights and the thawed certainty that we could be working on something great here. We love AMY&PINK and it is high time to continue penetrating the souls we have poured into this project and to use our energy to make smart decisions, seize our opportunities and, above all, be different. Different in thinking, different in writing and different in acting. Because that’s the only way it works.

We are happy that we are finding more and more allies who are joining our cause. Our AMY&PINK Network is gradually growing and thriving and very soon we will be officially welcoming (more or less) tough guys, snazzy girls and busty troops to our ranks. Our marketing wave of evil is finally making its way and you will soon be delighted with sexy stickers, risqué promo videos and skin-tight T-shirts. Whether you like it or not. In addition, our doubled number of new articles per day guarantees that you will be quickly, wittily and filthily informed and entertained about everything that is happening in the vast universe of curiosities.

Hannah, Asumi and I are looking forward with you to a great summer full of inspiring events and hope that you can feel for yourselves how much our heart and soul is invested in this project. Continue to be part of a creative movement unlike any other and dive into our self-created world full of life, art and naughtiness. To you, to us, to AMY&PINK!

Bryan Sheffield: My United States Of Fuckever

Brandon Flowers: Crossfire

[flv:crossfire.flv crossfire.jpg 940 529]

How Personal Is Our Web? The Freedom Of Writing

Everything used to be better. When we were messing around on our Tripod pages and building websites with Word, the internet was not yet a shark tank full of data-protection junkies, child-porn wankers and pseudo-millionaires, but a digital little place where you simply wanted to be. An unknown new world with all its pitfalls and joys. And the best part about it was: we could still write whatever was on our hearts.

Pressing free thoughts into personal texts was, for us before the millennium, the only reason to start writing publicly. You had your own little webspace where you could vent about your experiences, heartbreak, friends, enemies, the here and now. And you didn’t have to be afraid of who might be reading. Because the tangled domain full of letters and numbers was known only to selected people.

Nowadays it is becoming increasingly difficult to find mental relief on the web. Your head bursts with joy, hatred, grief or love and yet it is becoming harder and harder to banish those feelings onto digital paper. The boss is reading along, the data octopus is panting, the audience is laughing. The pedophiles are drooling, the parents are sinking, the friends are insisting. Where has our freedom gone?

More and more bloggers are closing their little world out of fear of being read. By the wrong people. Because the panic-mongering, awareness campaigns and injected fear are taking effect. It is sad to see how the web has changed and how supposedly self-destructive it can be to be a free human being with feelings, hopes and vulnerabilities here. Because at some point, they say, everything can be used against you.

How open and free are you still online and on your blogs? How personal are you in your texts and photos? And do you find it sad that more and more people are retreating into silence instead of writing the pain and the love from their souls through passionate, captivating and perhaps hurtful works? The courage to show one’s own personality is in danger; the only question is: will anyone even miss it?

id="">

Barbara Hvidt & Jan Gleie: Noot Seear Home Alone

Styles of the Week: Pretty in Pink

The Mercedes-Benz Fashion Week in Berlin has just come to an end and has sent masses of mutated adolescents out into the wide world, wrapping everything around their bodies that has more than two colors and has already appeared on page twelve of a Swedish fashion blog. As seasoned veterans, it’s twice as much fun for us to make fun of these confused souls and casually sic the youth welfare office on them. But of course there are also lovable exceptions you’d rather run after all day just to tell them how amazing they look. You can decide which of these two scenarios applies to the following protagonists of the current “Pretty in Pink” series.

Olivia

Seventeen-year-old Olivia from California not only has an extremely beautifully furnished home, but also wins us over with the occasional vintage bash and cool sunglasses. Handbag from Electronic Love Letter, necklace from GAS'D and a dress from Spanish Moss Vintage – that’s how alternative teenage life, by no means dictated by fake pregnancies, fast-food joints and mainstream drugs, becomes twice as much fun. We’re in love.

Eszter

Presenting a round baby bump as a fashion accessory probably ranks among the more extreme products—alongside cat handbags on your arm, beer cans in your hair and pink leggings up your butt—to make a striking impression. But that doesn’t stop Eszter from Vienna from confidently and sexily showcasing her bodily new burden born of sexual desperation, complete with earrings from Topshop, a denim vest from Zara and a standard plus-size dress.

Alternative Justin

We all know that Justin Bieber is just a small, mutated sewer rat with a wig on his head that we’d love to bomb away with nuclear missiles along with the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. In exceptional cases, violence is indeed a beautiful and quick solution. Because if we’re going to let singing malaria into our house, then at least in the form of the alternative Justin, whom we spotted over at the Fatale Femmes. We have no idea whether he can produce a decent note, but he’s definitely better than the Bieber bump. And he’s wearing a nice vest too.

Camille

If it were possible to send music over the still very underdeveloped internet, our first contribution would be a sexually charged love song for 22-year-old Camille from London. Because in her pumps and T-shirt from Topshop, the necklace from Asos and the treggings from American Apparel, the petite, slender creature not only looks incredibly fairy-like, but would clearly deserve the award for “Style of the Week” – assuming we would actually give out such a thing.

Olof

Olof from Sweden may look at first glance like a lesbian 10-year-old with a penchant for pseudo-cool poses, but behind the chicken chest is a 16-year-old student who’s into clothes from MTWTFSS Weekday, shoes from Beyond Retro and bags from Chanel. Personally, we like the docked boats better than Olof himself, but once he quits smoking and puts on some decent trousers, he’ll find the woman of his life. Or something like that.

The Acoustic Orgasm: The Sounds of the Week – The Albums of the Week

M.I.A. - ///Y/: The now 34-year-old ushered in a new era of musical understanding and coolness for all of us, and no album was as eagerly awaited as the follow-up to “Arular” and “Kala.” And then this. Barely available in the illegal corners of the web, the electro work “///Y/” was disappointedly torn apart, stoned and thrown off a cliff. Rightly so? Yes. Instead of filling fresh musical influences with legendary M.I.A. power, she gets lost in an experimental drug haze and bores along. But if you haven’t heard it, you’re not allowed to have an opinion. Recommended tracks: “Born Free” and “XXXO.”

Bombay Bicycle Club - Flaws: It almost seems as if the guys from Bombay Bicycle Club were replaced after the magnificent “I Had The Blues But I Shook Them Loose” by depressive eco-freaks before whose eyes you violated little kittens and their grandmothers with a broomstick while making music. Because such routine softie sentimentality is hardly bearable even with heartbreak combined with suicidal thoughts. Sad, and not in the intended way. Recommended track: They all sound completely the same, so “Ivy & Gold.”

Wolf Parade - Expo 86: At least the guys from Montreal give us a small glimmer of hope this week and, with their third album “Expo 86,” deliver not a hard-partying record, but at least a truth you can believe in: that good rock music with atmospheric keyboards is still good for something. Well done, Wolf Parade. Recommended tracks: “Ghost Pressure” and “Little Golden Age.”

Win Tickets and a Phone: Die Fantastischen Vier

It’s that time again and another fantastic band is doing us the honor of showcasing their artistic talents in a rather unusual location. After the great concert by Pheonix, where we made our loyal reader Martin sweat, the hip-hop giants of the Fantastischen Vier are now following at a brisk pace. They’ll be playing on July 23 as part of the Telekom Street Gigs at the ProSieben broadcasting center near Munich—and the best part is: you can be there!

We’re giving away 1x2 exclusive tickets for this extraordinary performance and, on top of that, the lucky winner will also receive a brand-new Nokia X6 mobile phone including a 5-megapixel camera and 16 gigabytes of storage capacity. Definitely worth taking part.

All you have to do to snag these hot prizes is leave a comment with a valid email address by Sunday, July 18. And if you want to play it safe, you can also try your luck on the Telekom Street Gigs website, where you can still get limited tickets for the concert. We wish you the best of luck from hot Berlin!

id="">

Evan Baden: Self Shots In My Child’s RoomSelf-Portraits in the Children’s Room

Why We Are Alone: There Is No Love In SummerThere Is No Love In Summer

The past few weeks have been hotter, more humid, and more unjust than our battered bodies could ever endure without suffering considerable emotional pain. To ease it at least a little, we are on an eternal search for brotherly beings upon whom we can place our torment without binding ourselves too emotionally. Private worlds, extraordinary adventures, the magic of a night soaked in colorful string lights, cheap red wine, and music that is far too good. But true feelings, we certainly do not find them these days.

For years now, my relationships with girls have begun in autumn without exception. Not because I’m some macho brute who only wants to fuck small-minded sluts in the summer and then have someone to cuddle like Diddl and cook sausages with in the colder days, but because by the end of summer I have regained my psychological balance after embarking on an unconditional journey in search of the meaning of myself. Of course without any success, and yet a little further along.

And when the days grow cooler and the nights quieter again, she is usually already waiting for me. The woman at the entrance to the red leaves, gliding walks, and deep conversations. I will take her in my arms and walk a while with her, love her and plunge myself into endless suffering. Because I know that our paths will part again as soon as the cold breath of winter disappears once more. What remains is a basket full of memories and impetuous realizations.

So let us fully enjoy the hottest time of the year and not worry about emotional stuff that only keeps us from throwing ourselves into the most beautiful summer of our lives. To recapture our lost selves and understand what it is really about. We cannot expect more from ourselves and from our fellow sufferers at the moment. A smile, a kiss, a sleep—and yet nothing more. For this is certain: in summer, there is no love.

Surviving the Weekend: Ten Little Missions

The well-earned weekend is once again ahead of us, and for anyone who isn’t already completely exhausted from the enormous heat and the stressful football routine, we have ten wonderful missions here that must be completed as conscientiously as possible over the next few days. Among them: having sex with Kristen Stewart, building yourself a goose that lays golden eggs, and searching for the Olsen twins. Good luck!

One. Watch this GIF while listening to this song. Two. Download as many Japanese fashion magazines as possible here and count how often the Olsen twins appear in them. Three. Publish an app for the iPhone—after all, developers make 1,400 dollars a day from it. Four. Sleep with Kristen Stewart and try to get a different facial expression out of her than this one. Five. Be thrilled that new episodes of "Beavis and Butt-Head" are coming soon.

Six. Tweet something nice to Lindsay Lohan; she could use it. Seven. Dance and laugh and rejoice to the Double Rainbow Song. Eight. Photograph your breasts, send us the photo and we’ll turn it into T-shirts. Nine. Spend a whole day speaking to your surroundings in a nerve-racking fantasy language and mean it seriously. Ten. Listen as often as you possibly can to "Bang Bang Bang" by Mark Ronson & The Business Intl because the song is unbelievably good.

Berlin Fashion Week: Where Are The Redheads?Where Are the Redheads?

Fashion Week in Berlin is proceeding cheerfully and energetically, relentlessly focusing on summery experiments, impetuous outbursts, and lots of bare skin. While C.neeon relies on large-scale bedsheets with sexy pastel patterns in the backyard of the Picknick Club, Kaviar Gauche presents dreams of silk and chiffon, and Frida Weyer shows romantic evening gowns in stylish sepia tones. As varied and creative as this, fashion can really be fun.

A beautiful and personal text about our beloved redheads was written by the sympathetic model redhead Teresa Bücker for the Fashion Week magazine DERZEIT. In it, she addresses the most secret and shimmering trend of the year: girls with red hair. “The daily reminders of the golden reserves on my head only constantly renew my secure exoticism. This feature, to which I am constantly reduced by others, has become my personal obsession.” Truly absolutely beautiful.

Meanwhile, we are particularly excited about the scandalous StyleNite by Michael Michalsky, which we are allowed to attend tomorrow evening. Also taking part is the British label Maharishi and the team of the Friedrichstadtpalast, which will present its glamorous couture outfits from the revue show Yma. But things will not only heat up on the runway—there will also be excitement at the infamous aftershow party. Together with the English cult band O.M.D, currently celebrating its revival, the opera singer Nadja Michael, and DJ Hell. Well, this should be something.

If you want to stay up to date with what’s happening in the current fashion capital of the world, you can’t miss the magnificent magazine “Night Shots” by Belvedere Vodka. It is available free of charge at Berlin’s hot spots or can be downloaded on Facebook. Featuring great blogs such as Les Mads, Bang Bang Berlin, or Eve Without Adam—and of course us as well. So grab it while it’s still hot.

We Are Like Crystals: Bartosz Ludwinski

Old, Fail, Rofl: You Are So LameThe Thing About Speed

We at AMY&PINK write a lot of good stuff, usually garnished with pretty pictures and magnificent videos. Great music that takes our breath away, and stories from the torture that some call life. Texts about art, sex, and the modern whole. And of course we have the ambition to always report quickly and up to date about what’s happening out there in the big wide world. But we can’t and don’t want to post only the hottest of the hot shit all the time.

This time the point of contention: the music video "No-one's Gonna Love You" by Cee-Lo. There are actually certain people who take the trouble to inform us by mail that this masterpiece is already one or two weeks old and that some had already honored and published it with an article before we did. Why on earth would we do that? Even we were left speechless.

You want to know why we threw this video into the crowd even though it’s from the day before yesterday? Because it’s awesome, really good, hot stuff! Who says you always have to drag only the newest of the new into the public eye? With that attitude you destroy many a great work and prevent it from gaining broader recognition. Not everyone has a bursting feed reader at home and moans with self-satisfaction just because they’re reading the same video / image / piece of information for the third time.

If everyone were always chasing the latest craze, this would be a very boring planet, believe us. So stop giving yourselves (or rather us) shit just because something is older than your greasy cheeseburger. Instead, be happy that good quality sometimes spreads faster and sometimes a little more slowly, and think of the nice people who have better things to do than consume everything day in and day out, but who know how to enjoy and appreciate pearls. You pseudo-trendsetters.

Berlin Fashion Week: Higgledy-Piggledy FashionColorful Variety of Fashion

The first day of Berlin Fashion Week is almost over again and shortly after the opening show by Munich rascal Marcel Ostertag, it was clear what Berlin will probably have to endure in the coming days. Colorfully jumbled shapes, colors, and fabrics dominate this year’s collections, far removed from any harmony or clear line. Pink, orange, and even nude tones—the pure chaos reigns during the first hours of fashion week and leaves room for many questions and fresh impressions. We are curious to see whether the other designers will be just as bold.

Fashion itself played a rather subordinate role yesterday evening, because like the rest of the nation, designers, models, and visitors were interested in only one thing: the semifinal between Germany and Spain at the World Cup in South Africa. The organizers were prepared for that much patriotism. Calvin Klein sponsored a collective public viewing for stylish fans, Bread & Butter even opened its own stadium including performances by Sportfreunde Stiller and Patrice, and the smaller labels and shops around the fashion circus simply set up flat-screen TVs right in the street. We like it that way.

A few more or less stylish highlights were still worth mentioning, however. The Austrian Lena Hoschek, for example, presented absolutely hot pieces with her collection, while redhead Barbara Meier caused puzzled faces and the occasional whisper with a somewhat extraterrestrial-looking pink cap. But even certain top models can’t always choose what they’re allowed to wear—and what not.

Let’s see which rabbits the fashion circus will pull out of its hat in the coming days, and anyone who wants to learn more about what’s happening around the tent at Bebelplatz can either steal the magnificent magazine “Night Shots” from Belvedere Vodka somewhere or download it via Facebook. It appears fresh every day and not only features such magnificent blogs as Les Mads, Bang Bang Berlin, or Eve Without Adam, but to everyone’s great surprise, also us. And with that, it transforms at this very moment into the absolute must-have.

Scandal about Ke$ha: Ke$ha Covered With CumKe$ha and the Lovely Sperm

Styles of the Week: Pretty in Pink

Since for the first time in nine years even the big and small starlets of Berlin Fashion Week have been consuming us as of today, we don’t want to miss the opportunity to give the fashion makers of the United Nations a little glimpse into the real world out there. Complete with their likable messy heads, drunken New Berliners, and candy-sucking bare-breasted girls. All that and much more is now available right here in the current edition of “Pretty in Pink.”

Ester

The Swede may have a totally crazy first name, but despite being just 16 years old, Ester looks more than hot. And that’s why she can call herself whatever she wants. She prefers to run barefoot through the sea late in the evening, holding her beloved Chucks from Converse tightly in her hands and smiling so sweetly into the camera held up to her face that God himself supposedly fell backward off his chair in satisfaction after creating her. Those Swedes again.

Kadeem

Hey Kadeem, what’s up, my brother? The 20-year-old student and freelancer from New York City not only looks absolutely dashing in his white shirt by Levi's, but also loves photographing his hood with all its beautiful and eerie facets, people, and secrets. That’s great. And if you can’t get enough of him, you can still follow him on Twitter, he’d surely be thrilled.

Lauren

Ugly cap, impossible glasses, and a lollipop with a disgusting flavor. Lauren really doesn’t have a particularly good hand when it comes to her outward appearance, and yet in this photo especially she has something about her that magically attracts us. But what is it… The pool in the background? The green turtle in attack mode or perhaps the wristbands on the American girl’s arm that testify to her importance? We’ll probably never find out, but maybe someone should tell Lauren that someone has placed their dirty feet on her breasts. The villain.

Eddy

Eddy is cool. With his delicious drink in hand, the inviting bedroom look, and the barely shaved kissing zone around his oral body opening, the Berlin transplant knows how to fully convince the female individuals. But what we like best about Eddy is his fondness for timelessly stylish plaid shirts that can change color with mood swings. At least we hope so. Because that would be pretty awesome.

Cristina

Anyone who has such a toned and tanned body as 22-year-old Cristina from New York City can, as far as we’re concerned, wear pretty much anything the bargain bins of wholesale chains have to offer. But with pink leggings, leopard-print strings, and knee pads made of fur, the self-confessed blogger is not satisfied and conjures her charming vision of a stylish world into every photo. With herself and her sexy messy head in the leading role, of course. Superb.

After the Suicide of Roberto Müller: Death And All His FriendsDeath and All His Friends

While just yesterday we were still dancing the lifeblood out of our bodies, throwing each other into the wet pond outside the city and loving each other in places that were never meant for it, all of that can already be over the next day. Forever. The sparkle, the glow, the resistance. In these days, the Grim Reaper comes quietly, swift like an impetuous moment, or creeping and admonishing like the satisfaction of something devilish. Existence, my dear friends, is only of short duration and we are all far too rarely aware of that.

After the suicide of Roberto Müller and his composed, somehow candid farewell letter, so many questions suddenly arise in our minds. About the here and now, our digital identities, and what it might be like. Dying. Hannah and I talked for a long time last night about Roberto’s passing and the way in which he carried it out. What awaits us afterward, what happens deep inside us in the moment of departure, and whether we really are in a better, freer place afterward. But we did not reach any real agreement—or even an answer.

Although countless beings have already passed through the stage of farewell, death remains for all of us a wonder full of horror, grief, and uncertainties. What images do you believe await you after your last breath, and what do you think dying will be like? Possibly full of pain or somehow completely okay. Would you ever choose the step of suicide, or is there truly always another way out? And can you fully understand Roberto’s decision to leave life in this way? Because one thing became clear to us during the discussion about death and all his friends: if there is one thing we respect, it is the final path that may still lie ahead for all of us.

id="">

Cee-Lo Uncensored Video: No-one’s Gonna Love You

[flv:Cee-Lo-NoonesGonnaLoveYou.flv Cee-Lo-NoonesGonnaLoveYou.jpg 940 529]

Berlin Fashion Week: Berlin’s Gonna Be Beautiful AgainThe Capital Will Be Beautiful Again

Starting tomorrow, the international fashion circus will once again make a stop in our beloved capital and roll out the big guns with a whole host of closed and open events to press cultural beauty into each and every more or less interested individual. In the next few days, which can hardly be surpassed in terms of heat, we can expect—besides a party mile not entirely averse to rising alcohol levels—a multitude of enchanting fashion shows, this time including Calvin Klein, Michael Michalsky, and Marcel Ostertag.

Anyone who isn’t quite as important as the established trade press or the female companions of certain local celebrities and hasn’t received an invitation to the coveted shows can, thanks to the typical Berlin spirit, look forward to countless free or low-cost festivities. From Wedding Dress to the Underground Catwalk and the .HBC Couture Designers Scouts, even the average Joe can soak up all the flair of these sympathetic fashion victims. After all, beauty, music, and plenty of good vibes are guaranteed everywhere.

Truly famous stars are unfortunately still nowhere to be found at the local clothing presentations, so you can pack away your cameras and autograph books again. The highlight will be the appearance of zombie hunter Milla Jovovich, who is allowed to serve as the official face of Fashion Week this year. Otherwise, there will be plenty of German celebrities such as Boris Becker and Bettina Zimmermann and, of course, the occasional super-sexy model to gawk at—and that’s something, after all.

So take a shower for once, put on a bit of makeup, and jump into your finest outfits, and you’re bound to have a whole lot of fun at this year’s Fashion Week in Berlin. And don’t forget: flirt your hearts out, because there are only this many beautiful people in the capital on very special occasions. Three cheers for fashion!

Star Watch: Celebrity Crackdown

Aside from a few scandals increasingly involving bare skin in less-tanned areas, the stars and starlets have gotten off pretty lightly with us so far. But that’s over for now, because in collaboration with our sexy stepsister blog VIPDIP, we will from now on dig week after week into the deepest secrets of international high society and fervently hope to soon be sued into the ground by one of the fallen stars. Today in Celebrity Crackdown: underage fashion victims, porn-ish singers, and distracted witches.

• Madonna’s graceful daughter Lourdes Leon has taken inspiration from one or two fashion role models and has been blogging herself for a few days now about fashion trends, the ’80s, and her famous mom. Her first entry on Material Girl Collection immediately racked up 800 comments and 500 Facebook likes. Not bad for a mere 13-year-old.

• What Megan Fox actually does professionally, no one could tell us by press time (it would be hard to call her state crimes “acting”), but now Hollywood’s hottest bride is completely off the market, having recently married her odd Brian Austin Green in Hawaii. It won’t last long anyway; after all, the 24-year-old is already contractually set to become my second wife (after Nora Tschirner).

• Singer Katy Perry goes a step further with every new photoshoot and presents herself in the British Esquire wearing nothing but latex panties, high heels, and a necklace. If the 25-year-old continues her all-around unveiling at this pace, we expect the first porn film around October. Hopefully.

• Sexy Hexy Emma Watson, meanwhile, is developing into an alternative do-gooder, having recently appeared in the music video of her current lover George Craig, frontman of the well-known band One Night Only, where she plays a somewhat misplaced young goddess. Or something like that. Maybe the 20-year-old should simply spend less time with random Muggle guys and practice more for the fight against Lord Voldemort. That’s clearly more important right now.

Jens Ingvarsson: Putting A Banana Into My Mouth

The Girl and the Fish: Mutant Sperm

A Television Story: Episodes Of Our Generation – The Series of Our Generation

I was an absolute television kid. The box raised me, taught me how to speak without a Bavarian accent, and gave me values for life. Every half hour I was a member of a different family, clique, or secret organization, and at some point it became clear to me that love will always triumph over evil, money isn’t everything in life, and true friends are the most important thing of all. Even if one day you simply get canceled.

When I was younger, there were no torrents or dubious streaming platforms. We still had to memorize the TV guide to know when the shows were on that advanced us in life and consciousness more than all teachers, relatives, and relationships combined. When “Friends” came on at 7:00 p.m. on ProSieben or ORF1, you gathered with your equally outcast crew in front of the flickering screen and listened carefully to what Joey, Ross, and the hot Rachel had to say.

Through “Scrubs” we learned to handle scalpels and thought bubbles, in “Full House” both men and women fell for Jesse, and in “The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air” Will Smith wasn’t yet hunting zombie vampires or aliens, but pretty women or his crazy cousin. “O.C., California,” “Family Matters,” “Married… with Children.” Back then the world was still in order. Fixed TV times, likable commercial breaks, loved ones gathered around the glowing box.

Most of our shows have long since disappeared, and what remains belongs to a worn-out species that is more dead than alive. Instead of celebrating a cozy TV evening with the family, we binge entire seasons of current hits from the web and consume them late at night at high speed on the flat screens of our computers. Not just because we can, but especially because Hollywood constantly supplies more. “Gossip Girl,” “The Big Bang Theory,” “How I Met Your Mother”… The flood of supposedly good programming can hardly be stopped.

But what are the series of our once administratively flawless generation? Which characters, settings, and scenes would you absolutely love to see again, and were the shows before the millennium really all better? Let’s just take some time to pay tribute to the Steve Urkels, Ryan Atwoods, and Al Bundys of our youth and look back on which series we miss more than all our ex-partners combined—and with what trash we’re insulting our eyes and ears these days.

Where to Put Your Digital Life? Puberty Of BlogsPuberty of Blogs

Apart from personal blogs, many of their more seriously conceived brothers have, over the past few years, built up true image variants that characterize them, define them, and make up their content. And many people keep coming back precisely because of this image. Jeriko, for example, is the supplier of beautiful visual worlds, Nerdcore the all-knowing brain when it comes to originally packaged zombies, and at Superlevel the pixelated world is, as is well known, all about the excesses of enchanted mushroom kingdoms. Just as AMY&PINK simply cannot exist without electronic music, hyperactive Pokémon, and young boobs. That is carved in stone and will never change. Or will it?

What if Christoph eventually no longer feels like rambling on about implausible dream worlds, René is fed up with Jedis, the undead, and cats, and Fabu throws his controllers out the window, only to then launch a website together with the others about the tastiest Tibetan rice dishes under 200 calories? Or what if at AMY&PINK we get sick of boobs? Where do we put our digital lives then?

Some blogs have already achieved such a steadfast image that they may no longer be able to grow along with the personal development of their creators and are thus anchored to the preferences of their audience. Instead of subjecting the blog to one’s own, perhaps someday more mature, ideas and visions, one has to ask with some online publications whether it might not be better to hand over one’s raised baby to younger, fresher, and more interested hands and step back oneself.

So if Hannah someday no longer feels like writing sweet life advice, Caro shaves her head and joins the Scientologists, Asumi moves from Tokyo to Azerbaijan, and yours truly degenerates into a homosexual big-city nudist, would AMY&PINK have to grow along with our life concepts, or should we rather let youthful clones take our place, continuing to supply you with the typical pink topics? And what about your own blogs? As John Galsworthy once said: If you do not think about the future, you cannot have one.

Sky Ferreira: One

The Acoustic Orgasm: The Sounds Of The WeekThe Albums of the Week

Wavves - King Of The Beach: Those were the days when you allegedly armed yourself with Rasta girls, footbags, and skateboards and had sex in the mayor’s basement and smoked weed until the doctor came, all while giving each other high-fives. At least that’s what you heard from the cool kids while we were saving the world with our Pikachus and Goldeens. And if yesterday were today, then the Californians’ third album would definitely be blasting at those parties. Recommended tracks: "King Of The Beach" and "Post Acid".

Stars - The Five Ghosts: When the Canadians sing, it’s time for all of you to shut up deluxe. No one howls so beautifully about love, depression, and ex-partners up in flames like Amy Millan and her boys. Their fifth studio album may not be quite as epic as "In Our Bedroom after the War," but it’s still better than the other trash being pushed on you out there. Recommended tracks: "Wasted Daylight" and "I Died So I Could Hunt You".

We Are Scientists - Barbara: Anyone who wants to dive into the hip world of hip hipsters and even hipper hipness shouldn’t miss the New York flagship band’s fourth record. Rocking numbers with a pinch of individualism don’t exactly turn cheeky Barbara into the album of the millennium, but it doesn’t always have to be bland electro to bring a little color into your gray life. Recommended tracks: "Nice Guys" and "Rules Don't Stop".

Welt Kompakt Scroll Edition: The Whole World In Our Hands – The World in Our Hands

For the amusement of an entire editorial team, including the council of the national blogosphere, we and a colorful selection of other digital writers were guests yesterday at the office complex of the evil Axel Springer publishing house and quickly realized: Well… it’s not that evil after all. Heatedly debated, torn apart, and traumatically anticipated in advance, Caro, Hannah, and my hairy self set out to create our own Welt Kompakt, produced, filled, and written exclusively by digital natives (10 cents into the buzzword jar). A test, an experiment, and something new. And it wasn’t that easy.

Together with Claudio & Suz from iHeartBerlin, Sandra from Gossip Girlz, and Rose from Sprachrodeo, we practically dug through the day’s news, followed more or less excitedly the live outcome of the federal presidential election on the screen, and stuffed ourselves with a wide range of schnitzels, muffins, and fresh fruit. Naturally washing it all down seconds later with Club-Mate. The iPads were flying through the air while we sat in the midst of pulsating brains and once again realized how different the inhabitants of the web really are and how diverse their intuitions, wishes, and opinions can be. Only on one thing did even the most snobbish bloggers, Twitterers, and critics agree: we all have a Mac. Except Hannah, who has something with windows.

As consolation, she stuffed herself with chicken drumsticks and white wine in the evening while we all sat comfortably in a bar by the Spree, thinking about what we had just committed in analog form and what shocking answers we had given to the constantly passing press representatives’ cameras. Lots of beautiful photos from the event can be seen at the sexy mama Dani from Butterflyfish, and you should rush immediately to the kiosk of your trust and grab the one and only Scroll Edition of Welt Kompakt before it sells out. Because we’re in it. And lots of smart people as well. Print is quite a lovely thing. Only one question remains: Who the hell is Carolin Schmitz?

One Man A Cappella Multitrack: Pokémon Theme Song: Gotta Catch ’em All! Catch Them All!

Tumblr Festival: Walking On An Inspiration

Styles of the Week: Pretty in Pink

Due to our—let’s boldly call them—restructuring efforts at AMY&PINK headquarters, not only have a few nights been lost, but especially our beloved recurring features have fallen by the wayside here and there. But that ends now. Little by little we’re bringing them back to life and today we begin with the unrivaled fashion show called “Pretty in Pink,” in which we present to you the street styles of the week—without having the faintest clue about the theme. Joining us today: underage ponytails, New York exhibitionists, and Pikachus on drugs. Have fun!

Taylin

Okay, “I Love New York” shirts were trendy at a time when your grandmothers were still sleeping with the Russian allies because idiot Grandpa Heinz had ended up in a prisoner-of-war camp. After that, incredibly creative outbursts like “New York Loves Me,” “I Hate New York,” and “Dort Mund” were burned onto the chests of your ancestors, and eventually the whole cute affair disappeared into the trash heap of oblivion. At least until the small, sweet Taylin Elisa Yasmin from Montreal dug up her variation of urban cuddle sessions and shows it off on her sexy 18-year-old body. The only question now is: does anyone even want to see that anymore?

Sebastien

The 22-year-old Sebastien from Paris is a fashion designer and for that reason alone should be incredibly well dressed. Always. And everywhere. Today the Frenchman delights us with red sneakers from Vans, skin-tight pants from H&M, and a jacket from Zara. What a man. But really, everyone only wants to know two things: where Mr. Taberlet got that incredibly awesome Elvis shirt and how many girls he has already pleased with his disproportionately large penis. Because he’s black.

Claudia

In New York, people are miles ahead of us when it comes to fashion, appearance, and style. While we’re still worrying about which colors, shapes, and labels will be trendy again in autumn, the hot war of the exhibitionists is raging in the Big Apple. There, whatever can be shown is shown, whatever can be exposed is exposed, and whatever can be pulled out is pulled out. At least until the cops get wind of it. And as tourists, you definitely shouldn’t do that. Unless you’re into wild chases.

Romina

Isn’t she adorable? 15 years old, from Düsseldorf, and her name is Romina. Without Power. Her fashion style is typical of all those underage bloggers out there, and yet we’d rather not tear her apart at such a young age. Because somehow we like Romina. And her Chucks. And her ponytail. We’re not entirely sure why, but perhaps it’s the way she looks so cheerfully and expectantly into the camera, as if she knows it’s only three more years until we make her a big star at AMY&PINK. Just wait.

Clark & Jennifer

If you stare at these two stoners long enough to find Walter, it should quickly become clear: drugs are bad, m’kay? As much as we love Pikachu, neon colors, and reasonably pretty girls, the combination we see with Clark, Jennifer, and all the other quicksand victims is even more hideous. Kids, do us a favor today and flush your entire collection of smiley pills, dried grass, and doctor syringes down the toilet and immediately sign an apprenticeship contract as a tax clerk. Because any fate is better than that of Atom-Clark and Pokémon-Jennifer.

Lisa Is Now a Vegetarian: Super Scary Simpsons Comics

id="">

Marina And The Diamonds: Damn Oh No!

[flv:marina_ohno.mp4 marina_ohno.jpg 940 529]

Mark Ronson & The Business INTL: Bang Bang Bang

[flv:bangbangbang.mp4 bangbangbang.jpg 940 529]

Bat For Lashes: Let’s Get Lost

We all agree that all these “Twilight” movies are terrible, contribute more to the intellectual decline of our children than all the Teletubbies, Ronald McDonalds and Popstars seasons combined, and have brought about as much to the respected world of cinema as the invention of the ice scraper has to the rest of humanity. Nevertheless, you have to give the makers one thing: when it comes to music, the fine ladies and gentlemen in the marketing department seem to know what they’re doing.

After Lykke Li and Muse had already lent their musical talents to that vampire trash called “Twilight Saga: Eclipse,” our darling Natasha Khan from Bat For Lashes has now also been bitten directly in the carotid artery and recorded a rather excellent song titled “Let’s Get Lost” together with Beck, which hopefully was only stolen illegally by the undead—because otherwise my entire worldview will collapse. Listen and cry.

[audio:letsgetlost.mp3]

Working for Dov Charney: How Much American Apparel Are You?

If you’re broke again, then besides prostitution or drug dealing you can always try your luck at American Apparel and attempt to land a job there. Selling a few colored rags sewn together by homosexual Mexicans can’t be that hard, right? Think again! The American clothing company has very clear ideas about what their future employees should look like—and what they definitely should not. We’ve compiled a list of what Dov Charney absolutely cannot stand.

Forbidden are: Chucks, visible tattoos, silver, piercings, full beards, caps, colored contact lenses, bright hair colors, make-up, earplugs, Vans, flip-flops, hats, G-Shocks, cufflinks, bracelets, necklaces, sideburns, too many rings, ballerinas, goatees, sneakers, boots, fake fingernails, lip gloss, plucked eyebrows, unnatural hairstyles, large earrings and inappropriate jewelry.

Sounds worse than an apprenticeship as a bank clerk. Now of course we’re interested: would you meet all these requirements and practically step straight out of one of their catalogs? And if you’re not sure whether your appearance and clothing style fit American Apparel, you can send the nice folks an email with a photo. They specialize in evaluating your look and, if necessary, writing to your parents to inform them what an incredibly ugly child they have.

Breast Fighter II: The Battle for the Breasts

Imagine you’re a woman, some idiot from the parallel class got you pregnant at the barn party, and suddenly a small human being is panting and wheezing its way out of your primary sexual organ. After buying paternity tests and wallpaper with colorful unicorns on it, only one question remains in your mind: how are you going to get Mini-Me through the first few months without it starving and you ending up on the front page of a major German newspaper the next day? You have two options: either via the enlarged milk jugs on your upper body or crystal-clear bottles from the supermarket.

Journalist Kathryn Blundell reflects on exactly this topic in the English parenting magazine Mother & Baby and writes that she feeds her offspring exclusively with the bottle. “I wanted my body back and to drink wine whenever I want. Besides, it was the last chance for my boobs to stay on my chest and not hang around my stomach. They’re also part of my sexuality. Not just breasts, but fun bags. I find the thought of my small, sweet, innocent baby sucking on the things that otherwise only my lovers have been on somehow very creepy.”

So girls, hand on heart. Once you’re entitled to child benefits again, what matters more to you: that your melons stay firm, sexy and in shape, or that the charming offspring is fed as healthily as possible instead of being stuffed with processed products and powdered milk? And to the guys: would it bother you if your junior sucked your wife’s / girlfriend’s / secretary’s boobs empty and long, and afterwards you could play paddleball with them?

M.I.A.: M.I.A. and the Killer Games

What is going on with my former idols? First MGMT drift off into irrelevance, then Uffie bores me to death, and now my once so beloved M.I.A. is spouting one piece of nonsense after another from her pretty mouth. She is now firmly convinced that video games make the children of our world violent and thus joins the long tradition of brain-dead psychologists and politicians not to be taken seriously. Rampage? Killer games! Stabbing? Killer games! Hipster chick? Killer games!

“I don’t know what’s worse,” says the 34-year-old in an interview. “The knowledge that I’ve seen many bad things in my life, or that an entire generation of American children sees violence on their computer screens and is then shipped off to Afghanistan. These kids think they know violence when they don’t. They don’t have a proper understanding of violence, interpret it completely wrong, and that naturally makes it especially easy for them to inflict pain on others.”

The fact that in the Middle East there are plenty of violent youths running around who certainly haven’t numbed their brains with killer games seems to escape the “Paper Planes” singer. And it’s sad that someone keeps coming along and repeating the same old refrain without having any clue about the subject matter. Or does she perhaps have a point after all…?

He Was A Sk8er Boi

My quarter-life crisis is in full swing and for exactly that reason I now want to fulfill a childhood dream: buy a skateboard, roll around on it and scare old grandmas. In my entire life I’ve only had two of those things. I was eight years old and their quality was more than questionable. That’s why I have absolutely no clue about the sport which, in my opinion, alongside snowboarding and surfing, is one of the most beautiful activities in the world.

Decks, longboards, cruisers… skate tools, kingpins, shock pads. What do you need bearings for, how much grip tape does a normal person need (and for what), and what special features should I pay attention to when it comes to wheels? How important is choosing the right trucks? Should I buy a complete board or preferably have an individual one put together? And do modern editions have advantages or disadvantages compared to old-school variants besides the different appearance?

So as you can see: when it comes to skateboarding I know less than Italy knows about playing football or McDonald’s knows about good fries. So help Grandpa Marcel onto one of these modern rolling boards and also tell him where online or in the real world he can find a really great selection and the most beautiful decks. And if everything goes well, Avril Lavigne will be mine in about two months.

Guess Her Muff Again

For two years now, excited individuals have been discussing, guessing and betting on Guess Her Muff about the only important question on the internet: jungle or steppe, Brazil or Canada, natural or shaved. At least until Google threw a wrench in the plans of the perverts among the rural population and shut the whole thing down about two weeks ago. The internet giant simply considered the blog to be spam. The friends of ever-changing intimate hairstyles wouldn’t stand for that, of course, and fought with all their might to get their favorite game back online. And they succeeded.

Since last night, Guess Her Muff is once again shining with exhibitionistic girls, dainty landing strips and revealing insights, bringing tears of joy to the eyes of the nation’s men when they guessed correctly on the question of all questions. How long will it take before their ex-girlfriends find out that they’re presenting their exposed vaginas on the internet? And off we go.

New Kids In The Blog

Of course we’re always as happy as Tony the Tiger when someone finds the courage and passion to launch a truly high-quality blog fresh onto the scene—especially one that preferably revolves around the beautiful things in life: fashion, girls, models. My esteemed colleague Philipp Georg Friedrich Langenheim from the Hundertmark Blog has fulfilled a true dream together with his enchanting muse Vivian Ronge and now proudly presents their current joint project New Kids On The Blog.

There the two primarily showcase photographs and videos from the intoxicating world of fashion, provide insights into their very own little world and occasionally hit the streets to blindly photograph unsuspecting citizens with exceptionally good taste in clothes. And while Philipp is currently spending six months gallivanting around New York City, I will probably have to take a trip to Tokyo with Vivian soon. Simply because we can. New Kids On The Blog – take a look, subscribe and love it.

id="">

The World And Its Big Chances The World and Its Possibilities

Okay, Welt Kompakt announced that it would have its first July issue editorially designed by national bloggers and invited us to be part of it as well. We liked the idea, we liked the opportunities that arose from it, and we said yes. Hannah and Caro would be flown to Berlin especially for it, a hotel stay would be provided, and there would even be a fee. On top of that, insights into one of Germany’s most important editorial offices, an exchange with all kinds of more or less well-known bloggers like Robert Basic, Julia Stelzner and Hendrik Thoma, and plenty of free publicity for AMY&PINK. Sounds great.

Of course, we forgot about the rest of the blogosphere, which likes to blindly throw itself into an anti-position sponsored by tirades of hatred and rashness, getting worked up over unimportant issues instead of dealing with the truly essential problems of this planet. Vuvuzelas instead of child poverty, internal party conventions instead of globalization, and now newspaper issues instead of animal cruelty. But how could we have forgotten… Axel Springer is evil, print media are the enemy, and dilettantish self-display in territories controlled by bits and bytes preferably has a higher priority than simply enjoying the possibilities of life, gaining experience, and spontaneously deciding to take part in the fun of existence.

It is sad that in Germany every opportunity that could enrich the lives of its inhabitants and broaden the horizons of fellow travelers is surrounded by a swarm of winged monkeys who are first and foremost against it in reflex. Against the here, the now, and whatever else might come. And that is shitty, annoying, and narrow-minded. So greetings to all the Deefs, Christians and Horsts out there in front of their flickering monitors, and a free tip for all of you: Temporary self-profiling can be quite entertaining, but a slightly more open mind at the right time could make you richer in many a great experience. Jerks.

The Travelettes Fleamarket

We can see it, after all: you’re broke as Herbert and could use a little fresh cash flow in your long-deceased wallet. So why not just sell a few of your beloved clothes at the upcoming flea market in Berlin hosted by the Travelettes, where you can not only advance to become a nouveau riche millionaire, but also enjoy a sexy DJ, get pleasantly drunk at the bar, and meet lots of nice people.

The event with all the vintage clothes will take place on Sunday, July 4th at Dr Pong on Eberswalder Straße. Just drop by and find some treasures. And anyone who wants to sacrifice their wardrobe at the flea market should please contact photo queen and organizer Katja, who will then find a free spot for you. And we’ll be there as well, so what could be better…? Come by and cash in in every respect.

P. Diddy Is A Blogger Now P. Diddy Becomes a Blogger

Well look at that, who now owns his very own blog: major entrepreneur and former hip-hop superstar P.-Puff-Puffy-Daddy-Diddy-Bad-Boy-Sean-John-Combs-Whatever. Because if ego-wanker Kanye West can do it with his Universecity, then the Godzilla rapper can certainly do it too. The Diddy Blog isn’t (yet) designed all that intuitively, but success is guaranteed for the 40-year-old with enough energy and more beautiful topics like Muhammad Ali, surfing toddlers, and creative nerds. You can safely subscribe. After all, it costs nothing—except a bit of lifetime.

I Haven’t Been Raped By Terry Richardson Terry Richardson Did Not Rape Me

After photo lout and Ed Hardy double Terry Richardson recently caused international attention because he allegedly humiliated, raped, and sexually exploited his models, the sweet mannequin Nettie R. Harris, who used to be a hardcore Christian and began having professional nude photos taken of herself at 19, now breaks a lance in favor of the perverse American and clearly states, based on her shoot for The Journal: Terry Richardson did not rape me.

In an interview with Filthy Gorgeous Things, the 22-year-old speaks openly about her life so far, her missionary work in India and Africa, and that the scandal-ridden photographer never went further than she herself wanted. “I don’t like working with photographers who just want to shoot pretty girls,” says the Louisianan confidently. “I’m into artists.” And further: “Terry Richardson photographs a lot of unusual and provocative things. I believe he’s getting so much shit because he dishes it out too. And I don’t think every girl is suited for his work. Because it’s really borderline.”

“Terry, like many other photographers, likes to play with my sexual boundaries. He constantly asked whether his next steps were okay, and when he reached a level that made me uncomfortable, that was fine and he didn’t pressure me any further. I enjoyed every contact. And I don’t think he ever behaved inappropriately. I had the impression that my well-being was very important to him.”

This interview should therefore reinforce the positive opinions of Marc Jacobs, Olivier Zahm and Noot Seear regarding Terry Richardson and reduce the tearing accusations of sexual assault to a reasonable level again. And it is more than creepy that the 14-year-old Tavi Gevinson is already getting so deeply involved in this discussion. First grow pubic hair, then debate tit pictures. Thanks.

id="">

Lena Meyer-Landrut For The Win

Winning the Eurovision Song Contest seems to have done good not only for Lena Meyer-Landrut’s soul and her well-filled wallet, but also to have been a real cure for her appearance. We have rarely seen the 19-year-old looking so young, dynamic, and beautiful. Meanwhile, her new mentor and substitute father Stefan Raab already looks almost a bit crestfallen. Still a cute pair. Thanks to my favorite Bernd Paulchen for the tip.

The Roots – Dear God 2.0

I’m personally not necessarily the biggest fan of American hip hop, which sometimes leaves me pretty alone around here. But The Roots are considered little legends even in my life. Now they’ve released their new video for "Dear God 2.0," which in an intimate and unsettling way shows the dark streets of New York with all their different facets and people—from the perspective of a taxi driver. Great song, great video. And you can listen to their new album "How I Got Over" featuring Joanna Newsom and Dice Raw here in the stream. What a great band.

Soko – The Anniversary Issue

The probably most beautiful magazine in the world called Soko has now turned one year old and presents with its free anniversary issue a colorful firework of stunning photography, drawings that are unbelievably gorgeous, and mind-expanding interviews. “A year ago we started Soko with the idea of having our own creative playground,” tell us the editors-in-chief Adrián Carlos Grygierzcyk and Pampa García Peña. “It was meant to become an experiment full of images, texts, typography, and illustrations. Today a new year begins for us, a new Soko, a new vision.”

Among those involved are great artists such as Jenny Mortsell, Pablo Franco, Jonathan Zawada, and Belinda Chen, who have given the newly released issue its soul. And you can download the Argentine magazine, hardly surpassable in colors, sex, and creativity, here for free as a PDF. Happy Birthday, Soko—here’s to another fantastic year!

The Sounds Of The Week – The Albums of the Week

Kele - The Boxer: Who needs the guys from Bloc Party when you can approach great fame all on your own as the new hero of the homosexual scene? That’s probably what Kele Okereke thought and is launching his first solo album with “The Boxer.” Fast beats, catchy melodies, and grandiose lyrics—though you can indeed hear the absence of the rest of the band. Still great.

Sia - We Are Born: The Australian does what she has simply been good at for years: writing and singing catchy ballads and fast, experimental pop music for adults that leaves you unsure whether to cry or giggle foolishly. Sia hasn’t changed excessively since then, but that doesn’t have to be a bad thing. So: buy it and like it.

Uffie - Sex Dreams and Denim Jeans: If Amanda Blank got together with Steve Aoki and both of them joyfully jumped into a radioactively contaminated broth, something like little Uffie would probably come out of it. You won’t find charming surprises on this record, but you can bounce around in a trance while listening—as long as you’ve swallowed enough pills beforehand. Oh yes, and the evergreen “Pop The Glock” is on it again. Surprise…

Adam Green And His Penis

If there is one musician on this planet to whom absolutely everything is completely fucking irrelevant, it is certainly Adam Green. On his own blog The Lake Room he likes to post tasteless photos of drunken playmates, stoned grandfathers, and museum visits worthy of masturbation (for which we practically worship him). But now even the 29-year-old American is launching a perverse all-around strike and has uploaded a whole bunch of tasty pictures showing him in a tender game with his best friend: his penis!

Serious self-expression is actually fun this way, and perhaps the singer of “Friends of Mine” and “Carolina” is starting a new trend that all bloggers on this earth should follow: displaying their primary genitals online in 360° mode in order to shove them right into the faces of the data geeks at Facebook, Google, and the Stasi. Because attack is known to be the best defense. We’ll start…

Run Away From Home!

I’m already a little bit smitten. With Janina, probably the coolest fashion blogger bitch this side of the Himalayas. Even though she’s not a redhead—and that’s saying something. In her digital home Run Away From Home! she writes in approachable English about her role as Germany’s alternative supermodel, smoothly shaved party excesses, and questionable magazine clippings. She posts photos of herself in elevators, on lawns, and pseudo-naked in front of cold bathroom tiles and comes across hotter than all the underage H&M sluts and Gucci suckers combined who sit in their “Hello Kitty”-wallpapered childhood bedrooms hoping for the big break.

Anyone who wants to stalk the 19-year-old with hot declarations of love, dumb pick-up lines, and dubious marriage proposals can commit these legal violations immediately via her blog, on Twitter, or in large format on DeviantArt. And we are already diligently working on having Janina run a paid webcam service through AMY&PINK in the near future. After all, that’s what we all want.

Futurama Is Back

One thing is more obvious than Siegfried and Roy’s sexual passion for wild kittens: “Futurama” is and has always been the better alternative to “The Simpsons.” Matt Groening’s visionary bunch—consisting of alcoholic robots, one-eyed mutants, and lazy time travelers who have to earn a living in a chaotic delivery company in future New York—still has more charm today than all the Homers, Barts, and Lisas combined.

No wonder many fans were close to suicide when the series was canceled in 2003, just four years after its premiere, due to poor ratings. But the endless repetition of the same episodes has finally come to an end since Thursday, as Comedy Central has bought the rights to “Futurama” from FOX and will begin airing new adventures next week.

We’re as happy as Kotzi the chicken and hope that ProSieben will quickly bring the new season to Germany uncut. Although, if we’re honest, we don’t really give a shit, since we’ll download it from the internet immediately anyway. Welcome to the future.

Iceland And The Digital Freedom – Iceland and Digital Freedom

The little patch of Iceland is as broke as the health insurance funds after the education reform and had to come up with something to protect its residents from impending famines, civil wars, and vengeful killer volcanoes. The website Wikileaks, hunted by the USA and loved by rebellious nerds, quickly and shrewdly noticed this and made a proposal to the country blessed with plenty of really good musicians: Iceland should become the new nation of digital freedom and thereby attract plenty of companies, providers, and porn bloggers to the distant European border. That would bring cash back into the empty coffers. And the northerners are by no means opposed to the idea.

With the help of the Icelandic Modern Media Initiative (IMMI), a state is to be created that protects digital creators from copyright lawsuits and places the ordinary citizen into a warm boat full of data protection. Communication will become more secure and sources may remain anonymous without punishment. With all these measures, the media as one of the pillars of democracy is to be strengthened. Sounds great—now the Icelandic government just has to give the green light.

And what does that mean for us online publishers? Should we all quickly get ourselves a provider in Iceland to free ourselves from local youth protection laws, petty-bourgeois spying, and state gag orders? Will Iceland become the new Mecca of digital anarchy, where uncensored honey and opinion-free milk flow? And will we then be able to show open-hearted female genitalia whenever and as much as we want? To our ears, that somehow sounds pretty good. Iceland, we love you.

Finding Berlin

The German capital is truly a worth-seeing alternative to all the other magnificent and gold-paved metropolises out there. Only here does the warm scent of currywurst and dog shit hit you straight in the nose. Only here can you brawl daily from 1 to 4 p.m. at the bus stop with Mustafa and Arék. And only here can you fuck girls in the park while simultaneously being filmed by MTV. What a city.

Sara loves Berlin. And because she won’t be staying here much longer due to an upcoming world trip, she has, together with her hand, launched the anti-blog Finding Berlin, which offers impressions, lifestyle, and memories of a very special metropolis and here and there provides tips for every newcomer, tourist, and local. Capital city feeling for everyone. Awesome.

Join TheKommt ins AMY&PINK Blog Network

Let’s create something great. Because what we tested with the four enchanting girls from lil.bit, we now want to expand due to the sympathetic success. They run their fantastic blog through AMY&PINK, fill it daily with the hottest shit, and didn’t have to deal with any installations, codes, or design adjustments for a single second. And you can do that too.

With the AMY&PINK Blog Network you have the chance to become part of a movement beaten by recessions and driven by inspiration, through which you can skillfully write your own story under the banner of one of Germany’s most successful blogs. If you want to deal—in German or English—with nonsensical topics like music, design, sex, fashion, games, or other awesome actions we’ve never even thought of, then you’ve come to the right place.

Apply with a meaningful email explaining why you’re eager to become a decisive part of AMY&PINK. If you’re selected, we’ll take care of the design according to your specifications and the technical shit, and we’ll also cover the costs for your self-chosen domain. Afterwards we’ll regularly feature you with all sorts of articles and push you upwards as if there were no tomorrow. The rights to all your texts / images / thingamajigs of course remain entirely yours; we only want to point out the AMY&PINK network at the top of your blog and place a (naturally beautiful) advertising banner so that the money for the domain and the server can flow back in. The main thing is that you know how to rock the web. In this sense: Let’s create something great.

id="">

Model Tom Nicon Found Dead in Milan

After Daul Kim, Alexander McQueen and Isabella Blow, yet another well-known member of the fashion circus has left this world. Model Tom Nicon was found dead in Milan yesterday morning after falling from the window of his apartment. Whether it was suicide or an accident has not yet been determined. Nevertheless, if it was suicide, the debate about the harshness of the fashion scene is likely to flare up once again.

A fellow model said that same afternoon: “People think we are young and beautiful and rich and happy. But we are none of those things. We go to castings, people take one look at us and we’re out. You spend your whole life wondering what’s wrong with you. Why didn’t you get that job? You’re in constant competition with your friends, far away from your family. The pressure is immense. It’s not the fairy tale people would expect.”

Could it be that Tom Nicon, who was scheduled to take part in Milan Fashion Week starting today, could no longer withstand the brutal life between Versace, the gym, and the big runway? Let us hope that the death of the 22-year-old is not another link in a chain of people who see no other way out of the business than to take their own lives. Our condolences go out to Tom’s family and friends.

Richard Kern in Berlin

If I could trade lives with anyone, it would without a doubt be Richard Kern. Just look at him. He has been photographing girls since the Renaissance who are just barely tall enough to ride a roller coaster. And naked. They walk into the room, politely greet the crew, and then show their breasts. The employment office does not have jobs like that in stock.

The 56-year-old recently spent some time in several major cities across Europe, including the German capital, taking amusing photographs and a heartbreaking video of a few naked Berlin girls for VBS.TV. I also imagine the faces of the Vice interns to be priceless. “Hi, I’m Liesa, where should I put my T-shirt?”

Watch the accompanying film, because maybe your beloved girlfriend has a dark hobby and enjoys undressing for horny Americans. And even if you’re not into exposed breasts, it’s still worth it, because you’ll get some beautiful shots of Berlin and see what a typical Berlin apartment looks like. That’s something, too.

Free MP3: Suck Shaft – There Are Children Here

The Swedes. Good-looking, making confusingly catchy music, and on top of that they have a glamorous royal family at the helm instead of the bunch of corrupt politicians that hang around here. Near Shelley in Stockholm there is a club concept called Atlantis. All sorts of creative musicians hang out there, including Wildlife! and Suck Shaft. And they have made a terrific song.

If you’re into all that electro hype, then “There Are Children Here” should be just right for you. And the best part: you can download the musical masterpiece right here as a free MP3. Everyone else can continue slitting their wrists to the “Twilight” soundtrack. I just don’t know yet which side I belong to.

[audio:suck-shaft_-_there-are-children-here.mp3]

Yana Kedrina

I like Yana. She lives in Moscow and seems to be a funny girl. When she has nothing else to do, she goes penis hunting on Chatroulette, shakes her butt to Cyndi Lauper, and draws disturbing works about Jewish fellow citizens as crab people. Totally crazy, the little thing – and quite good-looking as well.

Her photos and videos are snapshots taken from life in a foreign, cooler yet still so similar culture, and show cheekily, humorously, and now and then refreshingly sexy how today’s Russian youth tick. Cold War my ass.

Shut Down The Internetz

That the internet belongs solely to the United States should go without saying. No wonder, then, that the land of milk and honey has come up with a brand-new plan out of fear of terror, death, and ex-wives: the red internet button. In a so-called emergency, Obama would be able to shut down the entire web in order to calmly devote himself once again to his VHS collection and thus play a real trick on the Taliban.

So imagine this: you’re researching for a term paper, bidding on the first Harry Potter book on eBay, or exchanging nude photos of Cousin Paula with your uncle from Italy, and something gets stuck in the craw of the United States: boom, the net is gone. It can happen that fast.

That’s why you should start getting used to the idea today that your hobby, job, or “WoW” addiction could disappear from one day to the next and prepare for a life without Twitter, 4chan, and the Club Nick. So dig out the old photo albums, buy a used Super Nintendo, and exchange landline numbers with your loved ones. Because one day you will wake up and the internet will have vanished. Thanks, Obama.

Uffie featuring Pharrell Williams – ADD SUV

We’ve been into Uffie since the dawn of gravity itself, and since roughly the Middle Ages she has owed us an album we could listen to together with the family in front of the old radio sets. After “Sex Dreams and Denim Jeans” was officially released a few days ago, her latest video has now fluttered into our house and proves once again, despite the tough help of Pharrell Williams: Uffie may have many talents – but singing definitely is not one of them.

In “ADD SUV,” the wannabe model cruises through the nocturnal city with the hottest nerd in the West, looks around a bit, and in the end gets screwed by the police. So far, so mediocre. But really, it doesn’t matter how good Uffie’s creative talents are. In our hearts she will forever hop through our nightly adventures as the embodiment of coolness, proving her open-hearted potential along the way. Uffie, we love you – you little slut.

Filippa Smeds Sexy Video

The Swedish model Filippa Smeds is without a doubt one of the most beautiful girls in the world. Red hair, Nordic roots, a cute little button nose… it almost makes you want to sneak into Scandinavia as a secret agent and interrogate her for days in the basement of Stockholm’s banking district while “Waterloo” by Abba plays in the background.

Together with her buzzed-up boyfriend Olov, who really can count himself more than lucky, Filippa has now shot a more than sexy video for the fashion brand Made By Noemi, in which the 21-year-old shows what her normal everyday life looks like. Namely, having her toenails painted in sexy lingerie with a glass of red wine in hand and occasionally flashing a nipple or two. Being red-haired really is fun.

id="">

Win Tickets For Phoenix In Cologne

On Thursday, June 24, 2010 at 8 PM, the French band Phoenix will be playing an undoubtedly awesome concert on the rooftop parking deck of the Cologne Messe, and with AMY&PINK and the Telekom Street Gigs you can be there live. We are giving away 1x2 unforgettable exclusive tickets for the event right here and now—tickets that you can’t buy anywhere, but can only win directly from the magenta giant itself.

All you guys and girls have to do to be part of it is leave us a comment with a valid email address by Sunday and answer the following question as truthfully as possible: Which fashion blogger girl would you like to go out to dinner with and why? Write her name, include a link, point us to a photo… however you like. Good luck!

YeahYeahYeahYeahYeah

The internet is always good for a surprise. Now there’s a website called YeahYeahYeahYeahYeah that simply shows photos—no frills, no categories, no navigation. Huge, random, right in your face. Where this new masterpiece of HTML and PHP code gets its images from is a secret, and ridiculous legends are already forming around it.

And what can we see there? Cute pets, kissing girls, and sleeping Asians. Blooming landscapes, colorful socks, and healthy lunches. Broken showers, hairy penises, and dead moths. A paradise of fate, because you never know what to expect. It’s like Chatroulette—only prettier. An absolutely fantastic idea, and there’s no advertising anywhere. I’m in love.

Chucka Norris: Small Breasts Are Cooler

My best friend had breasts as small and firm as those of a 10-year-old boy, and when I was allowed to touch them for the first time at the basement party across the street, I felt nothing but skin and two nipples. Still, I couldn’t keep my fingers off her, and even today I wake up drenched in sweat with a dumbbell between my legs when I think back to Maria’s nonexistent bust.

But that was simply because she was the coolest person on this planet. The half-Italian girl fought like Chuck Norris, devoured cheeseburgers like XXL jumbo, and chain-smoked like Udo. Playing Super Nintendo with her was more fun than being a filthy rich rocket tester at Disneyland stuffing yourself with magical cotton candy. She drank, we made out.

At some point we lost sight of each other. The last thing I heard about Maria is that she became a lesbian waitress in a nightclub and that you can still have a lot of fun with her otherwise. But I will never forget my small-breasted, car-stealing, quick-witted best friend with whom I roamed the streets at night—and who is a beacon of hope for all models, fashion bloggers, and hipster girls who were not blessed with God’s fat percentage. Because small breasts are cooler.

Go Back In Time

I can’t stop grunting with laughter… just look at her face! The little girl! There in the photo! With the beard! And the strange expression! The best part is: there’s much more of it at bumbumbum. It seems to be an advertisement for some kind of Jurassic Park zoo knockoff called the Calgary Zoo in distant, sparsely populated, oh Canada.

So there they are, the heroes of my childhood. The sweet Tyrannosaurus rex, my cuddly friend Triceratops, and the absolute insider tip among the beasts, Eoraptor. Free and alive and anything but extinct. That’s how I like it. If I ever make it to the small, unpopular brother of the United States, I absolutely have to go there—if only so I can make a face like little Ulrike up there.

Suicide Girls vs. Steve Jobs

Now the girls from the barely-clothed supermarket chain called SuicideGirls have finally had enough. After Apple boss and ruler of us all Steve Jobs cheerfully announced that he would not tolerate a single exposed nipple on any of his technical nerd gadgets and promptly banned the (admittedly somewhat hardcore) iPhone app of the bouncing double breasts, the American beauties are striking back.

The self-proclaimed Apple lover and Suicide Girl number one Missy has now announced in a blog article that she will make her beloved—and probably best website on the net—completely iPhone-compatible. With optimized galleries, profiles, and even more naked skin. And the old LSD geezer can’t do a thing about it—at least we hope so.

And although the girls’ shop is often portrayed as a feminine super-disaster and contractual devil, we remain loyal to the naked ladies and think that the fight against Steve Jobs and his fear of pornography is a good thing. Maybe we should optimize AMY&PINK for the iPhone too…

Pic of World Cup 2010: Maradona

Maradona and a vuvuzela? That can’t end well! The Argentine meatball shamelessly shows us what he thinks of those damn loud things and knows how to positively impress and shape today’s football youth. Horn up the nose and let’s go—that’s how the World Cup in South Africa really becomes fun.

All honor to the football god, and we’re really only mad at the coke-snorting fatso if he snorted our order along with it. Then there’ll be trouble, boy. But the good thing about Maradona’s delivery service is that you get two hookers on top if it takes longer than half an hour. So we’re patient.

: The Last GingersThe Last Redheads

These quirky redheads are by no means drifting into insignificance; instead, with every passing day they do justice to their reputation as creative, inspiring, and stunningly beautiful people—especially when they happen to be female. Whether models, poets, or artists, the red lanterns of this earth know exactly how to skillfully compensate for their declining numbers, effortlessly turning the heads of astonished men around them. And because we at AMY&PINK are known as the biggest fans of the fire-born, we’ve picked out the ten hottest, most enchanting, and most marriage-worthy bloggers of the freckled realm—whom we’d most love to exhibit in a human museum and stare at all day long. Let the show begin!

Rockie Nolan

Who is that? The 19-year-old student is one of the most promising new talents in the field of mind-expanding photography, likely due to her love of classic style and her incredibly skilled eye for beauty. We were also lucky enough to interview her once. Where to find her? Since Rockie practically grew up with the internet, she can be found quickly and skillfully. Everywhere. She blogs, among other places, at The Wanderlusters. Did you know? Instead of sleeping, the Texas native prefers to work on her photos in Photoshop until she is completely satisfied.

Filippa Smeds

Who is that? The 21-year-old up-and-coming model is the face of the Nordic Radar Magazine, long ran one of Sweden’s most successful blogs, and gave us an interview at the beginning of 2009. Where to find her? Although she’s currently still roaming Scandinavian lands, the Filippa wave is slowly but surely spilling over into surrounding magazines and countries. On Gillo Filippa she writes about Nintendo, love, and parties. Did you know? Two Argentinians have dedicated a fan page to Filippa on Facebook, where they post old photos and quotes from the model.

Teresa Buecker

Who is that? The petite woman with the big words keeps lovers of German feuilletonism breathless with sweeping and beautiful texts about Russian divers, fashionable stagings, and lively one-night stands, managing to muse in ways both sugar-sweet and powerful. Where to find her? Teresa works as an author at Flannel Apparel and Knicken and writes texts for the German newspaper Der Freitag. Did you know? At this year’s re:publica in Berlin, the 26-year-old held a session on the global development of love.

Alexandra Sim-Wise

Who is that? The English model became known through photo series in magazines such as FHM and Playboy and from there made the leap into surrounding media. Today the 27-year-old writes columns about Super Mario, first-person shooters, and Pokémon and regularly takes her clothes off for the British Front. Where to find her? When she’s not roaming around as a speaker on English radio shows or writing reports for magazines, she blogs on her own website. Did you know? Sonic was always much cooler to Alex than the fat plumber. Simply because he was faster, spikier, and bluer.

Maria Eugenia Elias Gonzales

Who is that? The 19-year-old student from Spain is the prototype of a fashion victim, embodying the groupie, sleeping with singers, smoking one cigarette after another. A girl can hardly have more sex appeal. Where to find her? The hobby baker and roller-skate lover writes about her artistic escapades on her own blog There She Goes Babe, where you can admire plenty of photos from her professional modeling life as well as private snapshots. Did you know? Maria’s boyfriend is the frontman of the Spanish indie rock band Zenttric.

Eva Schulz

Who is that? Anyone with a fetish for sweet female students cannot ignore the 19-year-old perpetual learner. Whether she’s shivering in the cold imitating neglected birds, philosophizing about returning to her former life, or reviewing emotional movies in detail, you always just want to give Eva a big hug. Where to find her? For five years now the sympathetic redhead has been writing away on the Hurra! Blog and regularly appears in print publications. Did you know? Eva hates pralines because you never know how they’ll taste and then you have to deal with the useless calories afterward.

Katrin Isabel

Who is that? Katrin is 26 years old and comes straight from hell. What the messed-up creature does in her free time or even professionally, no one really knows. Something with design. But she probably just wants to bring about the absolute apocalypse upon us, which is somehow okay too. Where to find her? As Kate Holy she shakes up the internet via Tumblr, Twitter, and Lookbook, where she posts pictures of redheads, writes about puking car rides, and photographs herself next to Hello Kitty in her childhood bedroom. Did you know? Katrin can consume alcohol in rough quantities, but a single energy drink turns her into a wide-awake weasel who can’t sleep for days.

Tahti Syrjala

Who is that? The 19-year-old Finn currently lives in Ireland, where she is studying to become a makeup artist. Despite her young age, she is already one of the best-known faces of the international fashion blogger circus. Where to find her? While letting her thoughts dance to Bad Religion, Johnny Cash, and Ella Fitzgerald, she is now trying to bring her red hair and green eyes into magazines and books as well. Did you know? Tahti particularly loves tuna and likes to turn the sea creature into meatballs.

Kath Purkis

Who is that? The 24-year-old is one of Australia’s most promising fashion designers and has already collected numerous awards worldwide. Her label Le Black Book has been praised in just about every leading fashion magazine. Where to find her? She blogs for her label and occasionally shows on Lookbook.nu just how much she knows about good looks. Did you know? Kath worked for renowned fashion designer Akira Isogawa before setting out to do her own thing.

Traci Lynn Matlock

Who is that? Traci Lynn is an aging artist and photographer who, despite her mature age, is not too shy to occasionally present to the world outside—uncensored—what Mother Nature gave the redheaded Texan. Where to find her? On her private weblog The Noumenon Revelation, the inclined voyeur can experience the travels and adventures of the 33-year-old up close and perhaps even spot a nipple here and there. Did you know? The American especially enjoys driving through the vast landscapes of her favorite state; she just recently bought a new car.

Peaches Geldof Nude Scandal: British It-Girl Shows Boobs

The Big Tits Zombie 3D

Forget “Lost in Translation,” “Thirteen,” and “Soloalbum”—as of today I have a new favorite movie: “Kyonyu Dragon: Onsen Zombie vs. Stripper 5” (or in Western territories called “The Big Tits Zombie 3D”) by Takao Nakano. It’s about some Japanese strippers who set out to read some kind of cursed book in order to trigger the zombie apocalypse. One of the strippers then becomes the ruler of the undead kingdom, and Japanese porn star Sora Aoi must (of course) save the entire world with her breasts.

It all sounds so insane and awesome that I’m already unzipping my pants and eagerly awaiting the DVD release in August. Whether this surely more than high-quality masterpiece will actually be in 3D as promised—I seriously doubt it. But it would be nice.

Shake It, Mom!

So, who has the best mom in the world? Obviously these two kids from the States, whose mother is both a real eye-catcher and a successful and extremely aesthetic dancer. It’s simply fun to watch her teach her little darlings the fine art of stylish movement to the rhythm of classical sounds, giving them educational as well as pedagogically valuable tips for life along the way. Spray cheese included.

id="">

: One Night in Paris

Submerged in the city of love—what could be more beautiful. The small alleyways of the gay, Jewish, and intellectual quarters smelled of life, stirred up by the heat and offering curious senses a true flood of mysterious dealings, stories, and artistic effusions.

My study group consisted of likable nerds, damned daredevils, and cute redheads, and we set out to wear our feet down to the bone for a week. So we hurried past magnificent castles, modern art schools, and bustling markets, enjoyed alcoholic love affairs in front of the Eiffel Tower, and immersed ourselves in the world of international literature—in shops that seemed to be from another era and appeared ready to burst under the weight of their works.

I was in a frenzy, embracing this and that. A Japanese original edition of Richard Kern’s “XxModels,” the signed version of James Frey’s “A Million Little Pieces,” and an ancient edition of Frances Hodgson Burnett’s “The Secret Garden.” But neither the girls nor the shops, the art or the sights were as worthy of worship as the chopped steak with fries and mayo. For hours—yes, days—I could philosophize about how much this fatty mash of bloody meat, golden-brown sticks, and spicy sauce deeply moved me, clogged my heart, and drove tears of pleasure into my ring-shadowed eyes.

Even today I wake up at night drenched in sweat and quietly weep because I will never again be allowed to push something so divine past my palate, and everything that will nourish my paunch in the future will be nothing but cheap substitute drugs—in comparison to the steak of happiness. With fries.

Only the memories of lusting crabs, the relentless hunts for pixel monsters, and the satisfaction of having discovered pure places all on my own—places I would like to return to again in the near future—can cheer me up.

To a glamorous city that, with its ghosts of days gone by, awakened great admiration in me—and of which the French can rightly be proud—not only because of the multitude of pretty girls hopping around in time-honored fashion-blog style and enchanting every stranger with the beauty of their language.

: Music Is My Hot Hot Sex

The Brazilian band Cansei de Ser Sexy (CSS for short) ushered in a new era in my understanding of music and modern pop culture in 2006 and drove me crazy with songs like “Let’s Make Love And Listen To Death From Above” and “Music Is My Hot Hot Sex.” And Lovefoxxx is, after Natasha Khan and Kate Nash, one of the cutest singers around anyway.

VBS.TV teamed up with Intel and, for their new platform The Creators Project, produced a mini documentary about the band, also asking the cheerful crew about technical refinements and the influence of the internet on their story. A film worth seeing that bridges the waiting time for their third album a little—and also suitable for people who didn’t like “Donkey” as much as the debut. Which, by the way, I can’t understand in the slightest—I thought both were fantastic.

I-Ref: Digital World Domination

Although digital has long been dead, only isolated homepages still flicker across the screen, and analog newspapers and magazines have long since taken control over the flood of information and our way of thinking and acting, two brave people—who somehow seem to love each other—are standing up to the unstoppable trend.

Their well-devised plan: write for as many online publications as possible while enlisting active support from the crème de la crème of the digital bohemia. The two Berlin drifters Norman Roehlig and Isabelle Pohl not only publish their thoughts and dreams on websites like The Junction, Eve Without Adam, or Welt Online and merrily hop through events in the cultural, fashion, and music scenes, but half a year after the announcement they have struck the final blow with their new project.

I-ref is the name of the good piece, which has been freely accessible to everyone since yesterday and, in grand words and sweeping gestures, expounds on changing societies, fundamental harshness, and ignited synapses, setting itself the task of highlighting the individuals behind the stories. What sounds a bit like student gobbledygook after two bottles of Berentzen and the subsequent sexual liberation campaign of an Argentine lecturer could actually turn out to be quite exciting. Provided the hip couple somehow manages to hit the nerve of the times. But that should be ensured by the army of freelance writers alone.

No fewer than 28 contributors have been rescued from their dark basements by Norman and Isabelle, including familiar faces like my two girls Deniz and Dori from lil.bit, Clemens from iGNANT, and the sexy redheaded model Luise Müller-Hofstede. With so much active support, not too much can go wrong, and we at AMY&PINK wish the trilling troupe every success with I-ref and hope that they can once again add a bit more color to the blogosphere.

Michael J. DeMeo: I’m In Love With A Dead Squirrel

Goddamn digital photography. Whenever I see this flood of soulless images of random flowers, pets, and ugly fellow human beings, I feel like screaming and tearing my heart out of my chest to offer it as a boundless sacrifice to the loudly laughing beauty that is departing from this world and the entire universe—just so it might finally return.

But it remains lost and lets Media Markt shoppers, streams of tourists, and grinning Nazis have their way in peace. And I have no choice but to giggle in my own pool of blood and imagine what it must have been like with all those darkrooms, films, and the preference for photographing only what is true instead of letting your flash blaze across the room.

Michael J DeMeo from Portland doesn’t give a damn about anything that has nothing to do with the customs of the analog and only true way of capturing the moments of our existence forever, and can therefore call himself one of the last knights of light who, through skillful craftsmanship, biting courage, and a pinch of self-obsession, keeps the wonders of a long-overrun and shaken-to-the-core art alive.

And it’s about much more than just photographing naked women’s breasts, tattooed city ruffians, and drooling dog spirits. With his shots, he tells stories that life writes, practically pukes authenticity, and brings the true life of this fuckin’ gangster hood right into your shitty living room. So go ahead and buy his new book, which he will publish with a German publisher sometime this year, and until then enjoy the dead squirrels on his blog.

Dirty Little Secrets: Marcel Has 839 Friends

If I hadn’t been born in this time and place, I would never have brushed against the lives of these people who have shown me so much openness, warmth and affection, hatred, coldness and discomfort, and love, honesty and fun.

So many different characters draw their small and large circles through my existence, flared up and faded forever into the endless memory of myself. Time for me to summarize the dramas of the people who shaped me the most and to give a brief glimpse into the warped and sympathetic world full of secrets, affairs, and self-hatred of my friends and enemies.

Martin is actually into Nicole. Sarah lost her virginity at 13. Maike’s boyfriend is an asshole. Helena was wearing green socks. Manuel is short. Thomas is being taken over. Anastasia had anal sex with Paul on New Year’s Eve. Klaus is better than Manuel at “Warcraft III.” André came in Melanie’s mouth. Alican kissed Sarah on the playground. Karina slept with Markus. Marvin was in love with Christin. Rebecca had Martin’s penis in her mouth. Tino can’t speak German. Bettina has long nipples. Tanja cheated on her boyfriend on the class trip to Italy. Johannes almost lost a testicle.

Sebastian slept with two lesbians. Gino bought a new Nintendo game every week. Sabrina only shaves her mons pubis. Caner was always the smallest. Lisa slept with Julian. Bianca is with Ben. Stefano was bullied as a child. Jennifer has big breasts. Anne cried. Maria is now a lesbian. Vincenzo was always a ladies’ man. Lydia kissed Robert without tongue. Cindy looks better than Mandy. Rebecca demanded more fingers. Kathrin took part in an orgy and then had an abortion. Carolin kissed Thilo. Tina doesn’t like shaving.

Stefanie likes the feeling of tampons. Sina is the daughter of a driving instructor. Benjamin stripped in front of a nude dancer. Sara slept with a woman. Paul doesn’t eat much. Franzi had nude photos taken of herself. Darja has no friends anymore. Ferdinand wrote the most beautiful love letter. Ramona’s boyfriend broke up with her. Meltem lost her father. Dennis has a new girlfriend. Hannah kissed an emo. Onur is getting fatter and fatter. Regina was precocious. Mandy slept with Sven. Irina works as a dental assistant.

Kevin has a pretty girlfriend. Julia was an altar server. Stefanie has small breasts. Theresa writes short stories. Angelika had a child at 16. Susanne bit her ex-boyfriend in the genitals. Katharina likes Korea. Aaron is now a gangster. Anton wanted to take his own life.

Larissa is into tattooed girls. Sabrina has a burn scar on her breast. Stefanie is a follower. Kerstin undressed on a table. Isabell has psychological problems. Julia lost her virginity to four men at the same time. Margarete only ends up with strange boys. Rebecka got everything. Lisa had to have hip surgery. Sebastian likes swimming. Nadine gave the waiter a blowjob. Ina has blonde little hairs on her skin. Verena likes rich boys. Raphaela lay naked in bed with Eniz. Ayse can’t lose. Sonja likes driving to Munich. Kerstin was too tight. No one has ever been able to stand Binnaz. Maria has an arrow-shaped shave between her legs. Mona is dead. Sandra likes to sing to herself. Daniel is with Madeleine. Susann never got over the breakup. Tanja sent nude photos of herself to a stranger. Verena has a soft butt. Laura is a slut. Silvia has rich parents. Marcel has cheated on every one of his girlfriends so far.

Der 4. Stern für Deutschland: Soccer Is Our LifeFootball Is Our Life

When the Arab neighbor across the street hangs the German flag out of the window, total assholes belt out some pseudo-funny anthems, and even we devote ourselves to the topic of football, then it can only mean one thing: the Football World Cup is just around the corner again. This time it’s taking place on the lost continent (how poetic) of Africa, and during the summer slump even we amateurs can once again muse about the really important topics like penalties, fouls, and jersey swapping. We’re looking forward to it as intensely as Olaf.

To support our team in the distant south both spiritually and visually, especially the vroom-vroom farmer Mercedes-Benz is making an effort. Exactly, that’s the company that was brave enough to let me and a few other lunatics cruise through the prairie in their latest models without us chasing the things across the border. With their campaign “The 4th Star for Germany,” they want to please all fans of the German national team and encourage them to catapult their entire mental power toward South Africa so that we can finally become world champions again.

To this end, they are sending out brilliant little stars that you can pin to your T-shirt, your grandma, or your dog, thereby giving optimal expression to your loyalty and steadfastness. And the best part: you can send them to yourself or your friends free of charge by simply taking part in the postcard campaign by Brash and intelligently managing to fill out the little box. So send those things out as if there were no tomorrow and accompany our eleven through a new summer fairy tale. Because you are Germany!

Surviving the Weekend: Ten Little Missions

What, you’re still alive? Even though last week we cheerfully encouraged you to prank your roommate, engage in shady transactions with corrupt businessmen from Belarus, and have sex with the walking germ Courtney Love? You deserve our full respect. And to finally catapult you suicidal chickens out of the universe, today there are ten new missions that you may, can, and must tackle this weekend. This time it’s about sexy religions, Hitler’s power over starchy vegetables, and unconditional love for an English teen band. Have fun!

One. Pour half a bottle of pure vodka down your throat and still watch the Badger Song loudly without smashing your head against the wall. Two. Live for a change and just become temporarily homosexual this summer. Sex with the other gender all the time is boring anyway. Three. Pick a hot actress and name an emerging religion after her. With altar, ordinations, and everything that goes with it. Four. Go to Burger King again. They’re not as shitty as they used to be. Five. Take sexy black-and-white photos of your pets and send them to us.

Six. Start your own private TV channel and broadcast “S Club Party” by S Club 7 24 hours a day. Seven. For heaven’s sake, start believing in God again. He’s not as shitty as he used to be. Eight. Kidnap Santa Claus. Nine. Buy a book about homeopathy and save your entire family with it. Ten. Steal a sack of potatoes from Edeka and then claim that Hitler personally ordered you to do it.

Meet 'n' Greet with Nora and Ulmen: Win Nora Tschirner NowWe’re Giving Away Nora Tschirner

There are three things I want to do with my life before I bite the dust. First: fly to Tokyo and kiss the ground there. Second: buy a dishwasher. One that washes. For me. And third: meet the dazzling Nora Tschirner for more than just three sentences. Well-heeled readers might remember. Now we had the opportunity to meet the Berlin-born actress and possibly Germany’s best actor, Christian Ulmen, for an extensive interview about their new joint film “Marmaduke,” but had to realize—crying, depressed, and via self-help group—that we simply don’t have time to go. Which is without a doubt a mortal sin.

But that’s all the better for you, because right here and now we’re giving away a (truly) exclusive meet ’n’ greet with Nora Tschirner and Christian Ulmen, where in a relaxed atmosphere you can chat about your teenage hobbies, the international oil crisis, and preferably also about the funny dog movie, snap a few photos, and collect autographs on not-too-outrageous body parts.

All you have to do is leave a comment with a valid email address here by Sunday, be in Berlin on the morning of June 2 if you win, and be aware of the honor and burden on your shoulders that comes with this royal task. So skip school, ditch work, and head to the capital: Nora and Ulmen will thank you.

Styles of the Week: Pretty in Pink

So if there’s one thing that’s doing well in these economically more-than-strained times, it’s fashion. And food. Two ancient enemies that have been battling each other for millennia and nowadays stage their showdown in colorful magazines and minimalist blogs. Rice cake versus cheeseburger, water versus cola, vomiting versus digestion nap. And in this edition of “Pretty in Pink,” our illustrious roundtable on other people’s clothing styles, you can once again eagerly guess who among our protagonists sticks to the food pyramid and who frequently says hello to Uncle Finger. Let’s go, we’re already excited.

Shelley

Shit, Shelley has skinny legs; let anyone say again that bulimia doesn’t pay off. As if tailor-made for her, the 19-year-old Swede wraps herself in fine fabrics from Lee and Converse, presents a self-made T-shirt in memory of Boys Noize, and almost looks a bit suicidal standing there by the railing, as if a small gust of wind could blow the model right through it. But don’t get us wrong: we would absolutely do her.

Alice

There are many people (your mothers included) who would simply look better if they walked around Monday to Friday with brightly glowing traffic cones on their heads. The 21-year-old Alice from Tokyo has recognized exactly these signs of the times, yet overlooked one crucial detail: for masking objects on her head, the Italian-born beauty simply looks far too good. Only the clothes from some Japanese cathedrals seem a bit unsettling.

Harald

Who rushes to your aid when you’re in trouble with the law? Harald! Is it a bird, a plane, a rocket? Harald! What is orange and sits on the roof? Harald! Who escorts you safely across the street at night? Harald! How much sangria do you have to drink to encounter him? Harald! Who does your brother secretly meet for a visit to the petting zoo? Harald! Who turned the clock? Harald! Why is the banana crooked? Harald! Harald? Harald!

Zara

So now between us, I have this idea of a better world. A world in which every girl is handed a mirror and a digital camera, locked in her room, and then given an hour to make something of it. And Einstein already proved with his theory of bread rolls that with the probability of a positive paternity test, something like what the 18-year-old Zara produced will result. The camera is from Fujifilm, in case anyone cares.

Fiia

The 18-year-old Fiia from Helsinki somehow reminds me of a modern Pippi Longstocking. Just without a horse, a monkey, or weird incest friends with sticks up their asses. Instead, the Finn lives every aging bio-babe’s dream, hangs out in the park around the corner with Hitler piercing, Marley hair, her skateboard, and those insanely blue eyes, and belts out lyrics from “Fuck Forever” by the Babyshambles in her H&M shirt. If that’s not the coolest girl in the world, then I don’t know what is.

Sleeping for World Peace: Global WearinessGlobal Weariness

I’m tired, people. No, that’s not even true anymore. Tiredness doesn’t even begin to describe it. Whether I’m slowly and leisurely crawling along the streets of Berlin, shaking myself back and forth to the ever-recurring beat at pseudo-hipster parties, or mentally knocking one back while you’re having sex—in every damn moment of my miserable existence I could collapse without warning and fall asleep. Just like that. Adiós, muchachos. And there’s nothing more annoying, especially because I can feel my life passing me by without bothering to take me along.

I’d actually like to know what’s wrong with me. I went to the doctor—he said I’m missing nothing. I’m swallowing vitamin tablets from Doppelherz like a maniac (even with lutein for the eyes) and liters of energy drinks, nearly collapsing from the enormous range of wake-up aids, stuffing myself with fruit, splashing hot coffee and cold water on and into my face, only masturbating late at night. The effect is far less devastating than a fly’s shit—namely zero. So what’s left to do now?

I can’t exactly watch horror documentaries every evening about the Columbine High School massacre or the concentration camps of the Second World War just so the images in my head keep me from sleeping. And that things are getting serious, that little Marci is visibly losing his fun and that my weariness of life could soon become my downfall, is proven by the fact that while writing this text I’ve slammed my head onto the keyboard twice from exhaustion and mumbled the theme songs of old cartoon series to myself in a daze. So if you care even the slightest bit about me, this site, or scouts in spirit, then save me already!

Ready for Fresh Faces: We Heart Blogs

Yes, they still exist. Those weird bathroom walls on the internet where any random village Manfred types his harebrained philosophies about the conspiracy theories of soulless tabloid papers, minimum wages for Arab immigrants, and differences in taste between traditionally crunchy cookie rolls from the candy aisle into the wide world and, at the slightest sign of visitor traffic, jerks off to the theme music of “Charlie’s Angels.” But it doesn’t have to be that way. In honor of the greatest blog baton in the Federal Republic, we’re sending you freshly brewed digital diaries (preferably something with clothes or square pictures) that will either pull themselves together and make something awesome out of this crowning mention here—or perish miserably in favor of family, friends, and the beautiful weather outside.

German: Bekleidet – One Jana, a thousand facial expressions. Abgeschirmt – Brazen hipster nonsense at its finest. !LookyLooky! – Three girls shaking up the fashion world in their own way. Darth Vader’s Diary – Zephyr lives fashion, photos, and the rest. Davaj! – Henri and Johanna traumatize their surroundings. Knalleffekt – Fashionable recklessness. lil.bit – Female firecrackers for a better togetherness. pale. – Professional beauty gracefully packaged. Heavensdarling – Sandra on her way to the top. Goldmädchen – A sweet brat named Alina. Popcorn Paranoia – Veronika’s fear of sweets. There’s No Sex In Your Violence – Amélie’s dreamlike fairy tale. Shoupett – Razor-sharp insights into another life.

English: Phenomena – The cruel events of modern times. .tiff – A crazy pixel blog to fall in love with. Dandy Gum – Large-format soullessness. Have Love Will Travel – Sara’s departure into a new world. Tahti Syrjala – Redheads to power. Ppppapertissue – Sympathetic photo blog from Australia. Sim Wise – Crazy ginger retro chick. The DuckDuck Collective Blog – It’s about art. And more. Va$htie – Fragile otherness in the 21st century. A Lion Hearted Boy – Barney is a brave little fellow. Louby’s Wardrobe – Lou hates hairdressers.

id="">

Tamara Lichtenstein: Like A Dreamy Afternoon – An Afternoon in Dreamland

While summer is slowly arriving here as well, heating up the streets and the city’s inhabitants with its warming waves, a cheerful mix of blazing heat and crushing thunderstorms is raging in the American state where Tamara Lichtenstein lives. Twenty years old, photographer, in Houston. And as long as the glowing ball of life sends its bright messages down to earth and relentlessly demands more, the amiable talent behind the camera keeps snapping away happily.

As with so many well-known representatives of her genre, this young woman’s love of photography awakened during her school years. There, she was handed a digital camera and from then on was allowed to capture everything that stumbled in front of her lens. After a short time, the American had discovered a new obsession for herself: making people immortal.

Tamara loves Ryan McGinley, Terry Richardson and Juergen Teller, enjoys being inspired by films like “Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind” and “I’m Gonna Explode,” and prefers working with analog film—simply because digital bores her. And her dreamy, gentle, almost fairytale-like yet stimulating works are no coincidence, because she most loves to let her wandering thoughts and nightly dreams flow into them. So why shouldn’t we simply follow her…?

The End of a Generation: God Save American Apparel

Friends, hipsters, countrymen… lend me your ears. Your time has now come. You are the chosen ones who, through wise purchasing decisions and exquisite taste in fashion, have hoisted yourselves onto the Olympus of modern times and have thus been granted the power to positively shape and save the future of an entire faith community. For the religion of the entire neon generation—full of vintage clothing, electro lovers, and black-framed glasses—is nearing its inglorious end: American Apparel is on the brink of bankruptcy.

Dov Charney and his beautiful employees lost 17.6 million dollars and 41% of their stock value in the first quarter of this year. Reasons include declining sales revenue from local shops, the growing strength of the competition, and the loss of 1,500 illegal employees last year. So what now?

The disappearance of fashion manufacturer American Apparel would tear such a deep hole into the souls of the local hipsteria that, in their mental despair, they would start buying the new record by Mehrzad Marashi, downloading series with German dubbing, and becoming regular customers at Ed Hardy. And we really must prevent that.

So break into an American Apparel store you trust right away, buy a pallet of differently colored T-shirts in your size, and pay the cute cashier an extra five bucks for the current issue of Vice. Because you are American Apparel! Or does the store actually not matter to you at all because you’d rather let the fifth-hand eco shop around the corner sell you scarves and linen, consider the consumers of the two big A’s to be unworthy followers, and think the world would be a slightly better place if Dov Charney opened a fruit shop in Canada? The choice is yours.

Robyn: Sweden’s Queen of Tomboys – The Nordic Wild Child

Robyn is back and, on a sleigh led by reindeer, has dragged her new video for “Dancing On My Own” all the way from Sweden to here. And, in typical Robyn fashion, it truly has it all. Hot beats, fierce visuals, and plenty of unusual poses accompany this journey through the underworld of the drunken party scene, making it painfully clear what emotional suffering the 30-year-old is exposed to day after day without even once considering going on a rampage.

“A big black sky is over my town,” she sings. “I’m in the corner watching you kiss her. I’m right over here, why can’t you see me?” And further: “I gave it my all, but I’m not the girl you’re taking home.” With lyrics like these, you just want to take the platinum-blonde mannish woman in your arms and say: Darling, everything will be fine—really. Head down now.

And the opportunities to do just that are becoming increasingly rare, because after her performance at Berghain, the Nordic bundle of energy will not be returning to Germany for the time being. Instead, she’s making her rounds through London, Oslo, and Helsinki. But don’t despair: anyone who couldn’t see Robyn live can at least make do with her fresh album “Body Talk Pt. 1,” which will be released in June—and it’s definitely worth it, promised. Go, Robyn, go!

Surviving the Weekend: Ten Little Missions

Welcome to an almost enchanted world full of wonders, excesses, and spontaneity, in which everything was simply shifted by one day without mercy. Bitches. So forgive us your puzzled facial expression and get ready for a weekend that will burn itself into your memory forever, stuffed to the brim with colorful ideas. And whether you prefer wearing women’s underwear, shaking a leg on the dance floor, or sleeping with your ugly stepsister—today once again there’s something for everyone in “Ten Little Missions.” So what are you waiting for? Get out there and complete your list!

One. Sleep with Courtney Love—everyone’s doing it. Two. Get yourself a free thong from American Apparel, wear it all weekend long, and then sell it under a Japanese girl’s name to a corrupt businessman from Belarus. Three. Replace your roommate’s sea salt with ordinary iodized salt. He’ll explode with rage. Four. Visit Asumi, give her a kiss on the cheek, and take a photo as proof. Five. Download the song “The World’s Not Bad” by Smoosh for free and then smile to yourself in delight.

Six. Leave all your worries behind at the Auszeit Party tonight at the VCF Club in Berlin and dance yourself happy. Seven. From now on, only eat animals that have more than five legs. You’ll be surprised at how healthy your diet suddenly becomes. Eight. Reenact “Cruel Intentions” together with your ugly stepsister and experience a hot summer full of crisp intrigues, accursed virgins, and thrilling car accidents. Nine. Finally take out the trash again. Even the family of rats living under the sink is already complaining. Ten. Press on your stomach until you’ve pushed your fat into your breasts. You just have to be careful whether you really want that.

id="">

Styles of the Week: Pretty in Pink

Once again this week, we spared no expense—financially, legally, or physically—and set out in search of the most fashionable trends of the current moment. In doing so, we unexpectedly encountered a whole host of gracefully ridiculous professional wrestlers, two-man anal inseminators, and necrophiliac deep-sea divers whom we would have loved to immortalize in the latest edition of our ever-popular fashion column. Unfortunately, they somehow weren’t into the idea. So, with heavy hearts, we instead present you with a nonetheless highly unusual selection of bewildered-looking pussies, French-inspired gentlemen, and ghetto kids who never show even the slightest hint of mercy. All this and much more—right now in this very edition of “Pretty in Pink.”

Chelsea

No one in Canada? Oh yes, there is! The 18-year-old Chelsea from the forgotten northern state shows us spoiled city dwellers how to skillfully decorate standard terrace fashion from H&M with somewhat confused-looking cats, thereby distracting from the incredibly ugly leggings styled like botched riding pants. A free tip from us to the young student: You’d look better without pants. Probably.

Tony

Tony, you old Frenchman, long time no see! Still seducing unsuspecting female tourists with your charmingly natural demeanor and that sexy, melting accent? Next to you, the Chucks, the deer head, and the banjo almost fade uselessly into the background. And you even take fantastically authentic photos of your ever-growing facial hair, your friends, and everything around you? What a dreamboat.

Roxy

Tits. Roxy has finally understood that they are the one true accessory women need—alongside silver rings, necklaces, and a suggestive phone-sex voice—to survive in the stormy wilderness of the urban jungle. So let us pray to God that, after Sharia and burqa bans, it soon becomes a nationwide obligation for women to proudly and uncoveredly present their secondary sexual characteristics like Erna’s mom would prudishly demand. In return, we’ll let our beer bellies run free as well.

Mailin & Su

The ghettos, streets, and hoods of today just aren’t what they used to be. Where once heavily armed gangs with migrant backgrounds and stolen car radios blew each other’s brains out, now the hardened and monotone kids rule the underground of the new age. At the very top of the leading posse: Mailin and Su from New York City, bitches. Equipped with fierce backpacks, traditionally unconventional tinsel on their bikes, and sharply radical haircuts. Into battle, girls!

Betsy

Anyone who hasn’t frozen to death may have noticed: Summer is here! So what could be more obvious than finally hauling the green lawn out of the damp basement, lying down on it together with your clothes from Urban Outfitters and grandma, and simply letting the sun shine on your sexy legs. The 22-year-old Betsy from California is doing almost everything right—only she seems not to have heard of grass stains yet. But rebellion is everything, especially when it’s directed against nature herself.

Sasha Grey: A Fuck’s Life

Anyone who enjoys rough and dirty little films but still doesn’t disdain a good book with a cup of tea on the veranda can already start bouncing with excitement, because now the Megan Fox of the porn industry has ventured into the ranks of aspiring young authors and will present her first literary work later this year with the philosophically appealing title “Neu Sex.” And you may guess three times what postmodern life story this work will revolve around.

Exactly: It tells the not-so-old life story of a woman in her mid-twenties named Sasha Grey, who set out to bring the men of this world a little more hope, joy, and gruesome facial expressions into their gray everyday lives filled with wives, office work, and annoying children—while stuffing her scantily dressed pockets with plenty of green dollar bills in the process. And that worked out wonderfully.

So anyone who has had enough of all the openhearted pictures and videos on the internet, who would like to take sexy Sasha under the covers, and who might be interested in her stories, backgrounds, and traumatic experiences should pre-order “Neu Sex” now from Amazon and sweeten the waiting time with regular confessions or by signing up for the next local porn casting. Keep at it.

In My Head: Creative Loneliness

Inside my flashy head, scenarios, stories, and outbursts are constantly playing out that would make me burst, practically kill me, if I didn’t regularly and proudly squeeze them out of myself. Like a cow. With udders and milk. Whether textually onto a digital sheet of paper, singing in the shower, or by verbally demolishing rebellious idiots without mercy. On a high linguistic level. At least in my world, because if I don’t think beforehand every second foreign word sounds like potato pancake.

I absolutely love casting my outpourings into image and word, into designs, playful elements, long and short phrases, word vomit.

But while I’m mentally masturbating, I have to be alone, feel free both physically and emotionally. There’s no ifs or buts about it. I don’t want to feel observed, inspected, or spied on, nor can I produce good and self-loving work in a creativity-free environment. I have to feel the flow, be challenged and encouraged, see tasks as challenges and not as tragedies wrapped in gift paper.

There is nothing more exhausting and draining than enduring missions day after day that lack inspiring meaning and sense, facing demise anew without having made the world a little more beautiful, richer, better, and having long since given up the inner struggle for change. Stagnation is death, and we can’t afford that right now.

Smelling adventure, sun on your face, no pants on your legs. Music loud, pizza on the table, neighbors hammering. Silence of the night, wine in hand, dreams awakening. That is creativity. That is life. That is the future. With meaning and goodness and a self-appreciation that isn’t pacified with slogans of perseverance, compromises, and hardships, but is steadily nourished and rewarded through courage, reason, and a healthy pinch of aversion toward alternative opinions.

How much I would hate myself for sacrificing my goals and principles for emotional mediocrity and one day waking up in a real nightmare full of fear, colorlessness, and mental darkness that I can no longer escape because I too often chose the prescribed path and thus forgot the spirit whipping me forward.

And even if many of my decisions, ideas, and plans may seem wrong, cause misunderstanding, and in part appear doomed to fail from the outset, I can nevertheless assure everyone that they all serve purposes that reveal themselves to no one but me. Because life is so much more than always doing what is supposedly right without daring to cast a curious glance behind the whole thing. But to recognize that, one must be free.

Sleigh Bells: The Attack of the Noisemakers

The two likable Americans Derek E. Miller and Alexis Krauss simply cannot get modern pop music loud and shrill enough. Britney Spears, Christina Aguilera, Lady Gaga… throw those old chestnuts in the trash. Ear-splitting noise paired with hot lyrics and genre-typical electro melodies—that’s what contemporary mainstream music of the 21st century should sound like, at least if you ask the traumatizing New York noise-pop duo Sleigh Bells and their young fans.

And the duo’s mixture couldn’t be much more disturbing. Derek was once the guitarist for the post-hardcore group Poison the Well and was just looking for a female companion for his latest music project when, in 2008, he stumbled upon the former singer of the teen pop band RubyBlue and was immediately impressed. No wonder their music sounds like a 40-ton truck crashing into a singing cat.

The first album by Sleigh Bells was christened “Treats” and will soon be released in Germany. And the lucky visitors of Rock am Ring 2010 have even more reason to celebrate alongside a fantastic festival, because the two will also perform live there. Don’t miss it—this is pop with noise. Olé.

[audio:sleigh_bells.mp3]

Faye Reagan: Fashionable Discretion

So, who is by far the hottest redhead in the world who not only gets naked in front of the camera here and there but also, with a professional smile on her face, performs sexual intercourse more authentically than anyone else? That’s right, our fiery little brothel cupcake Faye Reagan! Once again this week, she teaches us a thing or two about prejudice, coping, and truth-seeking. Because just because we have tensely watched the 21-year-old in films like “The Gauntlet 3,” “Teenage Whores 4,” and “Popporn: The Guide to Making Fuck” as she was thoroughly penetrated into the ground by a horde of dark-skinned men, that doesn’t mean we are allowed to lose respect for a human being, let alone for her business acumen.

After all, Mrs. Valentine can do more than just publicly bounce her body openings up and down. Not too long ago, Faye stood in front of the camera as the face of the hipster brand American Apparel, and now she has had truly hot photos taken in fantastic clothes for the American label Married To The Mob by none other than Brooke Nipar. And the masses are thrilled.

So let’s immediately order such grand clothes with slogans like “Sexy Bitch,” “Boys Ain’t Shit But Hoes & Tricks,” and “Other Bitches Just Front,” show them off at our next job interview, and slip the unshredded rest over our beloved ladies’ hearts so that in the end they might become just as sexually open-minded as certain porn redheads. And if that’s not the case, we can still illegally download “Fucked on Sight 7,” “Cock Pigs,” or “Teens with Tits 12” somewhere and really indulge ourselves. Happy hunting!

Surviving the Weekend: Ten Little Missions

The weather. Oh folks, what could we say about the weather. With its dreamless shades of gray, the resulting life depressions, and the cold, the fear, the gloom. But we won’t, because the weather is small talk, and with every bit of small talk started, two cute little kittens in Uganda die. Really, it was on RTL II the other day. So despite the… uh… hangover from the recently delivered public holiday, let’s make good use of this weekend and all dutifully take part in today’s “Ten Little Missions,” which should keep you on your toes as the weekend approaches at rapid speed. Have fun—and don’t die on us!

One. Get your girlfriend drunk on Jägermeister and then let her lie in front of the altar in a wedding dress. Two. Visit the party Last Days of Courtney Love in Berlin and at the same time think about the next theme. Last days of Emma Watson, light bulbs, or employee discounts? You decide! Three. Download Steam and in “Battlefield – Bad Company 2” shoot exclusively at your own men. Four. Do wild things with the vacuum cleaner and upload photos of it to Facebook. Five. Drink two liters of water every day. It’s healthy, after all.

Six. Watch “Confessions Of A Hipster” and make a reaction video including the burning of your black box glasses, an MGMT album, and your gay ego. Seven. Just go to Africa for fun. Eight. Call your perverted Uncle Udo again and tell him about your adventures in the school restroom. Nine. Steal a piece of gum from Edeka and then return it with a tearful story about broken families, dead pets, and amputated grandmas. Ten. Squeeze into your Sailor Moon costume from fifth grade and spread love and justice in the local subway.

Styles of the Week: Pretty in Pink

The art of presenting oneself as chic, elegant, and still contemporary to the outside world remains a closed book for many bipeds. Why shouldn’t you wear pink leggings if you’ve just been through two pregnancies? Who decided that Hawaiian shirts don’t belong in this summer’s street scene? And why should any kind of botched fabric trash from the bargain brand Ed Hardy be publicly burned today? We lovingly take you by the hand and skillfully guide you each week through the depths, pitfalls, and dreams of the local fashion circus by introducing you to small and large people who not only know their closets inside out but occasionally live in them as well. Today with us: red-haired retiree haters, hairy wandering men, and exposed Chinese women—right here in “Pretty in Pink.”

Tiffany

Although red-haired people are known not to be particularly pretty and are rarely featured on AMY&PINK with entire sections, articles, or photo series, at least the 18-year-old Tiffany from the capital of Uruguay looks quite presentable and skillfully wraps herself in ribbed clothes from her wrinkled grandmother. So stop obsessing over overpriced off-the-rack brands and instead go politely raid elderly people in some South American republics.

Lorena

The radiant bundle of joy Lorena from Sweden loves to wrap herself in arm and neck jewelry from Cocoo, but what we find even more delightful is the bright, image- and color-filled room with parquet flooring in which the 22-year-old lives. We’d love to chat there all night, bring her breakfast in bed the next morning, and laughingly blow soap bubbles into the wide world from the central window. Oh, a cold shower would be appropriate right now.

Mavi

Forget Topshop, H&M, or American Apparel—all the modern woman of today really needs to wear is a good, sturdy man she can clearly and strictly rely on. The Chinese woman Mavi knows this too and keeps hopping around on her chosen beanbag until she finds a way to have a coat made from the testosterone-pumped good-for-nothing. Maybe we should pass along Cruella de Vil’s number to her…

Aren

Aren from dreary Detroit is 25 years old, likes to present himself as a wandering man, and seems to be a real lumberjack type. With tattoos and muscles and hair everywhere. Especially on his face. As he stands there in the middle of the forest. As if he had been born there, breaking straight out of a thick, firm bud—biting his way free. And of course in the deepest American wilderness you only wear Levi’s, Kirra, and Vans. Tim Taylor would be more than proud of him.

Liisa

The 14-year-old Liisa from Tallinn is living proof that you can live at the ass end of the world and still be fashionably up to date. Whether Cheap Monday, Gina Tricot, or Pull & Bear, the student knows what’s currently in—thanks to the internet. And the Estonian even has absolutely individual hobbies, since she likes music, hates school, and loves photography. A conformist teenager in today’s world could hardly be any cooler—we should probably just adopt her soon.

id="">

Asumi in Tokyo: Japan Is Calling

"

The country called Japan on the other side of the world is a veritable paradise of incredible inspiration, crazy ideas, and groundbreaking impressions, and it is time to skillfully appropriate this creative power. And what could be more obvious in order to catch an uncensored and honest glimpse of the nation of the rising sun than to see it through the eyes of a local? That is why we are more than proud to welcome a new member to AMY&PINK who will, from now on, take us every Thursday on a discovery tour of a very special kind, introducing us to the craziest stories, most intoxicating videos, and wildest absurdities of Far Eastern culture—and hopefully presenting us from time to time with a few abnormal sushi dishes as well.

In our search for a suitable guide, our choice fell without hesitation on the 20-year-old art student Asumi from Tokyo, who not only looks incredibly enchanting and cliché, but also has a direct line to Japanese underground fighters, twisted design hacks, and the most secret party basements. Or something like that. When she is not spending every second making the distant metropolis unsafe just for us alone, she prefers to throw delicious fish into the cooking pot with her friends, play old retro games on her Wii, and play the piano for dear life. If that is not the absolute dream woman.

So let us all warmly welcome our newest comrade-in-arms on the path to total domination over manga, Pokémon, and costumed boybands, look forward to getting to know the greatest country in the world a little better starting Thursday, and perhaps launch an online petition today so that Asumi will soon crack open a few underwear vending machines and send us the hot merchandise directly to Germany. Irasshaimase!

The Cleveland Show: Fuck Yeah Family Guy

Stupid wordplay, nonsensical flashbacks, and lowbrow cartoon slapstick—that is how we love and hate the slightly backward idiots from “Family Guy,” who have been sweetening our boring lives for over ten years, more or less. And it was only a matter of time before the successful format would squeeze a spin-off out of itself, whose star, however, could be neither the difficult-to-raise devil brat Stewie nor the perverted ladies’ man Quagmire. The time of the great, but sometimes somewhat slow, Cleveland Brown and his fat son Junior had finally come.

And now that almost the entire first season has aired on American television, it is time to draw a conclusion as to how the black Peter Griffin, together with his new family, the crazy neighbors, and the homosexual boss, has fared compared to Quahog—and whether the initially devastatingly negative reviews were justified in any way. At this point, feel free to imagine a long and detailed conclusion, because that is important—after all, we are talking about an animated series. And it is great.

The thing is: “The Cleveland Show” may be a darkly painted version of the Griffin gang, but at least for the moment it is far more fun than “Family Guy” has managed to be in its recent seasons. Not to mention the crap called “American Dad”. So download it somewhere illegally today and, together with our unconditional recommendation, laugh your asses off at farting grandmas, murdered rubber dolls, and brawling cat ladies—there is not much to laugh about these days anyway.

Surviving the Weekend: Ten Little Missions

Hooray, winter is back. Now it is time to say goodbye to the extended summer months, stock up on chocolate Santas, and loudly sing “Jingle Bells” and “O Christmas Tree” with everyone you love. To express your boundless joy and pay your final respects to the far-too-hot days, it is time to make this weekend something very special. That is why we have written down ten missions for you here as a pre-Christmas gift—complete them thoroughly and you will afterward be filled with a warm feeling of love, security, and the universe. Have fun.

One. Run to a record store you trust today and buy Lena Meyer-Landrut’s first album “My Cassette Player” with your hard-earned allowance—so you can join the conversation. Two. Take an extensive sunbath with everything that goes with it and then have the frostbite surgically removed. Three. Throw a truly crazy party with elephants, magic dust, and torn-down wallpaper that you can still tell your grandchildren about. Four. Just shut the fuck up for once. Five. Run off to Las Vegas with favorite model Filippa Smeds and get married there by an Indian Elvis impersonator.

Six. On Saturday, grab as many free comics as you can possibly get your hands on. Seven. Buy high-quality chocolate muesli from Kellogg’s with real chunks in it instead of that cheap Aldi version. Eight. Start a campaign to sing a duet with Hannah. Nine. Only accept red-haired people as friends on Facebook from now on. Ten. Climb a nearby tree in a monkey costume and then throw heavy wooden barrels at unsuspecting plumbers.

Sky Ferreira: Heaven Is Near

If you are not young, sexy, and talented in some way, you generally have a problem gaining power, fame, and glory in this unfair life—unless you maneuver airplanes directly into a New York river. Sky Ferreira is only seventeen years old, retains that incredibly awesome feeling of youthful freedom at first, second, and even third glance, and also has over-dimensionally good chances of seriously shaking up the music world with her chaotic form of singing and tinkering.

And anyone who has not just started reading us yesterday might remember our article about the freshest girls and an interview with the Waffles Girls, in which we not only praised the American but also announced her as the hot shit of this year. So it would only be polite to repay that properly now. Therefore we demand: Buy Sky’s record!

Her single “17” has been available on relevant websites since April, which means that (hopefully) her first album will soon explode onto the local market as well. Until then, we quietly indulge in pseudo-pedophilic feelings at bedtime, diligently read her tweets, and hope that Miss Ferreira will soon come on a totally secret underground tour to Germany. Or something like that.

Youth Protection Loves Us: Everything for the Children

Through the holy gates of this website, many horrifying, collectively amusing, and occasionally shocking visual pieces of information have found their way into the digital vastness of the internet—and we can tell you: some of them were filthy, electrifying, and often unknowingly illegal. While we happily grinned at erect penises, wide-open cave entrances, and various absurd situations, dark figures in the land of gray men were crafting plans to twist a rope around our necks for exactly that. And they succeeded.

Last week, the nonexistent editorial team of AMY&PINK received a letter from Youth Protection, in which a rather friendly Mr. Wahl kindly but firmly pointed out that certain illegalities were taking place on this colorful online presence—content that was not only frequently disgusting and sexually explicit but could also seriously impair the development of children and adolescents.

Certain requirements were communicated to us that we must comply with, and ignoring them would result in AMY&PINK being blocked. Which (almost) nobody wants. For that reason (and because the little ones are closer to our hearts than you might think), we are currently cheerfully censoring all images that in any way cross the line of legality. Even if it pains us.

If you happen to notice any depictions on AMY&PINK that primarily feature (primary) sexual organs, sexual acts, and/or green, jumping sheep playing ring-a-ring-a-roses with groping as the visual theme, then let us know and we will stick a nice pink clover on top to show that certain bodily openings are not everything in life—and that at least we are allowed to keep the bouncing breasts. Everything for the children.

Styles of the Week: Pretty in Pink

The chances are damn good that you somehow noticed this dilemma. Because the hard truth is: last week we were unable to fulfill our editorial and fashionable duty as promised due to the remaining volcanic ash in the upper atmosphere, and had to send you out onto the streets of the nation without a proper style guide. There you were most likely spat on, beaten, and finally thrown into the nearest trash can by Gucci elite fascists and Vogue subscription fanatics, from which you could only free yourself with the help of your deceased grandmother. But you can now stop crying yourselves to sleep, continuously chanting the words “Les Mads” and “Sartorialist,” and save your money for an overpriced psychiatrist, because here it is again: “Pretty in Pink,” your world-exclusive outlook on people who probably dress far better than you do.

Olivia

If you look hot, you can basically wear whatever you want—from potato sacks to Pokémon T-shirts to mid-length fishnet stockings from the century before last. The 17-year-old Olivia from distant Los Angeles knows that too and loves hopping around the city of the beautiful and the rich in clothes from Pixie Market, without ever worrying about losses. If you also lounge around sexily in a ’68 Cadillac, the local village boy’s flute might start tooting.

Rembrandt

We love pink—no question. But whether the attention-hungry color also makes a good clothing color for men is still debated today. We will settle the confusing situation once and for all and say: pumped-up posers like the 18-year-old Rembrandt here, posing like a poser with his poser buddy—forget it! Even conciliatory clothes from Oak, Marc Jacobs, and Band of Outsiders cannot help. And screw that bitch called self-realization on your way out.

Emily

The consumer crisis that emerged from the economic crisis is particularly noticeable in the fact that young girls can now only afford clothes whose top priority has been apparent since their first romper suit. Because who the hell needs pants when you can just wrap an expensive plastic jacket from Adidas around your well-built body? The perplexed Emily is already doing quite well with that.

Ebba

This is Ebba. She comes from Sweden and is 14 years old. And as we know, in the Nordic country not only is everyone slim, pretty, and well dressed, but they also pass the gift of overwhelming beauty and fashion directly on to their offspring. When we cast our sad gaze over the streets of Berlin, including saggy sweatpants, neon-colored leggings, and the excesses of endless Ed Hardy terror, we almost have to cry. Please Scandinavia, save us…

Pascal

Anyone who not only preaches the fashionable secret formula consisting of Moscot, Whyred, H&M, and Topman in some blog but also wears it on their own body belongs to the true elite of the Cirque de la Mode. Pascal is one of them. Sympathetic Swiss guy, talented young photographer, and visually captured on grandma’s old sofa. An unswerving dream in classic. Sort of.

AMY&PINK Learns English: I’ll Become a Steak Please

If you have been able to consume and understand this simple website so far without major problems, then you lucky devils have fulfilled three requirements at once: you are not blind, you do not have an illiterate learning disability, and you have a reasonable command of the German language. You may now jubilantly jump around the table, because only very few people have that much luck at once. But especially foreign slowpokes who have no clue about the harsh German language and only wander in here to have a good time with the few colorful pictures have always sat sadly in front of their flickering monitors and wished for just one thing from the dear Lord: that sentences like “Rub my cucumber!”, “How much is the fish?” and “When flies fly behind flies, flies fly after flies.” would finally reveal their vehement secrets. But that does not have to be the case!

Today at midnight, AMY&PINK was fitted with a small miracle module that presents our articles in both good old German and the modern universal language English—although it is currently still in beta stage. Beta, however, means here that I translated two pages and then got drunk and threw myself into bed with a Lindsay Lohan rubber doll. The main thing is that I had fun.

But we are delighted like Lazlo that from now on we can also harass very important people like Barack Obama, Muhammad Ali, and the blonde chick from “Glee” with our mental bullshit and thus move one step closer to an old phrase that Hannah recently quoted into the ground: absolute world domination! And admit it: that is exactly what you want. So say hello, welcome, and howdy to all the strangers out there who can now finally be infected with the pink virus while grinning. Nice to have you here!

When Gravity Strikes: Lindsay’s Drooping Friends

Firm, large, and equipped with perky nipples—that is how they must be: breasts. Since the dawn of our cultural baby steps, they have ruled men, states, and fantasies, been vehemently hidden behind wool fabrics or provocatively displayed with erect results, and driven in us the insatiable desire for discovery, conquest, and exposure. The invincibility of the female breast would be almost perfect if it did not have an overpowering enemy that is difficult to combat with bras, stretching exercises, and operations: gravity. Isaac Newton, you asshole.

Best prominent example: Lindsay Lohan. While not long ago entire movies had to be digitally revised to tame her ample bosom, current images show that even for the former Mean Girl the wheel of time has left unmistakable traces. Her deflated airbags will soon make acquaintance with the ground. Unfortunately. Because the former redhead used to be more than hot. Tragic.

So what to do in the fight against frostbitten boobs, boys and girls? You may choose from three variants of fear: either panic and only run into the gym upside down, preemptively make an appointment with a plastic surgeon, or simply hope that inflatable rafts will one day come back into fashion. Girls: do you already notice that your things are no longer getting bigger, only longer? And to the boys of the nation: would you still find the woman of your choice attractive if she could practically carry her milk cartons dangling under her arms to the next grocery run? We demand answers, today on the official Titty Sunday. Go!

Mag Watch: Petting, Pikachu and Periodicals

Not too long ago, ungrateful brats still had to be painstakingly taught in specially activated school classes what books, environmental protection, and cassette recorders were all about; today the little know-it-alls do not even know what petting, Pikachu, and periodicals are. The children of our nation grow more stupid with every second in which they google one of the words from the previous sentence. But not with us! We drag the orphans of the world back onto the path of enlightenment and bring them closer again to publications that, with a bit of a wink, could almost pass as belletristic reading for young hipsters: magazines! Because, as every month, we stagger to our trusted Arab kiosk and stock up on everything that has around 100 pages. And this time we fished the following surprises out of the sea of printed DIN formats.

Our English erection guarantee Front Mag is going all “Glee” this month and presents the two sex bombs Rosie and Natalie as hot high school girls. After the inevitable happy ending, there are interviews with the Lostprophets, Sim Wise plays his way through the gaming world, and the British festivals are listed one by one in a calculated manner.

NEON impresses with a bit more depth and, with the friendly support of AOK, gives us 66 clever kitchen tips, reveals to the inclined reader why it makes no sense to plan life too far ahead in these times, and revives feminism on the internet. The sluts from Vice are, as usual, less politically correct and philosophize about Chinese boybands, follow a fiery group of British hooligans step by step, and get to the bottom of the myth of fucking salami faces. Awesome.

That does not leave many topics for the rest of the magazine world, but Ilovefakemagazine drags grunge out of the eternal hole of oblivion, i-D Mag knows that home is where the heart is, and in the current Wendy you will find, besides sugary-sweet photos of happy horses, colorful picture frames in which you can place photos of your very special little friends. If that is not something.

So we realize that even this month there is quite a lot outside the quirky world of the internet—big tits, Asian singing groups, and convinced feminists—and we hereby call on you, right here and now, to purchase at least one of these flat, rectangular, and mysterious paper goods. On your marks, get set, go!

id="">

Surviving the Weekend: Ten Little Missions

If you can read this article, then with the percentage certainty of a positive paternity test you have more or less happily survived last weekend with all its memorable Marty McFly quotes, sexual assaults on Lady Gaga and deep-frozen Democrats, and you’re already hot to have the ten new tasks for your upcoming days off pressed onto your head. So prepare yourselves for childish fun with southern ghetto kids, plenty of minced meat and the imminent demise through invigorating beverages – let the new Ten Little Missions begin!

One. Finally cut your toenails again. Two. Pretend to be Gray Powell and fly for free to… um… yes… Munich. Three. Drink five Red Bull shots in a row and find out whether that stuff is actually deadly. Four. Let your little sister laugh at you if you really tried it. Five. Save Lindsay Lohan. Someone has to do it.

Six. Join a Turkish gang and get them to sing the "Pokémon" theme song out in the open. Seven. Slip a little girl five euros and a lollipop and then cheerfully let a special task force chase you through Saxony-Anhalt. Eight. Purchase 60 kilograms of mixed minced meat and celebrate a really dirty orgy with it. Nine. Drive one of your followers to suicide via Twitter and later claim with an innocent face that your account was hacked. Ten. Illegally download a song by David Hasselhoff and then be thrilled because you didn’t get caught. Provided that it’s true.

Glee: The Singing Losers

Moronic and schizophrenic students, under the influence of more than just one mind-altering substance, jumping around cheering and belting out heartwarming ballads through the school hallway – hadn’t we already left this mutated film genre behind with “High School Musical” and “Camp Rock”? Celebrated too soon! Because in the US and A a television series built on exactly these proven components has been enjoying great popularity since last year: "Glee." As a self-experiment, instead of burying my head in textbooks and vocabulary cards, I watched the entire first season tonight. And what can I say? It was worth it.

A troupe of colorfully mixed pseudo-teenagers, including a stuttering Asian girl, the wheelchair-bound uber-nerd and the sexy queen of the cheerleaders, suddenly find themselves in a high school choir group and then sing their way episode after episode through an absurd world full of rapping Spanish teachers, phobic redheads and flying soft drinks. Of course including everything you would otherwise expect from a FOX series after “O.C., California”: hot love, quirky humor and hard-hitting intrigue. What more could you want? Except perhaps an increased frequency of sex.

So if you’re into sweaty gym teachers suddenly expressing their innermost feelings through an Avril Lavigne song on the home football field and you’re not too proud of a washed-out storyline miles below "Skins", but full of lovable characters, then I can only recommend “Glee” to you – even if you’ll claim you’re watching it because of your little sister. Everyone else who can’t do much with the whole “High School Musical” revival crap would probably be better served with “Castle,” “Sons of Tucson” and “Dollhouse.” The main thing is that you waste your life by stuffing as many American series as possible into your mushy brains. Cheerio!

Chew Lips: Everybody Loves The Unicorn

While we’re still keeping an eye out for the big shift in mood and asking ourselves when the era of modern electro sound will give way to yet another fashion trend and to which sounds we’ll then let our greasy bodies spin, here in our imaginary editorial office we’re listening to the tracks of a London dance-pop trio that sweetens the days of the approaching festival summer with airy hip sounds, surely somewhere absolutely socially critical lyrics and a sexy, presumptuous frontwoman.

Chew Lips is the name of the three-piece formed at the beginning of 2008 around singer Tigs and her two male colleagues Will Sanderson and James Watkins, who somehow sound like a bloody mix of Metric, Uh Huh Her and the Ting Tings and, with their poppy but not embarrassing manner, display the same kind of passionate ignorance as their great role models Prince and LCD Soundsystem.

If you want to see the enchanting blonde and her creative entourage live, you’ll probably have to hitchhike to England or France at the moment, because no concert in Germany is planned for now. But after all, the three only released their first album, "Unicorn," in January – and that should suffice for now. Logical calculation: The more often you purchase the record here, the sooner Tiger Tigs and her funny friends from the Hundred Acre Wood will come to Germany. Speaking of bands starting with T: Didn’t the Ting Tings want to celebrate a dazzling comeback this year? Katie and Jules: We’re waiting!

The Girl with the Freckles: You’ve Got Stars On Your Face

Jule had 173 freckles on her face. Counted exactly. I couldn’t take my eyes, my thoughts or my fingertips off her; I was almost poking around her round head intrusively. “You’ve got stars on your face,” I whispered to her. She smiled kindly, deliberately pushed my hand aside with a kiss and then strolled into the kitchen wearing nothing but a hairband to make herself a toast with jam. Maybe in that moment I was truly happy.

Because what I find far more exciting than the boring ideal image of the tall blonde or the brunette covered in beauty spots including tuned-up, almost angular boobs are these little treasures in the faces of sunlit femininity that always make me giggle like a little brat. I love them. Like little fairy tales with their own unexplored stories.

And woe betide anyone who insults summer spots as cosmetically disturbing pigment deposits, who makes girls around the world ashamed of them or even persuades women to have them medically removed! So let us raise a glass to the many little points of light that inhabit the bodies of the most beautiful people of all and be glad that girls like Jule proudly carry theirs even on their left buttock – even if not everyone gets to see it.

Winning Tickets for Jamie Cullum: The Improvised Musician

Today is official Women’s Wednesday at AMY&PINK and to do something good for our favorite people on two legs on this glorious day, we’ve prepared something truly great for you together with the outstanding newcomer Jamie Cullum. He has conquered the hearts of a whole horde of fans both with his calm, powerful and alternative versions of well-known hits and with his own musical spirit – and now he’s conquering you as well. Because you can win the charismatic messy-haired guy here and today! Well, almost at least.

We’re giving away exclusive 1x2 tickets for his red-hot concert as part of the Telekom Street Gigs on Saturday, May 1, 2010, at the BSAG central workshop in Bremen and, as an additional incentive to slam your name under this article, a brand-new Nokia X6 including stereo headphones and a 5-megapixel camera, with which you can even call Mr. Cullum! Provided you somehow get hold of his number…

All you have to do to get your hands on the tickets and this truly excellent mobile phone is answer the following question in the comments by next Wednesday, April 28: Whose number would you most like to have in order to call them in the middle of the night? Real or fictional, alive or dead – it doesn’t matter. We wish you the best of luck taking part; as always, you can find the conditions for fair participation somewhere here, and if you don’t want to pin all your luck on us alone, you can also win tickets on the Telekom Street Gigs website until April 30. If that’s not something, then we don’t know what is. Party!

Styles of the Week: Pretty in Pink

Fashion far too often falls short with us, we know that. Problem recognized, problem solved. Or something like that. After all, the male part of us knows as much about fashion, Vogue and the colors of the season as Lindsay Lohan knows about acting or Germany knows about playing war. And the two clothing designers Hannah and Caro simply won’t give up their tips, tricks and secrets when it comes to awesome outfits – neither alcohol, hypnosis nor brute force helps. So we simply created slightly dumber clones of ourselves, bombarded them for days with articles from Les Mads, quotes by Karl Lagerfeld and nude photos of Beth Ditto, and then sent them out into the wild internet to pick out the five hottest looks of the moment. And those three blockheads did such a good job that we immediately signed them up for a new section called “Pretty in Pink,” in which we’ll now comb through the alternative fashion world every week. Just for you. So that you might look good for once. Let’s go.

Denni

The 21-year-old stylist from France dresses entirely in clothes from Topshop, currently the favorite brand of all up-and-coming fashion girls with a tendency toward joyful squealing. Unobtrusive, simple and still sexy despite her bony legs, she walks through the streets of Paris as if to say: “I am a gazelle.” With Denni and this outfit, you’d most like to climb the Eiffel Tower at night and then whisper some filth into her ear in terrible French. Touch my baguette. Or something like that.

Nixon

Is it a plane? Is it Geordi LaForge? Does it have female genitalia? No! It’s Nixon from Manila. The 22-year-old designer shows the men of all nations exactly how machos, softies and househusbands have to look nowadays. Exquisite haircut, girlish T-shirt from Topshop and a daily saying that radiates good mood and new courage at the same time. Combined with trousers from Zara. We’ll just overlook the Star Trek memorial glasses for now. But he’ll probably overlook us instead; who knows that these days.

Lila

A harsh shock for all followers: Sometimes you just have to show your colors, even if it hurts. The cheeky Lila (we just made that name up) does it quite well, sets hard priorities and shows fashion victims beyond the southern hemisphere that xenophobia in this daring shade can also come across as totally stylish and extremely erotic. Standing there alone in the woods. And without pants. We’d do her.

Lina

Sweden is known for its incredibly good taste when it comes to wearable goods and angelic faces. If we could save just one country in the world from total nuclear strike, it would definitely be the elongated nation in the north. Need proof? Lina! The 22-year-old model wears a jacket from Levi's, shoes from Acne and fully convinces with her cool sunglasses and polka-dot silk stockings. Save Lina, save Sweden, save fashion!

Tab

Tab comes from Japan and runs her own shop called Spank as a fashion designer. That’s why she has to look as flashy, different and whooo as possible. Obviously. Getting your hands on the colorful stuff might turn into a great adventure, provided you have enough time to click through her crazy online store and learn another language in the process. But it’s worth it, really. Probably. If you’re brave enough and would most like to deflower Hello Kitty. Nippon Power!

Eleni Mettyear: Summer in the City

The astonishingly sweaty, sticky months that wrap us in unimaginable warmth somewhere between spring and autumn demonstrably form the only truly real and lovable season that nature has to offer. The scent of fresh grass, the prickling hot rain on the skin and the bright blue firmament far above offer year after year an incredible number of creative, moving and stimulating inspirations that help us endure the wait until the next summer with a smile on our faces.

Something like that must also be what 18-year-old Englishwoman Eleni Mettyear thinks about the most temperamental of all seasonal moments, because when you look at her spontaneous yet well-considered photos, you’re struck by the feelings of the first summer, of falling in love and of joy over so much independence. The chirping of crickets, the girls in the grass, the smell of water. Everything fits together so incredibly well.

And whether it’s the bared breasts of her friends, a photo trip with singer Florrie or the fading art of Polaroids – Eleni likes to experiment with herself and her environment, and that’s exactly what youth and summer have in common: to embrace new challenges without thinking or being aware of the dangers of an ill-considered step. And maybe then we may feel the great miracle in our own bodies that will accompany us for a lifetime – to experience the summer of our lives.

In & Out: Your Better-Living Guide

Since you are legally obligated not to be allowed to have your own opinion about what’s totally in right now and which institutions, lifestyles and blabbermouths you should preferably avoid like the plague, we of course couldn’t resist, as every month, pressing the Ins & Outs of the moment into your faces uncensored, honest and direct, all happy crazy “in your face, biatch.” And because this mixture of hipster posing, street jargon and bagpipe German is at least as threatening as little hipster children, drunken volcanoes and puny genitals, pay attention and listen up – this is your Better-Living Guide. At least until there’s a new one.

In: Freshly squeezed orange juice, Laura Jansen’s "Use Somebody" version, waiting for the new iPhone, monetizing everything around you, finding AMY&PINK childish, double cookies, dreaming about making out with Hannah, highlighters, karaoke in Mauerpark, going hunting with "Monster Hunter Tri," buying new printer cartridges, drinking sangria from plastic bottles, chicken feet as a snack in between, rediscovering yourself, Saskia, small miracles, living beyond your means, ordering a round of Wi-Fi for everyone at St. Oberholz, anime and manga, disturbing people having sex with a dead animal on your head, having photos of old friends in your wallet, not having seen “Twilight,” being different, Uffie, already picking an exotic favorite team for the 2010 World Cup, love.

Out: Calling in sick and then actually getting sick, Blümchen, girls with principles, small penises, Eyjafjallajökull, lying next to models and wanting to “talk,” Potsdam, hay fever, not knowing who Julia Hafström is, not having money for festivals, Til Schweiger, prostituting students, bad-mood blogs, having no toilet paper left, little hipster children, accidentally drinking from the soy sauce bottle, purple, having slept with Avril Lavigne, trolls, moving to a suburb, not being able to smoke weed anymore, the ex, losing another word about casting shows, not knowing who you are, earthquakes, not having time for masturbation, small talk, MGMT, claiming the opposite, death.

Kate Nash Is Back: I Hate Seagulls

Kate Nash is simply great. By repeating this sentence roughly 500 times, we could fill this article in no time and no important information would be lost. The cute Londoner already dragged our feet, legs and hands onto the dance floors a few years ago with “Foundations” and “Nicest Thing,” and at the same time drove thick tears of sorrow, love and eternity into our faces. This year, the 22-year-old seagull hater is finally celebrating her well-deserved comeback.

Before us lies her newly released album "My Best Friend Is You" and as if it had been designed especially for these glorious rays of sunshine outside, the songs on it deliver a mental play of light of the highest class. Last summer in your heart, alcoholic butterflies in your stomach, an undefined cheerfulness on your shoulders. Beautiful enough to fall in love with.

A good-mood tip including some tragic tracks, then, that may gently accompany us throughout the entire warm season. And if you don’t just want to confess your love to Kate Nash acoustically but would rather shout it to her in person, the singer-songwriter herself will be touring Germany in May, stopping in Berlin, Cologne and Hamburg among other cities. Go there, take off your clothes and swoon.

Who Will Be the New Author at AMY&PINK? The End of the Waiting

Recently I met up with the two nutcases Hannah and Caro in Munich for the sole purpose of giving one single question the answer it deserved (and to eat brownies with strawberry milkshakes): Who will be the new author at AMY&PINK? Since the beginning of March we had raised two interns named Wenke and Max, thrown them into the hard ring of insight and confronted the girl with pseudo-sexual harassment, the boy instead with the hardness of the streets – while we sat next to it with popcorn.

And it really wasn’t easy to make a decision that satisfied us all. Should we preferably keep the thing with the versatile breasts, the tendency toward self-arousal and the important insider knowledge about scam companies, music editorial offices and the uninhabited East living in the basement, or should we have chosen the not overly hectic Max, who left the girls of this nation breathless and juggled calm words, as the new ruler over coffee, dishwasher and natural pleasure?

The short, concise and perhaps shocking truth is – and now hold on tight: We decided on neither of them. (Pause for boos, torch marches and letter bomb attacks…) Not because we weren’t satisfied with the quality of the articles, the character strengths or the interpersonal aspects, but for the simple reason that we weren’t sure whether the two really fit with AMY&PINK and logically expand our topics.

Nevertheless, it was a great time, we truly grew fond of the two of them, and should either of them ever decide to profile themselves with a regularly updated presence on the internet, we will of course let you know without further ado. So throw a polite goodbye into the comments today, feel free to demand a few nude photos of Wenke, and instead of going on another search for new authors, we’ll let ourselves be found from now on. So if you think you were born for AMY&PINK, prefer to write about video games, fashion and your menstrual complaints, and can also impress in the subsequent porno casting, then simply send us a punchy email. After all, we’re permanently open to something new. And now: Goodbye, Max and Wenke!

re:publica in Berlin: Making Revolution Easy

Last week, for the fourth time already, the biggest hipster-nerd meet ’n’ greet of the northern hemisphere took place in Berlin, and of course we little starlets couldn’t resist being right at the front ourselves, to finally put faces to a large part of the names in our timelines, comments and feed readers. So it was off with all the other chaos-makers for three days to the mostly sunny capital (= 200 meters as the crow flies from the Friedrichstadtpalast), off to re:publica and to the annual festival of dick comparisons.

Together with Malte, Paulchen and Sara in tow, we were generally busy for those three days trying to become the rulers of the Wi-Fi, permanently maintaining a feeling of a spirit of departure in our heads and luxuriating with the other elite humans in the mud of unassailable insight that we obviously know best where this society should be heading.

On the very first day we listened to an unbelievably good talk by Peter Kruse about us, the others and everything around it, learned from the appearance of a Mario Barth double how and why and with what we can make big money with our publications (which I personally consider a true work of the devil, those lousy commercial pigs), and together with the two likable jokers Nilzenburger and Herm explored the abysses of German television. In between it regularly meant: repeatedly searching for the tall Christoph aka “The Phantom,” monetizing Wichi and his little friends on the open street and picking up a few alternative fashion girls with Markus on nearby Oranienburger. Well, mentally at least.

The second day was dull; because of all the exotic food (Indian, McDonald’s and strange coffee) I had a shot in the pipe, almost fell asleep at the promotional event by WikiLeaks and always grinned slyly and somewhat stoned at the self-devouring hymns of praise and the hatred toward the evil, evil world out there, the so-called women’s movement. The three cute fashion girls, on the other hand, were delicious, I would have loved to tear the 3D printer out of Mr. Pettis’s hands, and the somewhat chubby Indian with his remarks about the important things in life and the showing of one of my favorite videos was my personal highlight. Nevertheless, I then fell into a well-deserved, sappy deep sleep.

The end was a bit more lively again. We ate delicious schnitzel with fried potatoes, watched funny videos for an hour with our favorite proll from Kiel and closed this year’s re:publica with lots of liquid gold, pounding music and pretty girls in the Kalkscheune. Except for Sara, she was drunk. I then staggered home with her, in a good-mood booze binge we devoured probably the spiciest noodle dish this side of India and giggled peacefully at “Friends” on DVD until we finally fell asleep.

My conclusion is similar to that of the woman with the hat. The festival of unique visits was great fun; many of the panels, relationships and people will probably accompany me for the rest of my life, and yet a great danger clings to the digital bohemia that it would do well to quickly disable: the tendency to instrumentalize the instruments. Anyone who constantly talks about how to do with Facebook, Twitter and blogs what one does with Facebook, Twitter and blogs is turning in circles, not moving forward and eventually devouring themselves.

So it’s time for the hip nerds of the new age to take a new direction and finally seal what we already know anyway: namely how it works. Instead, we’re currently craving to find out: where we’re going, what we’re changing and how much we can individualize in the process. And God help us if the time of fashion blogs ever ends, because then the surplus of penises on Chatroulette will be one of our smaller problems. Thanks for the great time, boys and girls; next year we’ll demand less atmosphere and more departure. Or something like that.

id="">

Abby Winters: The Natural Openness

Anyone who hasn’t completely forgotten who won the first season of “Big Brother,” why little children once hurled spinning tops at each other, and how VIVA Plus Zwobot was run over, might also remember that a few years ago I developed a bit of a crush on a tiny naked sweetheart from the Australian, let’s call it, porn site Abby Winters. I even launched an international appeal to somehow get to know the girl with the melodious name Aydee, who back then gave me such an incredible tingle.

As we all know, that didn’t really work out—which in hindsight wasn’t such a bad thing. Instead, I became somewhat friendly with the operators of Abby Winters, who have kindly granted me lifetime, free access to their innermost realm ever since. Naturally, I gratefully accepted this offer, which has sweetened many a lonely night over the past few years.

In a few weeks, the cheeky girls will relaunch their online offering and asked me to spread this joyful news across German lands. So if any of you little perverts are fed up with overly made-up, dolled-up, and fake nude models and would rather feast your eyes on a likable selection of natural, charismatic, and free-spirited young women, then you’re in excellent hands with these sexy girls from the smallest continent in the world. So, feminists, now it’s your turn.

Surviving the Weekend: Ten Little Missions

There’s one thing we’ve truly learned over the past 50 years: without our invisible guidance, you’re completely lost. Especially when the weekend approaches, you practically run in panic through the corridors of your open-plan university calling for help, discipline, and your parents. But AMY&PINK has the solution for you. Starting now. At the beginning of every weekend, we’ll give you ten little missions to accomplish—no, to master—over those two and a half days of intense partying, boundless freedom, and joyful anticipation. Write them down on a note, print them out, carve them into Big Bird’s tombstone… the more you complete successfully, the higher your chances of an outstanding week filled with strawberries, penetrations, and unicorns. Promise.

One. Make the fashion dolls of this nation dance at Hundertmark’s party. Two. Listen to the new tracks from Swedish export Robyn. Three. Grab a 16-year-old goth girl and eat her with potatoes. Four. Take to the streets so new episodes of “Pinky & Brain” finally get aired. Five. Support Kai so he can emigrate to Iceland and defeat the evil end-volcano.

Six. Have sex with Lady Gaga. Seven. Dye your hair gold. Eight. Visit the weird-smelling Asian store around the corner, reach blindly into the freezer, and then gift the newly acquired fish / elk / democrat to your grandma for her birthday. Nine. Invest at least 100 euros in shares of your favorite beverage brand. Ten. Start every conversation with a random quote from the three “Back to the Future” films.

User Generated Fashion: I Like My Style

It was really only a matter of time before passionate offset printers discovered the internet and added two and two together on an imaginary checklist. Fashion is in? Check. Users do everything themselves and we reap the glory? Check. Print is totally trendy again this year? Also check. That doesn’t leave much room for speculation, and the result of such a mathematically correct brainwave is now lying right here in front of us. And to steer this biting paragraph back on track: it’s anything but bad.

The world’s first user-generated fashion magazine is hereby I Like My Style Quarterly, presenting itself thick, sexy, and at 12 euros not exactly cheap. A colorful mix of photos and stories, English and German, self-portraits and snapshots inhabit this flat, dead forest, and we must honestly admit that rarely has a magazine united such a charismatic, likable, and rebelliously thrown-together bunch of pretty, interesting, and more or less well-dressed people within its pages.

Whether it’s 16-year-old schoolgirls, homosexual ZZ Top lookalikes, or intimate revelations in southern Florida—the nearly 270-page tome from the heart of Berlin offers curious onlookers many delightful hours of marveling and murmuring and inspires them to pull their school uniform from the closet and ceremoniously cut and burn it. Provided they own one. We’ll just have to talk once more about the explicit and uber-cool mix of uppercase and lowercase letters, which our 11-year-old cousins market better on their Beepworld pages.

Zach Singh: The Little Photographer

When we were 15 years old, you couldn’t exactly say that we bundled our soulful creativity into a project, beautified the world in this way, and at the same time picked up a few girls. In that age, freed from obligations yet crushed by inner puberty, we preferred imitating “Dragon Ball” pseudo-moves and kicking each other’s heads in, getting drunk on playgrounds with whatever the previous generation managed to swipe from the nearby gas station, and feeling lucky if we could slip our hand into the pants of a random girl lying next to us who was at least as wild as we were. How romantic.

Zach Singh is different. Obviously. Because at his anything-but-of-age existence, the young American channels his barely faded energies into the old art of photography, capturing the reality of underage life and today’s youth culture on analog and digital film. Under this skillful definition, however, he mostly photographs pretty girls. And bears.

Whether it’s red-haired beauties by the river, a brunette in white socks on her bed at home, or the girl next door in fluffy powder snow—Zach Singh manages with his dreamy, somehow intimate yet direct works to create a magical, enchanting, and familiar world in the minds of viewers. Achieving this at 15 certainly deserves double the respect.

We’re Giving Away Tickets! Electronic Beats Festival

It doesn’t always have to be Berlin. That’s what the organizers of the Electronic Beats Festival thought as well and are hauling their digital artists to Cologne this year to host the courtly night of electronic music at the E-Werk on May 20, 2010. And of course we wouldn’t just report on this gigantic event if we hadn’t personally slept with every responsible person to somehow get you in for free.

Taking part in the international event series by Deutsche Telekom this lunar cycle are, among others, the great guys from Moderat, the two riot-makers from Major Lazer, the singer of the charismatic band Bloc Party, Mr. Kele, who will present his solo project there, the dreamy Little Dragon, and the downright worship-worthy Miike Snow, whose album is on constant rotation with us. So it’s worth being there.

All you have to do to win 1x2 tickets for the coveted Electronic Beats Festival 2010 on May 20 in Cologne is answer the following question in the comments: What is your all-time favorite electronic song? The deadline for entries is Sunday, April 18. Our usual terms and conditions apply, and to emerge as the winner you must provide a valid email address. Good luck and success!

Marcel at Mercedes-Benz: Jump In My Car

If you live in Berlin, you don’t need a car. Period. Through the cluttered streets, overcrowded facilities, and impossible parking situations, you sometimes crawl faster than you could drive in a mobile metal box. And yet it was an incredibly awesome feeling, after almost three years in the capital, to speed down the autobahn again, music blasting, gas pedal pushed to the floor. And all of it in a brand-new Mercedes, because they were boldly radical enough to invite me, along with a few other self-promoters and journalists, to Stuttgart to learn more about them and their beautifully shaped fleet.

Shortly after the near explosion of Tegel, the two crazies from Hundertmark and I arrived at the Le Méridien in the Baden-Württemberg metropolis, enjoyed a few beers in the sunny park with Wichi and Markus, and then drove with Pieter and yet another Markus to the Mercedes Benz Museum, where we were first royally fed and then guided through the history of the automobile by an admirer of the dark side of graveyards. During the tour, I secretly fell for one of the interns. But that’s a secret.

The short night turned out to be cheerfully boozy in the hotel bar, where we not only got to play with the new iPad and happily intoxicate fashion doll Dani, photo junkie Jakob, and NOTCOT creator Jean Aw with Cristal, but also ran into my favorite party animal Deniz from lil.bit. With the two crazy Americans Dave and Gerry, we occupied one hotel room or another at sunrise with pizza and Beck’s, and it was almost a miracle that we all showed up on time the next morning. More or less.

That’s when we headed into the highly secured heart of Mercedes-Benz, where Steffen Köhl and Alexander Mankowsky, among others, gave us truly interesting and exclusive insights into the design world, technological affinity, and future of the silver star. Afterward, we got to make Stuttgart and its surroundings unsafe ourselves in those sleek road arrows. Even though I almost caused a pile-up on the autobahn because the navigation system messed with me—or I simply took a wrong turn.

Personally, I was really positively surprised at how much fun this little class trip and all the newly gained anecdotes were, and I’d like to thank the responsible team around Kristina and Tobias from Daimler for the idea. You could constantly feel that mostly visionaries are at work there, trying to create awesome products with heart and mind, and I personally look forward to seeing all those rascals again next week at re:publica. Photos here, bye!

[audio:jumpinmycar.mp3]

Sonic the Hedgehog: Insect-Eater on Speed

Super Mario is small, fat, and has a crappy job. His hyperactive girlfriend is regularly kidnapped by pierced turtles, he has to spice up his boring everyday life with magic mushrooms, and squeeze through dirty green pipes to collect a few extra coins now and then. What a miserable life. How much cooler, more awesome, and faster was Sega’s rival mascot Sonic the Hedgehog: blue, speedy, and he had totally awesome red shoes! Who could possibly resist this insect-eater?

But after Sega, once Nintendo’s great rival, largely went under, Sonic fans also had to endure a bleak, gray, and hopeless existence, as the game studio released an even bigger disappointment with every new hedgehog installment. Sonic drives a car. Sonic fights with knights. Sonic becomes a puzzle. It’s a wonder that an angry mob with torches and pitchforks hasn’t yet stood in front of the Japanese headquarters demanding justice. But now everything is finally supposed to get better.

Sonic the Hedgehog 4” is the last great hope of all colorful speed fans, set to be released episodically on all major gaming platforms soon. Everything is supposed to be like back then. Colorful levels, rapid speed, and just a hint of a story. Only prettier, better, bigger. And so on. Sounds good—but can Sega even meet the oversized expectations of the hedgehog worshippers starved for years? We’re curious and will snuggle up with our Sonic plush toys under the Sonic duvet until then.

Your Youth: Musical Intercourse

This kind of project-crazy blogger isn’t something we encounter every day, but Laura from the Fucking Fucks has made it her passionate mission not only to cause a stir with spicy fashion photos, bold texts, or a pretty little face, but is now also smoothly sliding into the harsh, drug-, alcohol-, and sex-plastered music business. And that much heartfelt and devoted commitment simply deserves an extra-wide scoop of support. Especially when the result has turned out so great.

Deine Jugend is the resonant balancing act of the 23-year-old from Mannheim, who wants to catapult herself to the sound Olympus with direct lyrics, punchy beats, and an engaging presence. And at least for the music video released today for her first single “Deine Maske,” the sexy brunette secured active support from the enchanting and talented visual artist Katja Hentschel and her at least equally gifted cable carrier Hundertmark.

So here comes a true hint with a fence post to all organizers of melodic nightlife, the urban underground scene, and openings of hardware stores, kiosks, and subway stations to grab this impetuous girl and her band before the upcoming hype catapults them into unimaginable spheres and we only hear from them again when libidinous scandals drag them back to the depths of bourgeois life. Awesome.

Who Will Become the New Author at AMY&PINK? The Big Decision

For a good month now, the two interns Wenke and Max have accompanied us on our path to fame, fortune, and cheesecake, offering with their intellectual outbursts about reggae master Bob Marley, the capital of Turkey, and the past in the East one or another glimpse into their little souls. But now it’s finally time to get down to brass tacks, get cracking, and lay our cards on the table. The trial period is officially over—now we’re talking plain language!

Today you, our exquisitely beloved readers, will decide who gets to start permanently as a new author at AMY&PINK and which poor soul has to awkwardly say goodbye to the eternal dream of world domination. And you’re allowed to hold nothing back, speak your clear opinion, and also explain why you prefer whom and why—or wish the wooden catapult upon them.

Should Kreuzberg cutie Wenke become a permanent part of our chaotic crew with her blonde, sexy, and direct manner? Or did heartthrob Max convince you more with his flowing texts and calm words? Or did neither of them really make your genitals tremble and we should show them both the door again? The choice is yours: Wenke, Max, both of them, neither of them, replace the entire team with incontinent chimpanzees who have a fondness for chocolate cake? Decide now!

id="">

The Sharpest Tumblr in the World: Enchanting Imagery

Photographs of all kinds open up to us a distant, enchanting, and sometimes even stimulating glimpse into a completely different world full of beautiful spirits, unknown settings, and unwritten stories. They not only allow us to capture the past of a moment on digital paper, but also transport us directly into the lives and hearts of those who created them. It’s no wonder, then, that I in particular am a big fan of visual art — even though I myself commit the most atrocious works whenever I’m let loose on one of those devices and should therefore leave that calling to those who actually know what they’re doing.

For some time now, we at AMY&PINK have been offering what is probably the most colorful, inspiring, and appealing Tumblr blog God’s green earth has ever seen. And although I have no idea why I didn’t think of it sooner, today I can proudly announce that it has now officially been integrated into our site. You just have to take a slightly closer look at the somewhat modified navigation.

And if you’re going to spend the next few hours anyway digging through the masses of invigorating, enchanting, and appealing photographs of fashionable hipsters, drunken monsters, and bouncing breasts, you can leave some feedback in the comments about what you like, what you don’t, and what kind of images you’d like to see in the future. Green sheep, comforting garden gnomes, or naked ex-partners? You have (at least a little bit) of a choice!

Margaux Lonnberg: The Spirit and Its Suffering

While Germany continues to get worked up about professional models in magazines and the obsession with thinness of their protagonists, the international fashion scene next door is already celebrating its new star in the modeling sky: Margaux Lonnberg, 24 years young from Paris. With bleached eyebrows, bronzed skin, and her golden, perpetually exploding hair, the exhibitionist artist has posed her way into the hearts of Topshop junkies, Vogue subscribers, and the fashion blogger crowd. Even at first glance, she doesn’t stand out because of her tattoos or her excellent clothing style, but primarily for one thing: her aversion to food.

As enchanting as her golden skin with its sweet blond hairs may be, and as brilliantly sexy her alternative lifestyle, perfect complexion, and the wicked cigarette on the side may try to convey the impression of a life worthy of imitation, Margaux Lonnberg now consists of nothing but skin and bones. She is a physically exhausted wreck and is being elevated by all her naïve fans into the idol of a new, anorexic generation — a pressure she surely cannot withstand and which once again sets the eternal vicious circle of the renowned fashion world in motion.

Because one thing the blind hype surrounding the gaunt Frenchwoman shows once again is this: no matter how open-minded, modern, and mentally strong the amateurs and professionals of the Cirque de la Mode may be, deep down they still chase after the thinnest, frailest, and most insubstantial spirits who have seemingly managed to resist the calorie-laden temptations of life. In doing so, they become a physical role model for all those young souls who have been drawn into a merciless war of self-presentation by the fashion of fashion and must now profile themselves as incarnations of beauty, youth, and elegance. How dangerous, attractive, and progressive this development may be is something everyone must decide for themselves.

[gallery]

Pokémon: Animal Cruelty in the Children’s Bedroom

Whether we loudly belted out the PokéRap, battled the joker next door to the death via our link cables, or secretly touched ourselves during Misty’s appearances: “Pokémon” was the beginning of the end and our great passion around the turn of the millennium. The little colorful creatures taught us that it was perfectly fine to skip school when Nintendo released a new version, that we could stuff any creature lying around (whether cat, dog, or dead budgie) into a small plastic ball and misuse it for self-defense, and that it wasn’t wrong to spend our hard-earned allowance on heaps of plastic and cardboard printed with some kind of Japanese manga figures.

You know the game. You play a little boy who is cast out by his mother and thrown into tall grass by a dubious professor, trudge, swim, and fly through every little corner to stuff grumpy, annoying creatures into your pocket, and along the way battle brainless computer opponents, real friends, and eventually yourself. The joke of it all: without threatening classmates with ballpoint pens, cracking the game with dirty tricks, or shelling out 20 Deutschmarks to Paula around the corner for her stupid Mew, it was impossible to get all 151 little firecrackers — especially since they multiplied at lightning speed until there were around 500. That was when it was time for us uber-cool kids to get out.

And no matter whether stoned emos, sexy geek girls, or humorless accountants — it all started with that yellow pouch rat Pikachu and friends. And how I would love to turn back time just one more time, to when our daily worries revolved solely around not feeding Mewtwo rare candies, getting Missingno. to run on the Nintendo 64, and leveling Lavados up to 100 overnight so we could brag about it in front of everyone the next morning.

[audio:pokemon.mp3]

Insuh Yoon: Nostalgia and Femininity

At just 24 years old, South Korean Insuh Yoon is already one of the most promising photographers around today. This may be due in part to his extremely enchanting play with natural light, the beauty of nature, and his tremendous talent — but it probably also results from the fact that he has a particularly popular subject: pretty young girls who like to undress in front of him. And from Richard Kern, Terry Richardson, and Keiichi Nitta we can see very clearly that people are especially quick to celebrate artists of this kind to the top.

Adored by his models and admired by colleagues, the student has made a recognized name for himself in the industry within just a few years. Other photographers describe him as handsome and funny. “Being male also always means having an admiration for the female body,” says the new New Yorker calmly and composedly. “I’ve always been very taken by the beauty of the opposite sex.”

His bright, soft style is unmistakable, his eye sharpened for the grace of feminine charm, and his willingness to learn far from exhausted. His name is one to remember, because perhaps the nostalgia-loving Insuh Yoon will soon count among the most dazzling image artists far and wide, capturing many more beauties on digital paper.

[gallery]

Stadthunger: The Decay of My Soul

I celebrated my 18th birthday at Bar 25. The photographer and I moved closely pressed together, pumped full to the eternal beats of the loud music. When we opened our eyes, he staggered toward the bathroom, two tanning-salon girls following him. My world was full of colors, voices, and tragedies, so I hurried after them. When I pushed the door open a crack, I could see his tormented face and his open pants, at which the two girls were fumbling. When he came back to me on the dance floor, I looked at him intensely and asked, “Can we go home? I’m tired.”

When we got there, I couldn’t stop crying. “Why do I put myself through all this shit anyway?” I screamed in his direction, grabbing random objects and throwing them at his head. “I love you, you asshole, but you’re a coward, a freeloader, a hypocrite. You hate this world but exploit it. You hate these people but fuck them. You hate these drugs but keep snorting one line after another.”

I realized too late that I had just hurled the packet against the wall, and suddenly the whole room was full of white dots. The photographer sat on the bed and stared at me silently. “This world means nothing to you, I mean nothing to you, love means nothing to you. How can I open myself up to someone to whom love means nothing? Explain that to me!” “I’m not answering that trick question.” Rage boiled inside me.

I ran into the kitchen and grabbed the biggest knife I could find. When I returned to the bedroom, I began stabbing the pillows and the bed, screaming loudly. The guy leaned against the wall with a cigarette, smiling now and then as he took a drag. Feathers flew around the room and covered me in an explosion of white. “I have to get out of here!” I shouted, dropping the knife. I stuffed some clothes into my backpack, looked at the photographer one last time, and then fled the apartment.

Angry, screaming, sobbing, I stumbled down the stairwell and burst through the front door. Once outside, I ran straight to the nearest subway station, while a voice called down from above: “Sina, where are you going?” I didn’t look back, wanted nothing more to do with that asshole, and found myself underground. The calm down there freed my mind; I could hear a small heart beating.

Whenever we argued, the photographer wanted to finish it on my body. I closed my eyes; behind my lids a colorful world of chaos seemed to open up. Crystal-clear tears ran continuously. How had I ended up in this place? Love and suffering wore dark velvet robes for me, burying my battered body in the shattered dreams of myself. With the sweet words of a clear night and the organs of a rebel, he had entered my soul and now, out of fun, recklessness, and fear, abused everything I had ever believed in.

Nothing struck my youth as hard as the realization that I could not ease his suffering in a world whose existence and tragedy he had conjured himself — neither through my love nor through my breasts. Small gray fears devoured me from within and made my joyful moments seem dull and lonely.

All my life I constantly encouraged myself. That I am something special. That just balance would catch up with me one day. And that life had a fascinating ending in store for the little girl with the sparkling eyes in the mirror. My tears tasted bitter, but I smiled confidently. And when I felt the rush of wind from the train on my skin, I opened my eyes and let myself fall onto the tracks.

This was the eleventh chapter “The Fall of My Soul” from the furious blog novel project “Stadthunger,” the serialized novel at AMY&PINK. You can continuously find all parts under the category “Stadthunger”.

Axel Springer AG Acquires AMY&PINK: The Hard Road to the Top

We don’t live on love and air alone — that much should be clear to everyone these days. Hannah, Wenke, Max, Caro, and I pour so much heart, time, and joy into this project that we naturally like to see not only positive feedback, memorable discussions, and friendships that would otherwise never have happened, but — let’s put it bluntly — money resulting from it as well. Server costs, time investment, technical maintenance… all of that consumes financial resources. And in order to finally say goodbye to this problem, we are proud to share some joyful news with you today. We have received an offer we couldn’t refuse.

It is my pleasure to announce that Axel Springer AG, in the course of its move into social media, has as of today become the owner of AMY&PINK. Our site expects from this a financially strong partner with whom we can finally tackle the projects that have long been close to our hearts (such as skydiving, a new bicycle, and taking that cooking class around the corner). The owners of BILD, on the other hand, ask nothing more from us than to occasionally exert a little influence on our choice of topics and wording. Nevertheless, we will try to maintain our independence as much as possible.

So be happy for us that we will finally be earning even more money and have found a warm place in this big family full of exciting publications, amusing topics, and hard-hitting investigations. Once again, we have proven that takeovers can be a wonderful thing and are curious to see how this cooperation will develop. Here’s to a magnificent collaboration!

Studying in the Far East: We’re Sending You to the East

What is even a thousand times more mysterious, unknown, and culturally untamed than Japan, China, and Korea combined? Exactly: East Germany. What daring creatures might roam gracefully through the steppes there? What opportunities and dangers await you in this white spot on the map? And could it possibly be that you’ll ultimately fall head over heels in love with one of the so-called new federal states? Time to find out, because this time studying means trying.

The people at “Studieren in Fernost” are committed to attracting more young people to universities in Brandenburg, Thuringia & Co. Together with VIVA and N-JOY Radio, they’re sending a few brave students between 16 and 21 years old who feel like reporting their experiences in high journalistic quality via Twitter, Facebook, and SchülerVZ on a truly adventurous safari. It will take place from May 25 to 28; you’ll get time off from school and be equipped with cash and smartphones. That alone makes it worthwhile to take part.

Just whip up a text and a video about yourselves, explain why you’ll thoroughly kick the other teams’ asses and why you deserve both the ultra-secret prize and a visit to VIVA in Berlin more than all your competitors and their pets — and then apply directly here at Gang and Dong. Good luck, don’t let the Saxons bite you, and maybe at the end of your journey you’ll celebrate a big, big party together with a few wild Asians and the sexy Collien Fernandes. Who knows.

General Fiasco: Indie Rock and Its Children

Despite all the minimalist electronic stuff that is currently being misused in the trendy clubs of big cities to lure in small, hip kids, deep down we all know that rock is the one true genre in music. Direct, hard, and sometimes a little bit gay — just the way we like it. Beeping pixel sounds versus bearded, bone-rattling, destructive riffs — who the hell is going to win this uneven battle?

That’s probably one reason why the Strathern brothers from Northern Ireland decided not to turn themselves into one of those modern electro duos à la Empire of the Sun, La Roux, or Justice, but instead brought in reinforcements in 2007 and shook the small island in northwestern Europe, with everything that makes a proper racket, to its core. The band General Fiasco was born.

And a few days ago they released their first album, “Buildings,” celebrating on the record that beautiful, young kind of indie rock that was already a loyal companion to us back on school trips, at make-out parties, and during our first independent drives. A toast to immortality! And if you’d like to experience the three rascals live, you’ll have the chance in April. Owen, Enda, and Stephen will be stopping by Berlin, Hamburg, and Cologne as the opening act for The Black Box Revelation. And the best part: we’re giving away 2x2 tickets for each city! Just leave a comment with a valid email address by April 4 and tell us where you’d most like to see the three guys live!

id="">

Love, Pride and Warm Food: Everytime We Go To Pink

While I’m sitting here on the pseudo-wooden floor, waiting for my lunch and stealing sections, revelations, and ideas from old magazines that we might possibly recycle here for AMY&PINK, I once again realize how absolutely fantastic it is for me to be working on a project like this. How many hours, months, and years we have all invested in the little Asian girl. Tears of disappointment and orgasms of happiness squeezed from our young bodies, arguments and love in constant crossfire, genius and madness permanently so close together.

AMY&PINK is more than just an arbitrary, interchangeable web presence in the vast, ever-expanding net. We’ve stayed up through the nights, formed friendships, found love. We’ve had to endure defeats, the self-imposed pressure of expectations forced us to our knees in tears, great praise poured down on us like warm summer rain. We have become true allies, all of us pouring our souls into this project. And that in every damn moment.

No one tells us what to do or not to do. We write what we want, when we want, and how we want. And that is absolutely fantastic. AMY&PINK is our ship on this unreal ocean and we alone hold the helm. Constantly tinkering with fresh ideas, using new techniques, trying out what works and which action might turn out to be a shot in the dark. Every day a different surprise awaits us – if we only allow it and give free rein to the pioneering spirit deep inside us.

This is not a website, not a blog, not a magazine – it’s an attitude toward life. We thank every one of you who has made Lil’ Amy what she is today and what she will become. All doors are open to us and I can only urge everyone out there to pour your heart’s blood, your mind, and your soul into such a project. Be fire and flame, give your idea a home. Because it’s worth it. Really. Every second of time you invest honestly and willingly will be repaid a thousandfold.

In any case, I’m as excited as a bowstring to see what the future has in store for us crazy heads, but we’re certain that everything will develop in an exciting, emotional way together with you. Because we believe in it and won’t let the chance to create something great slip from our hands so quickly. And that’s what I live for.

[audio:collector.mp3]

In & Out: Your Better-Living Guide

My dear and esteemed followers, the time has come to confess your sins and admit that lately you’ve been straying further and further from the path of enlightenment. You watch old women celebrate birthdays, suddenly find Heidi Klum likable and feel drawn to soulless, calculating, and history-less bands – this cannot go on. That’s why today the master himself will once again make sure you don’t lose sight of what’s important in life, learn to separate the wheat from the chaff and finally become aware again that Lady Gaga and The XX are pitiable, while Zola Jesus and little redheads are all the more fascinating. Consequently, here and now your Better-Living Guide, so that you once again know which attitudes toward life are currently awesomely cool – and which simply aren’t.

In: Double cookies with cocoa, riding a bike in the sun, giving interviews for the radio, French, Lena Meyer-Landrut, checkered shirts, the new Adidas commercial, free cola, a cheeky side parting, Marlena, cheddar cheese, being drunk, Sonic the Hedgehog, sleeping with interns, smiling stupidly into the distance, Zola Jesus, Nestlé, waiting for the new iPhone, having long artist fingers, maybe studying after all, shirt up and chest out, vacation, listening to the old “Bibi Blocksberg” tapes again, humming the “Ponyo” theme song, “Final Fantasy XIII,” eating melon, Big Ass Message, treating yourself to outrageously expensive headphones, stomach flu diet, making out with minors, Stockholm, warm summer rain, the LSD grandpa around the corner, finally being into animes again.

Out: Whatever is happening right now, Chatroulette, writing concepts, when the job changes you (= finishes you off), stupid fitness trainers, nicknames with only one letter, Lady Gaga, when grown men are afraid of “cool guys,” acting like a superhuman, Sido’s kindergarten, snow, Star Wars, no salary at the end of the month, daylight saving time, Gucci, constantly having to reinvent yourself, seeing your own incompetence as a value, North Korea, credit note instead of money back, nuclear power, still being awake, “Gossip Girl,” Michael Michalsky, betting on Mischa Barton’s death, sunscreen stains on white MacBooks, The XX, having a gun to your head, button eyes, farewell.

Adeline Mai: Unclothed French Women

Congratulations. Adeline Mai is so far the only one who has passed the entrance exam to become my future wife and the mother of my children. At 21 she is still quite young and firm (because as we all know, it all goes downhill two years later), comes from France – the country that is sexually the most stimulating in the world both in accent and imagination – and likes to photograph beautiful girls in her spare time. Without clothes. So naked. How great do you have to be, please?

And as you know, when people can handle their creative streak in such shamelessly awesome ways, I always get a tingling sensation all over my body. Because on Black Orchid the avowed Air, Soko and Beatles fan presents a colorful bouquet of lively fashion photos, private snapshots and aesthetic nude shots, proudly shows how she roams the metropolises of the world armed with chewing gum, ice cream and beer, and loves to stare at the moon late at night and document its play of colors.

A valuable artist then, this Adeline Mai, who is currently studying photography in Paris – where else – but is welcome to stop by Germany afterwards to teach us potatoes a bit of cultural lifestyle, that certain magic and the art of perfectly capturing glowing souls. Or simply whisper permanently naughty French words into our ears.

[gallery]

Ponyo on the Cliff: Ariel Is Dead

Jaws has long been history, Nemo has been found countless times and giant squids still haven’t taken their rightful place as rulers of this world. So what more can we expect from the biggest puddle beyond the shores? Quite a lot if it’s up to the Japanese traditional studio Ghibli, which has been responsible for the most beautiful of all animes such as “Princess Mononoke,” “Spirited Away” and “Howl’s Moving Castle.” “Ponyo on the Cliff” is the name of the current film, which already came to Japanese cinemas in 2008, is finally set to appear on the big screen in Germany in autumn 2010 and awakens the small, dreamy and gluttonous child souls within us.

Rebellion, disobedience, running away – the little red-haired fish girl Ponyo no longer wants her dreary life in the sea and wishes for nothing more than to be human, much to the displeasure of her father who locks her up at home. Ariel, uh I mean Ponyo, escapes with the help of her sisters and ends up with little Sōsuke and his mother, who take the wet creature into their home. But they didn’t count on the father of the young runaway, because the more comfortable Ponyo feels with her new family, the more he tries to bring her back to the sea.

What sounds like a story already worn out in Disney times is in truth a magical fairy tale for tiny humans and great fantasy fetishists, full of small and big wonders, colorful ideas and a captivating narrative power as one is used to from Hayao Miyazaki’s house of magic. If you’re even a little open to Japanese animation art: watch it and love it!

Anastasia: The Girl and the Greed

Anastasia was the one who completely turned my life and everything I believed in upside down. When, with the window open on hot summer nights, we blasted Muse at full volume, when I would have loved to preserve the sweet scent of her breath in mason jars and keep it for bad times, and we talked breathlessly about our future as people who had no intention whatsoever of becoming adapted citizens of a rudimentary state, then spiritual freedom, the spontaneous restart and the rebirth of a long-forgotten generation were only a kiss away.

In her presence I was an inquisitive sponge who wanted and needed to soak up everything that had somehow left an impression in her short life so far and made her the person she was. Why did she suddenly eat only fruit, why did she wear only black clothes for months and on what fateful day did I turn from her best friend into her biggest fan?

Ana was an extreme dreamer and doer in one person. Inside her simmered the strong willpower to achieve everything she set out to do, yet at the same time a hurricane of self-destruction raged within her, turning her into a pulsating spirit without constraints, fears and losses. And there was nothing I admired more and wanted to claim as my own than her way of seeing life. Even if it would cost me everything.

What began harmlessly with shared trips to the lake, thoughtless flings at parties and traditionless walks toward the horizon increasingly became an unhealthy desire that poisonously took possession of my thoughts and soon dominated my existence. I transformed into a rabid zombie of my feelings, trapped in a vicious circle of deep remorse, false love and endless questions and slowly perishing from it. The light grew dimmer. I sacrificed myself, but was not honest. Preached rebellion, but fell in the wind. And loved her soul, but wanted her body.

When my innermost being had burned out and the nightmare was over, I had long since lost Ana to the greedy claws of the future. Her scent was forgotten, the words faded and the feeling of two souls, connected by nothing but their inexhaustible strength to fight against the end, vanished with mocking laughter and the cold truth into the quiet darkness of the past. What remained were the depressive scars of another time, whose guilt I alone must bear, and the certainty that a girl named Anastasia has become the symbol of my will, my freedom and my courage. I feel redeemed.

The End of "Skins": Goodbye My Effy

If the world were a Tokio Hotel concert, then last night a massive mob armed with pitchforks and torches—made up of pimple-faced teens, hipsters, and McDonald’s employees—would probably have stormed the stage, screamed the names of the worst screenwriters in the world, and skinned them alive up there. And all of that because the British television channel E4 managed to do just about everything wrong in yesterday’s finale of "Skins"—and probably even enjoyed it.

It had all started so promisingly. The new generation surrounding the psychologically unstable but incredibly enchanting Effy and her emotionally stuck friend Pandora brought fresh air into a world previously dominated by death, stalkers, and pregnancies. They smoked, drank, and slept their way straight into the hearts of viewers. They radiated the same kind of energy and magic as the legendary Tonys, Sids, and Cassies of Bristol once did, and up until shortly before the end they convinced with depressive dream worlds, laugh-out-loud comedic moments, and lesbian relationships. And then came this.

The writers, who otherwise always aimed for epic scope, immortality, and fantasy, had the one and only chance to turn Cook, JJ, and Naomi into absolute legends with a cleverly constructed, coherent ending that didn’t reveal everything but would still be talked about years later—as the boldest, most intimate, and yet refreshingly detached look into the lives of today’s youth. Unfortunately, they failed miserably.

The grand finale was like bad sex. It dragged along with pointless scenes and dialogue, not a single question was even remotely clarified, and the sudden final chord culminated in a shadow of a climax that was over as quickly as it had begun, leaving the planet’s fans with only one sentence: “That’s it?”

They are currently venting their anger on the official E4 website and various fan pages. “You left us with nothing but pure emptiness.”, “I personally hold all the writers responsible for this terrible ending.” and “Jesus, what a worthless season!” are among the more harmless insults, mostly directed straight at "Skins" creator Jamie Brittain.

We are more than disappointed as well. We would have wished for a worthy conclusion to all the great emotions these inspiring characters stirred in us and can hardly believe how one can crash such a magnificent saga so completely. There is nothing left for us to say except: Shame on you, Mr. Brittain! And don’t you dare mess up the next generation the same way.

Shutter Island: An Island with Two Mountains

Martin Scorsese has done it again and, after films like "Aviator", "Gangs of New York" and "The Departed", sends the next blockbuster starring his protégé and favorite Leonardo DiCaprio to the big screen. This time in the form of a dark psychological thriller that, at first glance, has everything you need to love it: an island full of secrets, an asylum with icy characters, and delicious brain surgeries for the good of all mankind. "Shutter Island" – a rollercoaster ride that delivers what it promises or rather second-rate pseudo-horror?

To get to the bottom of that question, Basti and I went to our trusted cinema on Asshole Day and witnessed a convoluted story about unstable policemen, liberated concentration camps and drowned children, burning houses, bloody nightmares, and voluminous orchestral music. A finely detailed puzzle whose pieces fit together perfectly one moment and scatter like a house of cards in the wind the next. Violence, play, and confusion everywhere.

What is the truth and who is lying on this not-so-idyllic isle? That is what needs to be uncovered. Where does the scar on the head come from, what is hidden in the secret lighthouse, and who the hell is inmate 67...? Questions that will turn your brain to butter for an hour and a half and continue to drive you to the brink of madness long after the film ends. Our recommendation: Watch it and get swept away.

Yvan Rodic: The Facehunter in Berlin

It has become an open popular sport to photograph complete strangers on the street and immediately post them on the street fashion blogs of this world—provided the protagonists are wearing clothes from the used-clothing collection on their skin, Game Boys around their necks, and dead cats on their heads. They are the ideal link between real-life fashion and the coked-up designers whose heads float above the clouds while they send their walking mannequins down the runway in unwearable outfits. A revolution, a new beginning, a new power. And the leader of this free movement, Facehunter alias Yvan Rodic, was in Berlin yesterday to present his first book.

My personal photographer Sandra and I, of course, couldn’t resist stopping by at Glad I Never... in the trendy neighborhood to meet the embodiment of the street catwalk in person among the gathered hipster crowd and chat with him a bit. And surprisingly, Yvan is probably the nicest person you could imagine. Relaxed and patient, he answered the excited audience’s questions, snapped a few photos of stylishly dressed girls here and there, and then signed his new work for us with the words “Power to bloggers,” after curiously and persistently asking who Amy and Pink were and what exactly we wrote about.

Yvan promised to return to Berlin soon, and we in turn wish that all internet celebrities were as down-to-earth and talkative as he is. His book, which contains over 300 of his best works as well as some uplifting words, can be ordered here at Amazon, among other places, and we look forward to meeting Mr. Rodic again soon—perhaps to philosophize a little longer about colorful wool hats, jumping dogs, and red-haired girls.

The Travelettes: Around the World in 80 Shoes

The world. Infinite expanses. So much unseen, not yet discovered, never experienced. Who doesn’t secretly or openly dream of simply leaving dreary everyday life behind, buying a plane ticket to nowhere, and exploring the wonders, secrets, and stories of this blue planet on their own—with a filled backpack packed with clothes, water, and Snickers bars? And preferably in the company of eight enchanting girls—you only live once, after all.

Patty, Sophie, Anna-Zoe, Kathrine, Gesa, Nina, Jaclyn and last but not least our favorite photographer Katja are little runaways who can never stay in the same place for too long and are therefore more than happy to have the chance to wander crisscross wherever they please. So why not run a joint weblog about backpacking if you might randomly meet at the other end of the world? Travelettes was born.

And so Kathrine cycles through Copenhagen’s tulip fields, Sophie befriends Austrian girls in Bangkok, and Katja gets her hair cut in London. The feeling of freedom, independence, and lack of ties that arises when you read the stories of these young travel protagonists is indescribable and fuels, second by second, a bursting desire: to join a sexy travel troupe today and roam across all the beaches, camels, and dictators of the nations with them. That would be a magnificent life.

Condoms: Great Invention or Major Evil? Honey, Put the Rubber On!

Condoms really are something magnificent. When we were still children, they were perfect for all kinds of water and inflatable games. As time went on, we slipped them like crazy over bananas, cucumbers, and other long vegetation, and eventually we squeezed and pressed them over our supposed tree trunks, skillfully trying to balance on the narrow ridge between pleasure and the fear that the damn thing might tear and that we’d soon end up on Hartz-IV television with a paternity test.

And no matter which bodily openings we stick the slippery things into today, what they are actually good for was explained to us far earlier than necessary. Chlamydia, gonorrhea, super AIDS... When I first engaged in certain doctor games with my best friend at the age of eight, I couldn’t sleep for the next three weeks because I was terrified of having contracted all sorts of deadly hyper-diseases from her. Since then, we’ve never really been able to look each other in the eyes again.

Rubbers cost money, kill the mood, and—whether ribbed, ultra-thin, or strawberry-flavored—don’t feel particularly good either. The compulsion to castrate our sex lives because it’s supposedly swarming with viruses and bacteria out there that want to finish us off is not something we chose ourselves, and at boozy parties and after two-week relationship trials it’s gladly ignored anyway—after all, they aren’t exactly popular with men, women, or popes.

So what do you think about love gloves? Are they an unavoidable necessity, the most annoying extra imaginable, or perhaps an option for wimps? Is even asking this question immoral, or does the condom industry celebrate with joy every single day? What are your favorite brands and variations, and do you really use them every time two or more bodies meet? Or do you consider the close-combat socks unnecessary in longer relationships anyway?

Ways Out of Depression: The Art of Helping Yourself

There are certain times in every person’s life when we not only feel lonely, abandoned, and alone, but also blame ourselves for our oppressive and heart-empty situation. Then we sit quietly and depressed at home late at night, unable to cope with our seemingly botched existence, questioning our past decisions while shedding our dried-up tears over old photos from a long-forgotten parallel world. Was it right to break up with Jule? Should I have studied instead of throwing myself straight into working life? And why the hell do all my good intentions only last until the next lunch break at the fries stand?

Far too quickly we sink into ourselves and our gloomy thoughts, lose contact with the outside world, and preferably project our suffering onto one particular person who is supposed to pull us out of this swamp of pessimism, melancholy, and discouragement. And must. After all, we have so many wonderful things to give that are all bursting out of us. Love, loyalty, passion. We have to throw it at someone.

Unfortunately, in all our desperation and haste we consistently idealize companions in suffering who are not companions at all. People to whom we give far more in a very short time than they could ever give or would want to give. Who often have no idea how many hopes and joys they trigger in the lives of temporarily lost souls and how much power they hold over their well-being and suffering. Or, even worse, are fully aware of it.

Thus every happiness just handed to us turns into pure hatred if expectations are not met, joy into sorrow, life into death. The lack of understanding eats at us. Why doesn’t she reply as quickly as I reply to her? Who is that girl in the photo to his right? And what can I do to attract even more attention?

Idealizations are therefore no solution. Anyone deeply stuck in emotional dirt needs the help and distraction of true friends who have ideally already proven themselves in difficult times. Who are there when we need them most and who, together with us and the will for a sunny morning, put an end to the gruesome thoughts.

But we must never make our happiness or suffering dependent on a single person who cannot possibly live up to our false needs and inflated expectations and who will ultimately—intentionally or not—let us fall even further into the big, black hole. Because that only proves once again that it lies solely with us to pull our lives out of the shit on our own—and with no one else. It’s time.

The Web-Chicks in an Interview: Waffles Girls Don’t Die

For several years now, the crazy girls from Waffles and Falafels have been haunting our heads like little phantoms, without us having even the slightest idea how, when, and why they do what people who name themselves after baked goods usually do. Modeling agency, bakery, or maybe an escort service? No idea. So in a cloak-and-dagger operation one night, we grabbed a few of the enchanting specimens to finally get to the bottom of it all. However, we had no clue whatsoever what we were getting ourselves into. A mine-ridden chicken coop would probably have been calmer, but armed with forks and sunglasses, we tried once and for all to uncover their secrets and question them about Captain Planet, Miley Cyrus, and fucking angels. See for yourselves whether we even remotely succeeded.

Okay, to all the people out there: what the hell do you actually do?
Bonez the Conqueror: We’re the Waffles Girls and we make a ton of money having fun.
Cassie F Baby: Greetings, earthlings.
Lovisa the Intern: We’re a street gang. Oh, and sometimes we sell T-shirts.

When, where, and how did it all start?
Cassie F Baby: Great, I have the long-term memory of a goldfish… maybe we should just guess?
Lovisa the Intern: A long time ago in a galaxy far, far away… also known as 2005.
Bonez the Conqueror: Kablam!

So what do you want to achieve with this army of chickens? The biggest girl band in the world, the killers of the Suicide Girls, or simply world domination?
Lovisa the Intern: World domination.
Bonez the Conqueror: Yes, definitely world domination.
Cassie F Baby: Just like Captain Planet and his Planeteers… when our powers unite, a black hole appears and the sands of time freeze forever to bring peace to the galaxy.
Lovisa the Intern: Uh, what the hell are you trying to tell us?
Cassie F Baby: Basically just: world domination.
Bonez the Conqueror: Riiiiight.

What does a girl need to become a Waffles Girl?
Bonez the Conqueror: Charisma!
Lovisa the Intern: They have to be themselves!
Cassie F Baby: Balls.

Then it’s about time for the first German Waffles Girl, right?
Bonez the Conqueror: The first German Waffles Girl? Anytime!
Cassie F Baby: Yes, we need to find one.
Lovisa the Intern: Soon?! We love Germany, Germany is awesome! Crazy style, the best gummy bears in the world, the wildest parties, boot-shaped glasses… what’s not to love? Send us your application videos and become Waffles+Falafels Next Top Model!

To become a full member, you have to live fashion and music. Which bands inspired you to become who you are today?
Bonez the Conqueror: I love metal. So probably Gojira, Dethklok, Metallica and Pantera. Metal makes me whole.
Cassie F Baby: Weezy F Baby is a literary genius. Beyoncé is incredible from head to toe. I watch her videos before I go dancing to get in the mood.
Lovisa the Intern: Courtney Love, everything sung by the Muppets, and Cœur de Pirate. You really have to check her out, because she’s a Waffles Girl now too.

Just like Sky Ferreira, who is known to be something like your personal pop star. When will she release her first album and how did she get into the music business?
Lovisa the Intern: Sky never gave up. She shoved her talent in everyone’s faces until they couldn’t ignore her anymore. Bold little badass.
Bonez the Conqueror: Damn it, I love this girl more than Pizza Hut! She has the voice of a gospel-princess-angel-fuck. I hardly need to mention that she’s the sweetest 17-year-old I’ve ever seen.
Cassie F Baby: Her CD is coming out this summer, by the way.

We’re looking forward to that. But back to fashion: which trends do you love at the moment, which labels are the hottest, and where is it all heading this year?
Bonez the Conqueror: Tight black leggings with killer boots.
Lovisa the Intern: Grey, silver, and pastel-colored hair.
Cassie F Baby: I’m stuck on the sexy but androgynous trend. You just can’t take it too far, or you’ll end up looking like a man.
Bonez the Conqueror: Even though she’s a little idiot, I totally love the clothing line by Miley Cyrus. And you can get it at every damn Walmart near you!
Lovisa the Intern: Whaaaaaat, are you kidding us?!
Bonez the Conqueror: Okay, don’t publish that I just said that…
Cassie F Baby: Waffles+Falafels.

Let’s dim the lights and get a bit more intimate. Tell me something about yourselves. Where do you live, what do you do, and are you taken?
Cassie F Baby: I live with my best friend in Charlotte, North Carolina. I love eating, watching foreign films, and drinking Hennessy. Recently, I started raising a baby dinosaur.
Bonez the Conqueror: I live in a small town called Lake Hughes, which really sucks. I also write for Shut Up! Magazine, I’m a model, and I pop up in various music videos from time to time. I spend my free time perfecting what I do all the time anyway: being dumb and writing.
Lovisa the Intern: I’m in Vancouver. I like acting like an idiot, hitting all-you-can-eat buffets, and dancing. Preferably all at the same time.
Cassie F Baby: We don’t have steady boyfriends, just guys who might turn into something.

Do you like watching movies, and what’s on your TV?
Bonez the Conqueror: Horror movies and the Discovery Channel. I’m really into documentaries about murders and self-mutilation.
Lovisa the Intern:Skins,” “Gossip Girl,” “The Secret Life of the American Teenager,” and MTV.
Cassie F Baby: I tried watching “Jersey Shore,” but it hurt my brain. “Lost,” on the other hand, is pretty mind-satisfying.
Lovisa the Intern: “Waffles Girls: The Reality Show.” But that’s still a secret.

And which magazines do you have lying around at home?
Bonez the Conqueror: Revolver, Alternative Press, and Nylon. What could possibly be more important than metal and fashion?!
Cassie F Baby: High Times or Vibe.
Lovisa the Intern: Fruits, i-D, Prim, Dazed and Confused. A lot of magazines, definitely.

Okay, but print is supposedly dead. Which websites do you absolutely love?
Lovisa the Intern: Tavi!!! And of course AMY&PINK. Obviously.
Bonez the Conqueror: Our own site.
Cassie F Baby: Because we’re the hot shit and we know how to dress.

Definitely. So tell us what your future will look like.
Bonez the Conqueror: I’m working on becoming a music journalist for Metal Hammer in London. And if that doesn’t work out, maybe a pin-up model (laughs).
Cassie F Baby: I’m going to marry Lil Wayne and then divorce him again. If I have time, maybe I’ll win the lottery too.
Lovisa the Intern: Sushi.
Cassie F Baby: PS: Waffles Girls Don’t Die.

Thank you very much for the great interview. And if you want to know more about these tough girls, just check out their official website.

Marcel Becomes a Celebrity Blogger: Star Hunters on the March

Whether it’s Lindsay Lohan, Emma Watson, or Lily Allen. When they’ve taken racy photos, caused rudimentary scandals, or even produced ghastly works, I’ve always gladly grabbed them by the balls—mentally speaking—to poke fun at them, thank them for their cheerfulness, and expose one or two body parts properly. And as you can imagine, this kind of detective work is often tremendous fun, after all there’s a little Perez Hilton in each of us—at least when you haven’t been paying attention and turned your ass away from the wall.

Now it once came to pass that Tanja from the Pimpettes, who in terms of naughtiness is in no way inferior to yours truly, knocked me out at night with chloroform, dragged me into a van, and then presented me to the high priests of stars, gossip, and scandals, who in a gentle voice made me an offer I simply couldn’t refuse.

In plain language, that means that starting today I will be running the blog VIPDIP for the magazine BUNTE and thus for Burda, together with the charming Tina from Los Angeles, where we’ll talk about all the things that don’t get enough space here at AMY&PINK: Lady Gaga showing her boobs, Megan Fox turning nerds on, and Madonna stealing friends.

So if you’re in the mood for first-class gossip, love charismatic vixens, and are into the wildest stories of the thin and the rich—and if you like it even more when we give them a proper spanking—then hop over and gossip with us a little. And just between us: I only took the job to get closer to Nora Tschirner that way. Or at least for now to Lena, that would work too. Somehow, sometime, somewhere… But it will happen. In this sense: Off to a merry celebrity hunt!

Brother Sharp: Homeless Boy Goes Famous

Fashion, alongside glowworms, cheese popcorn, and the stews at highway rest stops, has always been one of the most mysterious things in this world. Where does it come from, who decides what’s in and out, and when and why does it change as quickly as it appeared? Questions to which there are either no answers or which one could philosophize about for years with pseudo-clever minds—if there weren’t, recently, a man who puts all of that in the shade and practically presses the assumptions right into your face.

Because China—and slowly also the rest of the fashion world—is currently freaking out over a homeless man they simply call Brother Sharp, whose unconventional, casual, and ass-kickin’ style sweeps away everything the fashion bosses were planning to establish next with floral patterns, flashy colors, and ridiculous little shorts. According to quotes from his numerous fans on the internet, the end-of-days-scented guy from Ningbo “looks better than most of the so-called teen idols currently making it onto television” and is considered the “most attractive underdog of this century.”

Whether the mysterious Brother Sharp even knows about his current fame is unknown to us. Social workers, however, warn against bothering him with the whole thing: “If you see him, just give him something to eat and then leave him alone, because the man could be psychologically unstable.” We, however, can perfectly imagine him taking the elevator up to the runways of this world, casually strutting up and down with a cigarette in his mouth and then stabbing a few male co-models and crater-faced guys for a sandwich. Go, homeless boy, go!

Bethany Joy: Girls of Summer

The gray no-man’s-land of the acute present simply refuses to pass. Threatening, treacherous, and annoying, the dark clouds glide in their eternal circles across the firmament, occasionally letting a hint of sunshine flow through their bodies, only to prove all the more forcefully afterward where our place is. Namely far, far beneath them. Far from their power, able to toy with our small, insignificant existence as it suits them, forcing us into uninvolved helplessness as they drift unbound to wherever they please. Clouds are assholes.

How refreshing and warming, then, are the photographs of 15-year-old Bethany Joy, each of which bursts with summer, thoughts, and the magic of long-past days. Dancing in the hot rain, lying in the wet grass with friends, and chasing graceful horses, she shows us a life on the other side, far removed from big-city stress, workplace submission, and everyday powerlessness. And as we look at her photos, we’d most like to drop everything, pack up our belongings, and travel to where happiness lives. Away from the gray clouds and toward warmth, beauty, and eternity. Even if it’s only a brief daydream.

Elisabeth Rank: And When in Doubt, For Yourself

We love gifts. Especially when they’re this great. The top brass at Suhrkamp Verlag didn’t miss the opportunity to send over the wonderful debut work of one of their young authors: “And When in Doubt, For Yourself” by Berlin-born Elisabeth Rank, who, by the way, is pretty tight with Herm and Nilz and has long since ceased to be an unknown face in the realm of networked globalization. The 200-page white tome arrived just in time, right after the latest work by our favorite author Mian Mian, “Panda Sex,” left us somewhat disappointed and a dreadful drought of good reading material opened up before the pseudo-intellectuals of this world.

The road story of Lene and Tonia takes the reader on an emotional journey through the capital, the parties, and the lives of the young generation, yet the supposed carefree spirit shifts into a state that can hardly be put into words after the sudden death of Lene’s boyfriend Tim. Car accident, broken love, silent heartbeat. Without becoming abysmally depressed, the author uses small memories, individual passages, and beautiful snapshots to describe the sobering reality in the lives of two young women who must accept the loss of a loved one without losing sight of their own existence.

Of course, we don’t just post every piece of crap that some publishers or PR hacks scatter widely and send our way, but with Lisa, who by the way shares my appreciation for sexy girls in sneakers, you immediately notice that she and her light, yet at times also oppressive, novel are something very special, and that everything surrounding it radiates a charming and sympathetic vibe. It’s simply not acceptable that small-minded text thieves cause such a big stir while the truly beautiful pearls risk sinking into the shadows of lies and short-windedness. We say: support this kind of great emerging talent instead of spending your hard-earned money on cobbled-together nonsense. Helene who?

Vote for the AMY&PINK Party: Let’s All Get Blue

Things are buzzing around here like in a beehive, because in just a few days—more precisely on Sunday at exactly midnight—the big voting for the mega party worth 150,000 euros hosted by Vice Magazine and Smirnoff will end. And of course we’re in the mix with a huge lineup of red-hot acts, an awesome location, and plenty of free drinks, competing in the vast swamp of even greater competition. At the moment we’re ranked third overall, but we’ve mobilized every possible force to pull this off. Now all that’s missing is you!

Vote here on this website for the smashing, uplifting, head-exploding AMY&PINK party, which will take place on Friday, April 23 at Haus am Köllnischen Park. Simian Mobile Disco, Metronomy, Boy 8-Bit, and Les Gillettes will handle the musical part of the evening, the party crowd (that’s you) will provide the screaming part, and one or two pukers will take care of the comedic relief. But to turn this legendary Woodstock 2.0 into reality, we definitely need a lot more people who really like us and would love nothing more than to slobber all over our voluminous genitals.

Among everyone who helps us land this fat, proudly branded party, we’re raffling off plenty of free tickets, a surprise package filled with lots of exclusive junk stuff from Hannah, Caro, Wenke, Max, and myself, topped off with a few worn panties. And as a very special treat, there’s a VIP gold ticket that will fly you to Berlin for free, put you up in a hotel, and even give you a foot massage. So if you want to bring this sensational night full of music, vodka, and naked Hannahs into reality, drag your math teachers, babysitters, and window-watching stalkers to the nearest computer so they can vote here for the party of the millennium! May the force be with us.

AMY&PINK Is Now the Future: Geeks Will Love Me

It must have been around half past three in the morning when Steve Jobs suddenly snuggled up to me in bed, delighted me in spooning position, and then softly whispered the following sentence seductively into my ear: “Marcel, get ready for the future…” I was just about to call for my mommy when he jumped up, unpacked his iPad, and proceeded to explain at length why he wished death upon Flash, why the future belonged to HTML5, and why I had better get AMY&PINK ready for the new reign of the apple. Because if I didn’t obey him, he’d have to take other measures.

Shortly after he disappeared into the darkness of the night on his flying iHorn, I pulled out the hidden chest containing the secret code of this website from under my bed as if in a trance, spat into both hands, and typed and tinkered and bug-fixed like a wild bull smelling of Mozart—just to keep my butt virgin. And I’m proud to announce: What you’re seeing right now, my dear friends, is the future! Well, all of this here… sort of.

Sure, no one can really see the difference compared to before, but cunning nerds like me can smell what’s cooking and know what’s up. As of today, AMY&PINK officially runs on HTML5, the new uber-fresh specification that makes geek dreams come true, leaves non-checkers clueless, and makes basement dwellers climax. In addition, everything that keeps this project running has been completely overhauled, cleaned up, and optimized in order to supply you faster, more reliably, and with a kick up the competition’s ass, with hot stories about blue superheroes, naked models, and stoned gamers.

Thanks go out to the master tinkerer from Nasendackel, who probably owns the narrowest column in the world, and to Daniel from Ugotit, who apparently gets handed tons of money by aliens given how committed he is to the future. And so as not to strain this nerd orgy any further, we’re calling on all hipsters, grandmas, and kindergarten teachers with the most diverse browsers, operating systems, and configurations to take a close look at the updated AMY&PINK and let us know in the comments where I screwed up in the implementation and where errors, crashes, or deadly killer viruses from Mars may have crept in. Many thanks. Narf. Or something.

Our Tumblr Turns 1000: Reblog Your Titties

We’d simply like to thank the more than one thousand people who now follow us on our Tumblr blog and at the same time present a few of our absolute favorites. After starting our own microblog at the beginning of October last year, we’ve published over 3,400 photos, reached number one in the German charts (until they were abolished), and received plenty of electronic mail from people thanking us for the visual publications and others who, because of the many exposed young ladies, would most like to see us burn in hell. Just like here.

However, we probably would have posted only two photos of our feet and one of Hannah’s dog if it weren’t for the sickest, most disgusting, and greatest Tumblr blogs on this planet. For example Sperm Dump, who pump us full daily with the hottest shit, just like Dirty Little Style Whore, Abnormalcy, or Dethjunkie*. And not to forget ♥ parti, Ne te promène donc pas toute nue!, and Expo 7000. All run by perverted little piglets—and we love them.

So if you’d like to see the crème de la crème of the best Tumblr blogs, filthy and incredibly enchanting images, and occasionally nude photos of our ex-partners combined in one microblog, then you’d better follow the official AMY&PINK Tumblr today. But be warned that at this scattered place things can sometimes get pretty hard, and if you’re under 45 and still living with mommy and daddy, you probably don’t belong there anyway. Unless you’re into blood-smeared tits, guitar-playing monkeys, and Christmas with the Muppets. In that case, come right in.

The 82nd Academy Awards: Thank You, Love You, Fuck You

As scandal-free as ever, the 82nd Academy Awards ceremony drifted along in Hollywood last night. All the stars, starlets, and cable carriers of Marshmallow Land waddled off to the hairdresser one more time beforehand, dressed up nicely, and then confidently strutted past Steven Gätjen and the hottest babe on German television, Annemarie Warnkross, with their hands in front of their faces. Afterwards, the program consisted of saying “Thank you!” a lot, laughing loudly—preferably straight into the cameras of the world—at the pseudo-witty bits by Ben Stiller, Steve Martin, and Alec Baldwin, and then ordering a couple of double martinis after the ceremony because you didn’t win and your jaw was locked from all the envious grinning.

Nevertheless, we’ve listed the winners of this long night once again here. Best Picture went to the Smurf epic “Avatar,” Best Director to Dominic Polcino for the “Star Wars” parody “Blue Harvest” from “Family Guy,” and Best Actress was Scarlett Johansson in “Lost in Translation”—as every year. The award for Best Documentary went to “Date My Mom,” the best screenplay was clearly the one for “Super Mario Bros. 3,” and the award for the hottest TV show went to Michael Jackson’s funeral. Then we had the greatest song for Avril Lavigne’s “Sk8er Boi,” the most beautiful makeup for Kim Debkowski from “Deutschland sucht den Superstar – Director’s Cut,” and, deservedly, the most stunning supporting role for the little hedgehog in “Alice in Wonderland.”

So no major surprises at this year’s Oscars. There were only upheavals during the listing of the great actors who passed away last year, because neither Charlie’s Angel Farrah Fawcett, Golden Girl Bea Arthur, nor the Michael Jackson resurrected for a charity music video appeared in the tear-jerking montage. The reason, however, was easy to explain: so many croaked that it would have taken a full-length feature film to fit them all into the reel. So a free tip to all second-rate actors: think twice before reaching for the pill cabinet just to be in the spotlight one last time—because chances are even that won’t work.

And now, of course, the questions for you: Did your favorites list come true this year, and did you all wisely bet on “The Hurt Locker” instead of James Cameron’s self-pleasuring orgy? What significance does the golden, bald, naked man have for you, which cinema, indie, and porn flicks should finally be honored with him, and where the hell were Keira Knightley and Mischa Barton anyway? Questions upon questions that you should answer for us right away.

Holly Miranda: The Girl and the Mafia

The first thing that crossed singer Holly Miranda’s path in her adopted hometown of New York City, at the tender age of 16, was the mafia. “We want to sign you,” said the men in black suits who stood in front of her door late one evening, holding a more than questionable piece of paper under the nose of the bewildered teenager for her to sign. Luckily, an honest lawyer kept her from getting involved in those dubious circles—otherwise we might have found the former frontwoman of the Jealous Girlfriends in the Hudson River in the near future, with iron shoes tied to her feet.

Although critics loved everything the Detroit native and her bandmates hurled into their listeners’ ears with two albums full of sounds and lyrics, major success and a real breakthrough unfortunately failed to materialize. When the band threatened to fall apart, Holly met TV On The Radio frontman Dave Sitek, who sparked a flash in her mind with warm words and encouraged her to create something of her own. Said and done.

The music woman locked herself at home and wrote, refined, and crafted magnificent songs, pieces, and tracks day and night, which we can now admire on her first solo album “The Magician’s Private Library.” All small, quiet works that possess their very own charm and are perfect for a calm spring evening with a glass of wine and a little hash. At the moment, Holly Miranda is still on tour with Tegan And Sara, but on April 21 the singer will play her only show in Germany at the Molotow in Hamburg. Ten euros well spent.

[audio:forest.mp3]

Mega Man Returns: I’m Blue, Da Ba Dee Da Ba Dei

Slowly but surely, the gaming and nerd industry—after more or less successful excursions into misshapen 3D worlds, pillow fights with the class enemy, and a flood of nerve-wracking spin-offs—is returning to the roots of its success and releasing the craziest 2D retro classics back onto the markets of this world. After the triumphant “New Super Mario Bros. Wii” and the announcement of “Sonic the Hedgehog 4,” the blue forefather of the shooter genre has now returned in an anniversary game for all three major consoles: “Mega Man 10.”

And that the blue android—built to protect against evil robots and whose explosive adventures we followed on many a morning of playing hooky with a bowl of cornflakes in our hands and a Pokémon cartridge in our Game Boys—would one day rise again in this 8-bit splendor, hardly anyone would have expected.

So once again you shoot your way from left to right through technologically mutated killing machines, collect plenty of weapons along the way to ultimately kick Dr. Wily’s ass, all while listening to the most insane—never-to-be-forgotten—melodies the history of video games has ever produced. If you happen to be at the Nintendo World Store in New York tomorrow, you can experience the official premiere live with free T-shirts and posters. Everyone else can download “Mega Man 10” directly to their consoles.

To coincide with the launch, Capcom has also released a retro clip featuring lasers, explosions, and a burned little boy. And since most game developers seem to be traveling through time at the moment, we’d like to know which game you would like to see as a classic, completely revamped new edition with a new story and fresh settings on your screens. “Alex Kidd,” “Chrono Trigger,” or even “Day of the Tentacle”? It’s up to you.

The Book of Husk Magazine: A Bare Dedication

Our dear friends from Husk Magazine sent us a copy of their latest analog publication, “The Book of Husk Magazine,” by post and wrote in their enclosed love letter not only that they thank us for the support and that we must never, ever, ever stop with AMY&PINK, but also—something that particularly touched our little hearts—that every single image of naked and half-undressed people in this publication is dedicated solely to us nutcases. How great is that, please?

The spring and summer edition of the self-proclaimed fanzine revolving around fashion, art, music, and culture is packed with plenty of magnificent photographs by Lucy Carr-Ellison, Luke Byrne, and Munich-based artist Katjana Frisch, enchanting texts by Manuel Link, Katharina Schwaiger, and Ulrich Schippke, and a black-and-white tour through the fashion capitals of this planet—with lots of Darth Vader, cut-out faces, boys at the piano, and the outstanding realization that fashion equals desire equals sexuality. We are delighted.

A small, fine Gesamtkunstwerk has reached us from southern Germany under the pseudonym Husk Magazine, and we can only warmly recommend it. Our joy at having been able to help a creative publication in any way is surpassed only by their selfless dedication of sexy nudity to us. In the midst of this head party, it’s time for popsicles—and we’re left wondering: What are you dedicating to us?

Stadthunger: Because of This Night

Sina and I stared into each other’s eyes for what felt like eternities. My head seemed to explode in inhuman colors, my breath stopped. Adrenaline pumped impulsively through my body like a raging bull—a stroke was the only conceivable conclusion. Where did she come from, why was she here, and—for God’s sake—why was she talking to me after ignoring and despising me for the past two years, luring me into an emotional minefield of despair, sleeplessness, and suicidal thoughts and leaving me there? “Hello,” I croaked out in a phlegmy voice, cleared my throat briefly and conspicuously, and repeated my greeting, which almost sounded like a question.

My counterpart continued to smile, unfazed and steady, took a sip from her wine glass, and then stylishly threw it over the railing. “Long time no see,” she slurred toward me. Sina was drunk. And clearly high. My disappointment at not being able to have a sober and honest conversation with her must have been written all over my face, because she staggered toward me, wrapped her arms around me, and grinned with dilated pupils straight through me. “Are you okay?”

Her apartment wasn’t far from mine. High ceilings, large windows, fascinating old building. Every room had been thoughtfully and modernly furnished. The walls were covered in light pastel colors, the furniture partly new, partly old, but everything harmonious. Everywhere it smelled of vanilla-mango, and lamps and candles filled Sina’s world with a romantically muted light. Photos of her and her new friends and lovers clung to the refrigerator. She smiled in all of them. I felt bad. Before my eyes were the scenes in which she cried, howled in pain, and balanced on the edge of existence. “Would you like a glass of wine?” the most beautiful voice in my known universe called from another room. I nodded, briefly touched my forehead, and then answered yes.

“Why did you let me go so easily back then?” We lay on her bed, stared at the ceiling, and were covered in spilled wine. I tried to respond skillfully and eloquently, but the marijuana and alcohol blocked my reason and let adventurous stories escape my mouth, displacing the air around us. Of knights and flowers, dresses and bears, prostitutes and drama. She laughed loudly and for a long time at everything I placed into her red-blonde head. Her hair smelled exactly like it used to—of ice cream, Red Bull, and a mixture of fast food and meadow flowers. Then Sina sat up, took my hands, and said, “On that one evening that separated us, I tried to kill myself.”

After that night, we began seeing each other more often again. For coffee, at the movies, or at one or another party. Like a puzzle, we revealed our lives of the past years to each other piece by piece. I smiled honestly at some things, at others more painfully, because they tore my thoughts apart. She didn’t lose another word about her attempt to catapult herself out of life, but all the more about sex, love, and hard and soft breakups. When she asked how things were going for me in these matters, I lied through my teeth and deliberately left Paula unmentioned.

But lies had no effect on us. We both knew that. Since that moment on the balcony, we could suddenly read each other like an open book again. As if the time in between had never happened, as if I had only minutes ago shouted her name through tears and spit from above, while she walked down the street empty and broken and disappeared into the next subway station. The nightmares, the vodka, the medication. Everything rotted before my eyes into the last remnant of the darkest time of my life. When she notices, she hugs me tighter than ever, and tears run down my neck. “It was terrible,” she manages to put into words. Then we sleep together, and for a while, everything is good.

This was the tenth chapter, “Because of This Night,” from the furious blog novel project “Stadthunger,” the serialized novel at AMY&PINK. You can find all parts continuously under the category “Literature.”

Music for Spring: Nerdy Spring Mixtape

If not for a deadly horror storm bred in some Illuminati genetics lab devastating half the country, here and there we could already see our favorite fireball, the sun, flashing through the dark clouds of winter, depression, and the fear of slipping—casually and shirtless adorning car hoods from here to Düsseldorf and splashing each other with fresh lemonade. And although allergy and asthma sufferers of all nations are already lining up again to be sold miracle weapons against mutated pollen, rioting grasses, and nasty treetops, it’s slowly time for a cooling mixtape for the start of spring—which you’re only allowed to unwrap once it finally stops raining for good.

Joining us this time to make your farewell to the cold winter days as pleasant as possible are, among others, the enchanting Marina & The Diamonds, the returning Englishmen of Blood Red Shoes, and of course our friends from Asobi Seksu can’t be missing from the spring festival of nerd music. On top of that, there are the hottest newcomers of global warming and even a small trashy song has somehow sneaked into the mixtape—its melody just won’t leave our heads. Whoever finds it wins a secondary school diploma, and now it’s time to finally say goodbye to winter. School’s out, miniskirts, and hot spring thunderstorms—we’re coming!

Our New Interns: Fresh Meat on the Way

It took longer than we all thought it would. For weeks we dug through tons of more or less interesting applications, sometimes stimulating and then again off-putting pictures, and a whole lot of information about cup sizes and penis lengths. So it’s no surprise that we didn’t just find one hot candidate for our new writer position — we practically fought over two fine faces we absolutely wanted to stamp with the pink seal of approval. And while we were busy pulling hair, handing out kicks, and insulting each other’s parents, we came up with a truly brilliant idea.

With pride swelling in our chests, today we present to you our two qualified contenders for the coveted author position: Wenke and Max, who won us over with character, talent, and the occasional lap dance, melting our souls in the process. And although both of them write in a way that will make your genitals overflow with joy, they could hardly be more different in personality and essence.

While Wenke, 23 years old from Berlin and equipped with a bra size of 80B, packs more expressions, rollercoaster rides, and risqué phrases into one line than Kelly Osbourne into an entire lifetime — and has already shaken up and corrupted phone companies, the entire East, and Style and the Family Tunes — Max, one year younger from Würzburg and blessed with a washboard stomach that makes virgins bend, takes a calmer approach. He philosophizes in quieter, yet no less powerful words about life, love, and everything in between, charming the fairer sex with his relaxed, composed, and chilled-out manner.

A more than worthy duo, then, joining us today — but in the end only one of them will secure the position as the new author at AMY&PINK. Starting today, Wenke and Max have one month to cast their magical spell over you, because at the beginning of April we’ll let our readers vote on who impressed, moved, and intellectually impregnated you more. So let’s give this young pair a proper welcome and at the same time say: Let the fight begin!

Spacken on the March: Stalked Anyone Today?

It’s no big secret that we truly love you. All of you. Without exception. Our readers comment diligently, interact with us on Twitter and Facebook, and send us the occasional risqué email sprinkled with not entirely youth-friendly photos. That’s absolutely fantastic, because it shows us that what we scribble and shout out into the wide world is being heard, reaches real people, and is reflected back through feedback. That’s what we live for — that’s the ultimate hype. Still, with so much joy there is also a small dark side that occasionally gives the girls and me stomachaches and poisons the whole fun with curious thoughts.

While most of you respond in a friendly and exciting frequency to topics and words that truly interest you or where you sense that a bit of feedback is needed, others have long since crossed the line of good taste and practically bombard us permanently with patronizing emails, link suggestions, and questionable comments. And in a quantity that can’t possibly be healthy — for several of them, at various stages of well-meant psychoterror, we recommend a visit to a professional.

So remember: Love us, insult us, discuss with us — but keep it within reasonable limits. Because the last thing we (and you) want are small, permanent stalkers constantly texting us, adding our ex-partners on Facebook, and finally hitting us up awkwardly on Skype. That’s already almost creepy. Our tip for you: We’re hot, but still get yourselves a life. Otherwise we’ll have to set our buddies from the mobile self-defense unit on you, who will then blast you with the Pokémon rap (the long version) until your kidneys burst. And at a certain point, we might even enjoy that.

World Premiere in Berlin: Alice in Wonderland

The animated classic “Alice in Wonderland” by Disney from 1951 ranks among the most beautiful, colorful, and adventurous adventures of all time — especially under the influence of various little helpers. The Mad Hatter, the constantly confused twins Tweedle Dee and Tweedle Dum, and the stoned caterpillar have burned themselves into our minds and the imagination within them, while the stories of the Walrus and the Carpenter, the embittered Queen of Hearts, and the mysterious Cheshire Cat remain forever in our hearts.

Yesterday we were invited to the world premiere of the sequel directed by Tim Burton at the Astor Film Lounge in Berlin and, during the live broadcast from rain-soaked London with a witty but soaking-wet Steven Gätjen on the red carpet, we waited eagerly to see whether the years of built-up excitement toward this film — declared a masterpiece from the start — would be fulfilled even remotely. And to put it briefly: the whole thing is absolute madness.

A wildly unhinged and rarely so colorful Johnny Depp, the enchanting and sometimes even sexy boyish newcomer Mia Wasikowska, all of it buried in a glittering, glowing 3D world arranged by Tim Burton — what the hell could possibly go wrong? Admittedly, the story could have been a bit more twisted and less predictable, and a deeper dive into the characters’ psyches wouldn’t have hurt. But even so, the new Alice in Wonderland opens up a magical, magnificent world inside our skulls, teaches us to muster more courage to write our own life story instead of letting others dictate it, and quietly extracts a promise from us to follow a wandering white rabbit — no matter where it may lead. Go watch it!

Mag Watch: Horses, Smugglers and Gonzales

After the entire ranks of internet junkies, social media experts, and microbloggers threw themselves into the digital net with closed eyes as if there were no tomorrow, some creative minds these days are once again turning back to the long-declared-dead genre of print. Quality magazines can survive; all others must surrender to the masses and speed of anti-analog society. So today let’s devote ourselves once again to printed paper, the smell of ink on white ground, and those dangerously alluring pages — even if one or two pieces are available only as downloads.

Dazed & Confused leads the way under the cloak of fashion with a sexy androgynous photo shoot by Karim Sadli, while the new Milkshake philosophizes about life as it was when we were young. My personal favorite magazine Front, meanwhile, as usual leaves no eye and no step dry, firing you up alongside a fat interview with Biffy Clyro and a stripped-down Melissa Clarke, together with the three half-naked girls India, Daisy, and El Wood, urging you to finally get your fat asses off the office chair and try a bit of physical exertion.

VICE makes your trip to the nearest hipster fashion store worthwhile again, serving up grand reports and fashion spreads on Japanese pussies, a sensual French film from the 70s, and smoking girls by Richard Kern, while I Love Fake isn’t real at all and still offers 244 pages full of photographic highlights from the great cities of our world. Free of charge.

NEON once again takes care of German love relationships, portrays Palestinian smugglers in the tunnels of Gaza, and keeps poor people from their well-earned sleep, whereas BLANK presents Wilson Gonzales Ochsenknecht on its cover — which I personally consider highly illegal. POP does it a notch more charmingly and presents a hot Abbey Lee Kershaw, DSDS-style, on a motorcycle, looks after artists and their muses, and accompanies E.T. the fashion prodigy Tavi through Tokyo. But even that is nothing compared to the current issue of Wendy, which this month has thrown the absolute killer mag onto the market with a few cute rascals as posters, brand-new comic characters, and the Luzy party manager. We bow to so much horse power and will immediately check out the corresponding videos online.

Fettes Brot Live in Berlin: Calorie-Rich Baked Goods

The German hip-hoppers Dokter Renz, König Boris, and Björn Beton have been accompanying me for half my life now. First at stoned class parties, boozy graduation trips, and merry summer camps, later at somewhat more disciplined activities like jogging, driving, and the subscribed brothel visit. The Hamburg boys are somehow always there and have contributed a not insignificant part to the soundtrack of my little existence. And a bit of fresh northern air has never really harmed anyone’s health.

Yesterday the nearly 20-year-old combo from Fettes Brot gave an exclusive concert in the middle of nowhere at the Funkhaus Nalepastraße in Berlin as part of the T-Mobile Streetgigs. A handful of loyal fans, plenty of happy winners, and us shook everything our parents gave us to charming classics like “Bettina, please put something on,” “Schwule Mädchen,” and “Nordisch by Nature,” and even collectively received Nokia phones from MTV host Yoko. The three guys were in great spirits as usual, the atmosphere was huge, and there were plenty of encores. A successful firework of entertainment that left both hardcore fans and accidental visitors completely happy — even if most of them had to be carted back to civilization by taxi from the edge of nowhere.

The concert will be broadcast on March 12 in the series “We love in concert” on ProSieben. At the end of April the guys kick off their live tour with an additional concert in Bremen, and their two new albums “Fettes” and “Brot” are currently available for sale. And that’s far from all — following last night, two big competitions are waiting for you. Either you can win two new phones by uploading photos and videos from last night to the corresponding promotion page, or you can simply let yourselves be bombarded with posters, CDs, and T-shirts — as always, the choice is yours.

Win an Exclusive Top by Narciso Rodriguez: A Fashionable Declaration of Love

Our female readership often gets far too little on this side of horror. Mostly no naked guys, you won’t find styling tips with the latest eyeshadow or anything about a hint of beige here either, and if you’ve ever read anything about Josh Hartnett, Leonardo DiCaprio, or Matt Damon on this site, may we roast in the hot damnation of hell. It’s satisfying to know that despite all that you still stick with us like Fifi to a pork knuckle, and we would immediately invite all anti-penises over just to cuddle them properly one by one while the new Justin Bieber single plays in the background.

But instead, and to prove our eternal love to you, this week we’re giving away exclusively for you a jersey top by American fashion guru Narciso Rodriguez, worth 65 dollars, which you can otherwise only get in his special shop on eBay. We’re providing it in size M for our favorite female readers. It’s black, it’s white, it’s simply sexy, elegant, and chic at the same time. Wow, what a piece of clothing. You can find more information about the entire collection at Jette’s Deal Hunter.

To get it into your already screen-glued hands and wrap your feminine curves in it as soon as possible, simply tell us in the comments by next Wednesday what you would do with Justin Bieber if you met him on the street. And whatever it is: he would deserve it. As always, the funnier the better for us — but anyone can win. You can find the terms and conditions hidden somewhere here. All that’s left to say is: We love you and good luck.

Nicolae Ceaușescu: The Dictator in the Mind

I have always been fascinated by great men from history who, through charisma, intellect, and mental terror, rose to the top of their respective nations, rallied a host of allies and followers around them, and were responsible for the deaths of tens of thousands of people — and ultimately themselves. Adolf Hitler. Asshole, tyrant, mass murderer. A truly abhorrent human being whose dark world I sometimes can’t get enough of. Because it simply won’t fit into my head; it occupies me, and I can never fully grasp the entire extent of the horror he caused then and still causes today. That will never happen.

But my favorite dictator is another. Nicolae Ceaușescu of Romania. I was a small boy when, late at night, I watched a documentary about him and his wife Elena on Arte. Paralyzed, I sat on the couch, listening and watching the horror he wrought and how his own people eventually lined him up against a wall for it. In dilapidated and hopelessly overcrowded orphanages — overfilled due to his mutated family policy — for the “irrecoverable,” meaning disabled and dying souls, he came and went and drank the blood of children to stay young. Injured women who had abortions despite the state ban were sentenced to die, denied any help. And Nicolae pushed the birth rate up by forbidding television to the people. Incredible. As a little brat, that was what I found worst: the state could forbid me from watching TV. Just like that. That thought never left me.

And when I saw for the first time how two people were shot in front of a running camera, it was over for me. First the Ceaușescu couple begged for their lives, and the next second they were dead. That exceeded my horizon. So that’s how fast it goes. At eight years old you probably shouldn’t be asking yourself what thoughts go through your head when you know you’re about to be shot. But I did. And I still do. Goodbye, Mr. Ceaușescu. You changed my life. In a repulsive, bizarre way.

Jostein Wålengen: Expired Photography

Mistakes are something wonderful. Everyone knows them, everyone makes them, and no one gets disposed of just because they have them. Nobody is perfect. Flaws shape our character like nothing else and should be forgiven as quickly as possible, if not loved outright, as long as they grow slowly and surely in an honest, likable way and without bad intentions. Unless your boyfriend cheated on you with the entire Swedish national beach volleyball team – then it’s no longer a mistake, but an atomic strike against your relationship. And somehow heroic.

The young photographer Jostein Wålengen from beautiful Norway has made use of the certain charisma of imperfections and prefers to use film that has been expired for years in order to photograph himself, the most enchanting girls of Oslo, and everything else there is to discover around them. The result is enchanting images that seem to come from another world, more old-fashioned than ever and yet eaten away by modernity.

In an interview with the photography blog Milk With Tea, the youthful artist offers a small insight into his work: “I like to create things that I personally find beautiful. I love it when my photography looks like something I dreamed. I use several female models, but my girlfriend Sunniva appears in most of the shots. She is an ambitious stylist and fashion designer and I really enjoy photographing her. I also work with Maja, whom I live with and whom I’ve known forever, and Julie from my class can also be seen in one or two pictures.” When asked why he prefers working with expired film instead of new film, he gives a simple reason: “Because it’s much cheaper.”

Alternative Horror: SuicideGirls Must Die

What does a perfectly normal SuicideGirl do when she’s not getting pierced by tattoo artists, playing a round of “Pokémon” on her GameBoy, or blowing the minds of horny guys with a private digital lap dance? Exactly: the hottest of them gather for a photoshoot for a future calendar in a secluded house by the lake, giggle excitedly while shaking their tattooed breasts, and then get axed to death by a deranged mass murderer.

Or at least that’s more or less what happens in the new film by the SuicideGirls, which will be released in selected cinemas next month. And SuicideGirls Must Die is by no means one of the usual softcore flicks. “We talked about this film a year earlier,” Sawa explains about the upcoming masterpiece. “I spoke about it a bit with Missy Suicide and we realized it was time for a really big horror movie – after all, we love the genre. The films we had produced before were about hot girls in pretty places whom we then interviewed for the DVDs. So we told them it would be a normal calendar shoot. Our plan was to make the events look as real as possible in order to capture their true reactions to the unbelievable through the cameras.”

There was a vague script for the entire project, but in the end nobody really stuck to it. If the few insiders noticed that one of the girls was starting to suspect something, she was simply next – the craziest, most intimidated, and bravest survived until the end. You can probably wait a long time before “SuicideGirls Must Die” ever hits German cinemas; if you’re lucky, you might be able to get it on DVD from the USA in a few months. In any case, we’re already curious what film idea the alternative girls will hatch next and are strongly hoping for a nude cooking show, a nude climate protection program, or a complete walkthrough of “The Legend of Zelda – Ocarina of Time.” Nude, of course.

Seabear on Tour: Sounds from the Far North

If there is anything more useless in this world than hair salons, internet fees, and suicide bombers, then it’s music bands. They sprout like disgusting little mushrooms from the ground, increasingly pop up in pedestrian zones, rural competitions, and lists of free indie websites, and try to change the world with their cheap guitars and a singer whose voice is still breaking, crooning dull 08/15 songs about love, sex, and the financial crisis. And to put it very clearly: 99 percent of these wannabe groups are a torment to our ears, brains, and tastes and should rather go back to hustling in the Ruhr area. But every now and then miracles still happen and suddenly they pierce through our eardrums with wondrous melodies, cheeky lyrics, and a great story, enchanting us for the moment or, even better, forever.

The Iceland Express Music Club Nordrid has made it its mission to bring exactly this kind of sparsely scattered bands from the unknown distance of Iceland to Germany along the path paved by Sigur Ros, and at the beginning of the year presents the brilliant indie-folk troupe Seabear from Reykjavik, who moved up the release of their second album “We Built A Fire” by a month due to illegal activities and only recently released an absolutely fantastic video for their song “I Built You A Fire.”

From February 28 to March 6, the seven-member crew, together with the somewhat alternative Hudson Wayne, will tour all major cities in Germany, including Festsaal Kreuzberg in Berlin and 59:1 in Munich, and while you diligently order tickets now, you can simultaneously devote yourself to the fulminant fireworks of color in their new video. Go for it.

The Sexual Shift of Modern Times: Fuck Yeah Geek Girls

It’s quite astonishing how much the ideal image of women has changed in recent years. Back in the days of millennium madness, Pokémon, and the World Trade Center, only big-bosomed bombshell blondes like Pamela Anderson, Jenna Jameson, and Carmen Electra strutted across television screens and, with their bouncing around, made the bodily fluids of both male and female viewers boil over. Nowadays, much like in the rest of the world, nerds rule our fantasies – preferably wearing thick black glasses on their noses, as sexy as the shy girl next door, and ideally interested in video games, comics, and Macs. To put it clearly: instead of fooling around in the back seat of our tuned-up car with the scantily clad sex bomb from the parallel class, we’d now much rather have sex in the school library to the sounds of La Roux, Tegan & Sara, and The xx with the overachiever from the front row.

The question of why we are suddenly drawn away from voluptuous silicone wonders with wood in front of the cabin and a vacuum in their heads toward rather slender, IQ-loaded, sometimes even boyish know-it-alls can be answered in many different ways. Perhaps because today’s youth are so disgusted by the mass media reports on RTL and ProSieben, which have been mentally hammering pseudo-horniness for dumb, naive but estrogen-pumped airheads into our brains for years, that they are protesting against it with a new ideal of a potential life or sexual partner. Possibly, however, because during times of economic downturn priorities have shifted from physical to mental strength, and smart, open-minded, and intelligent women stand for a greater chance of social and professional success. Or because girls who play Nintendo and read “Batman” are simply incredibly sexy by nature.

Whatever the case may be. Whether biological selection or pleasure-driven imagination: if you’re into overachievers with perky breasts, math books in hand, and a fondness for Japanese comics and “Hello Kitty,” and can’t do anything with contact lenses, secondary schools, and book burnings anyway, then you can fully indulge your deepest nerdy desires at Fuck Yeah Geek Girls and, after a tangled, literature-soaked night stained with red wine with Friederike from advanced math class, return to your Playboys from 1998, when the world was still lush, superficial, and in order.

Helft uns und gewinnt exklusive Tickets: Save Our Party

Do you still remember the good old days when we blindly, naively, and almost pitifully stupidly started all kinds of ridiculous actions without thinking too much about them, and in the end they worked out like magic without much effort? Yes? Then wave to them once more, because they’ve long since driven away without saying goodbye. I have to be honest with you, folks: it doesn’t look particularly good for our huge, fat AMY&PINK party worth 150,000 euros that we want to throw at the end of April. Because to make that happen, we need enough votes – unfortunately, a coke-fueled club crew from Munich and the spamming primeval creature from the Hessian forest simply have far more people who love them. And we can’t just let that stand. After all, we do have (from time to time) something like honor.

And that’s why you’re being called upon now. The army of the good, the lovers of Hannah, and all those who absolutely do not feel like some Munich posers or Hessian drunks descending upon our beloved capital: rise up and help us turn the tide in this accursed competition – we still have until mid-March.

So publish posts about the AMY&PINK Party, link to the voting via Twitter, and plaster your Facebook pages with plenty of links. Be creative! Among everyone who stands by us, we’re raffling off an exclusive VIP ticket including flight and accommodation in Berlin, all kinds of free tickets to the party, and a very special, highly exclusive surprise package filled with lots of stuff from Hannah, Caro, and me. Including worn panties – only whose, we’re not (yet) revealing. Write in the comments where, how, and when you supported us virtually so that everyone has a chance to win the prizes. And of course, they’re only available if we win the AMY&PINK party, so get moving!

Das Sünden-Mixtape: Clear Your Souls

Before the Last Judgment unexpectedly takes its place atop the dome of our lives and prepares to put all our sins, offenses, and butt-fucks on trial, it’s time to give our souls one last vigorous wash. To do so, you can either paddle a round in the Ganges, recite the “Our Father” twenty times while throwing a few bills into the holy water for the Catholic Church, or simply tear the clothes from your body and dance and sing and cry to our exclusive “Clear Your Souls” mixtape. The followers of the Boltanian faith community and we strongly recommend the latter. And whoever now looks up a certain word on Google automatically forfeits their reproductive organs.

Joining in this time to make your small, depraved, and dirty lives fit for heaven again and set them aglow are, among others, the divine The Hundred in the Hands, the almost enlightened Ellie Goulding, as well as the already canonized ten times over in our world Sarah Jaffe. So don’t let yourselves stray from the righteous path, always go to confession, and if you don’t tell anyone, you’re welcome to do a few naughty things while the mixtape fills the room. But don’t tell Benni – he doesn’t need to know everything.

Who Will Become the New Author at AMY&PINK? The Agony of Choice

Changes can, as we all know, lift us to new heights, but they can just as quickly throw the impetuous back down to earth. And then you’ve got a mess on your hands. That’s why reforms should always be carefully considered and ideally decided during a night filled with wine, currywurst, and those sweet little smiley pills. As you know, we’re currently looking for a new author to bring fresh wind into the old shed together with me, Hannah, and Caro—someone who can introduce us to unfamiliar trains of thought, deliver texts brimming with magic, and call an interesting, sexy character their own. Just like us. Or something like that.

And our emotional appeal has been answered by plenty of interesting, talented young people—some completely unknown, others already seasoned through appearances in blogs, magazines, and newspapers. Among the many submissions is, for example, a roving reporter from southern Germany who is totally into rabbit-breeding clubs and wannabe directors; a creative bartender who never leaves the house without cigarettes and Red Bull and lost his virginity at 13; and a criminal psychologist from England who knows her way around all kinds of pills and anesthetics. A whole bunch of eccentric individuals trying to win us over with their strengths, weaknesses, and cup sizes to secure a place in our hearts.

And while we’re still digging through mountains of digital paper, doodling little hearts on applicants’ photos and enjoying the occasional printout on the toilet, anyone who has just now decided they’d like to face the tough and competent jury and become part of AMY&PINK can still send us an email with everything we need to know. But hurry, because very soon our cruel verdict will be delivered. And then we won’t know who is luckier—the one we’ll soon press firmly to our chest, or those who just barely escaped. One thing is certain: we’re already devising a merciless initiation test that the chosen one must endure. But if they pass it with courage, strength, and a pinch of lizard droppings, fame, glory, and the occasional virgin shall be theirs. Cue sinister laughter and cut.

Our Redhead of the Week: Julia Hafström

To hell with London, New York, or Tokyo—if you want to see the most beautiful human beings of the modern era with your own eyes, you should save up a few bucks and hop on a budget airline of your choice to follow in the footsteps of the venerable Vikings to the land that apparently breeds slim people with long legs, flat stomachs, and that sexy magic in their faces in some genetic laboratory: Sweden. Because no matter whether we’re drooling over Hanna Håkansson, Lisa Olsson, or our standard beauty Filippa Smeds in this estrogen-dominated discussion, they were all born around the myth- and legend-shrouded city of Stockholm. Just like Julia Hafström.

At just 15 years old, the unusually petite model was discovered on the street by a talent scout, landed immediately at fashion giant Prada thanks to her red hair and cute freckles, and then went on to walk the runways of the world for names like Valentino, Miu Miu, and Tsumori Chisato. And that’s not all: with shoots for i-D Magazine, Saga, and Teen Vogue, our little redheaded light of the week has proven she cuts a fine figure on glossy pages as well. With all this success, let’s just hope she lives up to the title of the new Kate Moss and doesn’t buckle under the pressure too soon.

And since we’ve mostly featured top models as worthy redheads in this section and would also like to support some digital newcomers, we hereby call on all bloggers with red hair to get in touch with us so we can present you here with all the trimmings. If you’re interested, just send us a meaningful email, and soon you could be our Redhead of the Week. And who wouldn’t want that?

[gallery]

Frankie Nazardo: At the End of the World

It’s probably not every mother’s greatest dream for her son to join a brutal gang of children in Kathmandu for an entire month and roam the dark streets of Nepal’s capital with them. Only eight hours a day does the melting pot of drugs, alcohol, and prostitution receive electricity; at night, unavoidable darkness descends and offers countless hiding places for every kind of injustice, crime, and premature death. But that didn’t stop the London- and Milan-based photographer Frankie Nazardo from joining a 15-member gang that sniffs so much glue every day they can no longer recognize their siblings and forget their own names.

He took a lot with him from his journey into the underbelly of humanity—for himself and for his profession. He realized that the kids weren’t about knife fights, yet still went through them. That their scars, missing fingers, and visible diseases were present but not important. And that the palpable fear, the uncertainty, and the hint of self-hatred hung in the air but played no major role in the young criminals’ lives. Conversely, all these visible and tangible signs were all the more significant for him as a photographer. Because he recognized that his profession could only capture the decoration of people. The optical, the visual. Only a glimmer of true feelings. And this new truth weighed heavily on him.

When Frankie returned home after a month at the end of the world with the so-called Rat Pack and countless thoughts about whether he had been able to help those lost souls even a little, he wrote down his experiences and reports, sent them to several magazines and newspapers, and got back to work. This time without abandoned, neglected, and abused children—but with bands, friends, and pretty girls. To process, not to forget.

[gallery]

The Results of Our Survey: The Perfect Target Group

Not too long ago, we launched a small survey here at AMY&PINK with the front- and back-of-mind intention of learning more about you little readers and selling that data cheaply to the German state. We’d like to thank the nearly 150 participants whose responses were garnished with grand surprises, great ideas, and nasty insults. It’s nice to finally know what kind of inspiring, modern, and slightly mushy brains we’re dealing with here. And while an entire league of statisticians and PR consultants will be getting off on the data below, you can now take a look in the mirror of yourselves and find out what kind of lunatics are consuming this wonderful site alongside you. One thing we can reveal in advance: you’re in good company. Provided you’re addicted to crack, slightly pedophilic, and a bit foggy in the head. But that’s nothing new. Let’s go!

How old are you?

We weren’t too far off when we described ourselves as having readers mostly between 18 and 29 years old. What was once a wild guess has now been proven. Over 60 percent of you are just old enough to drink alcohol, drive to a brothel, and rent dirty DVDs from the local video store. Only just under 10% of you are still underage larvae, most of whom—surprisingly—are female. What that means, we’re not entirely sure, but one thing is clear: the air gets thin beyond 30. They probably can’t quite handle our pseudo-modern expressions and pubescent antics anymore. Or they’re still surfing via AOL.

Penis or vagina?

No huge surprise here: nearly two-thirds of you are running around with little willies between your legs, while only 37% have to deal with a monthly strawberry week. Interesting, however, is the slightly odd age curve: among young teenagers, girls dominate as loyal visitors, but with each passing year, our readership becomes increasingly male—up to a full testosterone overdose. Among those over 40, there’s almost no woman left. But at least mom stays loyal.

What do you like about AMY&PINK?

As expected, you flooded us with preferences, favorite articles, and unforgettable sections. Broadly speaking, your favorite topics fall into three major areas: first, the sometimes profound yet punchy texts about love affairs, life, and your sister; second, the awesome music tips we deliver via mixtapes or individual features; and, entirely gender-neutral, both boys and girls love boobs, dicks, and vaginas—as long as they’re shaved.

Here are some selected quotes: “The texts, the sex, the images, the rebellion… everything just fits here, I feel at home.” “The ‘to hell with what and how and why we write, we just write’ attitude.” “The honesty and trend awareness.” “It distracts me from the gray everyday life.” “The cheeky writing style and shameless self-overestimation. It’s fun. And not as dry as all the other crap.” “The mix between superficial sex talk and deep feelings. That reflects my life.” “The individuality of the authors, the many photos, and that AMY&PINK is the best the German web has to offer.” “The mix of profound and funny texts, decorated with little perversions you can only laugh about.” “Design, boobs, Hannah!”

What could you do without?

Many of you left this blank or swore you love everything here. Those who dared to criticize mostly rode hard on advertising, articles about mainstream crap, and the boobs. In a figurative sense. Some wanted to throw out certain authors, sink cities, or skip red-haired models. Although with the last one, the fun would be over. How could you…

Who is your favorite author?

The answer: no one! Depending on mood, housewives and fashion dolls swoon over Marcel’s lyrical piggy texts, math teachers and emotionally unstable twenty-somethings fantasize about Hannah Banana, and the alternative crowd would lock themselves in a lion’s cage with Caro just to count her piercings. Rule of thumb: horny and in need of fun? Marcel. Looking for feelings? The girls’ asylum.

Where do you know AMY&PINK from?

Most came via links on blogs like Les Mads, Indigoidian, dragstripGirl, or from Nerdcore, Spreeblick, and Jeriko. Others through Facebook, Google searches, or pure fate.

Which topics are you experts in?

Despite all your individuality, you’re stereotypes: 85% claim to be ahead of the curve in music, 69% in technology and gadgets, 56% in art and design, and 49% in fashion and new brands. You sexy trendsetters.

What should there be more of?

More of everything. More boobs, more Hannah & Caro, more profound texts, more interaction, more retro, more videos and podcasts. The biggest wish: more involvement for you readers—competitions, participatory games, actions à la “Take photos of your breasts, send them in, and win a banana.”

The Big Conclusion

We love you. Our readership consists mostly of young, trend-conscious, intelligent people who love our mix of sex, drugs, and rock ’n’ roll. Over three-quarters of you would rather grab a beer with Marty McFly than with Kevin McCallister. So there you have it, kid—now keep quiet until your parents get home.

Beckii Cruel Superstar: Big in Japan

While in our childhood we had to jump through copied casting shows, sleep with shady managers, or send demo tapes to every mailbox company north of the equator, nowadays you can cobble together your career in an afternoon at Media Markt: cheap PC, webcam, internet connection—and you can start printing posters of yourself and pre-signing stacks of autograph cards. Provided you’re female, 14 years old, and your smile makes the hearts—or pacemakers—of slightly pedophilic grandfathers pound. The rest of you end up on 4Chan.

The English girl Rebecca Flint was lucky to be born in 1995, complete with vagina and not-so-bad genes, and built a steep career on YouTube under the pseudonym Beckii Cruel, shaking her little butt—following the path paved by others like Magibon or Lonelygirl15. She invents creative choreographies, slips into colorful costumes, and dances to Japanese pop music. So far, so not exactly new.

But the girl we now only call “The Nose” seems to be so well received in the Land of the Rising Sun that she recently released her own album and DVD there. Experts—that is, lunatics like us masturbating to her videos—assume these tasteful aberrations will sell like hotcakes after a war. Probably because viewers’ brains melt while watching the digital masterpieces, forcing them to buy the discs to regain their sanity. But no matter how her career as a singing bouncing doll turns out, she’s apparently high on the list for the live-action adaptation of Woody Woodpecker’s biography.

Nes Takes It Off: Foxy Tales of Snow White

With this article, we’re breaking all taboos between here and the Bosporus—but that’s nothing you’re not used to from us. Society can pretty much kiss our asses. You know Nes. She’s our reigning Blogger of the Year, born with Turkish blood in her veins and currently living in beautiful and faraway Istanbul. The enchanting 17-year-old writes on NESNES.DE about vegetarian pizzas, brutal wrestling, and deaf goldfish, and about the wonderful world. And to reinforce that AMY&PINK is always about boobs, sex, and nasty things, the sweet writing prodigy put on a black wig, grabbed the nearest red apple, dressed up as a hot Snow White, and posed topless for us.

Even Ilker Sekeroglu, the photographer behind this photo series, couldn’t really resist this superb sight (with more information we’d probably reveal too much), but this touch of erotic integration in Germany definitely has something going for it. So enjoy these shots of Nes, visit her blog diligently, and leave her nice comments. And if any of you creative female bloggers now feel like promoting your writing in this way, just contact us at marcel@amypink.com. Our site will of course take care of the photographer, the studio, and a professional setting. We’re easy like that.

[gallery]

Vote for the AMY&PINK Spectacle: We’re Throwing a Party!

What on earth has become of Berlin’s party scene? Crack-infested mega-clubs, student gatherings with a reach of barely two beats, and hipster posing in pseudo-trendy backyards – no wonder today’s kids would rather hang in front of their PlayStations, roam around parks at night, and get infected by their parents’ eco-trend. But that ends now – we’re taking over the helm. This spring, the fattest, biggest, and most insanely awesome party this planet has ever seen will go down, worth over 150,000 euros. Presented by AMY&PINK, VICE, and Smirnoff, we’re sending electro heavyweights like Simian Mobile Disco and Metronomy into Haus am Köllnischen Park, unleashing the hottest DJs on the planet like Boy 8-Bit and Les Gillettes onto the dance floor, and topping it all off with Conny “Coop” Opper, the man behind Scala, Broken Hearts Club, and the Berlin Festival, who will rock the second floor. The only catch: the party first has to be realized.

And to make that happen, we don’t need to drag in Harry Potter, win the lottery, or crawl up Dieter Bohlen’s ass – it’s entirely up to you whether we drown in vodka on April 23, bring Jannowitz Bridge to collapse, and kiss the feet of the sickest acts of the year. Vote here for the AMY&PINK party, you don’t have to register or do anything else. Just vote. And if we come out on top, we’ll shower you with free tickets, raffle off VIP passes including hotel stays in Berlin, and then blow the entire budget in one single night with you. Hannah and Caro included, of course.

So what are you waiting for? Click the big voting button below, cast your vote for us on the site, and in a few weeks you could already be taking a dump on the dance floor with me, beating Caro naked at arm wrestling, and making little nuisances with Hannah in the back room. Take your chance and spread the word to your friends, bosses, and cousins!

The Big Survey: Hey, Who Are You Anyway?

Do you know what’s really completely unfair and ranks among the greatest injustices ever? That the three of us idiots open up our souls, heads, and body crevices to you every single day, splatter this place with stories about our passion for ponies, lust for sliced cheese, and incomprehension toward any kind of gloom, and turn ourselves into the most desirable morons in the nation through photos, videos, and greasy wall paintings. But the other way around, we know absolutely nothing about those of you who watch this circus we’re putting on, grinning, cheering, and clapping your hands like fools. But that changes today and right here. Not on my watch, my friends.

Admittedly, we’ve gotten to know a few of you maniacs recently through reading marathons on your blogs, party nights with retro games, beer and vegetarian pizza, or simply moaning in bed, but the majority of you are hiding in a dark shadow of uncertainty. Consuming instead of interacting, basically. And we don’t think that’s cool at all. So today we’re combining two great things. With the survey below, you can not only tell us what magnificent group of humans you belong to, but at the same time help make AMY&PINK even better. How does that sound? Fill out the form below – first prize is five minutes of your life back. And if you’ve got anything else to say that Grandma Statistics didn’t provide a neat little box for, drop it in the comments. Improving the world and saving the environment – that’s how we like it.

[SURVEYS 1]

The Last Sentences of a Relationship: Turn Off the Love

Ending a relationship can, at a certain age, become quite a complicated undertaking, initiated by creeping everyday curses, foreign desires, and emotional thoughts, and then producing a long list of consequences for the couple, the friends, and the parents. Who has to move out of the shared apartment, who gets custody of Olaf and Clara, and who the hell gets to keep the “Lost” DVD box sets? How wonderfully simple relationship endings used to be when we were still making out in school bathrooms, strolling hand in hand to class parties, and swapping the stupid Tine overnight for the much hotter Alexandra. And the parents just had to accept it, no matter what they had already heard about the blonde, spoiled brat from next door.

Of course, I wasn’t always married to our Lord and Savior either, but rather ranted, bit, and fingered my way through a more or less large-breasted pile of pubescent bitches, shrieking nuisances, and cosmically inclined chicks. And at a time when we still wrote letters instead of bombarding each other with emails, eternal, apocalyptic, and profound love was often over after just two weeks – and what the last words of my supposed soulmates were, you can read here now.

“I know we didn’t exactly make it easy for each other, but I never would have thought it would end like this for us. Here’s the condom back that I took from you – you’ll probably still need it for your Kathi. If you don’t want me anymore, the only thing I want back from my stuff is my little teddy bear that my mom gave me. You can keep everything else, I’ll never forget you. Oh yeah, you still owe me seven marks.” Jasmin, 2001

“Hey yo, all good? How are Marc and Sarah? I have to tell you something. My friends say you’re not good for me, so unfortunately I have to break up with you today. But I think they’re really right, after all we come from different worlds and I also cried when we slept together for the first time. I really wish you an awesome life and now I’m going to go sacrifice a few rabbits in the woods with Magnus and Kevin. See you around.” Susanne, 2002

“Marcel, you little beaver, I wanted to tell you that I finally managed to sleep with Lukas. It was pretty awesome, but I would never have done it if I hadn’t been so drunk. His mom even came in and asked if everything was okay because she heard weird noises from upstairs. I love you and I’m also convinced that you’re the best thing that ever happened to me, but true love isn’t even separated by death. And certainly not by two kilometers, take care.” Sabrina, 2002

“It wasn’t really about Murat having a car and already working, but so many things are just so much better with him than with us. His friends are totally cool and do a lot of crazy shit. Drugs and stuff. I also smoked weed with him now, that was totally awesome. Even though his brother got between my legs while we were doing it, but Murat promised that once he’s separated from his wife and his two stupid kids, he’ll take me to London.” Regina, 2003

“Alright my friend, I’ve finally had enough of you. I’ve told you a thousand times that this isn’t a sect, it’s just that our leader and we have a different outlook on life and what comes after. And if you constantly have to make your stupid jokes about it, I have no choice but to break up with you. Seriously. Here are the two topless photos I promised you yesterday, and if you contact me again there’ll be trouble.” Stefanie, 2004

Donkeyboy: An Ode to Pop

With all this snow, frost, and frozen cats, where would you least want to be right now? Exactly: Norway. The five guys from the extreme pop outfit Donkeyboy see it the same way, would trade their homeland for a sandwich and a can of fish at the moment, and after their almost embarrassingly huge success in the land of the midnight sun, fjords, and trolls, are now planning to conquer the rest of the globe with their chubby, pimpled, and penetrating pop songs. And that sounds easier than it is.

Because pop is probably the most degenerate, filthy, and most despised music genre of all time. At least in the eyes of those who think they have a clue about the whole circus. Nowhere else is it so easy to mix a few simple beats, catchy melodies, and dumb lyrics into a product, have it sung primarily by characterless hacks or big-breasted virgins, and rake in millions as Dieter Bohlen, Lou Perlman, or Frank Farian, while at the same time practically raping the music form with the greatest artistic potential.

So it’s time once again for pop sounds that don’t have to hide because soulless little shits like Britney Spears, US5, or the Lollipops have beaten them deep into the ground of shame. Raise your heads, celebrate the three-four time, and swing your heads and legs to Alphabeat, Little Boots, and La Roux. And from now on also to Donkeyboy.

[audio:donkeyboyambitions.mp3]

Become an Author at AMY&PINK: We Want You!

Here it is. We know you’ve been waiting for it, praying, begging, yearning… Because today, here and now, it breaks over you. Your big chance. Forget “Deutschland sucht den Superstar,” “Popstars,” and “The X Factor.” Television is yesterday’s snow. From this day on, the gate to a new world opens up – to fame and glory, to sexual partners and larger genitals, to Sonic and Mario. So if you’ve got what it takes, show the will to accomplish something great and take the dump of your life, then you’re in the right place, because – long story short – we are hereby looking for a brand-new author for AMY&PINK!

It doesn’t matter whether you’re male or female, live in Berlin or Brunsbüttel, and have more or fewer friends than Guido Westerwelle and Schnappi the Little Crocodile combined: If you can captivate us and your future readers, churn out stories about life, lust, and passion, fashion, music, and killer boobs and pasta salad, Nintendo and Nora Tschirner in a bombastic, cheeky, and sexy way, and if you don’t just know current trends in the business by hearsay but live them with skin and hair, then you’re exactly right for us.

So if you’re up for working on something grand with Hannah, Caro, and me and seizing control of the internet by any means necessary, then send a sample text along with photos and info about your age, biography, and cup size to marcel@amypink.com. If you’re lucky, you’ll hear from us soon, be initiated into our ranks in a group-sex-like ceremony, and soon be able to press your hot thoughts into the heads of innocent readers, pocket a share of the ad revenue, and brag that you’re among the biggest idiots on the entire web. Good luck!

Our Redhead of the Week: The Unexplained Girl

For over 20 years now I’ve been searching for the perfect counterpart who knows how to deal with the chaos deep inside me, can empty the occasional plantation with me, and then, tipsy, high, and a little off track, rake in the first million together. After that it’s just about multiplying money, DNA, and our square footage at home, founding our own state, and finally chasing Mr. Fox out of his shack by the lake and watching the end of the world. So beautiful, so theoretical. Unfortunately, the perfect piece of walking flesh hasn’t crossed my path yet (except in the form of a slightly stale but still tasty cheeseburger), but every now and then there are those certain moments that can give you more than all pills, injections, and Hanutas combined.

And I’d bet my right arm that you’ve experienced that too. You’re hopping around in the street / at a party / on Museum Island, not thinking anything of it, and suddenly she rushes past you. The sun seems about to burst from shining, the birds chirp themselves silly, the air smells like an illegal mix of sunflower field and spearmint, and her face, her hair, her being brushes your life for a brief moment. And it doesn’t matter whether you still muster the courage to run after her like a lunatic or whether your shyness overwhelms you and you’d rather stand rooted to the spot: She’s gone as quickly as she appeared and your path continues along its preprogrammed wrong, dirty way instead of being redeemed by her.

And that’s exactly how I feel about Ella. I saw her on Redhead Models, fell temporarily hopelessly in love with her, and would drag her to an altar stuffed with Klingons without knowing anything about her except four letters in a row. Age? No idea. Hobbies? Who knows. Origin? Maybe New Zealand. But actually, it doesn’t matter. Because Ella generally stands for all those girls who only briefly flitted through my perception, never suspected anything, and left nothing behind but a small yet powerful feeling of freedom, immortality, and a parallel universe in which we’re currently doing it on tiger skins.

[gallery]

Social Media Week 2010: Nerds in Town

While at the annual Harley meeting the bearded muscle men form a sweat-soaked mob on their damn annoyingly loud smoke machines, while fashion junkies gather around a long plank at Fashion Weeks just waiting for one of the poles strutting across it to fall into the flooding masses of paparazzi, journalists, and H&M subscribers, at any event revolving around the platonic networking of the digitalized planet you practically drown in little white apples, silk-scarf-wrapped agency guys (we’re allowed to write that because none of them ever feel addressed anyway), and a huge cloud of horniness toward themselves and contempt for everyone else. That’s how the second Social Media Week in Berlin and the rest of the world ended yesterday, and we took a sniff for you to see what awaits us in the near future on Facebook, Twitter, and the other refuges of nerd kings.

You can credit us highly for this mission, after all we risked our lives on all that damn black ice to report firsthand why it can sometimes be quite okay to spend your entire life in front of a portable screen with a keyboard attached. And it wasn’t nearly as uninteresting as we had assumed beforehand.

At MTV we were confronted with the hard truth about the beautiful new realm of music on the horizon by the likable blog grandma Barbara Hallama and the boss of everything Yousef Hammoudah. Stephan Bode from the former and still dearly missed game channel Giga and the very popular project “Game One” with Budi and Simon told the interested crowd all about social games, rightly bashed the FarmVille zombies, and advocated for indie games like “World of Goo,” “VVVVVV,” and “Robot Unicorn Attack.” And the quite inspiring and agile guy from SoundCloud, Alexander Ljung, chatted about his childhood and how he imagines the future of the internet as a huge box of Lego bricks – everyone does their own thing, but somehow it all fits together. That doesn’t sound bad at all.

One thing this Social Media Week did show, though: nerds can’t party. Sara, Paulschen, Christoph, and I fought our way through icy lakes, slippery mountains, and stories about sexy Australians for parties that probably shouldn’t have existed in the first place. So we knocked back a few beers, tried hard to follow the Twitter battle between Herm and Nilzenburger (which no one else did), and definitely did not lose to the girl with a penis and Stylewalker at foosball. Because: no photos, no evidence. So we quickly fled to the nearby Belushi’s and then stuffed what felt like a ton of cheeseburgers into our completely flat stomachs.

So what do we learn from a week of extreme nerding? We were really afraid that behind most Twitterers and bloggers there were only uncommunicative, boring, and branded scaredy-cats, pretty boys, and self-important types – and in most cases that’s completely true. It’s huge that in this great new world people from Sweden, Egypt, and Mongolia can meet virtually and make music together, but it would also make them a bit better if they opened their mouths and talked to the person two meters away instead of typing all their thoughts into virtual nirvana like idiots.

Nevertheless, behind some new companies and a multitude of pseudo-important people there are truly smart, inspiring, and creative minds whose bubbling ideas practically spray out of them and that you’d most like to catch with your mouth wide open. The ideas, I mean. As far as I’m concerned, they can take the entire internet into their hands, occupy it, and turn it into a colorful playground – and maybe even offer a self-help course titled “Approaching Each Other.” That’ll be fun, and we’re already looking forward to the re:publica.

The End of All Topics: Against the Wall

It’s almost a miracle when I really think about it thoroughly and for a longer time, and I want to use today to philosophize a bit about what has been giving me a pounding headache for days and weeks. Hannah, Caro, and I have written nearly 1,500 articles on AMY&PINK so far that can hardly be surpassed in terms of variety of topics, vision, and sheer volume of words. And you know us: unlike our dear neighbors, we don’t just silently throw random YouTube videos, fragments of words, and pseudo-funny pictures into orbit, but write, type, and scribble our souls out so as not to become a lifeless and easily interchangeable link machine. We live the shit we produce.

Our entries range from masturbation to Nora Tschirner to Burma, deal with parties, school, and the latest shit in the music scene, and have turned into portraits of well-known photographers, models, and artists. But when I look back here and now and have a beer with the future, I unfortunately have to admit: we’ve crashed into a wall. Or worse: we’re going in circles.

Because slowly the forest of topics that we haven’t yet thoroughly trampled and that we haven’t already pounced on like a pack of starving wolves is thinning out. How often can you philosophize about this damn heartbreak until it’s hanging out of our and your ears? When is enough enough of hearing again and again about friendship, growing up, and wild sex? And how many bare breasts do we still have to slam in your face before even we, out of sheer saturation, join the next monastery?

Sure, new bands, pretty girls, and good creators we can properly introduce keep crawling out of some holes – that stream never dries up. But the essential things, what defines all our existence, what satisfies our wishes, longings, and hopes by the liter – life, love, and freedom around us – we’ve already devoted ourselves to. Published, checked off, and filed away. Stored forever in our portfolio of covered topics.

So what now? Get stuck in an endless loop like NEON and until cancellation reheat tips about heartbreak, job stress, and getting older year after year on the cover? Solve the problem like dragstripGirl and bring the best texts back out of obscurity in a dusted-off new edition? Or simply have the courage to confess at some point: “Thanks for the great time, we’ve said everything that needed to be said – that’s it. Take care, you fools.”

But maybe publishing is like the rest of life: an eternal, constantly repeating circle that makes us go through the same problems, situations, and thematic worlds in cycles, only to then demand that we do it better. Again and again.

Elin Kastlander and Joakim Benon are JJ: Swedish Voice Strikes Back

After the divine Lykke Li has been keeping us waiting for a new album for quite some time, the crazy Robyn prefers to hang out with spoiled snob kids, and the eternal rockers of Mando Diao seem to get a little worse with every song, it’s finally time again for new, unforced music from the country where blonde, long-legged models are bred, royal dreams come true, and Luther fans are happy: blue-and-yellow Sweden. And how could it be otherwise—this time, too, the trend spread by groups like La Roux, Make The Girl Dance and Empire Of The Sun remains unbroken, and a duo is being sent on a journey to continue the adventures and missions of Abba.

The group, named after the French 1960s film “Jules et Jim” and consisting of Elin Kastlander and Joakim Benon, calls itself—rather search-engine-unfriendly—simply JJ, is signed to the labels Sincerely Yours and Secretly Canadian, and after success and good reviews in their homeland, now wants to charm America and the rest of Europe with their melodic and catchy songs.

At the beginning of next month, after singles with such expressive titles as “jj n° 1” and “a jj 12”,” their second studio album “jj n° 3” will be released, featuring songs like “My Life,” “Into the Light,” and “Golden Virginia,” before they then go on tour together with the British band The XX. We’re certainly curious to see whether the two will become another high-caliber music group from Swedish lands—or whether they will collapse under the weight of their great role models.

[audio:https://www.amypink.com/music/andnow.mp3]

The Evolution of Drugs: Colors in the Head

Drugs, alongside sex, alcohol, and cigarettes, belong to those life essentials that your parents, society, and Mr. Mackey forbid you from before you can even begin to defend yourself. They make you addicted, stupid in the head, and can quickly land you either in prison or straight into a wet, cool grave. Too bad that this forest of prohibition signs gives all those colorful, unknown, and dangerous chemicals and plants an even stronger allure than any office sex, swimming pool break-in, or shoplifting combined.

But cocaine, ecstasy, and LSD are already old grandpas in the business of illusions, trips, and fantasies, because the newest achievement is called Meow Meow, is labeled as plant food and fertilizer, and can conveniently be ordered over our beloved internet. The capsules made from mephedrone are said to have the same effect as ecstasy, have already claimed a few lives in England and Spain, and of course have long since been circulating through the scene clubs of the German (drug) capital Berlin. And not only there.

Because drugs of all kinds in today’s society belong to two scenarios. In the first, they are swallowed and snorted by cool models, hipsters, and party gods bursting with attractiveness and youth, to turn night into day and squeeze the ultimate out of their free time. The second looks more tragic and depressive: junkies who can no longer think straight from all the stuff, who prostitute themselves for coke and crack, and eventually administer the golden shot to themselves in a train station restroom.

VICE, with its new multi-part film “Swansea Love Story,” has taken on the inglorious side of narcotics just in time for Valentine’s Day and accompanies several people who live in the British city of Swansea and fight there for love, life, and the next kick. So sober and inglorious that it takes your breath away. So be glad, you druggies, if you’re still living on the sunny side of the coked-up medal—because no one wants to end up in that surreal world. Not even me.

A Story About Jasmin: First Anarchy and Then to Lidl

Jasmin was a styled-through, convinced, and completely shaved punk to whom society and everything entangled within it passed straight by her ass. She passionately listened to Slipknot, In Extremo, and Knorkator, would have loved to see the world we live in go up in the unholy flames of lawlessness, and came from a wild gypsy family—a fact she never tired of rubbing in everyone’s face. I first met her at the nearby retirement home, where I endured an underpaid and boring job at the reception desk while she was doing community service and tormenting your grandparents with board games and math problems. While Jasmin completely ignored me on the bridge in front of the place, a few hours later we were making out in the elevator, throwing our clothes at each other in the chapel on the top floor, and then lighting up a joint in the common room while our elderly fellow humans were taking a nap. Except for Mr. Brechtl.

The old man in the wheelchair stared at us with greedy eyes as we were just about to make ourselves presentable again for the outside world and bury the rest of the joint in the garden. He shouted something about penises and towels and then dragged us into his room, where over a glass of tea he told us why he had requested a room with a view of the sports field of the neighboring school (because of the lightly dressed young girls, of course), showed us old albums with photos of his diverse nudist vacations, and labeled us with genitalia and terms from a long-gone era—without meaning any harm. We laughed, we rejoiced, we sang, and fled as quickly as we could from his free-spirited realm when he briefly dozed off.

After we came closer to the meaning of life in the restroom, I—infected by her enthusiasm—would have loved to renounce my religion on the spot and convert to anarchy. With our hands between our legs and lips on chests, we swore never to partake in this system of capitalism, socialism, and fundamentalism. My consciousness toward God changed forever. It’s not as if I’m easily convinced, but after this revelation, the beginning of my new life, and the kindled hatred toward my own species, we first properly celebrated the start of our new world order by stealing a few shrink-wrapped hot dogs from Lidl.

My conviction toward Jasmin and her views would have known no bounds, might have become immortal, and could have plunged our nation into the doom of satanic eternal fire—if I hadn’t cheated on her two weeks later at a school party with the blonde Sabrina (Cheshire grin, white socks, and uneven breasts) and, despite anarchy, the deep desire for chaos, and hatred of all isms, gone out for ice cream with her the next day.

Jasmin is said to have been so profoundly furious about it that, according to legend, she smashed her best friend’s head against the sink in his bathroom out of rage over me so hard that it shattered into a thousand pieces. And although I haven’t heard anything from her since, I’m sure that deep underground she’s forging a glowing plan of revenge that will catapult all those involved straight down to her in hell, so that together for all eternity we must devote ourselves to the greatest torture of all: listening to Mr. Brechtl’s nudist anecdotes.

The Anti-Cold Mixtape: Summer In Snow

February has broken over us in deep sleep and grants us the strange and illusory feeling of a cold, snow-covered summer day, to which we have absolutely nothing to oppose except our good mood and the hope for warmer hours. And that even though it’s Monday—what a perfectly torturous contrast. And so that you don’t let yourselves be processed into fish sandwiches at the start of this week and month, there’s the exclusive “Summer In Snow” mixtape completely free of charge, with a few songs to make you feel good and warm up.

On board are not only the incredibly charismatic American Toro y Moi with “Low Shoulder,” known from the “Skins” trailers, the sexy newcomer from the United Kingdom Ellie Goulding with the chart hit “Under the Sheets,” and the perpetually depressive Brett Anderson with his tearful deathbed ballad “Hymn,” but also Delphic, Adam Green, Vampire Weekend, and our favorite lesbians Tegan and Sara from eternally cold Canada in one go. And if this hot lineup doesn’t make you warm, we really can’t help you anymore. So snuggle up and let the show begin.

2010 Gets Fresh: The Country Needs New Girls

Whether it’s the disfigured punching victim Rihanna, the screeching hooked nose (and sagging tits) Lady Gaga, or the hopping acute with the killer butt Beyoncé, who constantly and everywhere have to press their mugs into the cameras of paparazzi, fans, and laptops: we’re really fed up with being confronted over and over again with the same dreary and uninteresting faces and listening to their boring stories time and time again. It’s time for fresh, modern, and far more attractive young girls to step up just in time for spring cleaning and prove to us and to you that 2010 has much more to offer than just another terrible year full of indistinguishable vaginas, recurring scandals, and rumors stuck in a loop. That’s why we’re presenting here the ten hottest female newcomers worth keeping one or even both eyes on this year—and who will hopefully sweeten the remaining eleven months properly. Curtain up.

Sky Ferreira

Who is that? Not yet of legal age, Sky Ferreira is something between singer, songwriter, and the successor to Cory Kennedy, appeared in Uffie’s video for “Pop the Glock,” and is rumored to somehow be collaborating with Britney Spears and Cisco Adler, the ex of Mischa Barton. Where to find? Her long-awaited debut album is supposed to be released this year—then we’ll find out whether the hype around the sky bride is justified or just hot air. Did you know? When she was 15, she simply stalked every musician and producer online until one finally took pity and listened to her demo tape.

Filippa Smeds

Who is that? The red-haired up-and-coming model from Sweden already caused a stir last year with her interview with us and is currently making her way through international magazines and video shoots. Where to find? This little bundle of energy will continue to work on her career this year through sheer willpower and have those sexy freckles printed on ever more valuable paper. You’ll see. Did you know? Filippa recently broke up with her boyfriend. So if you’re into red-haired girls and maybe even speak Swedish: go for it.

Alexa Chung

Who is that? The hot girlfriend of Arctic Monkeys frontman Alex Turner seemed to have already passed her zenith a few years ago, as she was considered the new it-girl and subsequently hosted several shows in England and the USA. Where to find? After her talk show “It’s On with Alexa Chung” was canceled on MTV, the 26-year-old is now trying her luck on the internet and modeling, among others, for VICE. Did you know? Alexa is into musicians and has previously dated Lostprophets frontman Ian Watkins and Klaxons singer James Righton.

Avril Lavigne

Who is that? The teenage boy’s dream come true around the turn of the millennium. After her divorce from Sum 41 frontman Deryck Whibley, she had disappeared from the scene, but songs like “Complicated” and “Sk8er Boi” remain anthems. Where to find? She sings the title song for Tim Burton’s 3D spectacle “Alice in Wonderland,” coming to theaters in spring, and plans to release a new album this year. Did you know? As a teenager, Avril was bullied because of her aversion to deodorants; today she markets one herself with her line “Black Star.”

Alexandra Sim-Wise

Who is that? Alexandra became known as a sexy student in the English FHM and then secured herself a place in the sun with hot photo shoots for newspapers, magazines, and the internet. Where to find? The little nerd writes columns about video games for Front and Rising Star Games, works as a host for radio and television stations, and regularly holds her breasts into the cameras of various photographers. Did you know? If Alex had a time machine, she would travel to 19th-century London, write a book about Jack the Ripper, and make a heap of money from it.

Taylor Momsen

Who is that? The 16-year-old, after appearances in “The Grinch” and “Spy Kids 2,” plays the emaciated Jenny in the US hit series “Gossip Girl” and shot herself into the Olympus of new it-girls. Where to find? Everywhere. The straw-blonde waif is the fashion icon of the Hollywood press, followed at every step by photographers, and will presumably be abused by a pedophilic stalker before her 18th birthday. Did you know? Taylor has her own grunge band, The Pretty Reckless, which has already opened for The Veronicas.

Amanda Hendrick

Who is that? The 19-year-old Amanda Hendrick is not only the girlfriend of the fully tattooed and second-hottest guy in Great Britain, Bring Me The Horizon frontman Oli Sykes, but also likes to hold her face into lenses for fashion photos, Vogues, and Hollywoods. Where to find? When she’s not posing for sexy pictures in Milan, she prefers to spend her free time at home cooking and playing computer games. Did you know? Amanda is so individual and unique that she simply hates going to the dentist. Wow.

Kemper

Who is that? The girl with the unusual name made a name for herself among the SuicideGirls with numerous revealing photo sets like “Hit The Sheets,” “Kamasutra,” and “Organic Love,” and has been blogging, kissing, and skillfully undressing there since 2006. Where to find? While letting her thoughts dance to Bad Religion, Johnny Cash, and Ella Fitzgerald, she now tries to get her red hair and green eyes into magazines and books. Did you know? When Kemper has nothing else to do, she likes to spend her free time searching for the mythical clitoris.

Ke$ha

Who is that? Do you live under a rock? Her song “Tik Tok,” in which she, as a messed-up alcoholic, gives the children of a model family the shock of their lives and then lets herself be licked by a walking mullet, is running on constant rotation on television, radio, and in the supermarket around the corner. Where to find? The sexy blonde has just released her first album “Animal,” which immediately stormed to number one in the USA and will probably not leave our heads this year. Did you know? Paul Lester from the Guardian called her the “neglected Hannah Montana” and stated that “her entire shtick is based on being a rebel in American Apparel.”

Kaya Scodelario

Who is that? The cutest Englishwoman since Rachel Stevens appeared in all four seasons of the British hit series “Skins” and plays the drugged-up and rebellious Effy. Where to find? After leaving the series this year, the half-Brazilian wants to establish herself in the film business. Her movie “Shank” will hit theaters this year. Did you know? Kaya was devastated when she heard rumors about the separation of Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie—they were her dream couple.

Stadthunger: The Cute Rage

It was one of those incredibly hot summer days whose bright glow burned into our skin and soul and kept the night, infused with magic, far away from us. Eva gazed dreamily after the southern waiter while I tried to crush the ice cubes in my cocktail with the straw. A horde of tourists pushed their way down the street, roaring and laughing. I watched them and felt a little envious. “How’s Adam?” I croaked toward my counterpart—more to end the awkward silence than because I truly cared. We hadn’t seen each other for so long, and yet her life and that of her life partner were relatively irrelevant to me. “Good,” came the short, meaningless answer, prompting her counter-question: “And how’s Sina?” A jolt of thought thundered through my body. By accident I threw the cocktail to the ground. As it shattered on the hard concrete—the mixture of glass, fruit, and liquid—I liked it. I smiled a bit stupidly.

Two years have passed since Sina fled head over heels and in tears from my apartment and my life, and we haven’t exchanged a single word since. From what I gathered, she had splendidly arranged herself with her newfound freedom in this city, made important contacts, and was present at every good party of high society. Recently she hosted a few shows on a music channel, modeled now and then for one or another local fashion label, and was rumored to have affairs with musicians, managers, and TV starlets.

From time to time I would run into her at various festivities and even photograph her occasionally arm in arm with overbred celebrities and emaciated models. She smiled like a professional into the camera, but once the flashbulb storm was over, she turned around and walked on—usually straight to the bar. As if she no longer knew me. After that, the evening was usually over for me.

A tormenting god seemed to have placed our fates on a scale that currently tilted painfully against me. While Sina’s life had turned, in fast forward, toward happiness, prosperity, and recognition, mine sank into a black mash of self-doubt, dissatisfaction, and ungrateful hatred toward everything and everyone. My search for her had long ago become my new purpose in life, and my hopes, dreams, and certainties transformed into an endless journey of setbacks, disappointments, and trampled feelings. I had become a shadow of myself.

I had scoured all of Berlin for a worthy copy of her. I searched for her playful freckles, red-golden hair, and shining blue eyes in every Catholic schoolgirl, burnt-out designer, and soulless prostitute in the city, and each time—with less shock and more finality—had to realize that they were all just empty shells, insignificant supporting characters who would never come close to what Sina had triggered deep inside me and could never meet the false expectations with which I burdened them.

So at night, under the influence of illegal stimulants and Red Bull, I lay awake, masturbating to the photos in her Facebook profile one after another and feeling jealous of everyone who left a message dripping with slime on her page, became a fan, and linked themselves into her life. I had degenerated into a stalker, a lonely nobody without true friends, who ultimately drowned in this world of glitter, drugs, and false reason. Just as Sina had prophesied.

It must have been a few days after the terse meeting with Eva when I was asked to take photos at the aftershow party for Schweighöfer’s new movie in a hotel—a party I arrived at already drunk and far too late. There were plenty of candles, seventeen different martinis, and a constantly stoned boss who spoke German with a New York accent and exaggerated it considerably. Her New York accent disgusted me. Only a fraction of the pictures I shot that evening were usable. But I didn’t care—like everything else. After all, I was an artist, and there was no reason not to admire me.

As a problem person, life in this world wasn’t easy. I had never been more aware of the limits of existence, always pushing further, further, even further—until everything around me cracked and shattered like a glass cube into a thousand pieces. My life was an experiment, and all the people in it became test subjects on whom I could tinker until I either freed them from their fantasies with too much pressure or they escaped before I could. It was time for me to disappear.

The rigid faces, the forced laughter, and the sad eyes of the invited guests disgusted me and practically pushed me away from them. I went out onto the balcony to light a cigarette and only after some time noticed that a girl was standing next to me, watching spellbound as I tried to blow rings toward the television tower to make it collapse. When I saw her head, I had to cough. Sina smiled at me.

This was the ninth chapter “The Cute Rage” from the furious blog novel project “Stadthunger,” the serialized novel on AMY&PINK. All parts can continuously be found under the category “Literature.”

Faqs vs. Fags: Kiwi or Banana?

Life, my friends, is full of mysteries, secrets, and tiny bits of information whose ignorance can drive us to the brink of insanity. But don’t worry, you little fools, because of course we’ve made provisions. Since we now also have a fulminant Formspring account and you’re allowed to annoy us there with the most idiotic, embarrassing, and sexual questions in the world, we’ve already been able to beautify and improve many fellow humans’ existence on this planet. So listen with us to the finest questions and dumbest answers of the first round of “Faqs vs. Fags,” and don’t forget: if you don’t know what to do anymore, we’re here for you. And we’re definitely better than that asshole SMS Guru. Try it out!

Why don’t penguins have kneecaps? Because they traded them in for ultra-cool suits. How do I remove the “Keep off the grass” sign from the lawn? With a rifle. What’s the relationship status of the girls and how can you land them (for a serious relationship)? Both Hannah and Carolin are more or less happy singles, but they preferably hunt in the same type area: Are you tall, sexy, humorous, and maybe even have a few tattoos, piercings, and a long dong? Then get to it! Why do kamikaze pilots wear helmets? Because they were helmets from last winter’s collection—they had to go anyway. What’s the thing called that you put on the conveyor belt in the supermarket between your own goods and the next customer’s goods? That varies by manufacturer: goods divider, goods separator, or customer separator. Many saleswomen simply call it a pusher.

Why does Hannah still live in Munich and not in Berlin? Because she started an affair with the reigning mayor there. Don’t you feel superior to all smaller and lesser-known bloggers? We generally feel superior to all shorter people because we can spit on their heads if they mess with us. What kind of music are you into? Everything that was between number 30 and 70 in the Australian charts in 1993. When did you start masturbating? It must have been yesterday around half past three when “Pokémon” was on TV.

What helps against razor burn? If you’re prone to razor burn, dry shaving is preferable to wet shaving; avoid care products containing alcohol and/or parabens and best not wear tight clothing around the neck. What to do about vaginal cramps while my boyfriend is inside me? First take a photo and send it to us and then pour a bucket of warm water over yourselves. Or did we only do that with our dogs back then because they were frozen together..? Would make more sense. Why are there only really shitty people in this season of “Big Brother”? Because it wasn’t much different in the previous nine seasons. Some even call it tradition. Kiwi or banana? Whichever slides better.

Mag Watch: Fish, Breasts and Vampires

We love print. But only as long as it’s magazines that print either flashy photos, gripping texts, or here and there bouncing breasts. Preferably, of course, all together. And because we don’t want the painted, dead trees to ever die out completely—after all, we would lose the scent of a fresh magazine in the morning, and laptops have always been a bit inconvenient as bathroom reading—we’re reviving an old section and will once again randomly scour the jungle of kiosks from now on, without paying attention to release dates, categories, or formats, and present you with the hottest publications and topics. Because you can never have enough regular columns. So grab your machetes and let’s go.

The mania surrounding vampires, blood, and bats has now, after the “Twilight” films, also washed over Germany in the form of a series. In line with that, NYLON introduces you in detail to the protagonists Nina Dobrev, Paul Wesley, and Ian Somerhalder from “The Vampire Diaries,” and also takes care of the latest fashion wave, Sarah Silverman, and 15 awesome bands you’ve never heard of. The current issue of VICE is less music-enthusiastic, preferring to let old Italians philosophize about sex, show photos of people with food in their mouths, and take a closer look at author Dolly Freed.

Naturally, the latest issue of FRONT is much more revealing, dedicating itself, among other things, to the two blonde and big-breasted girls Emily and Hannah, honoring the stage anniversary of Hulk Hogan, and telling you why you absolutely need to own a xylophone. In keeping with the cold weather and endless snow, Cooler prefers to write about professional snowboarder Nicole Angelrath, chat comfortably with Yeasayer, and reminisce about the good old days when Edward Scissorhands, Nirvana, and “Pulp Fiction” were still running wild: the early 90s!

NEON, on the other hand, has dedicated itself to more tragic stories and asks itself and you what to do in the case of acute and deadly heartbreak, how long you still have to live, and how high your sex IQ might be. Things are much more leisurely in the angling magazine Blinker. In March they focus on trout, fishing in the Balkans, and the tastiest dishes involving the little splashers—and even throw in an action-packed DVD. So if that doesn’t make you want to become a fish murderer, we can’t help you anymore.

Noah Kalina Takes Photos: The Man with the One Face

Do you still remember the crazy guy who photographed himself every single day for six years, including an incredibly versatile facial expression (we also like to call it the “Blue Steel”), and then turned it into a video that went around the world some time ago, was copied countless times and was ultimately even parodied by The Simpsons? Yes, no, maybe? Noah Kalina was the name of the gentleman from Brooklyn, blessed with dark circles under his eyes and a bit too little sunlight, who in no time became the new role model for all self-absorbed photographers and later had himself photographed with stars like the Black Eyed Peas, David Hasselhoff and Paris Hilton.

But the 29-year-old is capable of more than just holding his somewhat pale face into the lens and generating a questionable internet hype. On the side, he also shoots one or two really good photos of topless models, lounging beauties and hairy women who sprawl wide-legged across his studio floor while pulling on long utensils.

In terms of poster-like aesthetics, directness and a hint of overexposure, his works are hard to surpass and thus fit perfectly into the well-known style of the former Centerporter. You can find more from Mr. Kalina on his website and the corresponding Flickr account, and he is currently particularly fond of his Tumblr blog, which is running neck and neck with Terry’s Diary. Go, Noah, go Noah. Or something like that.

"Skins" Is Back: Effy’s Tragic Love

I was on my way to Munich when a young man sat down next to me at Berlin airport, looked provocatively at my laptop and then asked me: “How do you know ‘Skins’?” We then spent three whole hours talking about Tony’s relationship with Michelle, soaked in true love and sad lies, the incredibly tragic death of Chris, and the new generation around Effy, James and Freddie, who may be younger in their minds but are all the older in their hearts.

It hardly needs to be mentioned that “Skins” is the best series on this planet, far removed from all the Hollywood bling-bling, the slimy characters and a setting among the rich and beautiful that bursts at the seams with artificiality and unreality. The story about a group of teenage friends in Bristol who have to muddle through school, parties and sex is hard to beat in terms of authenticity, realism and closeness, yet it regularly sinks into magical, funny and absurd moments that make every character appear sympathetic and understood in their own way.

Tonight, with a one-week delay, the fourth season of the British hit series premieres on the London channel E4, and as announced, the tougher, darker and grayer sides will now be brought to the forefront, as the current trailer impressively shows. Who will Effy choose after her successful escape? Does the lesbian love story between Emily and Naomi stand a chance? And what role does the newly introduced Sophia play?

You can experience all this and much more tonight at the premiere, which will also be broadcast on Justin.tv at 11 p.m. German time. We here are excited about a worthy final season for this generation and hope that it won’t have quite such an open ending as last time, when we still didn’t really know whether Sid and Cassie ever met in New York. Or not.

It’s an iPad! Steve, You Are a Genius

If God’s own son had personally owned a company, then he most certainly would have chosen the one run by mastermind Steve Jobs. And that even though its name slightly mocks paradise. Apple not only has more followers willing to sacrifice themselves without much trouble than many a local religion, but whatever His Highness announces—and especially what remains unspoken—spreads through the world of tech disciples faster than a computer virus and is loved by vitamin-hungry followers while being more than feared by the competition.

As in previous years, forums, followers and freelance creatives knew only one topic today, and with all the pent-up curiosity about a product that Steve Jobs himself described as the most important thing he had ever made, it was clear even before today’s keynote: Whatever God’s true representative on Earth would present on the dark stage today, millions of designers, musicians and Starbucks visitors would gladly infect themselves with swine flu just to be allowed to buy it.

For over an hour now—and after a collapsed Twitter service—the greatest secret of modern times has been revealed, and thanks to the LSD junkie we finally know what we absolutely need without ever having suspected it before: the iPad! A mix between iPhone and MacBook that is supposed to once again revolutionize digital life and let us watch videos, show pictures and play games better, more comfortably and more easily than ever before. And at a price range that shouldn’t surprise veterans of the computer company: starting at 500 and going up to 830 dollars, depending on performance and storage size.

We, in any case, are impressed by so much creative freedom, which allows us to paint pictures by hand, read magazines with a fingertip and watch hardcore porn for ten hours straight. The only questions that really matter now are: How awesome is this thing really? Will you buy it? And can it be wiped clean without leaving any residue? But no matter what the answers may look like, we can all agree: You simply have to love Apple.

We’re Giving Away Tickets: Fettes Brot Live in Berlin

While their songs like “Emanuela,” “Schwule Mädchen” and “Bettina, zieh dir bitte etwas an” are still spinning around in our heads and prompting spontaneous sing-alongs at graduation parties and drinking binges, the three guys from Fettes Brot are once again setting off at the beginning of the year to the major concert halls of the native republic to finally make their fans completely happy live on stage again. And where else would be the best place for the daredevils to celebrate the kickoff of their brand-new tour if not in our capital.

On February 24, the veterans of German hip-hop—Rektor Donz, König Boris and Schiffmeister—will appear as part of the T-Mobile Street Gigs at the venerable and listed Funkhaus on Nalepastraße, which in the days of the Berlin Wall was home to the “Voice of the GDR,” Radio DDR 1 and Radio 2. And we are hereby giving away 1 x 2 tickets to this grand stage spectacle.

All you have to do to experience the three gifted Hamburgers live is answer the following question in the comments by February 3: What is your favorite Fettes Brot song and why? You can find the terms and conditions here, and as always the rule applies: The more off-the-wall the answers, the more fun for us—but anyone can win. And if Fortuna decides to mess with you and you’re not successful with us: On the homepage of the T-Mobile Street Gigs there are more of the coveted tickets to grab. Good luck!

Our Redhead of the Week: Cintia Dicker

The Dutch artist Bart Rouwenhorst is the self-proclaimed savior of redheads, as he organizes a world gathering of carrot-tops every year in autumn in Breda. Why does he do it? In his opinion, redheads are “something special,” “stand out from the crowd,” are “vulnerable,” yet often possess a “special strength of will.” On the other hand, they “get sunburned quickly and from childhood are used to being called ‘lighthouse.’” Around 4,000 copper heads have been flocking to our neighboring country since 2005, including, for example, the only three from all of Mexico. “Because he knows them all,” says Rouwenhorst. “They’re part of his family.”

Only a few countries away from the homeland of tacos, tortillas and drug wars lies the idyllic Brazil hidden in the heart of South America, from where our current redhead of the week originates. And the hot-blooded model Cintia Dicker has long since ceased to be an unknown face in the international fashion scene; after all, big names had already taken notice of the now 23-year-old back in 2004 through campaigns for Ann Taylor, Yves Saint Laurent and Dolce & Gabbana.

Since then, Cintia’s career has been on the rise. She has walked the runways of the world for Gucci, Matthew Williamson and Lanvin, among others, and with her carrot-colored hair has already graced various covers of Elle, Vogue and the Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Edition. Hats off to so much talent, beauty and success, and let’s hope she passes these traits on to a child with the same hair color—otherwise, according to scientists, redheads could be history in 90 years. And that would be terrible.

How Censorship Will Roll Over Us: AMY&PINK Will Die

The fat years are slowly but surely coming to an end, my dears. Gone are all the dripping wet sex, the legally protected swearwords and the bouncing nipples in the morning. Because what awaits us shadow warriors on the internet in the future not only makes the porn Horst next door’s blood freeze in his veins, it is a direct declaration of war on all those who love freedom, directness and truth and could, in the worst case, mean the acute death of all your favorite German websites. Including us.

As various internet circles such as Netzpolitik, the AK Zensur and Nerdcore report, the German government is currently discussing a state treaty that, under the guise of youth protection, intends to impose truly dreadful controls over the national internet. Among them are ideas such as categorizing all websites according to age ratings, making youth-endangering websites accessible only from 10 p.m. to 6 a.m., and holding content providers responsible for the—no matter how stupid—comments of their visitors. Without exception. Furthermore, international websites that do not comply with German youth protection laws are to be completely blocked.

If this list of horrors becomes reality, it would mean the greatest, most radical and most significant change in the German-speaking web and would censor, restrict or even extinguish many independent websites. Whether blogs like dragstripGirl, iHeartBerlin and Pimpettes, networks like Facebook, Tumblr and StudiVZ, or sites like VICE, SuicideGirls and LastNightsParty—they will be blocked, destroyed and banned. If we don’t do something about it.

You can see that something dreadful is looming on the horizon, something worth fighting against. Join together so that this idiotic idea by people who have no understanding of the internet, of digital life and of the free world never becomes reality. After all, this is about our freedom, our independence and our right to self-determination. Because if we keep quiet now, it will be 1984 faster than we can imagine…

Now It Gets Visual: Stalin & Chewbakka

Admittedly, sometimes we throw photos at your little eyes here that can hardly be surpassed in terms of perversity, disgust or brain rot. Recently we have even been accused of harming children with our visual selection, mocking youth protection laws and driving up subscriptions to BILD newspaper. Well, whatever. As long as Sylvana, Sarafina, Estefania, Calantha, Lauredana, Sarah Jane, Lavinia and Jeremy Pascal like it, we will of course do our best to skillfully keep the level high.

But of course these accusations are hardly to be surpassed in exaggeration, since in the evil, wide web, besides Chan4Chan, Flash glam trash! or our AMY&PINK Tumblr, there are many other sites that serve as true libraries of unreal, unbelievable and unhygienic graphics. Among them, for example, my new favorite sites Stalin & Chewbakka, Senseless Acts of Beauty and Maffashion, which each have something to contribute from all worlds of visual outpourings.

And because beautiful and exciting images in all variations, shapes and colors are something wonderful, we would like to introduce a new feature here at AMY&PINK that we will test out to see how it is received by you and by us. Starting today, you can also insert photos that are somewhere out there on the net into your delicious comments.

To properly test this new feature, we ask you to browse through the above-mentioned websites stuffed with optical orgasms and post your personal favorite image as a comment, along with a note explaining why and what you like about it. So, Jeremy Pascal, let’s get started!

[gallery]

WTF?! Vol. 12: Is the Red Power Ranger Gay?

Maybe it’s the bad weather. Or possibly the fact that the year has only just begun. Or you’re simply getting filthier month after month. Because what’s going on in the twelfth edition of “WTF?!” and the search queries through which you’ve recently landed on AMY&PINK via old acquaintances like Google, Yahoo! and Bing is almost an orgy of secondhand embarrassment and skillfully demonstrates what kind of disfigured society we currently have to vegetate in. Whereas back in the day you were still searching for Spongebob, ponies, and superheroes with toast as a head, today it’s all about the exposed genitalia of Emma Watson, Mischa Barton, and Lily Allen. Time for you to go to confession again, and what else you little piglets have been searching for on your eternal quest you can read now.

Hot naked cleaning ladies in a store. Palina Rojinski’s bra size. Stepping in shit with high heels. Mischa Barton’s pussy. Need something to fuck in Berlin. Lindsay Lohan’s pussy. Nora Tschirner’s breasts. Naked redheaded people. Tattooed tits. My boobs. Porn on air mattresses. Vomiting woman. Sex at the outdoor pool. My twin sister came in when I was naked. Fuck Emma Watson. My muff is gone. I hate couples. Lip balm with beer flavor. Kaya Scodelario naked in pictures. Hairy genitals. Yvonne Catterfeld naked. Ex-slut. Naughty Strullis. Comparison of tits. What is the meaning of Lady Gaga’s “Bad Romance”? Redheaded women fucking. Women in sneakers. Lily Cole is not pretty. Fur pussy. Fine girls. My sister naked.

Lily Allen naked. Skinny girls with pierced breasts. Young and naked bathing. Really disgusting stuff. Sexy little sister. Wanna fuck? Looking at duck masks. What kinds of vagina types are there? Anorexic naked women. The ugliest pussies. Nora Tschirner has small breasts. Fucking with shaved pubic hair. Redheaded vaginas. Fat Saras. Palina Rojinski’s feet. Bong in pussy. Sex slut in action. You have to put the walnut into the walnut hole. Penis on ProSieben. My longing is sex with Hannah. Photos of wide vaginas. Emma Watson’s pubic hair. I have sinned. Is the Red Power Ranger gay? Naked friendship. Anna lying naked in the grass. Man bleeding during sex. Why do I freak out when my partner just drinks one beer? Pizza with extra cheese. How do you puff without it being noticeable?

Ellie Goulding: The Miracle from England

Blonde, young, and now also famous: Ellie Goulding is a real lucky girl. In September of last year, the British songwriter signed a record deal with Polydor, released her first single “Under the Sheets” on the indie label Neon Gold Records, and shortly thereafter became the newcomer on the island crowned by its entertaining royal family. Most recently, the 23-year-old toured with last year’s pop sensation Little Boots, but the musical talent from Hereford has much bigger plans.

After all, she didn’t teach herself to play guitar and write and warble her own folk songs as a delicate teenager for nothing. Once she fell under the spell of electronic music and discovered Vincent Frank via MySpace, she promptly moved to West London with one goal in mind: to become a star!

And she is now within reach of that dream, and the machinery to make it happen is already in full swing. In February her next single “Starry Eyed” will be released, followed by her debut album “Lights” the month after, and in early April her solo tour through the sleepy villages of Great Britain begins. We’re curious to see when good old Germany will take notice of the creative blonde and are already making a note of her name.

Petra Collins and Laura-Lynn Petrick: Fatale Femmes

America. A country full of contrasts, overweight people, and sexual poles. While on the supposed bright side soldiers are already being arrested because a photo album sent by their mother contains a little girl in a bikini, or entire television shows are broadcast with delay because a nipple might slip out from somewhere, on the side of darkness, night, and parties another generation of artists is growing and thriving who don’t care about social constraints, dusty morals, or even purchased censorship.

And part of this scene in the land of unlimited possibilities (and occasionally Canada) are also Petra Collins and Laura-Lynn Petrick, who roam around together under the label Fatale Femmes with their cameras and skillfully capture everything that probably wouldn’t please the Mormons. Or maybe it would. Breasts, forests, red glasses. Thongs, upside-down crosses, and lots of dirt. It’s the combination that does it.

And the two are not only active in the visual arts but have also made a name for themselves through various other projects in the land of cheeseburgers, marshmallows, and amusement parks. For example, they write for the Rebelle Zine, blog for the Garbage Museum, and can even be found on Lookbook. Creative people, then, who make the internet a little more beautiful with their presence. And we all like creative young ladies, after all.

[gallery]

Victoria's Secret's Topless Bikini: Something’s Hanging Out!

Our beloved Berlin has been buried under a thick, gray, concrete-like blanket of clouds for over two weeks, plunging the residents of the capital into depressive anxieties, causing their tense skin to pale Snow White–like, and catapulting the suicide rate steeply upward. How glad we are, therefore, about the newest piece of fabric from the house of Victoria’s Secret, which is meant to make men’s hearts and pants burst and is the freshest development in swimwear: the topless bikini!

Perhaps the associated advertising agency should have chosen a slightly better-endowed model instead of relying on the rather small-breasted Lindsay Ellingson to demonstrate the controversial advantages of the mutated black strip. But if the American fashion empire has its way, already this summer the hottest of the hot will be jumping around on northern beaches with an almost continuous tan. Let’s hope that a contract is signed at purchase obligating the owners of the “Topless Bikini” to be totally sexy—and to stay that way. Otherwise, the whole thing looks quite different.

But now to you, dear top models and their well-built and toned partners: Would you buy / give away / eat this wonder of haute couture for an incredibly cheap 68 US dollars and run up and down the nearest beach in it? We should almost set a reward for those brave enough to do so, or for whom the castrated bikini would even count as greater coverage of their nakedness. And no matter what we and you think of it: At least this news brings a little sunshine straight into our gray, cold hearts.

Our Redhead of the Week: Anna Lutoskin

In our popular (and only launched a week ago) series about the redheads of the week, we dedicate ourselves to perhaps the most disadvantaged species on our small planet. These poor creatures are forced to get by with up to 30,000 fewer hairs than the average person, would be a blessing for the German army thanks to their reduced sensitivity to pain, and have to be put particularly strongly under anesthesia during upcoming surgical procedures. And to significantly ease their world-weariness, in addition to their increased vitamin D production and a heap of pheomelanin, here comes the next portrait of one of their most outstanding members.

Born in April 1990 in Budapest, Anna Lutoskin, with her strawberry cap of hair and matching green-blue shimmering eyes, quite unjustly belongs among the perhaps not yet very well-known names in the fashion business. Her face has already appeared in Glamour, Ozon, and L’Edito, and in recent times she has been seen on the international stage for Katti Zoob, Pull and Bear, and Rosa Clara, among others.

That can’t yet be described as the greatest career in the history of the circus of the beautiful and the slim, but we’re simply hoping that the 19-year-old will soon manage to break through the tipping point somewhere between “known” and “outstanding,” and that the Hungarian model will then get the opportunity to play with the big names—she would certainly deserve it.

[gallery]

In Our Own Interest: No Money, No Boobs

Thanks to your almost eerily fantastic support, AMY&PINK is growing and thriving faster than we can look. Every day masses of the curious land on our small island of abnormal perversions and devour everything we have to say about red-haired supermodels, musical outpourings, and shitty parties like a swarm of locusts. And of course, it’s not just pubescent Uwe, fashion-obsessed Maike, and construction worker Heinz from next door taking a peek—people from the business world have also become aware of us.

Because where relatively many people gather, advertising is never far away. Individual marketing strategies, contests, purchases of banner space. We constantly receive inquiries from companies, labels, and brands that somehow want to capitalize on this site, and we’re not entirely opposed to that, since without the advertising around us we wouldn’t exist in this form at all. And you know: If anyone is commercial—it’s us.

So for all business customers and those who want to become one, we’ve put together a Media Kit in which we have clearly and systematically listed all prices, advertising formats available with us, and general guidelines, so that a number of misunderstandings can be ruled out from the outset for both sides. We are, of course, never opposed to advertising that targets our audience and from which our readers can expect added value. At this point we would also like to thank all our advertising partners and the associated agencies for the friendly cooperation and look forward to a successful 2010 for everyone involved.

Hot Shit That Shortens Life: Death Looks Good on You

The cruel truth is that life is unfair, seems far too harsh, and constantly causes nothing but pain. Crushing heartbreak, unfulfilled dreams, false expectations... and what for? Only to eventually croak—battered, frail, and physically and mentally completely finished. So why not beat fate to the punch and manually hit the reset button? But this plan needs to be well thought out and, as a conclusion, mustn’t simply involve ordinary suicide. That would be cowardly, only cause sorrow and trouble, and in the end you might even drive straight to hell. These days there are far more creative ways to bite the lush green grass—and today we present the five most beautiful of them.

Pozzing: Anyone who carries a deadly disease such as AIDS and deliberately infects people at random can be thrown in prison for a long time. At least as long as they have left. But there are also people who intentionally allow themselves to be infected with a mortal virus—what in technical jargon is called “pozzing.” It derives from “positive” and is strange—but that’s how it is. The reasons can be varied. To finally escape the fear of unknowingly becoming infected at some point, for example. To be able to have unprotected sex with a positive partner. Or simply to wipe out humanity. And no matter how abnormal that may be: it gets you into the grave faster than you can blink and therefore fits wonderfully on this list.

The Feeders: You’re female, boring, and nobody can stand you? Then get yourself a feeder as a life partner. He stuffs you every minute with delicious ice cream, chicken, and cookies, massages your plump calves while you spend the whole day in front of talk, reality, and courtroom shows, and occasionally takes photos of you in your underwear that he uploads to the internet to show his buddies how fat, round, and lush you’ve already become. Sounds like heaven on earth to you? Then head straight to the nearest McDonald’s / KFC / Pizza Hut: that’s where the fat hunters like to hang out. And you’ll get a little fake love thrown in on top. Awesome.

The Law: Police officers, lawyers, and judges are constantly on the lookout for people whose lives they can ruin. So why not play cheeky rascal for once and, with a little imagination, pull one over on them? Head to New York—because there it is punishable by death to jump off a tall building. So far, no suicide has ever been arrested alive after jumping from the 102nd floor of the Empire State Building, but at least afterward in the afterlife you can brag about having thoroughly screwed over that absolutely annoying and illogical legal system.

Final Destination: Since certain films are based on true events and ancient Aztec legends, we all know: once the Grim Reaper has you on his hook, it’s hard to get off. Michael Anderson Godwin, for example, was sentenced to death in the electric chair for double murder. His sentence was later commuted to life imprisonment, but a few months afterward he was killed by electric shock while sitting on a metal toilet, attempting to repair the television in his cell. That’s what you call irony of fate.

Darwin Awards: And if absolutely nothing else helps, if you don’t want to infect yourself with AIDS or let some perverts stuff you full, then there’s only one option left: manually croak. But even that can be staged so creatively that at least posthumously you can snag one of the coveted Darwin Awards. As is well known, they go to people who have catapulted themselves into the shadow world in particularly idiotic ways. The robber who tries to shoot the police behind him during his escape and instead shoots himself in the face. The man who thought he was Jesus and broke his neck attempting to walk across the water in his bathtub. Or a driver who wanted to “relieve himself” during a traffic jam and jumped over a guardrail—unfortunately he happened to be on a bridge.

You see, it’s not that easy to rid yourself of this torment called life, but we’ve given all the emos, goths, and pseudo-vampires enough tips here on how to deal kindly with the Grim Reaper and his merry friends. And if you’re too lazy and depressed to croak, then we can’t help you either. In that sense: break a leg.

Photos by David Titlow: Kill Ugly Pop

Honestly? In my small mind, photographers only truly deserve that title once they press the style, the sex, and the atmosphere of an entire distant yet intimately close world onto their images—when their work bristles with a mixture of grime, gloss, and bold display, and when each of their models seems like a small icon in their own right. Because what are photographs for, if not to tear away our dull thoughts and send us on a journey bursting with reality, fantasy, and memory?

And exactly that kind of visual artist is the Brit David Titlow, who not only owns a rather attractive website but also delivers such killer work that he has already shot for Vice, 125 Magazine, and Elle Girl, among others. Which is hardly surprising, given this extraordinary talent. He captures his very personal impressions of the world on his blog Kill Ugly Pop or simply tweets them out into the ether. Not bad.

[gallery]]]

I’m Casper, the Friendly Ghost:

American director, writer, and artist Larry Clark uses drug-addicted teenagers fucking each other, half-naked alcoholics attending grimy underground parties, and scenes of brutal violence among these often neglected social groups for his movies, photographs, and related works. In other words: He’s one of my favorite creative minds.

Larry Clark’s debut film, Kids, profoundly impacted both myself and other members of the Millennial demographic during the 1990s. It makes almost any other portrait of American adolescence look like The Picture of Dorian Gray, Janet Maslin wrote of the unrated movie in her review for The New York Times.

When I was about thirteen years old, I first encountered the anti-fairy tale of New York teenagers Telly, Casper, Jennie, and Ruby, who seemingly have no other purpose in their aimless lives than to drink, do cocaine, and humping the shit out of their friends, on Swiss television, late at night.

The events that unfold in this narrative deeply affected me and shocked me to the core, leaving my childhood behind when the credits finally rolled. AIDS, violence, and rape entered into my small, innocent child’s soul, and I have to admit: Yes, Larry Clark screwed me over and deflowered me in the same breath. It hurt like hell—and it still does.

Even today, some quotes, scenes, and faces haunt me and have shaped my life in a rather unsavory way. Like the man without legs singing his plea in the subway car, Chloé Sevigny being raped by Justin Pierce on the couch while intoxicated, which triggered a fetish for white socks in me, and how Leo Fitzpatrick infected both Sarah Henderson and Yakira Peguero with HIV.

Kids became a banned phenomenon in many countries in the mid-90s but gradually transformed into a critically acclaimed cult classic showered with awards, recognition, and respect. For me personally, the movie will always remain my first time. Thank you, Larry, you damn jerk.

.

Hot Shit on the Internet: We’re Even Cooler Now

You know us: we love grabbing a loud, disturbing, or sexy topic, retreating with it to a room in an hourly hotel, and then doing with it what needs to be done: writing it into the ground. With everything that goes along with it. Nouns, adjectives, verbs and all that stuff. However, there’s an organizational problem that dear God has imposed on us: there’s constantly too much awesome shit happening on the internet—stuff you can’t really say much about because it’s simply a “look-at-it-listen-to-it-or-you-haven’t-lived” banger, stuff that others have already written the perfect article about, or we simply don’t have time to pounce on it as well because we’re still busy with the cigarette after the previous one.

And that’s why we ran through the Libyan desert, fought our way through the Indian jungle, and stuffed ourselves at little Kevin’s birthday party to bring back an old acquaintance, dress it up anew, and then chase it through the somewhat superfluous right-hand sidebar. Ladies and gentlemen, it was once green, then it was blue, and now it has returned in pink on white: our Trend Bar!

Holy shit, how we missed it. And since nobody was reading the last five unrelated comments anyway, and the newest articles appearing twice on the homepage didn’t really make sense, the completely revamped Trend Bar is your live ticker for current events.

Fresh music, photographers so good you’ll want to amputate something, and the latest achievements of the Catholic Church: just like in the big articles, here you’ll only get the most potent load of hot shit. And we’re not just talking—you wouldn’t expect anything else from us. That makes AMY&PINK more current, sharper, and even more irresistible than ever before. And all of it just for you.

The Cabinet of Dr. Parnassus: Sympathy For The Hanged Man

It has now been almost two years since actor Heath Ledger was torn from us by an overdose of medication and, not least because of his role as the Joker in “The Dark Knight,” became immortal. As is well known, before his sudden death the Australian—famous from films such as “10 Things I Hate About You,” “The Brothers Grimm,” and “Brokeback Mountain”—was in the middle of shooting Terry Gilliam’s film “The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus,” which has been showing in German cinemas since last week. Sandra and I set out in search of a cobbled-together, uneven story awkwardly forced into shape, and instead were surprised by a visually stunning and imposing epic that serves as a worthy finale to Heath Ledger’s film career.

The enchanting story of Dr. Parnassus’ homeless cabinet of illusions and his colorful companions sweeps its incredulous visitors away from the very first minute, guaranteeing a vibrantly colorful adventure full of secrets, mysteries, and twists, and skillfully integrating the sudden appearances of faces like Johnny Depp, Colin Farrell, and Jude Law into its imagination-soaked world. Even the Knight of Passion is honored in a brief sequence.

Despite—or perhaps because of—the death of its original star, Terry Gilliam has managed to create a film that, thanks to the paternal Christopher Plummer, the absurd Verne Troyer, and a breathtakingly hot Lily Cole, will remain a timeless masterpiece. And with that, I have now used up all the positive words I had in me for this year on a single film and will hate everything else for the next 352 days. Except maybe “Alice in Wonderland.”

Our Redhead of the Week: Nataliya Pirozhkova

Pumuckl was one, Ronja the Robber’s Daughter too, and Pippi Longstocking of course. Add to that the Sams, Red Zora, and an Anne who nowadays only jumps around on the children’s channel. But take note: redheads belong to a special, endangered species. In the Middle Ages, labeled witches and creatures of hell, they were tied to the stake and drowned without many questions asked; our favorite comedian Adolf Hitler feared them so much that, out of anxiety about their “degenerate offspring,” he once outright banned marriage between two redheads; and genetically disadvantaged by nature to such an extent that the blazing sun can set their copper roofs aflame in no time at all, carrot tops today live a dreary existence as a mere two percent of the population among all the blondes and brunettes. And they are becoming fewer and fewer. High time to present the most outstanding among them while they are still out there hopping around.

Joining us for the first time and therefore not to be voted for again: 21-year-old top model and one of my favorite faces on this planet, Nataliya Pirozhkova. The Ukrainian beauty has floated down the runways of the world for Elie Saab, Naeem Khan, and Strenesse, posed for photo spreads in Vanity Fair, Glamour, and Harper's Bazaar, and has already modeled for Pimkie, Satellite Paris, and L'Oreal. No wonder—her fiery hair and blue eyes are predestined to be made accessible to the wider public—and that’s exactly what we’re doing now.

[gallery]

Feet: Hot or Gross? Lick My Bubble Toes

As a little brat, I found it more disturbing than sexually arousing when old geezers placed ads in the local newspaper calling on girls of all ages to walk around barefoot in the street and then let them lick their feet. Or in sweaty sneakers. For payment, of course. With every word and every line my eyes grew wider in disbelief and my mouth hung further open. While others were getting erections from it, I hurled the big printed pages against the wall with full force and ran screaming out of the house. That was the end of my pseudo-erotic experience with natural standing devices—for the time being.

Opinions are divided when it comes to feet. For some they are the annoying evil down below, dirty, grimy, constantly surrounded by that very particular chili-cheese-nugget smell; for others they are gliding gold on earth, an underestimated beauty, even more arousing than all vaginas, breasts, and penises combined. King Ludwig I, for example, is said to have been a great foot fetishist and even had the dancer Lola Montez’s stompers immortalized in marble; Quentin Tarantino openly admits his fondness for women’s feet and processes his lust in films like “Pulp Fiction”; and the entire Chinese people were so keen on small, delicate ones that they preferred to break the feet of their girls and bandage them according to their beauty ideal so that, from that bloody mash, the perfect “lotus foot” would eventually grow.

And while nowadays I can sometimes get turned on by girls in sexy sneakers, dirty Chucks, or white socks on Christian holidays, the eternal question naturally arises: just how hot are these far-removed second hands really? Are foot lovers only men anyway, and how far is this medically not even recognized fetishism allowed to go? And while you come up with some clever answers, I’ll go have a few toes licked. Just for fun.

The Ten Hottest Porn Stars: The Mouthfuls

Nowadays nothing seems harder for people than finding jobs that match their qualifications and expectations, impressing through school degrees and further training, and with the help of apprenticeships and studies eventually ending up in a small open-plan office, slowly dying inside thanks to regulated working hours, and receiving only a few lousy bucks plus holiday bonuses and Christmas pay. So why even bother struggling? That there is a much easier way to cash in quickly is proven on countless websites, videotapes, and trade fairs by certain professionals, amateurs, and spectators. Because in order not to let your bank account completely wither away during the financial crisis, all you need these days are the following: primary and secondary sexual organs. And we’re now presenting the ten girls who handle their assets best.

Sasha Grey

The prodigy and shooting star of the American porn scene was barely 18 when she entered the business and quickly achieved fame through memorable titles such as “I Wanna Bang Your Sister,” “Masturbation Nation 3,” and “Sasha Grey's Anatomy.” Sasha has long since shed the shackles of a monotonous sex doll. She models, makes music, and even appears in major motion pictures, most recently in last year’s release “The Girlfriend Experience” by Steven Soderbergh. Sasha lives in an open relationship with her personal photographer Ian Cinnamon.

Faye Reagan

The probably most famous redhead in the circus of staged orgasms is Faye Reagan, 21 years old, who stepped into the spotlight thanks to a scene in the not-so-Christian film “The Gauntlet 3,” in which she endured a mixed-race orgy with 18 men. But not only the imaginary soccer team plus coach and substitutes left Faye happy on set—the stressed cleaning lady’s life was also made easier by the young talent, as she skillfully stored all the ejaculate involved in that scene in her stomach. Yummy, yummy.

Charlotte Stokely

Charlotte knew she wanted to do something with pornography since she was a little girl, as she had always been very open about her sexuality. After graduating high school, her roommate introduced her to the horizontal trade, where she first produced pictures for the internet. She became known in 2006 with Eon McKais’s “Skater Girl Fever,” and later proved her skills in titles like “Lords of Doggie Style Town,” “The Da Vinci Load,” and “My Daughter's Fucking Blackzilla! 3.”

Nikki Rhodes

It’s time to cast the bad image of the lower-body thrillers in a better light: not only bad grades, a broken childhood, or evil acquaintances can pave a girl’s way into the porn industry. Nikki Rhodes, a 27-year-old redhead from California, was a straight-A student and slipped into the business as a makeup artist before others began slipping into her in various episodes. Not to be underestimated are “Night of the Giving Head,” “Nasty Girls Wide Open,” and the philosophically inclined “Fuck the World.”

Xochielt Sanchez

For many successful performers, the dark side of the internet with its nude galleries, fan forums, and pay sites can still be the springboard to a big career. The girl with probably the most unusual first name ever became known as “Trixie Teen” among the palm-wavers, later tried artistically infused photos on GodsGirls, and today prefers to run in front of Merlin Bronques’ camera on LastNightsParty. That’s one way to make a career. Or whatever you want to call it.

Lexi Belle

For many teenagers, having sex for the first time isn’t exactly easy. Confused and hyped up by Bravo, biology class, and the utopian stories of best friends, losing one’s virginity often becomes one of the creepiest moments of our lives. So it was for Lexi Belle, who began making love at 17 and used cling film for contraception. After films like “Sorry Daddy, Whitezilla Broke My Little Pussy!!!,” “Slam It! In a Slut,” and “White Chicks Gettin' Black Balled 15,” she probably knows better today.

Stoya

The now 23-year-old Stoya was quite a nerd even as a small child. At the tender age of three, with her mother’s help, she could already handle DOS; her Serbian father, who worked in the computer industry, introduced her to technology and everything around it. After later being expelled from the Delaware College of Art & Design due to authoritarian issues, she ended up in the alternative business of porn. Among her successes are “Razördolls,” “A Taste of Stoya,” and “Pirates II: Stagnetti's Revenge.”

Madison Young

Madison Young was also once a very good student. At the School for Creative and Performing Arts she attended theater class and graduated among the best of her year. In San Francisco she later joined a nonprofit theater group through which she made contacts in the porn industry. After films like “Stuffed, Spanked, and Squirted,” “Helpless Heroines in Double Jeopardy!,” and the “Expert Guide to Sensual Bondage,” Madison now travels the world as a sex educator, writer, and founder of the Femina Potens Art Gallery.

Allie Sin

A first tip for aspiring porn actresses seems to be to get one or more memorable tattoos before the first shooting day in order to be easily recognized later in their careers. And Allie Sin, aka Stephanie Draheim, seems to have taken that to heart—her body is covered in stars, patterns, and comic figures. The alternative look seems to work. She appears not only as a sperm trap in countless videos, but also photographs bands, earns some money as a dancer at Mons Venus in Florida, and was once involved with Jeremiah Ruff of the band Phoenix Mourning.

Justine Joli

The red-haired Justine Joli is a true geek, into anime, Macs, and cartoons, and took ballet lessons for twelve years. She began her career in erotic films ten years ago after moving from Missouri to Los Angeles with her mother shortly before. Today she can proudly list titles such as “Personal Trainer Sluts,” “Naked Girls in Tight Trouble,” and “Atomic Vixens: Escape from the Valley of the Sluts.”

Everyday Is Like a Sunday:

As a protégé of the now-ostracized scandal photographer Terry Richardson, Keiichi Nitta, born in 1975 in the Japanese capital Tokyo, enjoyed what we might call an alternative education in the midst of a micro-universe shaped by sex, drugs, and rock music.

So it’s hardly surprising that, even after finishing his studies, he continued along the path of his mentor—combining his work with a Far Eastern flair and creating a skillful composition of perfectly shot photos, famous faces blessed with natural beauty, and the occasional exposed body part. I had the opportunity to speak with the master of Japanese breasts about his work, the birth of his son, and lots of sushi.

You are one of the best-known and most controversial photographers in Japan, but in fact everything began with Terry Richardson. How did the two of you meet, how did he inspire and influence you, and what is your relationship like today? I’ve always been interested in photography. Ever since I was a kid. I’m a big fan of many photographers, but I was especially impressed by Terry Richardson’s work. I was living in New York City and decided to try to work for Terry. But it wasn’t easy. I called his studio every day for a year, and eventually he gave in. I was incredibly happy and learned a lot from Terry—especially how to deal with the people I photographed. The atmosphere has to be fun, relaxed, and cheerful. Then everything works out. I owe Terry a lot, and we’re still very good friends today.

Was it difficult for you to set up your own studio, find models, and convince clients to work with you? After all, you didn’t know what the future would bring, or did things actually turn out to be quite easy for you? I was pretty nervous and excited when I moved back to Tokyo to open my own studio and all that. But I was very lucky—everything came together as if guided by fate, and after a short time everything was running smoothly.

You’ve already hosted many international stars like the Beastie Boys, Lady Gaga, and M.I.A., as well as Japanese celebrities like Kumi Koda, Aoi Miyazaki, and Yoko Maki in your studio. Which of the people you’ve worked with left the best memories, and which would you never want to see in front of your camera again? Whether I work with Japanese or international celebrities, I’ve always been very lucky with them. Each of them has an individual personality and brings their own atmosphere. And that’s what makes a shoot interesting.

Your trademark is the Polaroids you take of people you meet. When did that start, and do the amateur models enjoy being photographed that way and signing the picture afterward, or do you have to persuade them first? Well, that started when I was still working with Terry, and I simply continued doing it after opening my studio in Tokyo. So far I’ve never had any trouble taking the Polaroids. Most models and stars like the idea.

What inspires you—where do you get the ideas for your photos, and do you have any role models or muses? Actually, my inspiration varies from shoot to shoot. It always depends on the model, the fashion brand, and so on.

What have been the highlights of your life so far? Clearly the birth of my son Milo. That moment completely changed my life. And my 100K show was also a great achievement for me personally.

Did the birth of Milo change your work as well? And would you like him to become a photographer someday, or would you advise him against choosing the same profession as his father? Becoming a father hasn’t really changed my work itself. If he wants to become a photographer, I’d think that’s great. He can do whatever he wants. I just hope it’s something creative.

I bet you enjoy good food. What do you prefer: American or Japanese cuisine, and what is your favorite dish? Yeah, I love food! And of course Japanese dishes. I’m into tonkatsu, sushi, yakiniku—oh man, the list would go on forever. Over the past few years I’ve eaten huge amounts of sushi, especially at my favorite restaurant, Fukusushi. Since I live in Tokyo, I have the chance to eat the best sushi all the time.

You work with many nude models. Is the temptation strong to do forbidden things with them, or are exposed breasts in your studio as normal as morning coffee? Well, after working with Terry for so long, it’s really no big deal anymore.

You’ve visited Europe several times already. Did you like it? Yes, I’ve been here several times, but unfortunately never directly to Germany. I’d really love to visit. Europe in general is great. I truly hope I’ll have more shows and exhibitions there soon.

What kinds of music do you like, who are your favorite bands, and can you name a few strictly secret but great Japanese underground bands? I like many different kinds of music—rock, house, anything really. But I don’t follow the Japanese music scene that closely, so unfortunately I can’t really help you in that area.

What tips and tricks would you give a young aspiring photographer who wants to start a career like yours, and what are your goals for the future? My advice to young photographers is to find a role model they love, try to work with them, and strengthen their skills wherever possible by photographing everything around them—friends, animals, plants, whatever comes in front of their lens. As for myself, I definitely want to have more shows and exhibitions—and ideally all over the world.

.

Where The Rich Kids Come To Die: The Bonus Mixtape

With some songs it’s like with people. We may quickly label them as incompatible with our tastes, our search for redemption, and our lives at first glance and avoid them as fast as possible, but many of them only grow on us once we’ve experienced exciting adventures with them, wandered through deep valleys of fate, and screamed happiness into the sky from the sun deck. Then we never want to let them go, want to marry them, have children, grow old until the last note has long since faded away.

That’s exactly how we feel about the following tracks by, among others, Passion Pit, Regina Spektor, and Magneta Lane, which have wrapped themselves around our ears like an all-encompassing soundtrack while we were dying of heartbreak, rolling in the snow, and flying to the clouds in our thoughts. All united in the bonus mixtape “Where The Rich Kids Come To Die,” which brings the songs—beyond the obvious highlights—a little closer to your heart and offers you a mix of unpolished diamonds. Have fun flying along.

You Are in the Year 2010: Welcome to the Future

If you can read this, you probably survived New Year’s Eve and all its pitfalls with more or less all your fingers intact, are lazily nursing your hangover with greasy food and lots of clear water, and are gradually becoming aware that as of today you are in the future. In the year 2010. A number around which all sorts of fantastic myths, mysterious legends, and obscure prophecies revolve. And countless questions are buzzing through your head. What epic moments will take place this year? What unsolvable challenges will stand in your way over the next 365 days, and how many new potential sexual partners will you break your battered little heart on after devouring them body and soul and filling their hopeful eyes with expectation?

For Hannah, Caro, and me, it will be a year full of changes, since we’ll be finishing our apprenticeships and studies and sometime in the summer will be sitting out on the street before once again heading out into the big wide world. While my plans all revolve around earning my money as a freelancer after my training, my two girls will storm the fashion world, sleep their way up with renowned designers, and eventually run the two most famous—and then probably most competitive—fashion companies in the world. But they probably don’t know that exactly yet themselves.

At AMY&PINK, all sorts of mindfucks, internet blockbusters, and pornographic major events await you this year, of course. We promise you the brightest doorbells, the most hardcore Pokémon profiles, and the most tasteful urologist jokes. Which basically means that we ourselves don’t have the faintest idea what the hell is going to happen on our glossy page this year.

However, we’ve already reserved one or two dates in the calendar and will, among other things, report live from Pete Doherty’s spectacular death on the Eiffel Tower, offer you the world-exclusive first of four Emma Watson pornos “Bitchy Witchy Hermione Vol. 1” for free download, and in late autumn reveal that Lady Gaga actually consists of three sewn-together (and incredibly ugly) miniature pinschers who want to enslave humanity with their songs and usher in the era of quadrupeds. But all in good time.

For now, at the beginning of the year, we’ll settle for butt-tearing mixtapes, interviews with the most creative of creatives, and erotically tinged diary entries by redheads in Berlin—and of course we now want to know from you what’s going on in your year, which events you already love and fear, and what big plans you’ve forged for 2010. After all, we still need inspiration for our to-do lists. Welcome to the future!

The Most Pregnant Night of the Year: Screw New Year's Eve:

Every year the same crap: While children are starving in Africa, sea levels are rising, and whales are dying, we hipsters and losers concern ourselves with just one big question: Where, with whom, and in what mental and intoxicated state are we going to spend that brief moment between December 31 and January 1? At the city’s most pseudo-hip party, in bed with the loved one(s), rebelliously wasted at home with cookies and sparkling wine in front of the DVD player, binge-watching the end of the third season of Lost and properly shitting on all the commotion outside? It’s worse than Christmas.

Again and again, it has to be the best, the biggest, the most epic celebration in the universe—one we’ll remember all year long with a grin on our faces, one that gives us enough fuel to tick off all our resolutions, to-do lists, and promises, and that, through sheer high spirits, zest for life, and alcohol, lets us survive another year on this garbage-covered planet. But it never turns out that way.

Because when we look back at past New Year’s Eves, we find ourselves in a chain of overrated and shattered dreams. Nights that never lived up to our expectations and that we drove into the wall with such passionate perfection that it’s almost embarrassing. Whether we were stuck on the subway at midnight, arguing over house and home with an ex, or wishing we could burn down the most boring party ever: New Year’s Eve is and always will be shit.

So the best thing we can do is learn that these unholy expectations placed on an ordinary sunset are completely exaggerated, approach the new year relaxed, spontaneous, and going with the flow, and simply look forward to experiencing a nice, surprising, and possibly unique night with our people. And if not: screw it—the next night will surely come.

.

The Ultimate Review: Please Kiss My 2009 Away:

The year is finally drawing to a close and the new decade is, as we all know, practically already at the door. Even though, scientifically speaking, that’s not entirely correct—but screw it. We experienced a lot in these 365 days, laughed our lungs out, cried our eyes out, and released alcohol back into freedom from the front, the back, and above. We thank our readers for the successful year they gave us together here at AMY&PINK, hope you won’t celebrate a too devastating New Year’s Eve, and to mark the occasion we once again sat down with some of the greatest people who accompanied us this year in one way or another on our path to world fame, and together with them we look back on this mixed time. We’ll see each other again next year and wish you all a good flight. Don’t blow your hands off—at least not without taking a photo of it.

Filippa Smeds, Model

Best moment? That I got to meet many wonderful people, had loads of great jobs, met Peaches Geldof (laughs) and a very specific boy. Best album? The debut album by Name The Pets, because it’s a really awesome party album and Hanna is the coolest (and cutest) girl of all time. Worst moment? When my boyfriend and I broke up, my grandmother died, and one of my best friends turned into a complete idiot. And I think all of that happened within a single month. Best film? Definitely “The Boat That Rocked,” because it has the best soundtrack of all time.

More from Filippa can be found on her blog.

Nicholas Gazin, Artist

Best moment? I had a lot of highs and lows this year. For example, I worked with many well-known artists and musicians and conducted interviews. I DJed at the Vice Holiday Party while they were serving schnapps in a bottle that had my artwork on the label. But the best moment was my birthday this year, when a few sweet girls took me out to dinner at Ninja, where ninjas serve you delicious food and great schnapps. I got drunk and ate a delicious steak the size of a laptop and then passed out! It was great. I cried tears of joy.

Best song? I like a lot of songs. But many of them didn’t come out this year. I think my favorite song is either “My Business” by Flight, “Sometimes” by Spits Off Of Volume 4, or Cerebral Ballzy’s “Causing Havoc.” But the coolest songs, which aren’t exactly new, would probably be “Where Evil Grows” by The Poppy Family or “I’m Gonna Get You Yet” by The Dixie Cups.

Hottest girl? The girl with the greatest sex appeal is definitely this one. She is probably the hottest slut I’ve met in recent years. I could look at that photo until it turns into 3D. Like those “Magic Eye” books.

Best drink? My favorite drink this year remains Jameson and Ginger Ale. Pabst Blue Ribbon is watery and cheap. That makes it perfect for knocking back constantly on hot days. Guinness is still a favorite, but it increasingly feels like work when I really want to get smashed. Jameson and Ginger Ale taste as good as hell and you can drink one after another until you’re drunk enough to annoy everyone else and fall down the stairs with your pants down.

More from Nicholas can be found on his blog.

Alex Sim-Wise, Model

Best moment? When I played “Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2” on that huge television in the most beautiful hotel room I’ve ever been in. That was the best day of my life. Best game? “Arkham Asylum,” because it’s kind of silly but brilliantly made. And it looks phenomenal. Best song? My favorite song at the moment is “Pictures Of Me” by Elliott Smith, but they never last long for me anyway. Hottest person? Michael Cera. I think he’s adorable.

More from Alex can be found on her blog.

Hannah Maria Paffen, AMY&PINK Author

Best moment? As cheesy as it sounds: there were many “most beautiful moments” in 2009, but all of them were together with friends and family. Although, now that I think about it, the feeling after handing in an assignment also comes pretty close to a climax. Best album? “New Wave” by Against Me!. Not necessarily a current album, but it carried me through the last year of my life and cheered me up whenever the world went bananas! Best boob groper? My boyfriend’s, clearly (laughs).

Best drink? That would probably be a mix of Sambucca and the attempt to break the Melo-Desperados record. It didn’t quite work out, but on the carousel-car ride home I had fun saying “I’m going to puke,” even though it wasn’t true at all, and we stopped at least five times on the highway (which is way too dangerous). The joke was that the car belonged to my buddy and was only a few weeks old and he was panicking that I might ruin it—but two weeks later he himself puked against the passenger door (laughs).

Juliet Elliott, Athlete

Best moment? I think I had the most fun in 2009 when I went to New York with my best friends. We rode our bikes so much around the area—all day, every day. Up and down Manhattan and around Brooklyn. And of course we went out every night. We met some fantastic people and crammed as many good times as possible into five days. Another highlight was quitting my job at Warner Records. I’m finally free and away from office stress and fixed working hours. I now work for myself. Thank God. I’m so much happier now.

Best album? Often my favorite album of the year didn’t even come out in the current year, but still becomes my soundtrack. I think this year it’s “Sleep’s Holy Mountain.” My friend Jack, whom I hung out with in New York, came all the way from the USA to England to see them at All Tomorrow’s Parties, a festival in Minehead, because they hadn’t performed in years. You could say we were really excited. We rented a caravan with my friend Posy and a bunch of other people and saw Sleep play two gigs in two days. At one of them they played the entire album. On Sunday evening I sat at the side of the stage with my friends Sanna and Nina. It was great. At the festival I also met my boyfriend Steve. We only talked about our love for Sleep and became really good friends.

Best country for sports action? That’s a difficult question because I was lucky enough to ride my bike through many different countries this year. I had a fantastic time in Paris, but I’d probably say the USA. New York was crazy, but I was also in San Francisco and Portland, where I was lucky to both have a great time riding and meet lots of great people.

Worst accident? I was just about to say that I was so lucky to have made it through 2009 unharmed, but then I remembered that I split open my chin and burst my eardrum. I needed six stitches and couldn’t hear properly for weeks.

Juliet rides for Charge, Carhartt and Vans. More from her can be found on her blog.

Carolin Schütz, AMY&PINK Author

Best moment? My personal most beautiful moment actually refers to a period of time… after the breakup of my long-term relationship, when my girls showed me what true friendship is—how cheesy, but it’s true. Best album? My favorite album: “The ’59 Sound” by The Gaslight Anthem. Best boob groper? Definitely Marcel, when he imaginary—through the movie screen—groped Nora Tschirner’s surgically enhanced boobs at the premiere of “Zweiohrküken” in the presence of hundreds of people (laughs).

Best quote? Oh God, there are so many… So my personal highlight quote was definitely when an acquaintance who shall remain anonymous said to me: “Actually, you’re a pretty normal girl, except that you drink like a guy, look like Pumuckl, and talk more than I could read in my entire life. Want to sleep together?” But that wasn’t all. When the aspiring industrial engineer, for example, said to me completely dryly: “You look like you study ‘renewable energy’? Am I right?” Or when Ruth, sitting in the back seat of the car, said: “Caro shouldn’t drink anything alcoholic, she does even more stupid stuff when she’s sober… and we’ll all get home just fine without subway or commuter train.”

My neighbor standing in his doorway in his underwear: “Have you seen my washing machine?” Or the Apple Store salesman in Munich when asked whether they had brochures about MacBooks: “No, we don’t cut down trees.” Mike under the comments of my septum post: “Why isn’t it bleeding? When I accidentally stab myself in the nose with a fondue fork it always hurts like hell and bleeds. Why not with you?” And the commercially best sentence of the year, if not the decade. Hannah about AMY&PINK: “We’re just completely normal people who want to take over world domination. Like Pinky and the Brain, for example, or Hitler back then.”

Palina Rojinski, MTV Host

Best moment? I had many beautiful moments. Sometimes the small, unexpected ones are the most beautiful. Shakira asked me where my wonderful earrings were from and I replied with a smile: “H&M, three euros!” She then said: “Cool, do they still have them?” Best album? “Rules” by The Whitest Boy Alive. It played at home, in the car and on my iPod on repeat! It’s so beautifully light and yet energizing! Best film? “Slumdog Millionaire.” A moving, colorful, modern fairy tale. I couldn’t sit still for a single second. My emotions rode a carousel with me for two hours. Best drink? Vodka soda with lemon or lime. Because it’s fresh, fizzy, vital—and gets you hammered.

The photo is by Katja Hentschel and more from Palina can be found on Twitter.

Marcel Winatschek, AMY&PINK Author

Best moment? When I ran through the city completely drunk with my camera and asked random people ridiculous questions. The fact that I didn’t get punched in the face is basically a miracle. Best film? I actually have to say it was “Avatar.” This bloated epic bursting with special effects and a positive message. But maybe I just found “Michelle Rodriguez” so hot, even—or especially—because she always reminds me a lot of Sara. Best album? “Two Suns” by Bat For Lashes. No big surprise, but “Daniel” will be the song of the decade, if not the millennium. The best thing about 2009? That it’s over.

.

Photos by Tommy Petroni: The Boy and His Camera:

What happens when you give underage schoolchildren any kind of electronic device (preferably a digital camera, cell phone, or iPhone) that gives them the magical ability to stop time and everything around them and capture all the events, beauty, and wonders of the world forever in digital or analog form? Exactly: they passionately beat up their classmates, set fire to little kittens, and rape their teachers. Without, of course, missing the opportunity to photograph everything in detail and display it to the whole world on Flickr / SchülerVZ / 4Chan.

Not so for a certain 15-year-old Tommy Petroni from our and Homer Simpson's favorite country, the US and A. He knows how to squeeze the magic out of his Minolta Maxxum 7000 and Nikon D40, photographing his siblings, friends, and surroundings with these special colors and inexplicable uniqueness, then uploading his work to his Flickr account. And what can we learn from this? Schools should offer more photography courses again. That way, at least the beatings, abuse, and rapes will be photographed in high quality.

.

The Ultimate Holiday Game: Lil’ Amy Celebrates Christmas:

Our Lil’ Amy is already as excited as Pummel the chubby bumblebee for Christmas Eve, the gifts delivered by Beate Uhse and the Orion mail-order company, and the reunion with her dearest friends Waldo, the magical dildo, and Mort, the permanently depressed zombie bride. It’s going to be a blast. With all kinds of party packages, living presents, and magical punch. And so that you don’t look completely stupid despite the family visit, the annoying relatives, and one or two crappy presents, here and now you get the ultimate game for Christmas Eve and everyone can join in. Just grab a pen and paper, read through the points below with pleasure, and then try to beat the high score. In this spirit: Merry Christmas and may the best Grinch win!

The Christmas Dog: “Little Bello has of course earned something absolutely special on Christmas Eve as well. For example, some special dog chocolate. After all, he too knows how to appreciate this magical occasion.” Like hell he does. The drooling creature is simply wondering why he has to chew on disgusting brown stuff instead of slobbering into his usual mash of chicken corns and pork bones. +200 points if you fill him up with punch and he then vomits all over Grandma’s expensive carpet every 10 minutes. -500 points if you wake up naked the next morning with him in your arms in the bathtub.

-->

The Hot Cousin: Holy shit, where has this hot piece been hiding all year — in the sexy-boobs factory? And suddenly she’s standing right in front of you and the Christmas tree in your pants is suddenly giving the one in the living room some serious competition. +400 points if it turns out you’re not actually blood-related and you lovebirds fool around in the attic. -200 points if you don’t give a damn whether you’re related or not.

The Cheap Christmas Tree: It’s standing in the corner, no longer quite green, more brown already. With gaps and holes and decorated with cheap ornaments, it is your duty as a Greenpeace activist to put an end to this misery. +300 points if you set the needle-covered heap on fire and blame it on your little brother. -200 points if you catch fire yourself.

The Drunk Uncle: Uncle Ludwig is a pig before the Lord. He’s already drunk before he even arrives, pees into the potato salad during the gift exchange, and then tries to grab you between the legs as thanks for his 10-euro Karstadt voucher. No matter what gender you are. +500 points if you manage to get him to climb naked onto the roof and stay there all evening. -300 points if he snatches the hot cousin right from under your nose.

-->

Your Little Brother: This little piece of shit got a brand-new PlayStation 3 for the holidays, while you have to be happy with Grandma’s self-knitted socks and a few bars of chocolate. And what does the second spawn of your parents do? Instead of appreciating the HD graphics, the awesome games, and the new design, he prefers to play with the packaging. +250 points if you lock him in the box, seal it up tightly with tape, and have him shipped by air freight to Timbuktu. -400 points if he comes back as a stone-rich pimp.

The Incontinent Grandma: Because she’s so excited that the whole family is finally together again, the roast duck is fragrantly cooking in the oven, and the snow is falling so beautifully, your grandma has already wet herself shortly after the first guests arrived — without even noticing. +300 points if you manage to have her use it to extinguish the burning Christmas tree. -500 points if you wet yourself out of excitement.

Bonus Points: +100 points if you make it snow inside the house as well. -200 points if even your grandma forgot to put something under the tree for you. +150 points if you desperately wanted SpongeBob bed sheets — and actually get them. -300 points if nobody thought it was a joke. +400 points if you manage to build a functional reindeer sleigh out of the neighbor’s cats. +200 points if you get so wasted that you experience an X-mas adventure with Mr. Hankey. -500 points if you simply end up with your head in the toilet.

.

Stars Are Doing It with Vice and Vodafone: A Heroic Christmas Surprise:

Our all-time favorite magazine VICE and the exceedingly likable, fox-red “Generation Upload” buzzword cannon Vodafone have teamed up for a joint project and set out in search of people who clearly count among the true heroes of the moment. And in times of economic crisis, global warming, and environmental disasters, these are not firefighters, nurses, or financial advisors, but—who would have thought—Lily Allen, La Roux, and Peaches. Which is absolutely the right choice.

So now all kinds of international stars are bustling about on the new platform Vodafone 360, where we can voyeuristically observe them during various exciting activities. Santigold, for example, tries out something completely different, while Simian Mobile Disco grant us a behind-the-scenes look at their new video with Saam. And Club Zonder Filter fight their way through the coffee shops of Amsterdam together with the funniest language in the world. So there’s something for every taste; some musicians are yet to be unlocked, and somewhere in the depths of this new, semi-red world, you can also find us from AMY&PINK. We don’t actually know where exactly, so let us know when you’ve managed to find us.

.

Hail to the Winners: AMY&PINK Awards 2009:

There are more than enough blogs in this world. We think so. The restroom doors of the internet are scribbled full of all sorts of nonsense, deceitful drivel, and idiotic details about shopping trips, TV series, and pseudo-love. We demand: enough of it! And so that you don’t grant every piece of digital garbage from elementary school kids, welfare recipients, and sailing sluts free admission into your little brains, we hereby ceremoniously present the winners of this year’s AMY&PINK Awards 2009, where you don’t have to worry at all about qualitative, perfectly researched, and error-free articles. And if you do, at least there are boobs as compensation.

Man of the Year Award: Die Gefuehlskonserve

A certain Mr. Deef Pirmasens from Gefuehlskonserve is already an old and welcome dog, both in the digital and in the analog world, and he’s still got it. He’s a passionate gamer, lives in beautiful Munich, and reads like there’s no tomorrow—on podcasts, at events, or simply by himself alone in the bathtub. And that much passion deserves the “Man of the Year Award.” Let’s hope he never runs out of words.

Girl of the Year Award: NESNES.DE

The somewhat crazy Turkish girl Neslisah writes on NESNES.DE about music, photography, and her perhaps not entirely voluntary stay in Istanbul, claims to be a singer, actress, and model, and is incidentally the boss of her global corporation “NESNES Company.” Who could possibly resist such a successful power woman? And so we are hereby sending her the “Girl of the Year Award” across the Bosporus.

Big Mouth Award: Hasencore

We could now allow ourselves an extensive psychological assessment of Thilo from Hasencore. That he drinks too much, for example. That he’s addicted to pornography. And that he’s still hung up on his ex-girlfriend and pseudo-coauthor Liz. But she was a cutie. Nevertheless, the overall package churns out one heap of verbal mush after another: sex, boobs, everyday worries. And with this (very similar to us) mixture, he hereby receives the coveted “Big Mouth Award.”

Sex Sells Award: Pimpettes

Let’s make one thing clear right away: compared to the pussies from the Pimpettes, we are a Christian old men’s club with coffee and a stroll by the lake. Ines, Kaethe, Tanja, Ina, Kati, Ginette, and Marion all have a black bar in front of their faces and blog semi-anonymously about everything the Pope would not approve of: rows of bare breasts, fashion for pussies, and gynecologist kits for home use. The amount of filthy stuff out there is unbelievable. In this sense: have fun with the “Sex Sells Award”—and keep on kicking Christianity in the butt.

Best Unique Design Award: C33

The Hauck family must have been blessed with an extra portion of creativity upon settling on Earth. While our esteemed Hotzen regularly blogs about design, photography, and visual art, his big brother Alex has also caught the fever and, on C33, publishes the most beautiful music videos, exhibitions, and pseudo-moldy breads in large-format posts—thereby more than earning the “Best Unique Design Award.”

Sweet ‘n’ Cute Award: The Fucking Fucks

We’ll say it openly—there’s no point in secrecy and it would have come out eventually: we are in love. And indeed with the two girls Woxy and Laura from THEFUCKINGFUCKS, who charmingly bring us closer to the big wide world of fashion, look stunning while doing so, and undoubtedly deserve the “Sweet ‘n’ Cute Award.” Congratulations.

Best Fashion Award: Zauberhafte Elv

Berlin is known as the new and old capital of the international fashion circus, and while 12-year-old brats take photos of themselves in their Snoopy panties and upload them to Funpic, the Zauberhafte Elv convinces us with clever ideas, daring fashion experiments, and a spark of magic to present her with the “Best Fashion Award.” The joy is great—and we’re heading right back to the panties pictures. Please do not disturb.

Best Picture Award: ♥ parti

Maria from ♥ parti knows how to appreciate good photography and collects everything on her Tumblr blog that is somehow beautiful, wicked, or funny—whether fashion, parties, or private bedroom shots. And because we could practically drown in the huge collection of amazing images, we’re awarding the “Best Picture Award” at this point. And please, more penis pictures, thanks.

Young Talent Award: Münchens Lieblingslied

That not only Berlin is blessed with pretty girls, but that Bavaria’s capital also has quite a few sexy faces to offer, is proven by the Curtiskids from Münchens Lieblingslied, for which the two students run through the blue-and-white streets, drag well-dressed bipeds with MP3 players in front of the camera, and also ask them about their favorite song. We find the idea and its execution so great that we are awarding the ladies the well-deserved Young Talent Award and hope they continue to bring plenty of great songs to light.

Old but Still Hot Special Award: Indigoidian

Our list of female bloggers we would like to spend a night with is long and filled with various explanations, but (since Sara is known to have a penis and therefore doesn’t count) it is led by Franzi. She is a sprightly 24 years old, lives somewhere in some backwater in northern Hesse, and types quotes, findings, and stories about all sorts of disgusting, revolting, and anti-virginal stuff into the keys for Indigoidian. We’ve already bought our tickets to the other end of Germany, packed up our collected sex toys, and scheduled our arrival in Franzi for tomorrow around 7 p.m. Photos to follow—and before it gets physical, we’ll also present her with the “Old but Still Hot Special Award.” Just for you, Franzi.

.

I Blame Coco feat. Robyn: Sting’s Daughter Raises Hell:

Let’s put it this way: Having well-known parents in the show and music business might not be such a bad thing if you’re aiming for a small career in those industries yourself. Apparently Sting’s daughter Eliot Pauline Sumner, a crisp 19 years old and better known by her nickname Coco, thought the same. She put together a small band and set out to make use—at least a little—of the paths her father had paved for her as a model, musician, and actress. And we’re not exactly going out on a limb when we say that you can somehow see who her progenitor is.

Together with Sweden’s export hit Robyn, the rock musician–blood-blessed Coco Sumner recorded the track “Cesar” with her band I Blame Coco, which will be released in January and will be featured on her upcoming album. The video for the single is definitely really awesome—let’s just hope that the singer, who was born in Italy, doesn’t turn out to be the international version of Jimi Blue. She’s already mastered his look, at least.

.

The Russian Woman of Dreams on Tour: Regina Spektor in Berlin:

The enchanting Regina Spektor visited the capital yesterday, and of course we couldn’t pass up the opportunity to hear the most beautiful, poppiest, and most heart-wrenching ballads of this decade live from the mouth of their creator. So we practically made a pilgrimage to Hermannplatz and, together with a mix of the social upper class and drunken construction workers, made our way into Huxley’s Neue Welt. There we first listened to the redhead Jenny Owen Youngs and her singing guitar before the Russian master herself took the stage. And she was magnificent.

Rarely have singers possessed such a magical presence. They don’t burst over you like a bombastic firework of effects, sex appeal, and sexy quips, only to disappear as quickly as they arrived; instead, they shine gently, steadily, and in an incredibly pleasant way from the stage. Which is not to say that Regina Spektor isn’t a loud person.

With her bombastic voice, sitting at the piano and accompanied by violin, cello, and drums, she belted out one catchy tune after another into the crowd, tirelessly switching back and forth between fast and slow pieces, and captivating the audience with songs about extinguished love, neighbors driven to distraction by her music, and women who are simply sluts. “Samson,” “Two Birds,” “On The Radio.” All the great tracks were there—we’re still thrilled.

.

New Heroes Are Needed: I Want to Be Super:

Envy, jealousy and greed are truly nasty traits. If our bald neighbor has a cool car, then we want an even better, faster and bluer one. Otto has a new cute, charismatic and well-educated girlfriend? We’ll grab one who’s far blonder, more anorexic and bigger-breasted. And fat Julia from the parallel class can roll her strawberry-red tongue in several directions? Suddenly we stand in front of our mirrors night after night, sucking and licking and pressing like crazy. Without success.

I personally am only rarely really down when someone owns something I’d like to have myself. Maybe if the asshole in front of me grabs the last sushi platter. If I have to settle for a small box of popcorn at the movies while the fat slob next to me sticks his flabby head into a butter-soaked jumbo bucket. Or if that sports student brings my girlfriend to climax — something I haven’t managed in months. Then I might get a little heated. But the worst is something I’d really like to have and for which I’d even commit genocide: having superpowers. And I would of course only use them for charitable purposes. Sure.

I want to be able to fly. And shit on people’s heads while doing it. Or look through walls. Just to see whether my neighbor really makes those terrifying noises during sex, or whether she and her lover are just regularly slaughtering kittens. Or best of all: stop time. That would probably be the greatest. No kidding.

If I were the master of the here and now, the past and the future, the tick and the tock, my life would become absolutely fantastic overnight. I could calmly shove a cactus up the ass of loudmouths, draw all over Osama bin Laden with a marker, and grab a few Wii games for free. Cheat on exams endlessly, start a travel company, leisurely shit on Mrs. Merkel’s desk. And take nude photos. Of random people on the street. Of you, for example. That would be fun. And you could only stop me with an even cooler superpower. Which one would you choose?

.

The Life of Sasha Grey: Pretty Porn Princess:

After all the long years in which bleached airheads with pumped-up tits, the charisma of a Barbie doll and the sexual authenticity of “Sachsen-Paule” drove the international porn industry to the brink of ruin and hordes of horny voyeurs were lost to self-service sites like YouPorn or Slutload, the old veterans of the business were already seeing doom for professional cumshots, unrestrained spotlight gangbangs and half-baked storylines involving plumbers, straw and stuffed pipes. Then a dark princess stepped out of the shadows in black Chucks, tore the clothes from her body and took the salvation of an entire industry into her own holes.

-->

Now 21 years old, Sasha Grey, aka Marina Ann Hantzis, hit the American sex industry like a rebellious bomb three years ago and, with her cheeky, direct and consistent style, picked up awards for films such as “Fuck Slaves,” “Face Invaders 4” and “I Wanna Bang Your Sister,” including best threesome, hottest oral sex and best group sex. After appearances in music videos, documentaries and talk shows, various covers for Vice, Les Inrocks and AVN, and attempts at launching her own music career, the Californian brat has long since established herself as a sex symbol of the alternative scene.

And we too love the newly crowned porn princess for finally bringing some fresh air into the dusty stereotypes of the established sex flicks, hope that she continues to show what she’s got in plenty of films like “Teenage Whores 2,” “Grand Theft Anal 11” and “Pop Goes the Weasel,” and would also like to point out a call by alt-porn legend Eon McKai, who is urgently looking for volunteers for a new project who would like to earn some money letting their natural urges run free with strangers in front of his camera. So, wouldn’t that be something for you?

.

The Thing with One-Night Stands: Hit It and Quit It:

Long-term relationships between two people are something wonderful. They wrap us smoothly in a cloak of blind trust, mental closeness and romantic artistry of living, warm everyone involved with a gently blazing fire of constant love and allow us to enjoy a high level of sexual pleasure where we can completely surrender to our partner. Because we know him and his body, know what he likes and what he doesn’t and where you’re allowed to stick your little willy — and where you’d better not.

But quite often we’d rather say screw all the constraints of an approaching partnership and, together with the next best Swedish student, the fitness trainer from the ghetto or the couple across the hall, devote ourselves to a night full of burning passion, nasty messes and lots of sore knees. Who cares whether the other person’s favorite food is spaghetti with salmon, whether their little sister has diabetes or whether the rent hasn’t been paid in three months. You delight in the big dick, the bouncing breasts and the shaved pubic area and feel good about it. At least until the next sunrise.

While men step out of the pigsty apartment onto the street the next morning with a triumphant smile, their female counterparts often display a mixture of powerlessness, guilt and the search for social constraints. Was this sex without love the right thing? Was I taken advantage of? And am I a slut now? Or is it normal nowadays that women also go hunting, look for walking penises for satisfaction and don’t care what outdated norms and a frightened male world think of women with a pulsating libido?

While here in Germany we still have to ask ourselves these dusty questions and thus restrict the expression of free physical love, at least the Australians make it easier for themselves. There, both boys and girls wear so-called Shag Bands, which differ in color and clearly express what you’re in the mood for: cuddling, screwing, or the full program just once. That leaves no room for misunderstandings. So then: pants down and off we go!

.

The Albums of the Year 2009: Glitter on the Ears:

The year, at least musically speaking, brought us many new love affairs, threw fresh artists into our lives and let us rediscover old acquaintances. Soon they powdered our ear canals with passionate songs, daring lyrics and flashy performances, leaving us with one or two lifetime anthems. So let us take the approaching end of 2009 as an opportunity to crown the ten best albums of the past 365 days, so that you can quickly go out and buy all those you don’t yet have in your record collection iTunes library, so that in 2010 you won’t be standing there sonically with your pants down. Let the music play.

The View - Which Bitch?

A band that has received far too little attention completely unjustly are the five guys Kyle, Kieren, Pete, Steven and Darren from The View from Scotland, who at the beginning of the year released “Which Bitch?”, one of the best indie rock records of the spring, which unfortunately was ignored to the ground. A big mistake that the musicians will hopefully soon avenge with a musical attack.

Regina Spektor - Far

When it comes to the words depression, hope and piano, then Regina Spektor is the common denominator. With her clever and thoughtful ballads, the Russian-born singer takes the listener on a journey full of charming stories, little anecdotes and heart-wrenching love tales and proves with “Far” that all of this works without kitsch, schmaltz and second-hand embarrassment. Absolutely magnificent.

Peter Doherty - Grace/Wastelands

No matter how bloated, drunk and constantly high our Pete(r) Doherty may be, he remains without a doubt one of the greatest lyricists of our time. With “Grace/Wastelands,” Kate Moss’s ex takes us deep down into the darkest corridors of his heart and lets us experience and sometimes even understand why he is the way he is. Including the drugs, the alcohol and the nicotine. Sad but strong.

Little Boots - Hands

The Englishwoman Little Boots is even praised to the skies by epic troll Kanye West and with her debut album “Hands” she may not have delivered a monumental album of grand philosophy into the analog and digital record stores of this world, but it is nevertheless a likable piece of music and shows that electro-pop can sometimes be lighter and more relaxed. Why not.

Lily Allen - It's Not Me, It's You

Loved by many, hated by many, mocked by many, everyone must admit that Lily Allen pretty much shook up the year 2009. Starting with her nude photos for i-D Magazine, her bombastic and not entirely serious retirement from the music business, all the way to her latest album “It's Not Me, It's You,” the depressive bundle of joy slid through the international press and regularly pulled one catchy tune after another out of her hat. We love her.

La Roux - La Roux

Eleanor Jackson came, saw and conquered. Together with Ben Langmaid and their joint band La Roux, the red-haired pseudo-boy stormed the indie charts of this world and fired off one hit after another into the cheering crowd with “Quicksand,” “In For The Kill” and “Bulletproof.” We think it’s great and hope the two won’t disappear from the scene just as quickly.

Amanda Blank - I Love You

The American Amanda Blank is currently the epitome of nonconformist hotness; with the album “I Love You,” the accompanying videos and at all her live performances she breaks a lance for sex on stage and shakes her pornographically great butt in front of the drooling and jumping party crowd. And the music is good too. Especially together with Lykke Li.

Bat For Lashes - Two Suns

With Natasha Khan, certain superlatives are hard to avoid; as Bat For Lashes and her new album “Two Suns,” she is currently so enchanting, mystical and utterly mind-blowing. She has completely cast a spell over us, and if she ever starts a sect, we will be the first to sign up.

Yeah Yeah Yeahs - It's Blitz!

The American Yeah Yeah Yeahs quietly slipped into the list of the ten best albums of the year, but the tracks on “It's Blitz!” are simply so universal and endlessly listenable that they have been played again and again since their release. And what else makes an album immortal, if not the number of times it is listened to?

Marina And The Diamonds - The Crown Jewels

The sweetest thing the pop world currently has to offer and our personal favorite at the moment is Marina And The Diamonds, blessed with Greek roots, who with her EP “The Crown Jewels,” her happy charisma and an incredibly great musical talent has conquered the hearts of many fans. Next year her first proper album will be released and we will be the first to pull out the digital cash for it.

.

In & Out: Your Better-Living Guide:

Just before Christmas you’re all sinking into well-deserved shopping and gift stress, and your sanity regarding current trends is suffering enormously thanks to fat Christmas stollen, the constant blasting of WHAM!, and the perpetual kneeling before Santa Claus. But that’s what we’re here for. We won’t leave you alone at the end of the year and will once again smack the Ins & Outs right into your face, so you’ll know which topics to talk about under the Christmas tree – and which ones not to.

In: mulled wine, herb quark potatoes, staying awake, working, plundering the Advent calendar early, Deichkind, beer, flowers, taking your time, sleeping in, Christmas cookies, ready-made baking mixes, cheating, flirting, receiving Christmas cards, wax crayons, spray adhesive, hemming tape, girls, sheepskin kidney warmers, Pete Doherty, butting into other people’s conversations, boys, men’s corsets, bouncy castles, having no plans for New Year’s Eve, looking forward to Berlin in January, Dr. Best, The Gaslight Anthem, confessing your love to someone, repressing stress and other things too..., Yu Tsai.

Out: breaking up, using someone else’s Christmas present before giving it to them, know-it-alls, speed workers, pushy people, lip-syncing idiots, brain failure, making the same mistake over and over again, Some & Any, chimney sweeps, empty refrigerators, being pregnant, Lady Gaga’s sagging tits, apps, broken sewing needles, neighbors yelling “Fuck you Motherfuuuuckeeeeer” at 3 a.m., pointless discussions, not having a cleaning lady, broken sewing machines, wearing your own band shirts, cowards, getting up early, the new Jay-Z song.

.

Marcel on a Reading Tour: You’d Better Listen to Me!:

When Jeriko, aka Christoph—the photo nerd and iPhone lover known far beyond the borders of Berlin—asked me whether I would send him my personal favorite text from AMY&PINK for his strange project called “Ausdruck,” and I, completely stressed out, with a full bladder and hungry as Elmo, sent him the first jumble of letters within reach of my greasy fingers and then immediately ran to the nearest bathroom with a cheeseburger, it didn’t even occur to me in my wildest dreams what significant consequences this careless act would have, how I would soon be reduced to this very document, and how on earth I was supposed to compile these strange, Latin characters in a recognizable way while completely drunk.

That’s how I now find myself next Wednesday at 8:00 p.m. in the Yuma Bar, where, alongside the boozehounds from Spreeblick, Markus and Max from Herm's Farm, Christoph, and Sara with no last name, I will most likely slur and laugh my way through my mini-smut piece from July titled “Here's To The Crazy Ones.” And if you’re lucky (or unlucky, depending on how you see it), I might even read a few lines from “City Hunger.”

So come in large numbers on Wednesday, December 16, 2009, at 8:00 p.m. at the Yuma Bar on Reuterstraße 63 in Berlin, drink a lot, chat a little with us, and in the meantime listen to our most intimate written outpourings. You can already download the texts that will be read there from Jeriko, and of course we’d be delighted if, like at pop concerts, you loudly sing along from memory as soon as it’s our turn to read. That way, bombastic atmosphere is guaranteed.

.

The Digital Lesson: How To Destroy A Blog:

The internet keeps proving to me again and again that the uglier a website is designed, the more unintuitive the navigation and the more random the colors are chosen, the more successful it becomes. MySpace before its fatal relaunch, for example. Facebook before… no, still. LastNightsParty, Wikipedia, YouTube, Google… Google is really hideous. In terms of design. Maybe it’s because visitors first have to fight their way through the abysses of these digital soul-suckers and invest more time in the process, bringing personal emotions into play. Because these repulsive rectangles are just like themselves, whether inside or out: really ugly.

The absolutely most unattractive blog, yet at the same time one of the most commented on, is Hipster Runoff, run by a guy named Carles. In garish colors and images he writes there about bad music, tormented teenagers, and passing boobs, and in doing so he has become one of my great web role models, a luminary of high-quality writing and the direct embodiment of my idea of magnificently researched shit and the gift of driving people mentally insane. And recently he completely screwed it up.

--> A lesson for all corporate bloggers, social media experts, and cash-makers out there in fast forward. After years of rambling, Carles simply didn’t feel like it anymore and wanted to devote himself more to his “fashion brand” (which pretty much consists of just a T-shirt), so he put a fat chick and a couple of idiots at the keyboard and rode off into the sunset. That might even have worked if certain people hadn’t freaked out: the readers. For a whole week they cursed, ranted, and insulted the new authors like crazy, wished Hipster Runoff an anti-analog downfall, and felt exploited, betrayed, and screwed over.

As a result of this muddy revolt, Carles returned a few days ago as a knight in shining armor, came back and kicked Becca and her chubby friends back out the door, but he still did neither himself nor the blog any favors. Some readers had long since taken off, others believe it was just a PR stunt, and a few stoners don’t even want Carles anymore and want the dumplings back instead. Well, shit happens.

And what do we learn from this? A blog is only as good as its authors. The label, the logo, the style are secondary and can’t simply be taken over by other idiots overnight. That doesn’t work. By the way, under which bridge is Robert Basic sleeping now? If you see him, someone please set up a free WordPress account for the poor guy so he can get away from the booze and start typing again. Even if it’s just about the whereabouts of his 15 minutes of fame.

.

Brooke Nipar in Interview: My Inspiration Is Life:

The American Brooke Nipar, with her impressive portfolio, is one of the shooting stars of the international photography scene. With her clear, sexy style and her personable manner, she has already had well-known faces such as Amy Winehouse, Bat For Lashes, and Lykke Li in front of her camera and has worked for Nylon, Trendi Magazine, and Anthem, among others. In her interview with AMY&PINK, she spoke about the curse of falling in love, her path to becoming a photographer, and the legacy of her late grandfather.

You’ve already had celebrities like M.I.A., P. Diddy, and Busta Rhymes in front of your lens. Be honest—who among all those stars was genuinely nice, and whom would you have preferred to push off a cliff?

I have to honestly say that I’ve hardly had any bad experiences with celebrities. Maybe it’s just luck, but I somehow manage to connect with everyone on a certain level. People usually only become difficult when they feel uncomfortable. If you find a way to help them feel balanced again, everything quickly falls back into place. Working with the three personalities just mentioned was a lot of fun, by the way.

I’m personally a huge fan of Natasha Khan and Lykke Li, who have also already stood in your studio. What was it like working with them, and are they as amazing as I imagine?

It was absolutely wonderful working with the two of them. Beautiful girls who are just as kind as they are talented. I’m also a big fan of Natasha and Lykke Li and was really excited when I heard I’d have the opportunity to photograph them. The great thing about being a photographer is getting the chance to meet people you admire in person and spend a bit of time with them.

What do you prefer: photographing really famous people, or working with nearly unknown models whom you can tell what to do—and what not to do?

I have absolutely no preference. I like working with people who are open and comfortable with themselves. They can be famous or not—that doesn’t matter to me at all. I have the most fun when I photograph someone who cares less about how good they look and more, like I do, about creating interesting images.

How did you get into photography in the first place? When did you know you wanted to turn your hobby into a profession, and when did you realize you had become somewhat more well-known than the wedding photographer around the corner?

When I was really young, I started taking black-and-white photos at school. I was just 13 or 14 years old. When my grandfather passed away, he left me his 35mm camera, and that’s when I began taking real photographs. I loved shooting an entire roll of film and then developing it myself in the darkroom. I loved being in the darkroom as a child. Nowadays, I don’t develop anything in a darkroom anymore—I haven’t been in one for years, and I don’t miss it.

After high school, I decided to pursue photography more seriously and studied at the Art Center College of Design. After graduating, I knew that I wanted to become a “professional photographer.” And although I turned my hobby into a career, I love it just as much as I did at 13—just in a different way. I’m happy to be able to do something I truly love.

What is your inspiration? Where do you get the ideas for your photos?

My inspiration is life. My friends. Music. Fashion. Art. Travel.

Do you have a steady boyfriend or girlfriend? And what kind of people are your best friends?

No, at the moment I don’t have a steady boyfriend… but I live in New York City, so that can change very suddenly (brief laughter). One minute you swear you’ll never go on a date again, and the next you fall hopelessly in love with some guy.

Funny people are my favorite kind of people. Witty and intelligent—which often go hand in hand. Most of my best friends can send me into a hysterical fit of laughter, and for me personally that’s one of the greatest feelings in the world. The kind of laughter that is completely uncontrollable and comes from deep within. And even if it sounds a bit cheesy: laughter is the best medicine. Without laughter, I would die.

Have you ever been to Europe or even to Germany? What memories and feelings come up when you think back on your travels?

Yes, I’ve traveled all over Europe and have also briefly been to Berlin. And it was great. A very relaxed city with lots of interesting people. And definitely a fantastic place to party. When I arrived, my first thought was: very gray (brief laughter). I’d love to come back sometime and visit other German cities as well. I’ve heard Munich is fantastic.

Do you like watching TV, and what are your favorite films? Which magazines do you most enjoy flipping through?

“Mad Men” is my favorite show at the moment. I love the characters and the attention to detail. “Curb Your Enthusiasm” is also great. And “30 Rock.” I wish “Arrested Development” were still on—I just watched an old episode of it last night. Huge!

Even though magazines are threatened with extinction, I still enjoy reading them. I’d rather hold a good magazine in my hands than read things online. And of course I prefer looking at photos in print. I enjoy reading i-D, Purple, Dazed & Confused, Lula, Nylon, and Celeste, for example.

Music is the creative engine for everyone. Which bands do you like to listen to? What kind of music is best for working, and which is better for relaxing?

I really listen to everything. It would be impossible for me to make a list of my favorite bands. The album by The XX is one of my favorites this year, just like the current record by The Horrors. Radiohead is possibly my favorite band—at least when it comes to contemporary music. Last year I traveled across the entire United States to see six of their shows live while they were on tour. When I’m photographing, I prefer fast, upbeat music—it keeps the energy flowing. Usually it’s a wild mix of different stuff, but my playlist is very dear to me.

Are you into the internet? What are your favorite sites when it comes to fashion, photography, and lifestyle?

I’m absolutely obsessed with the internet. I love it. It’s really hard to imagine how we ever survived without it—it has such a hold on me. Life without Google? Impossible! I’m constantly online not just for information, inspiration, and reading blogs—the internet is also an endless source of entertainment.

I regularly read blogs such as Dazed & Confused, Discobelle, Nicola Formichetti, l'atelier de lama, Feaverish Photography, and Chrissie Abbott.

What are your goals for the future?

I always say that my biggest goal for the future is to always be happy. Of course, I can’t say whether that will still work in 10, 20, or 30 years, but I believe I’ll still be photographing then. Although I’d also like to start making videos now. I will always remain a photographer, but directing music videos—that would be amazing.

Thank you very much for the wonderful interview. We wish the young exceptional talent every success in the future. If you’d like to see, read, and experience more of Brooke Nipar, you can find her official website here with great shots of P. Diddy, Cassie, and Sofia Fresh. And of course, you can also follow her here on Twitter to find out what the New Yorker is up to all day long.

.

Out of the Life of a Pig: I Need a Cleaning Lady:

Hello, my name is Marcel and I am a pig. Something like that is how I could begin my written search for a very special person. An angel. Someone who fights their way through mountains of beer bottles to reach me, frees my missing girlfriend from the clutches of unwashed socks, and defeats the final boss in the kitchen—mutated from rotten bananas and dirty dishes—with an apple-fresh sword of cleanliness. Which is exactly what I have done here. And with this self-provocative thesis, I am (almost) by no means alluding to my permanently breast-oriented thoughts, which I would most like to roll in chocolate sauce and then devour with the help of my receptors. No. Today it really is about a pig in the literal sense, wallowing in filth and actually feeling quite comfortable doing so. At least until someone stops by.

So technically I am not looking for more cleanliness, order, and that certain fresh smell for myself, but rather for everyone else—for unannounced visitors, for nagging pests who violently invade my musty cave of stains and cloudy windows and pull a face as if they had just discovered Angela Merkel in the men’s sauna. But why am I also so stupid as to open the door?

So if you know what a cleaning rag is, if no toilet can ever be shiny enough for you and you see dishes as an enemy that must be finished off once and for all, then get in touch. If you are tall and blonde and have big boobs look like Mr. Proper in ugly form, then get in touch. If you want to march into my place with bucket, vinegar, and scrubber, then get in touch. Ideally, I’d like a Berta from “Two and a Half Men”—always a big mouth and zero chance of any kind of sexual harassment in the workplace. Well, almost anyway. Get in touch regardless.

.

Is the Old Freckle Still Alive? Lindsay Lohan’s Private Party:

After we recently properly celebrated Lindsay Lohan’s demise and just a few days ago I, Lindsay-like, watched “Mean Girls” on Sat.1 through tears and laughter with lots of hard alcohol, the sweet girl from New York isn’t giving anyone time to let their moist dreams starring her settle down. For the upcoming issue of Muse Magazine, she has taken it all off—and not only that. This time things get really intense. With sexual intercourse and all.

Star photographer Yu Tsai not only lets Lilo mess around a little in the pictures and stages a hot threesome, but this time there is even a secret video to go with the steamy photoshoot, which AMY&PINK has exclusively. And it’s not the first time our favorite junkie has undressed for the camera (sometimes more, sometimes less voluntarily), but never before has the Herbie star looked so lascivious, sexy, and skillful. We think it’s hot and are already looking forward to the upcoming blockbuster “One Night in Lindsay,” to which we hereby cordially invite Ms. Lohan. Five dollars, Mr. Soldier.

[gallery]

[flv:https://www.amypink.com/videos/lindsay.mp4 580 420]

.

Favorite Pussy or Coleslaw? Pete Doherty:

Who lives in a drug world deep down in the swamp? Pete-do-her-ty! Alright, admittedly, our favorite junkie may have gone just a tiny bit overboard in cocaine-fueled excess in Berlin last weekend when he drunkenly attacked a defenseless, parked car with a beer bottle and bewildered passersby called the police because the vehicle, contrary to expectations, did not burst into flames. As a reward, the nice gentleman with the tattooed suit was allowed to sleep off his intoxication at the station. And since that image alone was enough to put Kate Moss’s ex-boyfriend back into everyone’s mouths, we ask here and now the question of questions: favorite pussy or coleslaw?

Favorite Pussy: Pedder is probably one of the greatest songwriting geniuses of our time and has cut a fine figure both with his bandmates in Babyshambles and The Libertines as well as solo. No one with ears wants to live without “New Love Grows On Trees,” “Music When The Lights Go Out,” and “Fuck Forever.” With his skinny figure, suits, and signature headwear, he is considered an absolute style icon in London and Berlin.

Anyone who wears Pete Doherty stands for a relaxed approach to life, the power to not give a damn about anything that doesn’t interest you. Drugs, women, good music—and all of it without effort. You simply are it. And if the music and the style haven’t convinced you of Doherty’s absolute superiority over every other figure on this earth, then let three words be said: Kate. Moss. Slept with.

Coleslaw: It’s a miracle he even fit into one of those cozy Berlin cells, so bloated has Pete Doherty become lately. He consumes drugs more regularly than any kind of fruit or vegetables, looks like a fat water corpse, and likes to spray blood and other fluids into nearby cameras. He is unreliable, never got over the end of his great love, and will probably pass away in the near future. The boy absolutely needs to see a doctor.

Conclusion: Fashion junkies hate Pete Doherty for the style curse he has brought upon the metropolises of Europe, parents fear him as an anti-role model in matters of drugs, sex, and alcohol for their offspring, and even prostitutes are likely afraid of all sorts of medically unknown diseases the singer is incubating and that will one day collectively burst out of him and bring a new era of apocalypse upon this world.

But one thing is certain: he is a fundamentally likable guy who just does all this crap because he somehow can’t cope with life. And in that character trait we probably all find ourselves again. After all, that’s still better than being a highly organized asshole who steps over mental corpses for fame, money, and women. Pete, we love you and give you one piece of advice along the way: shift down a gear, you favorite pussy.

.

T-Mobile Extreme Playgrounds: Mayhem and Uproar:

Yesterday, the Street Session of the T-Mobile Extreme Playgrounds 2009 took place at the Velodrom in Berlin, featuring the final of the World Cup Skateboarding Tour 2009, where among others the Australian Renton Millar, the Brazilian Carlos de Andrade, and the just 15-year-old Axel Cruyberghs emerged as winners. The highlights of the event—stuffed with video game consoles, foosball tables, and sexy skater girls including dreadlocks, baggies, and skimpy tops—were, however, clearly the performances by the Puppetmastaz, Blumentopf, and last but not least the masters of spaced-out effects Deichkind, whom we got closer to than we would have liked—unplanned.

Through a flashy coincidence in choosing a well-hidden, lonely elevator, we suddenly found ourselves backstage shortly before their concert, stumbled over props and a few Deichkinds just returning from the restroom, and were then placed directly in front of the stage by security—Sandra’s hefty camera in hand and the pseudo press passes did the rest. So remember for the next event at the Velodrom: the elevator near Block 32 is your friend.

That way, amid all the mayhem and uproar, we had a really good view of the awesome neon stuff the guys delivered, complete with inflatable boats, blow-up dolls, and umbrellas, were subsequently plied with vodka-orange by them, and after an odyssey in the dressing room staggered outside covered in feathers. Like little chickens. More about the concert can be found at the ever-sweet Les Mads or with information about the winners and everything surrounding it directly at the source.

[gallery]

.

WTF?! Vol. 11: Look How Big My Boobs Are!:

Just before Christmas, the small-minded folks of the nation really go wild one more time and type a delicate mixture of contagious perversion and impending brain rot into well-known search engines like Google, Bing, and Yahoo. And because others dare to write what we wouldn’t even allow ourselves to think in our wildest dreams, today we’re getting to the bottom of the extremely important questions of whether Nora Tschirner’s breasts in “Rabbit Without Ears 2” were created by nature, whether red-haired women are sexually arousing, and whether Emma Watson’s genitals are really as tiny as radio and television always claim.

If the neighbor pees standing up. Legs spread. Tattooed tits. Look how big my boobs are! Porn star at 15. Fat cocks. Girl pees into her own mouth. Dark room for couples in love. Girls with sexy shoes. Goats having sex. Is the penis in “Rabbit Without Ears 2” real? Are the breasts in “Rabbit Without Ears 2” real? Caught fooling around at the swimming pool. Fucking is probably the best thing there is. Naked women at 35. Are red-haired women sexy or not? Sad because ugly. Chucks on girls’ feet. Names for mannish women. The world’s biggest breasts. Lindsay Lohan naked. What would I look like if I were a girl? Fuck pictures with animals. Is Ed Hardy in or out? Where can I get laughing gas?

Please tame me. Sleeping with mom. Sexy emo feet. SpongeBob has neither a penis nor a vagina. What can you do with chocolate sauce? Nude photos of Palina. Is Tokyo foreigner-friendly? Porn with anorexic women. Naked girls in biology class. Lesbian insults at AMY&PINK. Pink baby Jesus. Asexual reproduction. Porn with baby Jesus. Emma Watson’s damn tiny vagina. Fear of redheads. Cute girls having sex. Scarlett Johansson topless. Sex in the woods. Annual meeting of Alcoholics Anonymous 2009. Hot ex naked on the street. My name in fuck-language. Who will draw me naked? Women sticking things up their asses. Fat cleaning lady. Avril Lavigne during childbirth.

.

Today We’re Bullying Countries: America Is Totally Stupid:

Even before humans mastered fire, invented the wheel, and cracked mysterious nuts with tools, the strange two-legged creature already had a great and very satisfying hobby that it indulged in late at night in cozy gatherings and even shortly before the hunt: hating America. After all, the Americans are fat, perverted meatballs, constantly elect weird guys as their rulers, and march into small, peaceful nations whenever and however they please—nations that just want to experiment a little with nuclear weapons or dictatorship.

But of course the United States is the most lovable country on earth, having produced such great achievements as the hot dog. Halloween, Lindsay Lohan, a brown, caustic brew packaged as a beverage. The dream of going from dishwasher to millionaire, often within just a few days. Clint Eastwood, Hannah Montana, and Keira Knightley. Oh wait, she’s from London.

Anyway, because we love the land of unlimited possibilities with all its flaws, quirks, and schizophrenic attitude toward peace, porn, and foreigners so much, here are two brand-new clips wrapped in red, white, and blue by the enchanting Marina And The Diamonds and the Swedish band Name the Pet, in which our favorite model Filippa Smeds jumps around lasciviously in a gymnasium. And to close things out, a classic by Liam Lynch. So if that doesn’t make you seriously crave everything the Americans have ever touched, I can’t help you either.

Marina And The Diamonds - Hollywood

Name the Pet - American Boys

Liam Lynch - United States Of Whatever

.

Need for Speed Shift: Flooring the Gas Again:

After our boozy gaming night recently, I’ve become really hungry again—after years of abstinence—for anything that has to do with video games, controller bashing, and the feeling of anti-analog triumph. Because playing has nothing to do with wasting time that could have been spent more meaningfully elsewhere; instead, it constantly stimulates our imagination, sharpens our reflexes, and possibly even brings us closer to new people.

-->

For example, as a little brat, together with my best buddies, I not only watched my first porn and threw wild puberty parties in the basement, but (usually even at the same time) proved our superiority by playing a very specific racing game whose awesome graphics already made our eyes water back then: “Need for Speed.” Speed, loud engines, and sexy grid girls—what more could you want?

For Christmas, EA’s pixel cars are attacking on multiple consoles at once. With “Need for Speed Nitro” on the Wii, you and your friends can tear up the digital streets in a cheerful party atmosphere, while in Need for Speed Shift on all other next-generation consoles like the PlayStation 3, PSP, and Xbox 360, you can blow your opponents off the track with stunning visuals. You can watch a really good review of the latest installment from the guys at GameOne, and if you have no idea what to throw into your own—or your loved one’s—console for the holiday season, then maybe it’s time to pick up a truly good racing game again. Fasten your seatbelt and let’s go!

.

Jordan Carroll and Katie Cooper: Make Art, Damn It!:

The two students from Manchester, Jordan Carroll and Katie Cooper, have found a shared passion: photography. Mostly of themselves (of each other), but often also of their friends, their hometown, and the small and big wonders they encounter every day. Whether it’s the rainbow above their house, the huge spider in the bushes, or the lazy cat on the ground—you can tell they walk through their little world with open eyes and capture it in beautiful images.

Friends should make art together much more often. Whether it’s photography, painting, or music—throw inspiration, thoughts, and creativity into one big mixer and see what comes out. That’s so much better than stubbornly sitting alone in front of a computer waiting for the little boxes in front of you to suddenly come to life.

So grab your temporary kindred spirits and create something amazing together—something lasting, something that will stay with you as a good memory. And who cares whether the result is pure nonsense that should never see the light of day or the next groundbreaking style that makes you filthy rich: the main thing is that you have fun and it brings you closer together. You can see how it works perfectly on Jordan’s and Katie’s Flickr accounts.

[gallery]

.

Pseudotwitter in Vogue: I Love My New Boobs:

If you don’t know it yet: Twitter is that dreadful new invention where all sorts of people around the world constantly shout into the crowd for a bit of fame, publish links, pictures, and videos in the hope that they’ll make it big—or (when all else fails) take suggestive photos and post them there. And depending on how famous you are, this stunt can cause either smaller or bigger waves. In the case of Sandy from Pankow, more the former; in the case of Lindsay Lohan, the latter.

Italian Vogue and American photographer Steven Meisel have taken on this sociologically highly explosive topic and, in the December issue of the successful fashion magazine, present an entire photo spread full of international top models like Gisele Bündchen, Abbey Lee, and Naomi Campbell, lounging lasciviously in front of their own mirrors, eating bananas half-naked, and smoking in full attire out on the balcony. In the process, they talk about new breasts, red lips, and the beauty of a bit of privacy.

They called the whole project “Meiselpic,” and the fashion world squeals and howls with delight, because now all the vagina trolls in vintage looks can stand in front of their dirty bedroom mirrors with renewed courage, tear the clothes off their bodies, and then distribute photos of it across the globe via TwitPic. So not all that much changes after this bold issue—but hey: you know me, I like it!

[gallery]

.

Behind the Scenes of ZDF Neo Music: Assassination Attempt on Markus Kavka:

The ZDF is old. The viewers are slowly wasting away, editors-in-chief are being fired, and Anton, Berti, Conni, Det, Edi, and Fritzchen aka the Mainzelmännchen are being gleefully trampled underfoot. Time to do something about it, thought those responsible at the last channel before eternal rest, and they came up with a rather daring idea: “ZDF, my dear comrades, ZDF must become younger!” So that very night they wallpapered all billboards, advertising spaces, and magazine pages with the logo of a young, dynamic, totally sexy TV channel called ZDFneo and invited the craziest, hippest, and hottest people behind the scenes of the music show “neoMusic.” And us.

--> So yesterday Sandra and I, stuffed with delicious currywurst and fries, found ourselves in the record store Groove in the middle of Kreuzberg—buzzing with real music—hosted by the fidgety Detta, and got to witness how Die Happy singer Marta Jandová sweetly and charmingly abused the German language, how Karpatenhund—including their sexy frontwoman Claire Oelkers (who, by the way, was naked in Playboy last month)—trilled their new song “Notfalls Werde Ich Für Immer Warten” unplugged to the crowd, and how Markus Kavka narrowly escaped death by falling interior decorations during the treacherous terror attack of an overzealous technician who, while trying to mount a lamp, tore down half the set—and as consolation was allowed to take home a record of his choice.

Personally, I would of course have sued everyone present into the ground, but Mr. Kavka remained characteristically relaxed, took it in stride, and at the end we all shouted a Christmas carol into the cameras together. You can watch the St. Nicholas-themed broadcast yourself on Sunday evening on ZDFneo—provided you belong to the lucky 0.02% of the world’s population that can actually receive this channel. We certainly don’t. And woe betide anyone who says the word starting with F now.

.

LastNightsParty in Berlin: The Capital at Night:

I have lied to all of you. My big, secret goals were never power, money, or even world domination. No. Deep down I was always just trying to emulate a homosexual Black man from New York City who has skillfully kept my inner drives running all these years and constantly held my life’s goal before my eyes: to run a website that is just as awesome as his. Merlin Bronques from LastNightsParty. I mean, just look at this site! Technically totally crappy, but unbelievably sexy, so authentic and digitally cult that no other website (except perhaps The Cobrasnake) has ever led me astray quite like this one. I am a die-hard fan. Forever.

Over the weekend, the former musician—who constantly reminds me of my old best friend, just a bit darker—was passing through good old Berlin and, of course, didn’t miss the chance to cruise around some underground parties and drag the hottest girls, craziest guys, and smallest penises in the state in front of his camera. The result: three sets titled “Undergründ,” “Kit Kat,” and “Europeans Are Free,” and once again they show what a delightfully depraved person my great role model with the weird hairstyle really is. Someday I’ll be as cool as you, Merlin. Someday…

[gallery]

.

“Zweiohrküken” Premiere in Berlin: Drag Queens, Sex and Nora’s Breasts:

Yesterday we attended the premiere of his new flick “Zweiohrküken” in Berlin together with Til Schweiger, and I can reveal the most important thing right away: yes, our beloved Nora Tschirner bares it all again, and her breasts have grown even more since last time. Enormously so. And knowing you little piglets, with this information alone I’ve probably driven our entire readership straight to the ticket counters of your local cinemas, and I could spend the rest of this article looking for words that rhyme with “anonymous.” Perfume, for example. But we’re not going to let the criticism-shy Mr. Schweiger get off scot-free despite this strategically sophisticated trick. Not like this, my friend.

Because, as with the first part, I only watched the film anyway because of my favorite lady parts, had to mentally brace myself against a rather poor mix of chart-friendly radio tunes a.k.a. soundtrack and the collective infatuation of all the estrogen-fueled mothers in the theater with Matthias Schweighöfer, and was forced to follow the somewhat shallow, occasionally disjointed story about jealousy, relationship problems, and Til Schweiger as a drag queen. So far, so mediocre.

Yet despite these points of criticism, the ninety minutes proved to be a worthy successor to “Keinohrhasen.” We laughed when the crap flew through the air, were startled when the Eiffel Tower suddenly dangled in front of our noses, and screamed when the nice doctor next door pursued his main profession without anesthesia and blood splattered everywhere. So if you liked the handicapped bunny, you’ll also enjoy the flying chick—and if, like me, you are the world’s biggest stalker of the enchanting Ms. Tschirner, you must not miss this semi-sappy flick and her pumped-up breasts. In any case, we’re very curious about the third installment. Pseudonym, monstrosity, impetuous…

.

SpeedDating in the Evening: Who’s Afraid of Nerds?:

Yesterday, in the heart of Berlin—yes, I’d like to take a grand sweep and say the prequential (the word doesn’t even exist, no need to google it) elite of the German internet, social media, and peanut fanatic scene—met up for a cozy little chat at the Dachkammer. Official representatives from Kopfbunt, dragstripGirl, P4ULCHEN, Jeriko, iGNANT, HUNDERTMARK and of course yours truly were among those present, and together we sought and found solutions to the great problems of the web such as declining data privacy, the increasing occurrence of Russian spam comments, and how digital Germany should move forward in general. Not.

Instead, we shamelessly drank our way up and down the menu, mocked the droll guy from UARRR behind his back, and, in an alcohol-induced haze, tossed nerdy terms like visitor numbers, Twitter celebrities, and trolls around the room (thanks to which we were glared at contemptuously by the surrounding masses). In the restroom there was ring-a-ring-a-roses with touching, the darkest secrets of Malte’s pre-war relationships were unearthed, and once again the phrase “The world is a village” proved entirely accurate, as some of the involuntary attendees were either born near me or live just around the corner. In Wedding. In the ghetto. Like Paulchen.

The evening really spiraled out of control when, drunk, we nearly stormed a Warhammer memorial shop, had ourselves photographed in patent leather and boots (I want that photo, by the way!), and caused quite a ruckus in the kebab shop on Frankfurter Allee. All in all, it was a smashing evening that needs to be topped next time (whether by the number of beer bottles or the use of flat puns), and I may well be the first to announce the Twitter wedding of the year, because after all these years they’ve finally found each other: Sara and Jeriko. How they laughed, how well they got along, and how often they disappeared together behind some street corner… I’m telling you, folks: there’s more to come. And I have witnesses! Drunk ones, admittedly… but they count too. Somehow. To love, people! And to Sara’s mom.

.

Kohei Yoshiyuki: Voyeurism Is Art:

When I was younger, there was a young woman living across from us with two boobs who showered every evening at precisely seven o’clock, didn’t see the need to close the curtains, and thus sweetened little pointy Marci’s boring life of Pokémon, pork schnitzel, and Bravo magazines so much that he looked forward to that magical moment all day long. Especially because his uncle had given him an outrageously expensive pair of binoculars the Christmas before. I wouldn’t really have called my new hobby art, though.

My girls from lil.bit have now introduced the lovely Mr. Kohei Yoshiyuki (nationality may be guessed), who was so fascinated by the interpersonal activities in the park around the corner that he crawled through the bushes at night armed with his infrared camera, photographed everything that wasn’t up in the trees by the count of three, and then exhibited the fondling of couples, coworkers, and random acquaintances in large format in various galleries such as the Komai Gallery in Tokyo and the MoMA in New York. In the dark and equipped with flashlights, of course. A ray of hope, then, for the voyeur ranks out there who no longer have to be ashamed of their inglorious passion, but can proclaim with puffed chest and loud voice: “Voyeurism is art!”

[gallery]

.

A Nintendo Fanboy Returns: We Now Have a Wii:

You know us as trendsetters in the categories of music, art, and pseudo-pornography. Constantly cute ideas, always the latest shit from the street, only the in, never the out. Anything older than ten minutes already belongs on the junkyard of tired smiles. And that’s exactly why we bribed the Yakuza with delicious, delicious cheesecake and nude photos of Montana and Caro so they would smuggle that strange white game console with its revolutionary controller and built-in nostalgia factor from the basement labs of the Japanese electronics company Nintendo to Germany. And Satoshi, Anako, and Takeshi fulfilled their job with flying colors—as expected—before us stands the unreleased marvel of Japanese craftsmanship: the Nintendo Wii.

Okay, admittedly we might not be the first to succumb to stealing one of these odd boxes, and until recently these next-next-next-next-whatever-generation consoles didn’t interest me at all, but then I saw it… on the television… “New Super Mario Bros Wii” – Mario and Luigi, 4-player mode, new power-ups, levels, and all that jazz – and inside me exploded the memories of the wonderful times I had with all the consoles Shigeru Miyamoto ever had sex with. “Super Mario World,” “Pokémon,” “Secret of Mana,” “The Legend of Zelda.” Just spelling and reciting those titles already gives me one erection after another.

So I grabbed my little cookie Sandra, pressed one of those strange, elongated, vibrating devices into her hand, and together we jumped, laughed, and bumped into each other through levels bursting with humor, secrets, and memories. Super Mario squeezed into quasi-2D—just the way it should be! And Yoshi’s in it too! Yoooshiii!

And because the box with the strange name might offer more than just this one game, here’s the quiz question for all Nintendo fanboys out there: Which games absolutely shouldn’t be missed? Whether disc, WiiWare, or Virtual Console—what software is worth it and which programmed crap should we keep our hands off? Role-playing games, multiplayer, cooking mamas? As always, we have no clue, so: your input is needed!

.

In Love With: Kaya Scodelario:

As we all know, the British series “Skins,” with its stories close to real life, the drugs, the love, and the messing around, is by far the best show around, and despite the numerous characters whose traits you could practically slip into immediately—so fitting does this second skin feel—one person in particular stands out from this trough of individual inspiration: Tony’s little sister Effy, played by Kaya Scodelario. Because no other character manages to carry the story of a group of teenagers from Bristol forward with such affectionate coolness, heartfelt ignorance, and that unique gaze.

In her private life, the 17-year-old is really kicking ass with her modeling and film jobs. She plays leading roles in films such as “Moon” and “Shank,” has already appeared in magazines like Teen Vogue, Nylon, Dazed & Confused, and i-D in sexy poses and great black-and-white photographs, and also tweets diligently for all the social media nerds out there. Rumor has it she’ll be leaving her home series next year, but that’s not due to any lack of acting talent or her rebellious Brazilian manner; it’s simply because the entire cast of “Skins” is replaced every two years. But we’re sure she’ll continue to cut a fine figure afterward and that we’ll be hearing plenty from her in film and on the airwaves. Go, Kaya! Go!

[gallery]

.

Fat, Fat Lesbian Party: Tegan and Sara in Berlin:

When the singing lesbians Tegan and Sara call for a grand vocal celebration, we obviously can’t say no. So on Thursday evening Sara and I grabbed strap-ons, love balls and all kinds of vegetables from the Turkish shop around the corner, marched straight into the Astra Berlin and were greeted by Tokio Hotel memorial hairstyles, kissing bra-wearers and the longest coat-check line of all time. One thing became immediately clear at this sight: the two sisters from Canada are no longer the two unknown indie crooning cookies they used to be a few years ago. No. The evil, evil mainstream has taken hold of them.

Because I wasn’t allowed to take my delicious Fritz Kola inside thanks to the fat I-don’t-give-a-shit-if-that-was-expensive-and-you’re-thirsty-go-die bouncer, we listened with a few beers in hand to the lyrically charming sounds of the American Astronautalis, who with his witty raps, rousing speeches and his red face—which he always tensed as if he were about to explode with a loud bang from high blood pressure—even conquered the hearts of the grumpiest hardcore feminists. And that’s saying something. Sara immediately bought a T-shirt from her new hero and if you ever get the chance to see that weirdo live somewhere—do it! You’ll rarely throw yourself around laughing that hard.

The two crooning twins played a sympathetic set with numerous varied songs from the good old days and the brand-new album “Sainthood,” told funny drug stories from their youth in between and were nearly lynched by the unshaven-crotch crowd when Sara confessed to having dated a boy at the tender age of 13. The lousy traitor. My sexy chicks from Les Mads conducted a video interview with the siblings Quin, who narrowly escaped death by hanging, and after the concert I first had to chop off my legs because they almost fell off from the pain. Next time I’m bringing a folding chair—you can believe that.

.

Let the Games Begin: AMY&PINK Awards 2009:

Once again it’s time to put a stop to the pointless discussion about the much-invoked demise of the German blogosphere, to prove to the pseudo-experts out there how lively the world of digital diaries still is, and to place the most beautiful, personal and interesting examples out there into the spotlight. Because this year once again they are taking place, the official AMY&PINK Awards 2009 – and you can be part of it!

Join in and apply in the following categories for Blog of the Year: Man of the Year Award, Girl of the Year Award, Big Mouth Award, Sex Sells Award, Best Unique Design Award, Sweet ‘n’ Cute Award, the Newcomer Award and brand new this year the Best Fashion Award and the Best Picture Award.

Whether WordPress, Tumblr or Blogspot – you can participate very easily by publishing a post about this competition on your blog by December 13, 2009, describing why you of all people want to win in at least one of the categories listed above and sending a trackback.

Both German- and English-language blogs may participate. For the Newcomer Award only blogs that are no more than six months old are permitted. The award ceremony will take place on Sunday, December 20, 2009. Fame, honor and jealous fellow bloggers await you. Let the games begin!

.

Ticket Giveaway: T-Mobile Extreme Playgrounds:

Pretty girls, great music and fast-paced sports – what more do you need to be truly happy? Exactly: nothing! And that’s precisely why on December 6 the who’s who of the international skate and BMX scene will rock the Velodrom in Berlin at this year’s Street Session of the T-Mobile Extreme Playgrounds. Among those taking part are X Games winner Pierre-Luc Gagnon, reigning Vert European Champion Jürgen Horrwarth from Berlin and the freshly crowned, 14-year-old Street European Champion Axel Cruysberghs, who will show what they’re made of at the final of the World Cup Skateboarding Tour 2009. Providing the soundtrack to the event will also be Deichkind, Blumentopf and Puppetmastaz. And the best part: We’re getting you in for free!

-->

AMY&PINK is giving away 2x2 tickets to the coolest event of the year and will also pack one of the lucky winners a brand-new Sony Ericsson W395 phone with stereo speakers and a 2-megapixel camera, with which you can snap photos with the stars of the BMX and skate scene and then jubilantly call your mom right away.

All you have to do is answer the following question in the comments by Monday, November 30, 2009: If you had the chance to transform into a really fresh hip hopper at night – what would you call yourself? We wish all participants the best of luck, and if you don’t quite trust it at the moment, you can of course order your tickets at all known advance booking offices and at T-Mobile Playgrounds yourself.

.

Photograph of a Redhead: Teenage Witchery:

I’m totally into this particular kind of photography, far removed from glamour, makeup and characterless, never-smiling models. The kind that smells of dirt, tastes of reality and has been beaten up three times over by all the emotions in the world. In them you can best lose yourself in heavy and lighthearted thoughts and indulge in the lie of having been present at the shoot yourself. Even though in recent weeks you’ve hardly moved more than three meters away from the fridge. Only to crawl back to it hungry afterward.

Andrea without a last name from San Francisco, a born redhead and better known online as Ladyfreak, churns out one of these magical images after another on the blog Teenage Witchery as well as on her Flickr stream. With cluttered apartments, friends puking at house parties and hot soul stripteases in the bathtub. Groping at the swimming pool, girls making out and bands smashing everything to pieces. I’d love to quietly stand beside them, just to at least pretend I belong to that crazy bunch. Just a little bit.

.

Readers’ Letters: Somehow Totally Analog:

Readers’ letters in newspapers and magazines were, until their extinction in 2004, a magnificent example of condescending communication, elitist favoritism of opinions, and more or less idiotic responses. For a long time, they were the object of our pent-up envy, because in the age of digital networking you may be flooded with shady opinions during peak hours, but the passion, the depth, and the love are often left by the wayside. For this reason, we are now literally beating the analog into the digital and from this point on will present the most beautiful, slimiest, and most disgusting opinions as readers’ letters that are worth answering in proper detail.

Not a Single Hair on His Balls

-->

"The picture is shocking, I think I missed something in my youth… Those two little brats don’t even have a single hair on their balls, but the little one just got devoured in a grandiose 5-minute quickie!? – And they even opened a guestbook right on her belly. Alexander Seitz, 14…" dip on Hermann, I Have the Power

Dear Dip, I fear that a few of the fantasies we’ve instilled in you over the years have just run away with you, because those innocently looking little rascals certainly had nothing evil in mind, let alone any thoughts of indecency. The picture is undoubtedly just a sample photo preloaded by Fujifilm onto the camera to demonstrate the outstanding quality and high resolution of its products. And as for Seitz Alex allegedly not having any pubic hair, I can refute that here and now—we knitted cozy, warm hats out of it together on our last ski vacation.

Stop Whining!

-->

"What really gets on my balls is that you’re actually the one whining here. You ask for criticism and feedback and then call the people who criticize A&P trolls? Sorry, but then you shouldn’t be surprised if someone calls you an arrogant asshole. Maybe I can’t quite relate to all this because I’ve never really read a truly ‘trollish’ comment here… Just do A&P the way you want and also accept comments you don’t like! That’s how it is in real life too! So stop whining!" Robert on You Used to Be Better

Dear Robert. As an enthusiastic Twitter user with over 50 followers, you have surely been running battle-hardened websites under constant fire since childhood and can therefore put yourself in our position a thousand times better than Udo the janitor, Ulrike the lab technician, or Gustav the goose, and pester us with your critical opinion. And you succeeded. Thanks to you, we no longer refer to visitors who constantly shove their narrow-minded, ill-tempered, and envious pseudo-opinions at us and have no interest whatsoever in healthy discussion as trolls, but as “small-dicked guys with inferiority complexes and attention deficits.” We thank you for the enlightenment and will tell you just one more thing: we’re not surprised by anything anymore.

What Would Hannah Do Now?

-->

"Hello Hannah, I’m a huuuuge fan of yours and that’s why I regularly check AMY&PINK to see if there’s anything new! I think it’s totally cool what you write and one day I’d like to have such a great blog myself or write for one! You always come across as so full of life and energy, everything I’d love to be! You’re a very good example of women who go through life with enthusiasm and simply do what they enjoy! You’re just my big role model and even without really knowing you I sometimes ask myself: ‘What would Hannah do in this situation?’ I’d just love to be like you, but I’m doing my best to try! Your loyal fan Nelly" Nelly by letter

Hello Nelly. Yes, Hannah really is a great girl. Those eyes, that mouth, that body… but what we find even greater is that you’ve saved the German Federal Post from its rapidly approaching bankruptcy and that your pre-lesbian declarations of love arrived to us by mail. For hours we sat in a circle in front of the sealed envelope, clicked “Open” and “Receive” a few times, and when that didn’t work ran a virus scanner over it and reinstalled our operating system, until the mailman initiated us into the secrets of tearing it open and kindly read your story to us as a bedtime tale. And now that we know how it works, we hereby call on you from today onward to send us your comments by post. It’s much more personal that way.

.

Chris Heads: Hip Hop, Ice Cream, Sunshine:

Ashes on my head, the human hell of the quick-checkers will open up beneath me and drag me down into the depths of yesterday’s snow with malicious laughter. Because I truly don’t know how this could have happened. Why we here at AMY&PINK have not yet said a single word about this talented and practically tailor-made-for-our-purposes photographer. I mean: super-hot girls, boob pictures, shot brilliantly. He likes: hip hop, ice cream, and sunshine. His name: Chris Heads.

At home in Milan and Paris and signed with the New Blood Agency, the somewhat otherworldly mind has already worked for Vanity Fair, Elle, and Glamour, photographing greats such as Kylie Minogue, Kelis, and Devon Aoki—and probably, to save time, also having them in bed right away. I bow to so much talent and will now grant him the honor he deserves: to manifest him on this page with selected images. And while you start groping yourselves, I will promptly run to confession and apologize for not having performed this good deed much earlier.

[gallery]

.

The Drunken Mixtape: Shitmotherfucker:

You know the drill. During the day you struggle with contagious pants-shitters, incontinent bosses, and recently divorced bus drivers, fight your way with love and warm thoughts through the modern-day urban jungle gone wild, and let your small, battered souls be abused by misunderstanding, mistrust, and jealousy toward your youth, directness, and toughness. And what helps more after this constant character fuck than getting properly and more or less stylishly drunk.

To lend you a hand on this routine trip between pre-drinks, partying, making out, and crashing, we present here a meaningful mixtape for inhaling promille, sprinkled with the party-loving Babyshambles, the enchanting Anya Marina, and the rabid girls from Be Your Own Pet. This will prepare you for every stage of the alcoholic rollercoaster ride, and when you reach that particular point where you’ve puked out of the fifth-floor window screaming for your mommy, Regina Spektor will gently catch you—after all, every night of debauchery ends with “Samson.”

What are your favorite tracks for joyfully getting wasted, and which stage do they fit best? But woe betide anyone who comes up with Jürgen Drews or Mickie Krause. May the wrath of good taste strike them down.

.

Favorite Pussy or Coleslaw? Lindsay Lohan:

The entire capital is celebrating tonight in honor of the Hollywood boozehound and pseudo-lesbian Lindsay Lohan with a lavish party at her expense, where attending girls are kindly requested to stick to her style of dress (= slutty), and since many of us still don’t know what to make of what I’ll now call an exceptional talent, here is an ultimate and misanthropic evaluation to determine where we should categorize Lilo: favorite pussy or coleslaw.

Favorite Pussy: Little Lindsay conquered our hearts in no time with films like "Mean Girls," "Freaky Friday," and "Confessions of a Teenage Drama Queen." Boys instantly fell in love with her ample cleavage, sweet face, and cute freckles, while girls swooned over her cheeky smile, enviable sex appeal, and the mysteries of her hair-care products.

She won heaps of awards such as the Teen Choice Award, an MTV Movie Award, and the coveted Young Hollywood Award: Superstar of Tomorrow, launched her singing career with the two albums "Speak" and "A Little More Personal (Raw)," and at that time was the true dream of every pubescent emo-in-the-making or aging grandpa. To put it nicely.

Coleslaw: At some point between the movie "Herbie: Fully Loaded" and the accompanying music video, Mrs. Lohan’s breasts must have deflated. Her hair color changed in line with her newly discovered IQ, and all that strenuous sex with various partners seems to have stripped the last reserves of fat from her once so voluptuous body.

Alongside Britney Spears and Mischa Barton, she plunged headfirst into the standard swamp of drugs, alcohol, and the forgetting of Hello Kitty underwear, then at some point believed herself to be a lesbian and grabbed three Golden Raspberries on her way out. Today she’s presumably either constantly driving her car into unsuspecting curbs or giving her trusted dealer a skillful blowjob to get her hands on some coke.

Conclusion: Lindsay Lohan is a crashed slut before the Lord who likes to look too deeply into a glass, occasionally licks pussies, and chases the mother of her personal assistant with a car while under the influence of drugs. So what? I’d gladly take Lilo in, rip the bleach out of her hand, and stuff her with muffins and cola until her cleavage fits again, her freckles sprout once more, and that smile returns to her face.

Until then we’ll keep shooting every dealer who even comes close to her and pray to God that the graphics nerd at Disney gets back on his fat ass and hits the undo button a few times while retouching her Herbie cleavage. Because what worked on screen seems to have carried over into real life. We believe in the magic of Mickey Mouse and are therefore in complete agreement: Lindsay Lohan is a favorite pussy before the Lord.

.

When the Day Has Too Few Hours: The Asshole Called Stress:

Hello, my name is Marcel Winatschek and at the moment I am so stressed that a new word really ought to be invented for it. Because the 24-hour day contains far too few minutes to fit in everything I actually need to accomplish so that my life continues to develop within the framework I consider appropriate. And right now that revolves around three major areas: training, AMY&PINK, and anal sex. And by the latter I don’t necessarily mean that I’ve switched to the pink camp, but rather my private life, which screws me over properly time and again. Or vice versa.

So at dawn I throw myself out of bed while the bats are dancing and the roosters are still asleep, scroll through the concentrated news of the past night on my screen to see if there’s anything awesome for AMY&PINK, rarely manage to get past the porn posts without skillfully touching myself, then, depending on the week, head off to work or vocational school and usually spend the distant evening partying / flirting / chilling out.

And what now sounds so loose and easygoing is in truth pure stress. Because while in training you’re bombarded with projects that, when frequent enough, haunt you horrifically even in your sleep phases, contacts need to be made and maintained, preferably three killer posts written per day, blogs combed through and commented on, girls kissed, Twitter used, family called, showered or bathed, films and series watched, breasts kneaded, Tumblr filled, coffee brewed, Facebook updated, sex had, loved, hated, drugs tried, laundry washed, money earned, pooped and peed, public transport used, dishes washed, groceries bought, parties attended, thoughts thought, beds made, interviews conducted and translated, ideas developed or stolen, SMS typed, prostitutes beaten up, upcoming projects planned, chatted with people important for my continued existence, eaten breakfast, lunch, and dinner, favors done, sites technically maintained, wandered around, sucked up to Merlin Bronques, alcohol drunk, emails answered, magazines studied, zombies killed, the apartment tidied and cleaned, music listened to, pseudo-sports performed, books read, plants watered, and wishes fulfilled. And all of that in 24 hours. If possible daily. Sleep not even mentioned.

Life is a bitch, so I demand from the god of time / the state / The Hoff™ an extension of the day by at least double, invest 10 euros in the development of a medication that keeps sleep as far away from us as possible, and will use the weekend to calmly ignore at least the most annoying things on the death list, pick out a few bullet points (probably something involving sex and zombies), and tonight, in memory of Lindsay Lohan, blissfully get completely smashed. And woe betide anyone who gets in my way, because that could end fatally. I’m stressed and therefore have a license for a bloody massacre, preferably at a Russian airport.

.

The New Video by Die Ärzte: PerfektHimmelblauBreit:

Berlin in the year 2046. Three ancient goths live carefree lives in a retirement home and reminisce about the good old days when they were still famous, adored, and celebrated as heroes of music. And yes, on closer inspection you can recognize beneath the wrinkles, bathrobes, and slippers the former best band in the world. Rod, Farin, and Bela B. The quirky daredevils from Die Ärzte.

In stark contrast to the "Yoko Ono" 31-second record holder, the three boys really take their time with "PerfektHimmelblauBreit," are pampered from back to front by Mandy and Bernd, and after their journey into the future cozy up together on the sofa. A smashing adventure that not only embodies three works of art in one, but also reinterprets old party hits like "Männer sind Schweine" and "Schunder-Song." A toast to retirement homes, semolina pudding, and lots of colorful pills.

.

Daul Kim Takes Her Own Life in Paris: The Sad Death of a Model:

While Germany is shocked by the death of a football player, in the fashion world only one piece of news is currently running through the rattling tickers of agencies and editorial offices: the 20-year-old South Korean top model Daul Kim, who drew attention to herself with beautiful shoots and a unique face in i-D, Dazed & Confused, and Vogue, among others, took her own life a few hours ago in Paris. Why and how, no one knows at this hour. Even on her blog I like To Fork Myself, where she had been regularly writing about her exciting life for two years, there were no signs of this tragedy. The last entry was the electro song "I Go Deep" by Jim Rivers.

Having just posed for the November issue of Russh in front of Beau Grealy’s camera and graced the cover with her cool, sexy gaze, her modeling agency announced a few minutes ago: "She was a top model and a great friend to all of us at Next. Please respect her family’s privacy at this time of sadness. We will all miss her very much." May she rest in peace, and in memory of this exceptional talent we show once again a small selection of her most characterful photos.

[gallery]

Update (20/11/09, 7:34 a.m.): Her blog apparently wasn’t quite so without signs after all; Vanessa has taken a closer look and found all kinds of depressive texts and thoughts in her entries that Daul Kim published there during difficult times: "My life is so god damn predictable. It's disgusting. (...) This endless loneliness, there must be something wrong from the core. I worry as I take the courage to sleep."

.

Stadthunger: The Madness of Your Voice:

“Are you satisfied with your life?” the little blonde girl asked me openly as we strolled hand in hand through the deserted streets of the long-forgotten Berlin. Not a breath of wind to be felt, not a sound to be heard, not a soul to be seen. The former war had silenced all activity and shattered the buildings in a fiery breath. I only looked upward. Unable either to give an answer or to ask a question. The white clouds against a blue backdrop drifted triumphantly above the ruins of the once so magnificent city. How alive these alleys once were, and how no one survived the days of eternal night. My battered body too lay buried somewhere beneath this rubble. Forever.

My companion and I turned into a nearby park and walked along the path paved with dead trees. Her bright dress glistened in the midday sun and the honest smile on her face made me forget for a moment the eternal pain I had been carrying deep in my heart for some time. We giggled, we romped about, but suddenly she stopped and pointed ahead with her arm outstretched.

My gaze froze when I saw the red-haired, naked girl standing at the other end of the path. I ran toward her, but when I saw her empty stare, the pale face and the bloody wounds all over her body, I slowed down and stopped in front of her. The sky turned black, the clouds transformed into glowing sparks that rained down on the dead earth, and the ground opened wide at our feet.

When I come to, Paula is holding me tightly in her arms and pressing a glass of cold water to my face. “Another one of your nightmares?” she asks gently. Her large breasts bounce with every movement and the mere presence of her character, the kisses, the smell of cheap perfume and poor intimate hygiene fatten my aversion toward her with every breath we take. Paula likes orange ties.

The mere fact that she has replaced Sina as my companion of the night leaves me without a single doubt that something incredibly wrong is happening in the universe and that it is up to me to restore the balance of our civilization. “I have to find her,” I reply curtly and take a large gulp of the refreshing liquid. “More than three months ago she ran off enraged and crying with hatred, and ever since these visions have been haunting me. They are making me sick.”

The room is drenched in dark blue-black tones and several empty syringes have been carelessly thrown onto the floor beside the bed. My body is covered in sticky sweat and while I vomit from the balcony, I imagine the fantasies that appear by the thousands. How she dies. How she suffers. How I can do nothing about it. A storm is brewing.

“She is your best friend, you fucking slut!” I suddenly scream at Paula and curse the day I opened the door to her. The endless nightly conversations, the crying, the recurring apologies and the remorseful sex. Where does she even come from? And since when has she been here? I mix reality with madness, can no longer clearly distinguish what is actually happening and which part of my life story is playing out only in my head. The drugs, the music, the women. And all I want is one thing. To have Sina back. That is all that matters right now.

This was the eighth chapter “The Madness of Your Voice” from the furious blog novel project “Stadthunger,” the serialized novel on AMY&PINK. You can always find all parts of it under the category “Literature.”

.

Carlos Nunez: Not About Tits:

Carlos Nunez is 28 years old, lives in Los Angeles, and he takes photos of naked women. Mainly. Because sometimes there are moments in Carlos’ life when he just hangs out at the beach. And photographs naked women. Takes a small, cozy walk through the woods. And photographs naked women. Or runs through the streets of California with all his equipment. And photographs naked women.

So you see how incredibly varied Carlos Nunez’s life is and how absolutely sad, depressing, and devoid of any hope of ever entering paradise his entire existence must be. I’ll stick with my boring life as a pseudo web designer and now take another relaxed look at one of his trips to the outdoor pool. With naked women, of course.

[gallery]

.

Become a Chiptune Legend: My Game Boy Is a DJ:

As a little brat there was nothing greater for me than waddling into the outdoor pool, stuffing greasy fries into my face on the grass, and beating time into my cheeks with my Game Boy. “Super Mario Land,” “The Legend of Zelda – Link’s Awakening,” or “Pokémon.” What for programmers were just a few antisocial cobbled-together lines of code opened up a world full of myths, riddles, and heroism for us. And where do I get Mew now?

Since those faded days, quite some time has passed. The video games of today’s youth can no longer do without bombastic graphics, orchestral sound, and loads of marketing. But one thing has remained: the love of an entire generation for the beeping tones and audio snippets whose sound reminds us of mushrooms, swords, and Poké Balls, and whose melodies we can still whistle in our sleep.

Alongside the admiration for composers, an entire community of freaks has emerged in recent years who refuse to miss the chance to program beeping 8-bit anthems themselves. Bands like Pixel H8, Casio Kid, or Syphus now fill entire clubs with their minimalist sounds, and even chart-toppers like La Roux, Gorillaz, and Crystal Castles have been inspired by the sound. And you too can soon belong to the stars of the stylish retro scene. Everything you need and how to go about it is explained here by the British video game composer Matthew Applegate of Pixelh8. So pay attention and join in…

1. Steal yourself a Game Boy: In principle, you can coax sounds out of any old video game console and turn it into a digital jukebox. The most popular in the scene is the plain gray Game Boy from Nintendo that your siblings probably still have lying around somewhere in the attic. If not: eBay is your friend.

2. Find the right software: There are plenty of homemade programs out there that will turn you into a retro DJ. The most well-known are LSDJ, Nanoloop, or Pixelh8 Music Tech. You can either buy them pre-installed on cartridges or download them for free. If you choose the second option, you’ll have to copy them onto empty cartridges via USB cable.

3. Experiment a little: Once you’ve got the software of your choice up and running, you’ll notice how easy it is to coax a variety of beeping tones out of your console just by pressing the buttons. You’ve now turned your old box into a pseudo keyboard, and from here on it’s entirely up to you, your creativity, and your talent what you make of it.

4. Record that stuff: If you’ve chosen LSDJ, you can record your songs directly onto your computer. All you need to do is connect your Game Boy’s headphone jack to your PC and you’re ready to go. Try out the various programs available out there. Most of them are free or dirt cheap.

5. Make yourself a few friends: For beginners, it’s a good idea to check out the various chiptune communities. 8bitcollective is a great place to get started. As for the music you make, the rule is: stay yourself. Chiptuning is not a genre; it’s an instrumentation.

Have fun!

.

The End of a Soulmate Bond: Here Is My New Boyfriend:

Good friends are by far the most important thing in life. They catch us when disaster strikes, protect us from all the evil in the world, and even support us unconditionally in our dumbest ideas. And while male specimens turn into drinking buddies, club comrades, and hole brothers, and women meet up for coffee klatches, shopping tours, and “Sex and the City” memorial DVD evenings, rumor has it that boys and girls can even mutate into best friends. As long as one of them is homosexual.

Because let’s be honest. Friendships between the sexes usually end in uncontrollable drama, suicidal depressions, and hate tirades that would make Satan himself fill his ears with paste. One of the two is always more unstable than the other, and so playful scuffles turn into special touches, pajama parties into ring-around-the-rosie with groping, and HDLs into promises of eternal devotion of the heart. And once the guy finally confesses his feelings to his secret crush, all hell breaks loose and the supposedly platonic love is completely screwed.

In 99% of cases, the soulmate bombarded with heartfelt confessions simply doesn’t want a relationship, retreats from the conversation with awkward “uhms” and “erms,” there are tears, there is talking. The once relaxed atmosphere turns into a minefield of right answers and false hopes, exaggerated reactions and extreme depressions.

My catastrophic union went by the name of Ana. We were soulmates, fucked our way through hot summer nights to Muse and Mando Diao, and enjoyed our loose mixture of liaison and friendship. Until—yes, until—I fell in love with her and my inner organs destroyed everything. What followed was pure hell that made me doubt humanity.

The following months, even years, of recovery are a single trial by fire in which you constantly run up and down a recurring vicious circle, torn between possible freedom and mental dependency. Because maybe you can still win her over somehow. But on the other hand, maybe it should just be like it used to be. And honestly: If he doesn’t want me, it’s his own fault. I deserve something better. But those sweet freckles…

And when you’ve finally made it out of the psychological misery with emotional scars as big as the Nile, patched together a shaky house of cards made of understanding, realism, and common sense, and could swear before a tribunal that you’re over it, stronger, already looking elsewhere… then suddenly the new boyfriend of your former best connection is standing in front of you. And you just want to commit a mass murder…

.

The New Discovery from Queens: Freelance Whales:

It happened on one of my profound journeys through the web. Past emo princes stagnating on YouTube, secret tweets of the year, and provocative art pages with naked foxes. In my eternal butterfly hunt for the most curious, most beautiful, and most heartfelt shit of the hour. In the middle of the browser jungle, a song suddenly sounded whose melody abruptly delighted my head and refused to let go. I pushed aside the windows buzzing around me, bravely fought against intrusive pop-ups, and finally arrived digitally bleeding at the source of the angelic tones. Freelance Whales was all I could read before everything around me blurred and I lost one life.

The song of the hour fatefully goes by the title “Hannah,” comes from the New Yorkers Judah, Kevin, Doris, Jake, and Chuck, and can be found on their album “Weathervanes.” It sings of the night sky, of rooftops, and of music. So romantic, nostalgic, and charming that these five indie musicians secured a place in my heart with this song alone.

And the best thing about it all: You can download this track for free at I Guess I'm Floating. And because Freelance Whales are not (yet) signed anywhere, the whole thing is (still) not illegal. Beautiful new world.

[audio:hannah.mp3]

.

At the Anarchy Apartmento: Little Island Management:

The fashion designer Mari Kojima was born in the prefecture of Shimane, located on the Sea of Japan. She then lived for a year in Tasmania and subsequently moved to Chicago and New York to study, where she won several fashion competitions. In the summer of last year, she returned to her old home country Japan, now works primarily as a photographer and in the consumer electronics industry, and also earns her bread as a radio DJ.

Her photos are very colorful, radiate a love of life in all its facets, and yet don’t come across as loud as a piece of candy, but rather calm, subdued, and with that very special charm. The shots show friends, acquaintances, and strangers, bleeding noses, naked butts, and nights of heavy partying. And if you want to see more, her blog We Are The Little Island Management is the right place to go. Beautiful.

[gallery]

.

Let’s Talk Straight: You Used to Be Better:

So, since I currently have some time, there’s nothing else to do but wait for death, and a few things are seriously pissing me off, today I would like to personally—yes exactly, me: the big man of AMY&PINK, inspired by the even bigger man at Nerdcore—issue a statement in non-alphabetical form regarding the petty accusations that old readers, young friends, and green trolls have recently been throwing at us more and more often, and make it clear in advance how much they pass me by. And you will damn well read through all the points with open eyes, because if anyone ever again throws at us—whether trollish or supposedly constructive—criticism referring to one or more of the following keywords, I will personally bite that person’s head off. And not just that.

Accusation 1: You used to be more personal, now everything is mainstream

We’ve grown, I admit that. And that’s nothing we need to be ashamed of. After all, we invested a lot of time, wrote great texts, and made a name for ourselves in the tough world out there. And not everyone can say that. More visitors also means we have to find our personal middle ground between intimate posts and mass-compatible general articles that ideally don’t scare off our beloved subscribers but also don’t bore new visitors.

And I think we’ve been managing that more and more lately. Personally tinged and deeper entries like “Friendship for a While,” “No Pain, No Gain,” and “Summer, Sex and Chocolate” steadily alternate with freer articles like “Crazy Otaku Mansion,” “Hotter, Hottest, Josh,” and “Burn Down The Snow,” which deal with music, art, and fashion but are still not devoid of personality, appearing on AMY&PINK because we find the topics interesting and put our heart and soul into them. A balanced mix from which everyone can pick their favorite articles. So stop whining.

Accusation 2: It’s always just tits, sex, and long dicks

You got to know us as an uncensored and free-thinking blog whose authors don’t mince words and who play with human sexuality, shock, and sometimes even disgust. Of course it may be that we’ve occasionally gone too far and scared off one or another reader, but it lies in our nature to try things out, cross boundaries, and see how far we, as children of Vice and LastNightsParty, can go.

AMY&PINK is not a blog for children and we never wanted it to be. The youth protection program keeps school computers from visiting the site, we are listed on Google with keywords like “Sex,” “Teens,” and “Girls,” and—holy shit—yes, we post naked breasts, like erect penises, and show people fucking. So what? The fact that we still have to justify ourselves for that in this day and age just shows how small-minded, jealous, and immature some of those who complain here and yet keep coming back really are.

And just because we put pornographic content up for discussion doesn’t mean it’s only about sex here. As with point 1, dirty and respectable topics alternate in constant harmony with themselves. And why? Because AMY&PINK is as diverse as life itself. No one freaks out at the Pimpettes just because they show a few hairy pussies. So stop whining.

Accusation 3: You kicked Hannah out and now everything sucks

I myself was surprised and shocked that Hannah left her home blog so stormily after almost a year, but she had her reasons and we respected them. And I suggest you do too. People develop and grow apart—just like in a relationship. And Miss Paffen is neither dead nor did we drive her away with bad intentions—that’s just life: a coming and going.

And anyone who only visited AMY&PINK to read Hannah’s posts is of course now missing their main reason to return regularly and may turn away from us, but we have to deal with that. And so do you. So let’s continue to enjoy Hannah’s articles, which remain available 24 hours a day in the archive, and be aware that every change has positive and negative sides. This one too. Because who knows what the future brings. So stop whining.

Accusation 4: Everything is stuffed with advertising

Our visitor numbers are steadily increasing and have long since exceeded a level where you could still keep up with your 2-euro-per-month webspace. In recent months, the number of simultaneous readers on AMY&PINK repeatedly grew beyond our heads and the site crashed at regular intervals or earned itself a Guinness World Record entry for eternal loading times.

That’s why we had to switch to our own server, which caused costs to skyrocket. And so that AMY&PINK doesn’t become a loss-making business for us, we had to logically and inevitably increase revenues. And how do you do that without prostitution, drug dealing, or selling your souls to Trigami? Exactly: with advertising.

However, we make a great effort in selecting our advertising partners, because not everyone can boast sexy American Apparel models. Or would you rather we plaster AMY&PINK with gaudy Google Ads, washing machines, and credit companies? No? Then stop whining.

The Devastating Conclusion

We constantly receive emails, comments, and messages from eviction squads telling us that we use such disgusting, terrible, and unacceptable images for our articles. That’s not allowed, you can’t do that. Blah blah. Of course we can. Why? Because we can. Quite simple. We are not people who fall asleep under a “My Little Pony” poster above the bed. And if we do, then only because we are so unbelievably badass. Not.

We fart, we shit, we fuck. We love, we hate, we ignore. And we’re annoyed by people who have to generalize everything. “Only tits. Only dicks. Only disgusting stuff.” Grow up already, diversity is raging here! Over there Lady Gaga is singing her latest hit, around the corner Jimmy Choo is designing for H&M, and not a meter away three idiots are sitting on a couch listening to Good Vibrations. And that is great!

So if you still haven’t realized how close to life, boundary-pushing, funny and yet so real AMY&PINK is, how much effort we put into bringing you the hottest shit in the universe to our pink page every day, and how much fun we have doing it, then we can without remorse label you as a little green, jealous troll who walks through the world without an open heart, sees everything as gray and gloomy, and begrudges us and our beloved readers their fun. So stop whining.

.

The Sexy Mixtape: Sleep With Your Neighbor:

Good music is there to cry to, to sing along with, to rejoice in, or simply to get through the day with a smile on your face. And while Spreeblick is searching for the soundtrack of an entire generation, we are content with the background music for the most beautiful minor matter in the world, because nothing can rob a charmingly candle- and fondue-decorated night of love of its potent magic faster than the wrong performers at the wrong time. After all, who wants to unite sweatily and breathing loudly with another body while Bill Kaulitz or the Killerpilze are complaining in the background about stupid teachers or heavy storms? Except maybe Emo-Cindy from Dresden and her Diddl-loving mobster Ralph.

When I think of a vibrating mixtape for intercourse, I recall fainting summer nights filled with Muse, Radiohead, and N.E.R.D., when passion gently crept along like ebb and flow and then pulsed quickly into our limbs like an all-destroying breath of fire that shattered glass, made Ikea beds collapse, tore flesh, and spat us back into reality after the deed was done, panting with a mischievous smile and bruises on our skin.

And before I start touching myself here, I want you to put the following mixtape through a stress test together with your partner, the neighbor’s dog, or simply your hand painted with waterproof marker, see if it ignites the magic within you, and hit the comments with the banging songs missing from the “Sleep With Your Neighbor” tracklist. Saddle the horses and have fun!

--> .

When Strangers Are Close to You: Friendship on Borrowed Time:

We’re talking about the time when Pikachu was still cool, the Nokia 3210 was still in, and everything outside of Bavaria was largely desolate wasteland. As pubescent drifters, we stumbled through thick and thin together with our best friends, beat the souls out of each other for nights on end as teams or opponents in “Super Smash Bros.” and “Phantasy Star Online,” stole each other’s girlfriends before sending the sluts off into the desert and meeting up fraternally for a beer at the village pub. We knew we could rely on our soulmates forever and ever, call them day or night for help, and master even the toughest situations together with the dorks. Skipping school, crashing farmers’ parties, making out with Christina behind the kiosk — we could only accomplish all that as a tight-knit team. The world was still in order.

A few years later, you’ve long since moved from the backwater to the big city. The old friends are either unemployed, married, or fled abroad for their studies, have long forgotten Pokémon and Stone Age cell phones, and at best get in touch around Christmas to regret how busy / fat / “World-of-Warcraft”-addicted you’ve become, that you unfortunately can’t see each other this time, but absolutely have to make up that beer sometime. The one eternal bond of trust, life anthems, and memories is gone, and what remains are new acquaintances. Adult friendships of convenience that work for a while and — spoiler alert — only scratch the surface.

These days, you maintain an entire army of good acquaintances in the various areas of your life (like university, work, and party life), who can be perfectly combined with your current outfit and sometimes even convey a hint of the trust you used to hand out like free T-shirts and that was reflected back a thousandfold. You laugh as if you’ve known each other forever, talk openly about your wishes and problems, and live as if there were no tomorrow.

Unfortunately, these modern friendships just don’t function globally; they seem rooted in the milieu where you met. Your best university friend simply doesn’t fit into your excessive party life; if you take two weeks of vacation, you don’t hear a peep from your beloved colleague; and party girl Paula, with whom you pull all-nighters every Saturday, seems to be tied up at WMF or maybe even a vampire. You certainly never run into her in broad daylight.

So we probably have to accept that the true friendships of climbing, groping, and brawling are relics of long-gone days, that we can only rely on ourselves now, and that our modern hipster friends are as interchangeable as the latest club hit or Versace’s winter collection. I’m going to cry for a bit and then play some “Pokémon” — in memory of the good old days. Go Pikachu!

.

At Home with Yasumasa Yonehara: Crazy Otaku Mansion:

There are apartments whose sight makes me jealous not only because of their modern furnishings, spacious layouts, or simply because of their sexy resident — no, there are homes that are so awesome, amazing, and superlative that I’d like to lure the owner away under false pretenses, throw him out, and move in myself.

Almost happened during the latest home invasion by The Selby, who temporarily moved in with Japanese photographer and blogger Yasumasa Yonehara and took a thorough look at his absolutely fantastic pad. Alongside his appealing work (primarily featuring half-naked, big-eyed girls), the colorful photos particularly reveal his love for even more colorful sneakers, uber-cool action figures, and SpongeBob SquarePants.

His admittedly rather cramped dwelling in the Godzilla capital Tokyo is a paradise for little pubescent boys or slightly underdeveloped adults (aka me), teeming with curiosities, awesome caps, and photos of bare Nanamis and Ayumis. I’ve already secured my flight on his cluttered desk, and while I’m on my way, you can indulge yourselves in his Blogspot blog Yone, which I may not understand word for word, but at least it offers beautiful photos. Picture books have always been my favorite anyway.

[gallery]

.

Bang Bang Berlin: A Legend Goes Online:

If there’s one phrase I remember from the boozy Scala farewell party, it’s “Bang Bang Berlin.” They photographed us — nicely drunk — on one of the many Dixie toilets while we plastered ourselves with filthy stickers and created art with artists like Ollio and his enchanting girlfriend. Back then still a verbal phantom in the murmur of the partying crowd, Bang Bang Berlin has been reality for a few days now and is online as a fresh website about Berlin and everything that creeps and crawls within it, as also reported here.

Founder Liz spoke with AMY&PINK about the launch of her project and revealed that she and her three co-authors Mertol, Emer, and Jobot want to bring the ultimate online guide to the German capital and its various scenes to life with BBB. It aims to stand out from other city blogs particularly through the four individual perspectives and to win readers’ trust with unique articles and a palpable love for Berlin.

And Bang Bang Berlin continues to evolve. By next year at the latest, more features and video support are planned, and Liz, alongside Berlin’s newest child, is dedicating herself to her creative career as a freelance journalist and producer. She is currently developing the web show “Palina and the Glitz” together with our favorite presenter, in which the cheeky blonde takes care of female hipsters’ party outfits and, among other things, takes a detailed look down Jennifer Rostock’s neckline.

We definitely wish Liz and her team every success in the digital jungle and are certain that the four of them will stir up quite a bit in our beloved metropolis with Bang Bang Berlin and that we’ll be hearing a lot more from them.

.

The She-Man Is Back: Lady Gaga – Bad Romance:

Our favorite transvestite is back and, after “Paparazzi” and “Poker Face,” gifts us with “Bad Romance,” a new, let’s say, masterpiece of modern video art including outlandish performance, huge eyes, and burning white rooms. The song is mainly about “Oh-oh-oh-oh-oooh-oh-oh-oooh-oh-oh-oh-oh!”, “Rah-rah-ah-ah-ah-ah! Roma-roma-mamaa! Ga-ga-ooh-la-la!” and, broadly speaking, about her wanting something. Namely drama, hands, and kisses in the sand. Well, if that’s not something.

However, I have to agree with Mr. Jeriko, who says that from now on the hero of our time Eric Cartman should perform all Gaga songs. So let’s vote: Which video do you like better? The new one by the transvestite or the version by the Hitler offspring from South Park? And I’m still waiting for Ms. Stefani Joanne Angelina Germanotta to one day perform a little song about world peace and the grievances on our planet… but that may take a while.

.

Hardcore Personal Ads: Philipp the Fashion Photographer:

Name: Phil. Age: 18. Height: 1.83m. Place of residence: Saarbrücken, between Frankfurt and Cologne. Profession: Fashion photographer. Zodiac sign: Cancer. What friends say: Non-mainstream. What the ex says: All the best. I go weak for: Women with a unique and tasteful clothing style. When I’m in love: I want to show it. :-) I’m good at: Cuddling and keeping my cool. I’m not good at: Resisting donuts. My distinguishing feature: Birthmark on the lower left palm. Secret passion: Slim, long fingers and thin women. No-go: Unshaven arms and legs, unfriendly bus drivers. I say: quoting: “…that human stupidity is more infinite than the universe” (attrib. A. Einstein). I believe in: God. My quirk: Very loud music after every time making love. I flee from: Thick sausage fingers.

“I’m not mainstream; that started back in kindergarten, when we showed each other things in the doll corner that were probably meant for after 24:00, and I once had something different than the three kindergarten girlfriends. And if it were up to me and I held the ‘staff of creation’ in my hand, everyone would be even more different, at least when it comes to their characters and taste. I’m for world peace and for helping unfriendly people. And what’s really silly are men who think they don’t have to wear purple because they’re men. I don’t like male-female clichés. Women are allowed to become Formula 1 drivers and men can love shoes. Men can be as creative as women. Soccer isn’t for me. I love kissing on a park bench and provoking uptight mustache wearers with it. Actually, I just want to help those people loosen up.

I hate €1-jobbers who accompany buses and trains and don’t even help disabled or elderly people. I love art. I don’t like poorly raised and undisciplined toddlers. I don’t like smelly fish restaurants. I like the internet with its anonymous world. I love extraordinary places. I love making you happy. What I really don’t like are communication misunderstandings in Web 2.0. I love traveling. I like capturing every great moment. I like Polaroids where I don’t have to share my secrets with the lab technician. I hate constantly having to learn firsthand that coconuts aren’t Bountys. I love being told on Twitter that I’m loved and saying that I love. I like sharing with you. I love the feeling of mutually looking out for each other.

I l(i)ove the goal of someday owning a small, private island to relax, think, and design. I love merging my life with that of another woman, enjoying it, discovering it, traveling through it. I actually don’t have that many demands. If you’re reading this, it already means we apparently read the same blogs, you know. I like traveling, but alone it’s not as much fun. I want to have someone familiar with me when we discover new worlds together and in the evening slip back into our own world in front of the hotel fireplace. Life is too exciting to enjoy it alone; you can’t remember all those impressions by yourself. If we don’t find each other quickly now, how are we supposed to tell our grandchildren about the past together someday?

In short, I just want the feeling of being loved. What you look like is almost irrelevant. If you were teased in kindergarten by cruel kids because you look different, then it could well be that I find you extraordinarily beautiful. So I buy everything on eBay because it’s simply faster, and if you’d like to try out the underwater camera I just bought with me and lots of bathing fun, then get in touch quickly. Or maybe you like cookies and we bake some together before Christmas — I can’t do that — and then eat the dough together and get stomachaches afterwards. Halloween was just recently. If I’d written this personal ad a bit earlier, we might already be scaring little kids together now.

I miss moments like that. Since I never get comments on my own blog because I don’t maintain it as nicely as Hannah, Caro, and Marcel do, I’d be happy about a nice comment here or, even better, an email.”

If you want to get to know Philipp, just send him a nice email or write something lovely in the comments. If you’d like to take part in the hardcore personal ads yourself, then send your meaningful text and a snazzy photo to us by email. Have fun! This section was ruthlessly stolen from NEON.

.

From the Life of a Blogger: Summer, Sex and Chocolate:

There aren’t many girls who appeal to me both physically and emotionally and who don’t bore me to death after five minutes of small-talk nonsense about fish, hairstyles and Friedrichshain—despite a pretty bust and a firm butt—so much that I’d rather throw myself out of the nearest fifth-floor window at a private party and devote myself to a skillfully executed basal skull fracture than continue listening to their bleached thoughts. Female beings have to challenge me, sweep me away, inspire me on complex levels and show me a world I haven’t known before. Or possess an extremely healthy oral cavity.

“All good things begin with an S,” as an old Dutch proverb says, and so, just for the fun of it, I’d like to tell you about Sandra, whom I more or less gently collided with recently and who conquered my life effortlessly with her perverted remarks, her mischievous smile, and a verbal as well as physical quick-wittedness. Since then, I’ve been keeping her as my sexy groupie in the basement.

If you’d like to drop by and feed her chocolate and caramelized marshmallows, you’re warmly invited. And when she’s not hopping around various festivities like the Shock the World Party with me, performing art on a table together with me at the Illustrative and coaxing spicy details about Nora Tschirner’s private life and the secret relationships of certain GZSZ starlets out of the house photographer, or simply throwing popcorn at me in the cinema, she also takes magnificent photos of Berlin and everything around it with her little digicam.

So go ahead and say hello. Just because it’s fun.

.

Sarah Small: Kissing in the Darkroom:

Born in 1979 in Washington, D.C., Sarah Small found herself in the arms of a musician family after her birth, made out with her crush at 13 in the darkroom of a summer art camp, and then fell hopelessly in love. Not with the crush, but with photography. With her newly purchased Pentax K1000, she roamed the streets of her hometown from then on, photographing everything that came before her lens and practicing her newly discovered skills at home on her red-haired, freckle-covered sister Rachel.

Today she works in Brooklyn, New York. Since 1997 she has taken a Polaroid photo of herself every single day and wants to turn that into her life’s project. And when she’s had enough of her work, she sings her heart out together with three others in her Balkan a cappella band Black Sea Hotel. Her work has been published in Vogue, Life and The New York Times, among others, and she was recently named by American Photo as one of the 13 most important female photographers.

Sarah Small gained particular recognition through her photographic trademark of uniting completely different characters in one work and then capturing them in bright, vivid colors. In doing so, she aims to highlight the unique emotional reactions of her models and thus offer the viewer a confused yet somehow beautiful world. And in my opinion, she succeeds quite well.

[gallery]

.

Ask Dr. Amy: Can You Live on Beck’s Alone?:

Our logo doll Lil’ Amy has successfully completed her doctoral thesis on the subject of “Small, naked and not quite tight anymore,” can now enjoy two extra letters plus a period in front of her first name, and starting today will join us in getting to the bottom of life’s great mysteries, unsolved riddles and syrupy mental nonsense. To kick things off, she has devoted herself to a question that could hardly be more down-to-earth and whose positive answer might prompt quite a few dietary changes: Can you survive on Beck’s alone?

The answer is as simple as it is straightforward: Yes, as long as you sell enough of it. But Dr. Amy can also report the following from the research front to consumers, customers and addicts: It works—well, almost. You can continue living on the basis of a Beck’s diet without any problems. A guy named Dr. Nigel Goodwin at the University of Nottingham wrote in the literary masterpiece “The Big Book o’ Beer” (which ranks just behind the Bible on the list of the world’s most important printed pages) that due to its ingredients, beer contains all the vitamins and minerals necessary for continued breathing except calcium and vitamin C.

However, you would have to pour down 47 bottles a day to supply your sick little bodies with enough nutrients. But with additional orange juice and a bit of milk, you could drift through existence more or less tipsy—depending on your training. Just please don’t forget to change your underwear at least twice a day…

So now we’re all a little bit wiser, and if you’ve always wanted to know something your grandparents wouldn’t tell you, then post your questions in the comments. Lil’ Amy will pick the best one and answer it in detail next week on AMY&PINK. Provided she survives her newly discovered Beck’s diet…

.

Beautiful, Sexy and Without Scandals: MTV Europe Music Awards:

Last night, the MTV Europe Music Awards 2009 honored us as the music event of the year and, after a long wait, finally returned to the German capital. And of course we were live at the O2 Arena when Katy Perry melted Europe with her sexy outfits, the Foo Fighters made the arena shake, and Green Day set the stage ablaze. The show sparkled with the presence and absence of various stars, The Hoff™ muttered world-improving wisdom into the microphone, and the stunning—though sometimes slightly soulless-looking—Miranda Cosgrove presented the award for Best Video to Beyoncé. She probably has Kanye West to thank for that.

Afterwards, Malte and I sneakily made our way onto Universal’s aftershow party, where we drank in the VIP area until the early hours of the morning with Sido, Tokio Hotel including blonde, underage groupies, and Joko, polished the dance floor during the live performances of Culcha Candela, Jan Delay and Patrice, and in the end snagged some gifts, devoured pizza, and had a quick chat with my favorite host Palina.

All in all, another successful night that once again made me realize I should stop replacing basic food groups like water and bread with Red Bull, because at a certain point I start hopping through the corridors like a ferret on coke, regularly attracting one or two mocking glances from bodyguards, press people, and Z-list celebrities. And vice versa.

A big thank you also goes to Nils Threepwood and his charming girlfriend, and now I’m going to find a quiet spot and then skillfully collapse—ideally without breaking anything. Wish me luck. Let’s see if I can manage it.

.

G-Shock Invited Everyone to Make Love: Shock the World Party in Berlin:

Last night, the who’s who of Berlin’s celebrity and hipster scene once again gathered for a rendezvous of handshakes and kisses left and right, this time at the annual G-Shock Shock The World Tour 2009 at the Admiralspalast. We attention-hungry vultures naturally couldn’t miss this monumental meeting of faces known from TV and radio and simply snagged a few white AAA wristbands to have a drink with MTV starlets like Palina and Anastasia, the No Angels crew and the ruling mayor Wowereit, make some small talk with the German fashion blogger scene and fool around a bit in the VIP area with sugar-sweet girls in green tops.

While we wrestled with the Ochsenknecht brothers and a very likable Keichii-Nitta double over the last remaining bottles of vodka, artists such as the half-naked Amanda Blank, former MTV host P-Knock-U aka Patrice and the not quite as tall Lady Sovereign heated up the tipsy crowd on the dance floor—and in the end there were even gifts.

So this event can’t have been that bad after all, and tonight it’s straight on to the MTV Europe Music Awards. We’re curious to see whether the heavily promoted show, advertised for months in almost hypnotically repetitive campaigns and featuring stars like Beyoncé, Katy Perry and Eminem, delivers what it promises. It all starts at 8:00 PM.

.

Winter Mixtape: Burn Down The Snow:

Even though you little basement kids probably haven’t noticed yet, winter is slowly knocking on our door. Outside, the temperature is dropping by the minute, the first snow has already fallen and Father Frost is slowly making his arduous way west from Siberia. And although the cold season is often seen as months of stagnation, death and the old-established, things are noticeably going wild with us—new love, new people, new decisions.

And so that you won’t be left without musical accompaniment while freezing alone, cuddling with your loved ones or having group sex with the neighbors, here—just for you—is the perfect winter mixtape featuring artists like Dresden Dolls, Bat for Lashes and Lykke Li to make you happy, make you cry and make you love. So turn up the speakers, take off your clothes and stretch your arms and legs far from your body, because this music will really heat you up.

.

Initiative for More Friendliness Toward Strangers: Color Is Great:

Racism can have many causes. Ignorance, for example. Bad experiences in the past that, through the influence of the wrong friends, settle as a parallel truth in the minds of the supposed victims. Or simply hatred toward something or someone entirely different, which is much easier to project onto the Brazilian family across the street. It can be expressed openly in hateful tirades online, at the local fair or in a dark alley, or secretly behind closed office doors, at the supermarket checkout or in preferential decisions—but one thing it always is: unfair, inhumane and incredibly ignorant.

Thorsten from the Pirgofabrik, unlike so many other media outlets, is not calling today for a monumental and often merely publicity-driven fight against injustice toward fellow human beings. Instead, with his campaign he wants to celebrate friendliness toward strangers, which should once again make us all realize how sad it is that this kind of hatred still has to be discussed—but that it will probably still be a long road until even the last Udo drops the barriers in his head and we can all sing and hop around on a green meadow together.

Many of my best friends are foreigners, citizens with a migration background and Germans. A colorful mix of all kinds of languages, culinary preferences and lifestyles that I have grown up with since early childhood and without which I would lack a great deal of understanding of the world, wonderful memories and culinary orgasms. I greet people in Spanish, say goodbye to them in Italian and listen to Japanese pop music in between.

Being forced to process only purely German ideas in my little head would mean the downfall of all creativity for me. So we should all be glad that there is so much variety, fun and fresh exchange of ideas that thrives and develops only through the mixture of a constantly interweaving society. Here’s to friendliness toward strangers.

.

The Fool and the Butterfly:

I always fall in love with the kind of person who slips through my fingers like smoke. The ones who never carry keys, who don’t answer messages, who makes me believe their body is a poem and their soul is some wild animal, untamed and glowing. The people who live like their veins pulse with the beat of freedom—mental, physical, cosmic freedom.

I meet them and suddenly my chest is no longer my own. One touch. One crooked smile. One kiss that tastes like danger and gum. I hope, no, I ache, to be the one. The one they stop for. The one that makes them pack away their suitcase heart. I want to be the reason they stay, feel at home, see me as their safe place in the chaos.

I hope that maybe, just maybe, they’ll throw their rules into the river for me, swear forever with breathless mouths, stay still. But it never works like that. It’s always the same stupid movie. I play the fool. They play the wind. What did we learn way too young? One of us is Ernie. The other? Bert. Always Bert. The one who stays behind to clean up the mess.

Ernie and I watched 500 Days of Summer in a dusty, half-broken cinema that smelled like artificial popcorn and ghosts of teenage sex. Zooey Deschanel floated through the screen like cotton candy laced with cyanide. Joseph Gordon-Levitt blinked too slowly, like someone who still believes in mixtapes, warmth, and soulmates.

The film was beautiful in a dangerous way—about a butterfly and the fool who tried to pin it to a wall. About love that doesn’t love back. About how hope resurrects itself like some dumb zombie, only to get its head smashed again. Over and over. The songs tasted like cherry coke and breakups. The girl and I, barely touching, burning with that weird early-stage electricity.

We laughed until tears ran down. We whispered insults at the screen, like children pretending not to care. Bitch, we said with reverence, heartbreak, and recognition. The film wasn’t a love story. It was a confession. A warning. A dare. Perfect for a first date. Perfect for ruining me just enough to want another one.

.

Concert Review: Bat for Lashes in Berlin:

Last night, the British band Bat for Lashes delighted the Fritz Club at Berlin’s Postbahnhof together with their admittedly somewhat unconventional support act Hecuba. As expected, my fascination and infatuation with Natasha Khan transformed during the gig into a devoted and eternal love that will outlast all time, overcome every obstacle, and freeze hundreds of other fans into ice.

Our indie prophetess, who gained recognition and a colorfully mixed fan base not least through such great tracks as "Daniel" and "Pearl's Dream," was so charming, fairy-like, and charismatic. Together with her band, she impressed with brilliant composing, a likable stage presence, and an breathtakingly amazing voice, that my enchanting companion Sara—who was slightly annoyed because of an overpriced hoodie—and I agreed on one thing: we want to kidnap her, put her in an enchanted terrarium, and have her dance and sing just for us in a magical, bluish shimmering environment.

The entire concert was surrounded by a certain aura. The audience even sang a birthday serenade for Natasha, who recently turned 30. Various film and TV personalities, such as our favorite MTV homie Klaas Heufer-Umlauf, also didn’t want to miss the gig and everything that came with it. And if, like us, you can’t get enough of the most magical band of modern times, we recommend tonight’s concert in Hamburg as well as the re-release of their second album "Two Suns," which also includes the fantastic documentary "Two + Two."

.

A Little Star Turns 22: Happy Birthday Hannah:

For as long as we can remember, our existence was gray, dull, and full of emotional voids. We felt empty at heart, lost in the world, and realized that something—yes—someone was missing. So we trudged through our daily duties day in, day out, almost no longer believing that anything would ever change. But then she entered our lives: Germany’s brightest treasure, the Mother Teresa of fashion, the hottest pseudo-nerd on the internet: Hannah Maria Paffen. And today she turns an incredible twelve years old. Plus ten.

And let’s be honest: AMY&PINK would be absolutely nothing without this blonde temptation. Like no other on the web, she floods us and you with a tremendous selection of emotional treasures, depressive mental clutter, and life-affirming all-purpose weapons, showing us how diverse, surprising, and full of colorful facets music, love, and death can be.

So let’s wish our sweet birthday girl all the love in the world, hurl heaps of heartfelt congratulations her way, and hope together that we won’t lose her anytime soon—and that you’ll still find her just as wonderful once we’ve taken over the world. Period.

.

Giveaway: Win Tickets to the MTV Europe Music Awards:

The biggest music event of the year is just a few days away. On November 5, amazing stars like Katy Perry, Green Day, and Shakira will sweep through the German capital and shake the O2 World at this year’s MTV Europe Music Awards, delight us with the best tracks of modern times, and turn our favorite city Berlin into one gigantic party. And the best part: you can be there live!

We’re giving away 2 exclusive tickets to the EMAs and, on top of that, The Beatles: Rock Band double microphone pack for PS3! All you have to do is be over 18 years old and leave us a comment with a valid email address by November 1, telling us—and the world—which superstar you’d like to jump into bed with and why.

Tickets for the event are not available for purchase and can only be won through giveaways—either here with us or directly at MTV. If you want to drastically increase your chances and grab more exclusive tickets, you can stop by the Alexa in Berlin today to show off your singing skills or take part this weekend in one of the public castings in front of the MTV building in Berlin, where we will also be present.

We wish you all the best of luck. And if you’ve tried everything and still couldn’t get your hands on tickets—despite various legal and illegal options—just remember that this year’s MTV Europe Music Awards will be broadcast live from the O2 World Berlin on Thursday, November 5, 2009, starting at 9 PM on MTV. And who would want to miss that..?

.

AMY&PINK Is Back: Better, Harder, and Fatter:

Congratulations to all of you who have survived the swine flu mass vaccinations unscathed and without any visible permanent damage, and who now have the unique pleasure of experiencing the relaunch of AMY&PINK—stuffed with tons of bells and whistles, improvements, and advertising banners—live and in color on this beautiful Wednesday morning.

As you can see, we meticulously read and analyzed your suggestions for improvement and then (as I’m only just now realizing) did exactly the opposite. The hyperlinks are gone. For no apparent reason. Just like the hearts, which we removed because even Kai-Uwe from Aldi had already copied that feature and we were more than happy to part ways with it. Adios, love. Lookbook, FFFFOUND!, and Google Ads—all of that has vanished into nirvana. At least until we miss them and come crawling back on our knees.

What remains is the true core of AMYPINK, my friends. A core nourished by grandiose topics, illuminated by enchanting readers, and grown—thanks to our resulting, I’d almost say unique texts, which certainly don’t suit everyone and earn us new haters week after week—into what I proudly announce here: We are no longer a blog—no—we now call ourselves a magazine! Or a blogazine... or a smut site—it depends on our mood.

What changes for you, you’re probably asking yourselves. What’s rattling around in your sweet little heads? Whether you now have to register somewhere? Whether we’ll start charging monthly fees in November (that would be an idea)? Or whether you should chase us out of the German blog charts with torches and pitchforks? No, no, folks. For you, everything stays the same.

You’ll continue to follow us diligently on Twitter, get your daily dose of pseudo-porn from our Tumblr blog, and befriend us on Facebook. In return, we’ll supply you with articles fertilized with quality and good conscience about life’s fluids, awesome bands, and bouncing breasts, links to the hottest stuff on the web, and photos of ugly toddlers. So, what do you think?

.

Fashion Series in VICE: Cool Squat Raves in Pink:

I really don’t need more in life than a few prostitutes named Cindy / Mandy / Jenny, great music, and breathtakingly beautiful photography. That VICE Magazine satisfies my existential dreams month after month in a full all-inclusive package—and even in between via the internet to the point of humiliation—should already be clear to you from my zombie-like, repeatedly and exclusively positive posts.

And sticking with photography (which works closely with the other two categories), the magazine once again offers plenty of sexy pseudo-fashion spreads this month that make us horny old geezers drool from our slavering body openings, entertain fashion victims with nicely thrown-together brand outfits, or inspire art connoisseurs with work presented in the right light and featuring characterful models.

In "Squat Rave," we can experience wholesome middle-class adventures with green-haired Laura and her frisky dog; in "Cool Kids," we jump around among a stylish clique of girls making out and playing SNES; and in "Preppy In Pink," we find ourselves accompanying the enchanting Daisy von Furth on a car ride through New York. Three wonderful daydreams that let us forget the more than dreadful weather outside for a few moments.

.

The New Song of the Pop Princess: Lily Allen – Who'd Have Known?:

Okay, after Lily Allen officially broke up with us, I was prepared for anything. That she’d be dragged halfway across Timbuktu by her management. That she’d soon tour Europe to promote the virtues of drugs and alcohol at local elementary schools. Or that she’d retreat to the Himalayas with a shady guru. But instead, the former pseudo-nude model surprises us with a great new video clip.

And as the official Nora Tschirner, Bat for Lashes, and of course Lily Allen fan club, we are proud to be the first in good old Germany to provide you with the clip for "Who'd Have Known?," in which… she… um… well… kidnaps Elton John. Because she loves him. But who doesn’t, after all.

And I thank God and the world that Lily apparently has found her way back to the path of virtue and will perform a few little serenades on November 3 at Astra in Berlin. And I already have a plan for getting close to her without detours: I’ll simply pretend to be a hairdresser. That’s an Allen insider. Thanks for listening.

.

Nerd Dreams in the Far East: Marci’s Totally Crazy Japan Corner #1:

If there’s one nation I would grant total world domination—seized by atomic weapons and all—it would definitely be the Japanese. No other country on this planet manages to make me regularly and involuntarily snort beer out of my nose the way they do. With their creativity, humor, and sheer brain rot, some Heinz over here could really take a lesson or two. Let’s get started with my finds of the week.

Panic Face King – I bet that poor guy definitely crapped his pants thanks to this delightful TV show. I would have too. Johnson Banks “Phonetikana” – Finally a typeface to… uh, I’ll just say understand Japanese. A hole and Maru4 – One cat, many faces. Life on the Japanese Coast – (M)y dream comes true. “Joyful” by Ikimono Gakari – My current favorite J-Pop band. I’m just into that stuff, but you know me.

Girl Meets Girl – Discover the world with Coba-U. Animal Farm – The bear and the tiger probably won’t become best friends… Helicopter Boyz In Yomiuri Land – Guys, I have no idea either… Helicopter Boyz. Wtf. Disney Cookies – Mickey Mouse, right where he belongs: in the oven! Slo-Mo People – Funny people running even funnier to a song by Nujabes. Very funny stuff. Otamatone & Keromin – One of those instruments looks like sperm. Breast Pudding – Mommy’s pudding tastes like…

.

Marina And The Diamonds: Mowgli’s Road:

Our all-time favorite pussy Sara loves Florence And The Machine so much that she actually wanted to go to their concert in Berlin recently. I always confuse them with a completely different band that I discovered around the same time and whose name structure sounds pretty similar—at least inside my scrambled brain. But I like them way more.

I’m talking about the British one-woman combo Marina And The Diamonds, whose current video “Mowgli’s Road” premiered last night and whose unmistakable voice has already poured stunning yet rousing tracks like “Obessions” and “I Am Not A Robot” directly from my iPod into my beautifully designed ears.

We don’t really know yet when the enchanting Marina Diamandis will do us the honor of bringing her sweet little butt to Germany, but at the latest after the debut of her first album “Family Jewels,” which will be released in spring 2010, the first venues in Berlin and Munich will be packed to the brim. Until then, she can enjoy having me as her only fan.

.

Party, Music and Lots of Stars: Ride with Us to the MTV Europe Music Awards:

On what will presumably be a very cold evening on November 5, national and international stars such as Shakira, Little Boots, and my secret favorites The Veronicas will gather in Berlin for this year’s MTV Europe Music Awards 2009. And the best part: you can be there with us!

In a monumental joint effort with Mr. UARRR, the Elektrospanier, and the enchanting Miss Frost, AMY&PINK is now also bringing you—with a bit of luck—to the music event of the year. And with that, we want to prove to the world that the internet is capable of more than just a few silly “yeaahhs” and insignificant Twitter protests in Iran.

All you have to do is register here with the o2-Crew, join this group, and then post your chosen username here in the comments. The 150 available tickets will then be raffled off fairly. Even if you don’t necessarily want to come along, you can still participate or spread the word online and among your friends just to do something good for once. Good luck—and yes: Tokio Hotel will be there too.

.

It’s a Fashion Blog! AMY&PINK Presents: lil.bit:

On this messed-up world, so much awesome shit is constantly happening that we could never even begin to adequately present, evaluate, and tear it apart here on AMY&PINK alone. New music, fresh art, and sexy clothes ultimately need a stage on which they can shine—and if we don’t have enough space for that here... then we’ll just create it ourselves!

Dori, Jenny, Deniz, and Juliane are four tough yet enchanting girls in the eternal fight against boredom, shitty fashion, and soulless space-wasters, and they have taken on the honorable task of leading the first spin-off blog of AMY&PINK, lil.bit, to success and really shaking up the rusty blogosphere with their combined forces.

So give the newest members of our pink family a very, very warm welcome, let yourselves—like I did—be impressed, enchanted, and wrapped around their fingers by their unique charm, their straightforward writing style, and an IQ that lies somewhere between 75 A and B on the blog launched today at lil.bit, and if in doubt, just follow them straight into absolute ruin. Have fun!

.

Tell Us Your Opinion! Love, Booms, and Naked Women:

For almost a year now, Hannah, I, and more recently Caro have been blogging on the revamped AMY&PINK about everything that moves us, occupies us, and seems worth shouting out into the wide world. When readers are asked to describe us, they talk about "bratty language, heart-melting reflections, and above all some dashing young naked ladies," "deeply probing texts about friendship, love, and the meaning of life," and "three super-likeable people who tell everyday stories with charm, wit, and a few bits of naughtiness."

We thrive like tigers on all the awesome shit, the love you show us, and the grand moments we’ve already been able to experience with and through AMY&PINK. And at this point we’d like to sincerely thank all those people who have offered helpful support, grand words, and endless loyalty during the highs and lows, the sometimes very personal dramas, and all the surrounding chaos.

However, from the very beginning we’ve also been accompanied by curious vultures who, at irregular intervals, throw around buzzwords like commercialization, soullessness, and vulgar language, accuse us of constant bombardment with boobs, sex, and naked women, and in particular label our occasionally more thoughtful posts as unbelievable and hypocritical because, unlike them, we don’t constantly wallow James-Blunt-style in the swamp of depression and hopelessness, but instead philosophize in between about awesome songs, great parties, and delicious cheesecake. Just like life actually is. We terrible rascals.

And of course we could let these attention-seeking assholes go in one ear and out the other, but since we’re always interested in finding out what our readers think of AMY&PINK and don’t want to drift off into some distant spheres, we’d like to seize this opportunity and, quite bluntly and without smileys, know what you think about the “Booms From Berlin And Munich,” what you love, what you think is shitty. The texts, the photos, the link list—what annoys you, what should we do differently, and what can’t you get enough of? Lay it out openly, freely, and directly, and use this chance to show us what’s going on inside our favorite readers so that we can learn from it and continue to be your favorite blog in the future.

.

Our Darling Is Back: Lykke Li – Possibility:

The cute Swede Lykke Li ushered in a new era in my understanding of music, art, and life in general a few years ago, and even though many say she’s not that much of a live performer, her album “Youth Novels” remains one of my absolute favorites and has practically burned itself into my iPod.

Since then I’ve been yearning for new material to make me dream, dance around, and weep myself into a depressive haze, and that’s exactly why the announcement of a new soundtrack made me grin with delight on the one hand and bombard me with existential fears on the other. The good news: Lykke Li has contributed a song. The bad news: it’s for “Twilight.”

Not that I have anything against little girls suddenly no longer messing around with magic spells and wooden brooms but instead copying sweet, depressive, pale vampires, but I’ve always had something against movies that primarily take place in dark forests. “The Blair Witch Project,” for example. “Wrong Turn.” Or even “7 Dwarfs – Men Alone in the Woods.” Terrible.

On the other hand, Ms. Zachrisson’s song is absolutely magnificent, dealing with oppressive gloominess about love, suffering, and mistakes in life, and it makes me incredibly excited for her upcoming album, which she is currently working on with full passion. Until then, we can safely listen to the rest of the soundtrack featuring greats like The Killers, Death Cab For Cutie, and the Editors. Even if we’re not into vampires.

[audio:possibility.mp3]

.

How Secrets Define Us: I Know Something You Don’t Know:

The people around us would be only half as interesting if we knew everything about them. Why does Björn never talk about his mother? Where does Annika sneak off to every Wednesday evening? And why does Peter freak out every time he hears the word “flashlight” and storm out of the room in anger? Questions about why and how are often dismissed with a guilty shake of the head and a dose of spontaneous hatred, and then the subject is quickly changed. Nice weather today.

So in our little heads we make up our own stories. Maybe his mother gave up her little darling for adoption right after birth. Perhaps Annika is training in the horizontal trade and Wednesday is her beginner’s course. And surely Peter was beaten senseless with flashlights by his big brothers. Yes, that must be it.

Secrets can be as deep as the Mariana Trench and, once uncovered, make the beloved person shine in a completely different light—where love can easily turn into disgust and incomprehension—or they can be as shallow as a puddle, and the detective work to uncover them wasn’t worth a single moment. You take a cooking class on Wednesdays? How boring.

Both small and big concealments are above all a form of protection. From others, from oneself. For example, I really don’t want everyone to know that I bite pieces off bananas and throw them into my cereal instead of using a knife. That on every foreign toilet I put toilet paper on the seat because I’m afraid of killer viruses, but at home I breed a new generation of them in the sink. Or that I didn’t call Julia back and watched “Hannah Montana” instead because she hadn’t shaved her legs the last time we had sex. And what are your secrets?

.

Men’s Hearts: Bruce Berger – All the Children of This Earth:

Today is official Children’s Day at AMY&PINK and in this context I unfortunately have to mention that the greatest babysitter of all time, namely Michael Jackson himself, has departed from earthly existence and therefore logically can no longer properly take care of our little treasures. If it weren’t for the greatest live act ever: Bruce Berger.

He is a phenomenal phantom, underestimated superstar, and great lover of our planet all in one, has already sweetened our party nights, solo mornings, and cuddly evenings with such grand hits as (...) and now, with his monumental number “All the Children of This Earth,” he strikes out against corruption, hatred, and environmental pollution. And Bruce Berger wants us all to think about it, to do something about these grievances, and—very important—to clap along.

So let’s all celebrate precious peace, fight the worst diseases, and send the children of this world a wonderful message through our actions: we are thinking about our planet, we are thinking about you, and we are thinking especially very hard about ourselves. For a more beautiful togetherness, for love and for justice. For humanity.

--> .

A Children’s Series Conquers the Web: Bed-Wetters and the Internet: iCarly:

To hell with all those random social media experts, self-proclaimed blog gurus and know-it-all SEOs, because the true secrets of how to achieve fame, fortune and success on the internet are not revealed by nerdy, aging pseudo-unemployed types, but currently by three little brats in the successful children’s show "iCarly", which I could watch 24 hours a day.

The brat from "Drake & Josh" and her two crazy friends deal with exactly the same issues that we, as small fish in the vast participatory web, constantly have to struggle with. On top of that, they have to cope with freaked-out stalkers, diabolical hackers and the commercial selling of one’s soul. And once the respective adventure is successfully wrapped up, there are chicken wings, cheese pizzas and smoothies for everyone – how awesome is that, please?

The sometimes slightly pedophilic-tinged spectacle airs on Nick and occasionally on VIVA. And so you can sleep peacefully at night, let me assure you right here that every episode has a happy ending, no Poken are harmed, and the occasionally quite terrifying Sam will not suddenly show up at your house and raid your refrigerator. Guaranteed.

.

The Campaign Enters Its 2nd Round: A ♥ for Blogs:

Weblogs really are something wonderful. They connect complete strangers by philosophizing about hobbies, revolutions and other nonsense, boycotting the poorly paid work of local journalists as egoistically run dictatorships, and constantly violating common sense, society’s conventions or even applicable law through their commentaries on how to live a better life, sweet photos of even sweeter kittens, or by showcasing the latest pseudo-fashionable favorite songs.

And because Kai from StyleSpion loves the confusing world of blogs just as much as we do and wants to bring them closer together again as leaders of hearts, he is calling on us today to link to the most beautiful, best and most charismatic among them for the sake of love. Here is our selection of fresh, German-language gems, and as always, you can find all our other favorite oddballs in our blogroll.

Megazord – Sick shit to get you warmed up. Reigen – Anna and Juliane fashion things up. Vice – Always dirty stuff. iHeartBerlin – From the heart of the capital. Kopfbunt – The world of design inside your head. dragstripGirl – Top-notch Atzenpunk. GameOne – The first address when it comes to gaming. Panda Fuck – Vanessa is into animal sex. NesNes.de – The adventures of an eccentric Turkish girl. MC Winkel – Hip hop, brains and awesome cribs. Indigoidian – Profound mindfuck. Sexdrugsblognroll – Two crazies run wild. Jeriko – The old man and art. Station57 – Lots of fries, no cheese.

.

Giveaway: Win Tickets for the G-Shock “Shock The World Tour 2009”:

On November 4th, the air will be on fire in the German capital, because on that otherwise chilly evening, top acts such as Amanda Blank, Lady Sovereign and Bugati Force will storm the Admiralspalast at the grand finale of the G-Shock Shock The World Tour 2009 in Berlin and offer us little party kids one of the most electrifying events of the year.

And because we’re not just telling you this so you can fall asleep a little smarter tonight, we’re giving away 3 x 2 tickets in cooperation with a well-known watch manufacturer for you and everyone you love, so you might be able to tear up the dance floor together with Sara and me. And our mere presence alone practically forces you to participate.

Since it’s getting damn cold outside again and we’re all longing for summer, sun and beach, all you have to do to hold the tickets in your frozen smoker hands is answer the following question in a comment: Which three things would you take to a deserted island? Don’t forget that at least one of those items must be a G-Shock watch, and you have until October 18th to take part in this giveaway. And as always: the crazier the answers, the more fun for us – but anyone can win. Good luck!

.

Good or Bad Idea? Sex with the Ex:

Once the furniture has been destroyed, phone numbers blocked and restraining orders signed, society can warmly welcome two freshly baked singles back into its world dictated by frozen pizzas and gyms. And nothing feels so good at first and yet hurts so endlessly afterward as the atomic end of a once loving relationship dripping with vows of fidelity.

But while you slowly but surely get your life back under control after hour zero, put away the chocolate ice cream and finally dare to mingle with people again, there’s still one thing you somehow miss despite self-service and flings with backcombed disco dudes: sex with your former better half. After all, it took months, sometimes even years, to finally learn how to properly handle the other person’s body, to understand wordlessly whether you’d rather make love romantically in that moment or break the world record in speed-fucking, and to reach a soul connection in order to ascend to higher spheres together.

That’s why it’s hardly surprising that former couples who have thrown bile at each other’s heads, insulted family, friends and pets into the ground, and possibly even already have a new partner at their side, disappear behind the next corner at parties, chess clubs or class reunions, only to shortly afterward once again strike into the same groove with a mixture of revenge, lust and satisfaction. Just like in the good old days.

But why do we do this to ourselves, throw all good intentions overboard and risk reopening old wounds? Because we see the body we know so well as the greatest possible chance to satisfy our desire one last time? Because deep down we know that the current partner is a total loser in bed and we are riding in as the savior in distress? Or because it’s simply less complicated and above all cheaper than prostitution?

Sexual contact with a former love can be a renewed explosion of tightly bundled feelings sunk in the lake of oblivion, can remind us one-sidedly of what we once loved and worshiped in the other person, or can send us home after a moist and cheerful night with a witty smile, kicked out the door and filled with the deeply satisfying thought that we’ve finally paid the bitch or the asshole back. Of former love, there is no trace anywhere.

.

The Most Important Thing in Life: Do We Want to Be Friends?:

That this world and everything crawling and flying within it is simply unfair, unreal and often unimaginably cruel should really be no secret and must have been noticed even by the last hillbilly. Again and again, our conviction—fueled anew by courage and annoyed defiance—that everything will turn out fine and that we only talk so many things down, is destroyed by shocking events, irreversible actions and soul-crushing behaviors. And then once again we lie there, gasping, bleeding and shattered on the dirty ground, losing even the tiniest hope for better days and a promising future.

In these moments, we are glad to have true friends by our side who lift us back up with cheerful spirits, stuff us with hefty bites of comfort or, like an all-star team made up of various Germanic gods, give us a proper dressing-down when we’ve screwed up and deserve nothing else. We argue, laugh, fight, drink, celebrate, cry, gossip, puke, sleep, love and hate together with them, forgive even serious mistakes and agree with them even when we don’t actually share their opinion—or hurl the unmistakably harsh truth at them with full force.

But even if they no longer have the same faces as before and we often resist their words or sit there with our heads lowered listening to their pseudo-wise speeches, we are constantly in agreement that it is good to have them with us, that we can rely on them even in the worst hours, and that without their mere presence in this sick world we ourselves would have long since been lost.

.

Sei nicht von gestern: In & Out:

Like every month, at this point we present you with an essential list of the things you are to consider good, grand, and even superb in the coming weeks on the one hand, and to respond to with hatred, disgust, and antipathy on the other. If you do not stick to these golden rules, worse things will happen to you than you could ever have imagined in your wildest dreams because of never-forwarded chain letters. So tell me, oh great internet gods: What are our new commandments as of today, and how can we appease you...?

IN: Comforting good friends, You Love Her Coz She's Dead, dancing through the last warm rain showers, Karen Gillan, eating chocolate muesli with honey, putting cucumber slices on your eyes, letting your favorite playlist run all day, learning Katakana, puffy nipples, bringing ticking clocks to a standstill, being addicted to freshly squeezed orange juice, looking forward to the new "Zelda", masturbating to this photo, crying when the bad things take over, riding the tram across Berlin while letting your thoughts run free, fish.

OUT: Waking up without your sunshine, fungal infections, Geocities, not being allowed to simply throw the huge pile of dishes out the window, Ed Hardy, eating cookies without milk, reruns, unfair life, fruit flies, "And everyone’s like: Yeeaah!", blue glass cleaner, Britney Spears, flying on vacation without taking one with you in your luggage, cold feet, "Windows 7", piercings on ugly people, stress, monkeys in white socks, mini skateboards, "Girls who don't love boobs", meat.

.

Fresh from New York: Boy Crisis – The Fountain of Youth:

The New York band Boy Crisis, to put it bluntly, sounds like a mixture of MGMT, Empire of the Sun, and the Klaxons, and thoughtfully and purposefully continues spinning the mutation of nu-rave and the greatest hits of the ’80s, ’90s, and today—a sound to which millions of chaotic teenagers and those who would still like to be, hopped around stoned on Berlin dance floors this summer alone.

Since last week, the album "Tulipomania" by the five-piece fun combo has been available in the United Kingdom, and the damn melody of the debut single "The Fountain of Youth" hasn’t left my head since the first listen, follows me all the way to the morning toilet, and will probably soon be ringing at the cloud-made door in my deepest Neverland dreams.

Tal, Alex, Victor, Lee, and Owen certainly haven’t reinvented the trend with this record, but I predict a high replay value and a solid rotation rate for them at the sweaty and cramped parties of the coming winter, and I’m really curious to see when a fresh hype will finally seize the somewhat dusty music world and give our ears something completely new again. Maybe the ’80s will come back. That would be something—we haven’t had that in ages...

.

We Are Number 1: Veni, Vidi, Tumblr:

It’s been just over a week since we proudly announced that we now also own our very own Tumblr blog and have been stuffing it with all kinds of sick shit, creative waste, and predominantly breasts bouncing around all over the place. You and the rest of the world apparently seem to like the inspiring mess, because on this rainy Sunday—and since there’s nothing else going on in this world anyway—I get to play the ultimate nerd braggart with the following joyful news: After such a short time, we are already number 1 in good old Germany!

I would like to thank my family, our management, little Timmy, and of course God for bribing great blogs like L'Aureola, Fuck Prince Charming, and also Rebell Girls with money, ice cream, and intercourse just for us, in order to paralyze them and fully do justice to our utopia of graceful, confusing, and yes, sometimes somewhat disgusting images. And heaven forbid Kanye West even thinks about opening his mouth now...

And while we try to knock "What's your secret?" (which must have something to do with Scientology) off the international throne, you can meanwhile check out a fucked-up Steve Aoki, the tits of Uffie, and a few freaked-out hippies on our official AMY&PINK Tumblr blog. I’ve also hidden a nude photo of my ex-girlfriend somewhere—whoever finds it can keep her.

.

The New Generation of Pets: You Are a Little Piglet:

To me, pets have always seemed like small, poor souls crammed together in cages far too small, locked up for their short lives in dirty aquariums, or trapped on leashes in a habitat not even one square meter in size. Instead of hopping around in the forest, splashing in the vast sea, or freely rising into the wide skies whenever they please, they lead a castrated existence on grandma’s sofa, Susie’s wall unit, or Paris Hilton’s arm. How cruel.

And maybe I only forcibly put the words pet and animal cruelty into the same sentence because—aside from a few houseflies or not very stable grasshoppers—I was never allowed to call such a creature my own. I could never run across wide meadows with Bello, marvel night after night at the glowing expanses of Nemo’s little miniature world, or watch as Goldie nibbled on my furniture and then proceeded to crap across the apartment. But that’s over now.

At our colleagues over at NYLON, I came across these adorable mini piglets that have been a trend in England, Spain, and God knows where for years. Breeding, freak of nature, malicious mutation—I don’t give a shit, I want one. And Ron Weasley has one too—so how could you say no to such a piggish affair?

So I ask you, oh dear pet dealers, Greenpeace activists, and pig breeders, you thousands out there listening to me right now: Where can you get these pot-sweet freaks of nature, what name should I punish my pseudo-Pokémon with, and most importantly: Which store will sell me suitable studs and leather belts so I can turn it into a mega-cool little battle pig? That reminds me: I should water my plants again… they’re already changing color. Responsibility is everything.

.

Freaking Out Without End: Prinz Pi – 3 Minutes:

Seriously now, I’m starting to feel incredibly guilty because my favorite lamer Sara always puts out the most awesome videos ever and I publish them here pseudo-brand-new half an hour later. But Herbert, you simply have the best taste in music on the net, there’s no denying it. Except for that American hip-hop stuff.

Prinz Pi – actually Prinz Porno, Friedrich Kautz and probably also P. Diddy – is one of the hottest (I hate that word) rappers from the capital, one of our colleague MC Winkel’s favorites, and with “3 Minutes” he pulls a track out of his sleeve that, in a few short words, deals with the well-known values of young, unspoiled life: drinking, puking and fooling around. Of course without failing to cast a critical eye on the party, porn and poppers scene.

Great track, great video and so many dirty moments that even I can peacefully drift off to sleep afterwards. And if you want to say anything about the video, please drop it in the comments at dragstripGirl so I don’t feel so bad for stealing the video from her. But she called me fat, so I’m allowed to. So there.

.

Nothing Is Like It Used to Be: The Hopeless Journey of a Gamer:

As little Mini-Marci I played every bit of crap that came under my fat sausage fingers. From "Sonic the Hedgehog" to "The Legend of Zelda" to "Final Fantasy". I knew every pixel, every enemy, every cheat by heart. I knew when and where which melody would play, could trace in the incredible depths of my brain exactly what consequences would result from which action somewhere in the game universe, and I knew how to help myself with magazines, walkthroughs and telephone support to crawl out alive from even the hardest and most unfair dungeons—with the princess on my back. The internet basically didn’t exist back then.

But those glittering times are long gone. Back then I could sing along to the Poké-Rap from memory; nowadays I can’t last ten minutes with the same game, can’t bring myself to immerse myself in one of these new worlds for long, and after the first few levels or the early swan song of my character I lose interest in the game, in the console, in everything. Because I know that this reheated crap can’t satisfy me, that everything used to be better anyway and that nothing—absolutely nothing—comes close to the Super Nintendo.

So I wander like a thirsty ex-junkie through the virtual worlds of digital fun, on an endless search for a game that will reignite the fire in me, push me to nerdy peak performance and let me prove that I can shoot, punch or arrange houses in the right order better than all the other members of this planet combined. But my journey seems doomed to fail.

And so, my dear friends of non-analog entertainment, I ask you for emotional support and assistance. The winter will be long and hard and I need a vibrating controller or a slippery mouse between my extremities to survive it, so I ask you: What’s the most awesome game currently floating around that will make me completely happy, that lets me compete with others, that pulls me into a completely different world and spits me back out as a pimply full-on nerd? Maybe it’s finally time to get one of those weird Wiis. At least then I could play Super Nintendo games again. Mario, here I come…

.

Mickey’s Nasty Revenge: Disney Destroyed My Life:

In many ways, Disney is probably the most evil corporation in the world by far, leaving dubious pharmaceutical mixers, arms dealers who walk over corpses, or even lawsuit-happy law firms far behind. They keep their unhappy employees on a short leash with confidentiality agreements, are repeatedly led by power-hungry leaders, and corrupt the hearts of our future and past loved ones with unimaginably unrealistic expectations of love, romance and courage. No wonder many depressed employees see no other way out of their misery than to sneak pornography into the films.

Unfortunately, you can’t even make it to a girl’s front door unless by the third date at the latest you sign a legally watertight declaration that you absolutely adore the entire Disney universe and everything crawling and squeaking in it until the end of the relationship, that you’ll let yourself be tied to the couch at least two evenings a week for a “Disney Motion Pictures Presents” classic like "Sleeping Beauty" or "Cinderella", and preferably belt out all the musical numbers in C major with subtitle sing-along lyrics.

And anyone who has ever cried their eyes out at Mufasa’s death or laughed themselves under the table because of Aladdin’s goofy genie has suddenly seen all their previously sworn resolutions to find the movies stupid, to label the singing as totally idiotic and to despise the drawing style forever and ever dissolve into thin air. Just like with Scientology.

And honestly, we all grew up with that soft-focused schmaltz, plopped our four-letter behinds down early in the morning as little sprouts to watch "Darkwing Duck" and "TaleSpin", and had important values like self-confidence, courage and pride hammered into our sappy little brains by talking animals and hopping teacups. Not like in "Dragon Ball Z", where everyone is constantly beating the crap out of everything and everyone. Evil Son Goku. The end.

And that’s why I want to thank Disney. Thanks for the fact that I can still belt out the "circle of life" from memory. Thanks, Pepper Ann, that during your show I cheated on my ex-girlfriend with that busty blonde and still remember exactly what the episode was about. Namely her disgusting pimples.

But my greatest thanks go to Walt Disney himself. For creating a character in Mickey Mouse who bundles all my views on hatred, injustice and revenge into a single figure and keeps my greatest wish burning: to beat that stupid mouse—with her idiotic laugh, those huge, fat ears and the constant “Oh boy!”—all the way back across the Atlantic into the studios of hell in a spontaneous encounter. God forbid I ever set foot through the gates of Disney Land. Then the first rodent I lay eyes on is going down.

.

Death and All His Friends:

Losing a loved one is probably one of the worst events that can befall you in life. Anyone who has ever had to endure that powerless pain of such a senseless loss and struggle with the sad certainty that this person is suddenly no longer there from one day to the next, will never again walk through that door and leaves you alone in this fast-paced, cold world, is pushed to the brink of sanity, feels pieces of their innermost soul shatter, and carries it like a melancholy, depressive illness for the rest of their life.

As much as we try to come to terms with death and its consequences and prepare ourselves for it as best as possible, the weeks, months and years are unimaginably cruel when the characters in your life who gave you love, friendship and comfort are suddenly replaced by dark thoughts that dwell on those careless seconds, replay scenarios of a parallel universe in which someone, somewhere made a different decision that avoided the inevitable and turned the never-to-be-forgotten moments of death into a harmless blink of an eye—all circling around a single word cemented forever in your head: Why.

A few days ago, the father of a very dear friend of mine unexpectedly passed away. She had always brought an overexposed ray of sunshine into my sometimes gray world filled with strange thoughts, and it hurts my heart to see her otherwise brightly shining eyes so dull and to know that, apart from offering support and promising not to leave her alone during this ordeal, I cannot protect her from the icy pain.

.

Stupid Search Queries: WTF?! Vol. 9:

We’re used to quite a bit from our “WTF?!” series, but just before our anniversary edition you little piglets apparently dig deep into your bag of tricks once more and end up on AMY&PINK via Google, Bing & Co. with queries about animal sex, hermaphrodites and – why only?! – Maybrit Illner without clothes. And whoever reported their boss to the tax office: bad boy.

Nude pictures of ugly girls. At school there are only disabled sluts. Pictures of naked hermaphrodites. Darling is a fish. Rent a porn star. Hairy genitals. Do you want world domination or a cake? Sex with an amputated leg. Why does Pixie Lott look so old? Hot, naked American woman. LSD prostitutes. What should be considered with animal sex? Grandpa stuck it in me. When is summer in Brazil? Sexy Maybrit Illner naked. Free vagina without registration. Emo girls in white socks. Marathon blowjobs. Glass in the ass.

List of things girls stick into their pussy and ass. Best sex movie of all time. Pictures of sexy junkies. Karoline Herfurth naked. Will Linux survive? Hot sluts naked on SchülerVZ. Legs spread and go. Animal sex with bulls. How do I report my boss to the tax office? Fucking goats. My heart hates you. Hardcore sow. Sexy girls at the pool table. Naughty gifts. Anal sex with anorexics. My hot stepmother comes naked to the birthday. Confucius says carpets. Little angels fuck. Is Hannah ugly? The biggest pussy in the world.

.

Soko Magazine:

The fact that good magazines don’t have to be printed on dead trees, published by large, faceless publishers, or cost a mere mark has been proven for years by tons of digital magazines from the international scene that can be quickly and easily downloaded and flipped through in the now-standard Portable Document Format – short and snappy: PDF.

One of the more beautiful examples is Soko Magazine, sent out from Buenos Aires, which recently released its second issue and, among other things, deals with the never-smiling Elly Jackson of La Roux, the beautiful works of young photographer Nirrimi Joy Hakanson, who photographs only with sunlight, and the sexy Cassandra Goeke. There are also great images by Manolo Campion, Jonathan Leder and Nacho Ricci to admire. Not bad.

If you’ve now developed a taste for anti-analog A4 pages, you can conveniently download thousands of them via the website specializing in exactly that, PDF Mags, and my personal favorite at the moment is the new edition of the Vice Guide to Berlin, which gives newcomers and visitors the opportunity to learn everything worth knowing about our favorite German city. And that’s pretty damn great.

.

No Party for You, Sick Boy:

Not being healthy, aside from the obvious advantages of being allowed to lounge around at home, drink tea and lie in bed, of course also has one or two disadvantages, namely that you have to lounge around at home, drink tea and lie in bed and cannot participate in public life. While I, due to my pseudo-swine flu, had to amuse myself with snot-filled tissues, lousy German television programming and a seductively bulging refrigerator, others partied all weekend, let themselves mount each other and came a little closer to the meaning of life.

And what do you do when you’re tied to your bed and the ceiling seems to sink a few centimeters every minute? Tidy up the apartment, thoroughly clean everything, do the laundry, devour cake and tuna like there’s no tomorrow, constantly keep an eye on those strange Tumblr statistics, watch that “Anubis” crap on Nick, impossibly look for an alternative online role-playing game to “World of Warcraft” on the Mac, stumble upon “Eve Online,” click through the tutorial for a full two hours before finally blasting an enemy spaceship, only to uninstall the game afterwards and rather keep playing “Plants vs. Zombies,” study Japanese via smart.fm, squeeze pimples, flirt online with freaked-out emos, mentally prepare yourself for something exploding somewhere on German Unity Day and check whether it’s finally snowing outside.

But I can probably wait a long time for that, the way the sun is currently shining outside, so I’ll now drag my infected body to the nearest supermarket of my choice because I’ve eaten and drunk all my rations and hope that you had a slightly more exciting weekend than your sick Marci. But at least I now know the TV schedule of all channels by heart. That’s bound to help me at some point.

.

Protect the Skin You’re In:

Anyone whose big dream—besides absolute spiritual salvation and owning a weather machine—has always been to adorn themselves with naked models, stars and Brandon Boyd dressed only with a pug on brightly colored T-shirts and run through the streets of the republic wearing them can now have exactly that dream fulfilled by Marc Jacobs. For an incredible 35 dollars made of 100% cotton.

For the designer and his campaign “http://theclones.eu/feature/14034/marc-jacobs-protect-the-skin-youre-in-x-chlo-sevigny,” such well-known personalities as Milla Jovovich, Heidi Klum and Dita Von Teese have shed their multi-layered clothes and pose as God created them for a good cause. Admittedly, at least Miss Von Teese is more often seen without than with clothing that protects against the cold, but it’s still a good thing.

The entire proceeds go in the form of liquid money, money, money to benefit the NYU Cancer Institute at the NYU Langone Medical Center, and that science fighting cancer is a good thing is surely something none of us would dispute. So if you want to dress nicely and do something good at the same time, you’d better run to a Marc Jacobs store tomorrow and buy yourself a stack of T-shirts. If you can find one...

.

How Important Is Sex to You?:

Sexual intercourse in itself is a system ingeniously devised by nature for optimal reproduction within a species, guaranteeing the highest possible rate of healthy and vigorous offspring and brought about by various factors such as appearance, smell and position within the respective hierarchy. Nothing other than food intake, health and sufficient sleep is as important in our conception of the universe as sex.

Typical of the crown of creation that we are, we have humanized this rather mechanical process and imposed our very own sick priorities and fantasies on it. So we whip each other over the kitchen table in schoolgirl costumes, set world records for marathon blowjobs at erotic fairs and spend the gross domestic product of a small country each year in order to reach ejaculation with the help of streetwalkers. The Christian church understands mattress sports differently.

Therefore our question for this holy Sunday: What status does the whole matter of penetration have for you? Are you more the candlelight-romantic cuddling types, or does it sometimes have to get rough in a public park? And what about contraception anyway? Let us share in your exhibitionism and help us understand how this ecological process has mutated from a mere act of reproduction into a profitable, emotion-driven industry.

.

Uffie – Pop The Glock:

Shortly before I moved to Berlin back then—which is now already over two years ago—I was really head over heels for a certain Uffie, at the time the hottest chick on this planet. I once shouted my big feelings briefly and bluntly into the wide world, and with one song in particular, which she sweetly and enchantingly trilled and which I always thought was about sex with a clock, she sang her way into my hungover little heart even without an official video: "Pop The Glock".

Today we are already nearing the end of 2009, have recently welcomed a new government, milk prices continue to fall, and German Unity Day passed without any major terrorist attack. But one thing hasn’t changed and is also confusing my fellow horny finder Sara: Uffie is still singing the same song. Or rather, again.

Maybe she doesn’t have any other songs or she just likes this one too much, but today a clip approved by her record label Ed Banger Records for the old, new song was released and I can only say: good things come to those who wait, because the video is sexy, colorful and wild, reminds me of a mix between Sebastien Tellier’s "Kilometer" and "Flathead" by the Fratellis, and maybe even lifts Uffie straight out of her clinging underground image. Unfortunately.

.

My Life After the Internet:

I am a junkie. Not for drugs, not for alcohol, not for cigarettes. I’ve long since gotten over all those things. My new and old addiction is the Internet. The tons of inspiration, information and independence have made me more addicted than all the joints, chicks and "World of Warcraft" raids combined, let me fall asleep happily grinning with my MacBook in my arms and give me a deep inner satisfaction. Because I enjoy the whole damn thing, can enter people’s brains and even earn money with it.

But of course we all know that our surfing vacation won’t last forever. At the latest when the world is overrun by the Chinese, the Third World War is fought and the last website has been accessed, it will be over with Google, Twitter & Co. Then the nerds will have to get used to daylight again, hipsters will crack nuts with their iPhones and bloggers will proclaim their unimportant, ego-driven thoughts from a nearby mountain.

And it will be difficult for me at first to get used to the new circumstances, but I can be sure that my permanent overdose of the net will significantly contribute to my rehabilitation, because from experience I get bored with things pretty quickly. With the Internet this process is just drawn out a bit due to the extensive variations and mutations. At some point that too will be over.

So after the great collapse of the World Wide Web I will move as a hermit to a lonely island, build myself a place high up in the mountains with a fabulous view of the sea, flip through my printed-out porn pages and, with a delicious coconut cocktail, amuse myself about how important we once thought this networked new world was, which will then be nothing more than a fading memory. Goodbye, you once so rebellious medium. It was nice with you.

[audio:war.mp3]

.

The Official AMY&PINK Tumblr:

It was only a matter of time before we finally had our own Tumblr blog, and one day before the anniversary of German reunification I can proudly announce: We are small, brain-mashed followers who, from this very second on, will immortalize everything that is somehow creative, inspiring and beautiful on the official AMY&PINK Tumblr.

And since you know us as the little piglets that we are, these visual finds consist largely of smut, substantial photographic art and pictures of naked people. Preferably the latter, which in turn means that you must have successfully survived your midlife crisis to be allowed to look at the page. Also, browsing would not be appropriate during your working hours—unless you want to get fired anyway. But who are we telling that.

With these legally inadmissible words I warmly welcome you to your new favorite photo stream, and of course we don’t just want to set up some second-rate image blog, but become number one on Tumblr. So follow, subscribe and love us as much as you can. Have fun and stay dry.

.

Where Are Hannah and Caro, Anyway?:

Lately one might almost think that AMY&PINK is a single crazy one-man show, but anyone who takes the time to look at our lovingly written authors page will be amazed to discover that not only my round mug is on display there, but also two pretty girls competing for the favor of our viewers.

Namely Hannah and Caro. Outraged and answer-hungry visitors of our little island of happiness bombard us via email and Twitter with questions about the whereabouts of the sexy duo from Munich. Were they abducted by aliens, did they start as naked presenters on 9Live, or are they launching their own blog stripped of primary and secondary sexual characteristics?

Of course that’s all nonsense and these assumptions are completely far-fetched. After all, it’s common knowledge that our tough contracts clearly state over pages that nobody gets out of your favorite blog alive. Once AMY&PINK, always AMY&PINK. Signed in blood and other bodily fluids.

The banal reason for the temporary absence of our favorite ladies is simply that, due to their careers in the fashion business, they are currently drowning in so much stress and unrealistic deadlines that they probably don’t even have time to breathe. So let’s hope they soon see light at the end of the tunnel and once again form the natural counterbalance to old Marci with his filthy posts. We just have to believe firmly and clap our hands.

.

Viktor Vauthier:

Even as a little brat, my later dream job was already cemented into my pubescent brain when I first held the Playboy with Nina Bott, whom I was madly in love with at the time, in my trembling hands: photographing girls without clothes. Preferably, of course, the pretty kind. Unfortunately, that didn’t work out for various reasons. For one, I didn’t have the money for the proper equipment, I would never be able to keep the camera steady around model-like naked beauties, and apart from a few drunken ex-girlfriends, nobody wanted to undress in front of me anyway.

Viktor Vauthier, who roams around East London, seems to have a much steadier hand. In the fashion and photography world he is already considered a star and certainly doesn’t need to hide from masters like Richard Kern, Terry Richardson or Keiichi Nitta. He has shot the cover of I Love Fake Magazine, runs his own Vimeo account together with his girlfriend, and has already had our favorite Swede Lisa Olsson in front of his lens.

With so much concentrated femininity that the nice gentleman has already captured with his soul-stealing machines, one can only look around enviously and depressed and hope that by chance a naked housewife walks toward you on the street so you can capture her with the camera built into your phone. That would at least be a start toward a big career.

.

Mixtape for the Autumn:

If you dare to take a quick look out the window, you can almost sense that summer has long since moved on to more southern regions, leaving us alone with rain, sleet showers and the softly creeping cold of the winter ahead. So it’s no surprise that you can now spread viruses over the phone, just like Sonja did with me. That means I am forced to follow in the footsteps of my namesake and lie flat with a sexy autumn flu.

And what would the time of cuddling sessions, medication and hot milk with honey and ginger be without music that matches the falling leaves and puddles inviting you to jump in? That’s why today we present the ultimate autumn mixtape in digital form, so you can use your CDs and vinyl records to light a warming fire in the fireplace. Provided you own such a fireplace. Have fun!

John Martyn - May You Never, Animal Collective - Fireworks, Lykke Li - Let It Fall, Broken Family Band - It's All Over, Low - Sunflower, LCD Soundsystem - Great Release, Regina Spektor - Machine, The Chemical Brothers feat. Midlake - The Pills Won't Help You Know, Arcade Fire - Keep The Car Running, Marina and the Diamonds - Obsessions, Amanda Blank - Make It, Take It, Death In Vegas - So You Say You Lost Your Baby, Born Ruffians - Hummingbird, XTC - Stupidly Happy.

.

Dead Girls:

The Internet as we know it today would never have become so big, despite information exchange and global networking, if smart people hadn’t built in the possibility of doing one thing over and over again: looking at photos. Of cute kittens, adorable children or a brawling Elvis. But one motif can, without exaggeration, probably be described as the most popular worldwide, across all generations, cultures and classes: the image of a girl.

Whether dressed or naked, real or animated, on a tree or on a guy: photos with female actors in them are viewed, downloaded and reused. While the crusade of feminine world domination began on rather shady websites, especially since the Web 2.0 boom images can now be exchanged freely in all directions. Not too long ago via bookmarking sites like FFFFOUND! or We Heart It, but more recently on a large scale through tons of Tumblr pages—let someone say something about copyright now.

An old hand in the business of digitally collecting female curves and one of my favorites is a certain Goto Motoshi, who gained fame and honor especially through his extraordinarily awesome Straightline Bookmark and the project 4U. He has recently been running the so-called BijoMagazine—a playground of aesthetically beautiful and culturally stimulating photos of young ladies that many a Tumblr teen could take as an example, and whose main characters can even be rated with little hearts like on our site.

The Internet is twice as much fun this way, and I’m curious when we’ll finally be able to watch moving images in here, kind of like video films. VHS-style. Hopefully soon, because I think that would become the new hit. Someone please invent that; I’d probably call such a platform YouTube. Yes, that’s my plan.

.

And What Do You Dream About at Night?:

Late at night, shamelessly and without punishment, dreaming yourself into the life of a pirate, a dog, or a sex offender and using extraordinary special abilities is clearly more fun for many people than the monotonous existence of an insurance clerk, bus driver, or financial accountant. Night visions are nature’s role-playing games, regarded in some cultures and in the twisted brains of lackluster esotericists as prophetic twists of fate, and for the most diverse reasons and at the most varied parts of the body they can cheerfully jolt us awake from deep sleep, pleasantly moist.

Personally, lately I’ve been having strange, twisted dreams that merge seamlessly into one another, are impetuous, and drive me insane. At first I experience sexy adventures in the land of Titicaca with female classmates, only to find myself seconds later roaring on a Berlin meadow with Bela B, singing sea shanties with him. Hardly have the last verses of “My Bonnie Is Over the Ocean” faded away when I’m suddenly sitting in a bathtub taking photos with my naked ex-girlfriend and her bald karate instructor, which then turns out to be a level in a gigantic video game.

Drenched in sweat and confused like a hamster on Ritalin, these dreams haunt me well into the day, and since I need confirmation that, firstly, I’m not completely insane and, secondly, I’m certainly not the only one in our little support group who dreams the biggest crap, you have to tell me what absurd, illogical stories you’ve been dreaming lately—stories that are forever burned into your tiny brains. Otherwise I’ll check myself into the loony bin tomorrow.

.

Hanna Håkansson:

In recent years, Sweden’s capital Stockholm has, at irregular intervals, produced a veritable flood of very young fashion victims who distinguish themselves through blogs, Lookbook.nu accounts, and their own portfolios, thereby pulling the fashion world out of stagnation and back into the awareness of countless girls and boys. Fresh faces like Hedvig Boström, Carolina Engman, or Lovisa Ranta speak for themselves.

Hanna Håkansson is 16 years old, another girl from Stockholm and the perfect example of one of these fresh creative sources from the far north. She models, runs the enchanting photo blog Worm vs. Bird together with her friend Fanny Wikstad, and together with Sara Hellgren they form the small indie band Shivering Heights, creating sounds from a forgotten world.

And when I look at her photos, listen to her songs, and read her texts, I really wonder why more teenagers don’t channel their energy and dreams in such an inspiring way and use their free time and their lives to create art, creativity, and beauty instead of hanging around in the streets, playing PlayStation, and beating up pensioners on the subway. Maybe one really should emigrate to Sweden.

.

Hail to Our New Rulers:

Right off the bat: everyone who, despite our begging, pleading, and kicking request, didn’t manage to haul their soft, smooth butts into one of those cozy polling stations because they were too drunk / high / lazy should get themselves a broken nose from a bouncer they trust first thing tomorrow morning. Because voter turnout was, unfortunately… crap.

The result is now a majority for the lovers of nuclear power, Afghanistan, and all-pervasive security for mankind, and the allergy sufferers of everything that has to do with that strange newfangled form of communication, freedom of expression, and clear thinking: a black/yellow coalition of the conservative CDU/CSU and the pseudo-fun party FDP.

For the internet and all sympathetic freedom fanatics, this outcome is of course both crushing and depressing, but we nevertheless congratulate the Pirates for being elected by almost a million nerds. And you can already start placing bets on when, in the times of the surveillance and censorship state that lie ahead, we at AMY&PINK—and maybe you as well—will be banned by our upcoming government. Hail to our new rulers.

.

Skero feat. Joyce Muniz – Cabin Party:

Since the entire German populace is busy today squeezing into hopelessly overcrowded voting booths to secure a better future for their homeland—and many websites are even shutting down their servers to drive election slackers to the polls—on this historic Sunday let’s instead devote ourselves to our favorite neighbors in the south, who, with commercial-free blockbusters, an amusing version of our language, and the tallest girls in the world, lead a much better life than we do in sniffling Schland.

Martin Skerwald is one of the few inhabitants of the anti-coastal state, calls himself Skero in his spare time, is a street art artist, and makes Austrian rap. First in a group called Texta and now as a solo act. And because it apparently is always summer, sun, and sunshine there, the red-whites don’t have to jet off to distant, exotic vacation destinations but instead lounge comfortably at the city’s outdoor pool.

So listen with us to the Caribbean sounds of the track “Kabinenparty,” imported into our hearts from the album “Memoiren eines Riesen,” which in impeccable German tells the romantic story of a leisurely party in the changing room of a swimming pool. Or to put it differently: Atzen-karamba at the poolside. This is the hit—everybody join in.

.

No Power to the Idiots:

Our lives are full of decisions. Small and big ones. Easy and hard ones. Clear and murky ones. Should I move abroad? Should I buy myself an ice cream? Should I go out with stupid Birte? And no matter how confusing and hopeless the options may be—once we’ve made our choice and step into the stream of consequences that result from it, we then feel free and relieved. Because we realize that by making that statement we’ve moved a little further forward and that from now on things can only get better. Unless, of course, you foolishly let yourselves be carried away into running over your teacher—then that’s probably it for you.

As is well known, Sunday is the legendary federal election, and from all sides we are being bombarded with calls to decide to decide. To choose democracy. To stand up against hatred of humanity. To carry on the social idea. To preserve our freedom. And although I am strongly inclined to dismiss everything that has even once been mentioned on RTL or in BILD as empty and not even worth passing on to other people as a sneeze, I hereby vehemently call on you to drag your lazy asses into one of those absolutely sexy voting booths tomorrow. No matter how bad your hangover may be.

Because I really don’t feel like my numerous children someday hopping around in polished uniforms on the green meadows of the Fourth Reich, croaking “Heil Hitler,” just because some stinking lazy hipsters were too stupid to vote and we are therefore ruled in the near future by pedophile communist Nazis. If you can’t manage to make two stupid crosses, then some thug idiot will vote for you. And who knows what sick options he’ll choose… in the end he might even vote for the Pirates or something equally perverse.

.

The Story of the Lost Souls:

Some people on this planet are simply kissed by fortune and blessed by the muse. They look good, pursue an incredibly passionate profession, live in a faithful partnership, and can choose the right companions from their rich and understanding circle of friends for any occasion—whether for sports, partying, or going to the movies. And no matter how closely you look behind the supposed façade, apart from a love of life, understanding for everyone and everything, and a hope that can hardly be beaten down, you find nothing but yourself.

My humble self, on the other hand, seems to be a walking magnet for lost souls. Creatures of darkness who somehow can’t cope with life, who go through depression, who are alone. Outsiders who struggle with torn love, loneliness, and bittersweet thoughts of suicide. Voluntarily or forced by fate. My friendships, relationships, and more intimate acquaintances all arise from the shadowy sides of existence.

I take them into my life and walk with them along the most difficult and darkest paths until, after nights drowned in wine, reality-distant adventures, and open-heart conversations, I release them back into the rest of humanity strengthened in will and with newly ignited hope.

And the more destroyed, tormented by God, and willing to put an end to it all they are, the louder and brighter I hear their little spirits knocking and take care of them. Because they have so much to tell, bursting with passion, dizzy from the alternative paths that all of this here can offer. Outsiders, rejected ones, and misunderstood ones—unite.

.

You Amuse Me:

I woke up this morning in Sara’s bed, enjoyed a beautiful sunrise over the Berlin skyline as I pulled the curtains aside, and then had an insatiable urge to wash my dishes. With Carsten I briefly philosophized about the Beatles and grannies at early-morning bowling, and as I staggered the few blocks home, still tipsy and swaying from the aftereffects, the impressions of the past night and the confirmation that this city is at its most beautiful early in the morning wouldn’t let me go.

After pre-drinking at Belushi’s, thanks to our Better-Life-Guide iHeartBerlin we ended up at the Deep Throat Action Party at Weise Puff, stroked fat cats and munched on pretzel sticks, and then actually wanted to head to the WMF on Klosterstraße, but by then we were clearly too wiped out. So we went home instead and let ourselves be sprinkled with a few episodes of "Friends" until we fell asleep exhausted. I simply love Joey.

And since I’m already awake this unusually early, my dear uncle has brought a bit of flood to my bank account plagued by low tide, and my urge to wash, clean, and scrub hasn’t disappeared despite this internet session, I’ll devote myself today entirely to freshening up my apartment. You’re very welcome to imitate this sparsely scattered moment of life. Cleaning buddies in spirit. Or something. Whatever.

[audio:knife.mp3]

.

Pomplamoose:

Often the simplest things are the best. These wise words already applied to “Tetris,” did not lose their meaning with crispbread, and convinced millions of listeners with Nicole’s "A Little Peace." Especially in music these days, more and more people are banging the drum, showing off, putting on makeup, crafting an image—and it’s annoying. And to all the blabbermouths named Britney, Gaga, or Cyrus, I hereby present Pomplamoose.

Jack Conte and Nataly Dawn from California are already an absolute insider tip on YouTube (and what counts as an insider tip there has already been viewed by more people than the chancellor debate) and perform, alongside their own songs in the loveliest way, their own versions of Beyoncé’s “Single Ladies”, Nat King Cole’s “Nature Boy”, and “Mrs. Robinson” by Simon and Garfunkel. And simply through Nataly’s sweet appearance and her enchanting voice, worldwide success is already pre-programmed.

So you Regina Spektors, Anna Ternheims, and Marit Larsens out there, better watch out that these two newcomers don’t just snatch away your piano and guitar and kick you off the stage. They definitely have what it takes. The album will be bought, even if Jack Conte somehow scares me a little. Nightmares pre-programmed...

.

Draw Us Naked Girls!:

When I was still a little pubescent pizza-face and my puny brain was doped up on "Dragon Ball," "Digimon," and "Wedding Peach," my entire free time (and usually school time as well) was spent sitting in front of the Super Nintendo, studying my Bravos thoroughly, and scribbling naked manga girls onto dead trees. Pseudo-hentai at zero cost, so to speak. My great role model back then was a certain Satoshi Urushihara, the master of breasts and creator of masterpieces such as "Plastic Little" and "Ragnarock City." And I wasn’t even that bad.

But what a somewhat disturbed guy named Ryuko Azuma pulls off over there is drawn perversion in its purest form. The Japanese artist from Tokyo sketches the lewdest fantasies, makes confusing self-portraits of himself, and casually had the hottest idea for a T-shirt ever. On top of that, he of course tweets and runs one of the crankest Tumblrs I know with his blog.

So much concentrated madness naturally deserves our respect, and since the weather is getting crappier anyway and we’re surely not the only joke figures who waste our lonely days sketching naked beauties, we’re calling on you this weekend to get back to the drawing board, dig out your pencils and Copic Markers, and just scribble wildly and twistedly while letting your imagination run free.

Then upload your sexy little pictures somewhere and send us a link via comment or trackback so we can all enjoy them. You won’t win anything this time except the soft moaning of our more than qualified art critics, but at least you’ll be occupied for a while and won’t have to loiter around in the streets. Got it? Then go!

.

Lily Allen Calls It Quits:

Without calling in advance or even giving us a brief warning, the British singing talent Lily Allen announced today on her blog It’s Not Alright the end of her music career. She supposedly doesn’t feel like making another album and, according to the glossy magazine Gala, would rather focus on her theater career, which is set to begin with the stage play “Reasons To Be Pretty” in London’s West End.

I personally am totally into Lily A. and her songs that burst with dirty wordplay and tackle rolling themes, which is why from this day on I will wear black and once again indulge in my favorite tracks "Smile," "I Could Say," and "Littlest Things" and of course her nude photos. Just so I don’t forget her. You know what I mean.

Her press spokesperson, by the way, denied everything shortly after Lily’s plans to turn her back on her record label and the rest of the music business became known; she is currently still doing very well with her album “It’s Not Me, It’s You” and therefore isn’t thinking about a new one at the moment.

Sure. And regardless of whether Ms. Allen once again showed her breasts to her hairdresser, whether it was all a big misunderstanding, or whether drugs and alcohol went a bit to her head while typing: at least we’ve had her back here on AMY&PINK and can play a few of her tracks when the opportunity arises. And that’s worth something too.

.

Love My Chucks:

Clothes make the man, and that still applies today just as it did hundreds, if not thousands, of years ago. Whether young girls stroll down the street in stylish vintage looks, gangsters hang out in clubs with wide hoodies and slightly tilted caps, or blonde brats loiter around the train station dressed in dark emo outfits: appearance determines how you are looked at, assessed, and treated. And this categorization happens faster than you think.

One item of clothing, however, has survived the ever-changing storms of fashion for decades, is still considered alternative, tasteful, and somehow awesome, and is gladly worn by fashion sluts, pseudo-nerds, and Atzen punks alike—provided they have taste: Chucks.

These shoes connect the enlightened ones, those who know how to appreciate good music, who carry a sense for what is real, and who stroll through life with a sexy kind of indifference without having given up their dreams, and separate their owners from all the dog beaters, bank clerks, and Bild readers of this nation and beyond.

When it comes to Chucks, even organic grannies and psychology students turn into brand fetishists; of course, Converse has to be tacked onto the cheese-smelling and preferably mud-covered sneakers, and all those glitter high-top special editions are obviously crap. The only ones that feel truly authentic are the single-colored ones. Even Nora Tschirner knows that.

And because she is just as fond of the former basketball shoes as I am and finds people automatically more likable when they clomp toward her wearing exactly these sneakers, I too would like to condescend to declare the Chuck Taylor All Star, alongside the iPod and Nora Tschirner as a girlfriend, as one of the three accessories one must own in life in order to enter paradise at the end of it without having to stand in line.

.

What Is It, Doctor?:

In every reasonably good porno it’s about the carnal lust of mostly human bodies penetrating each other and, at the grand finale, spraying various bodily fluids in all four cardinal directions. So less about love than about pure sex itself – tits, cocks and pussies in close-up. But what nature has come up with for the time after the fireworks of desire, you rarely see there. And if you do, then it’s illegal: children.

The little ones are our future, images of our longings, a crowning achievement of two-sex reproduction. And nobody wants to have them. Labeled as career-ending, stress-infested, money-devouring monsters, no soap opera, "Oliver Geissen" show or sitcom can do without the gnomes. Ostracized by society, young mothers or women with far-reaching reproductive urges are pushed out of their circle of friends as asocial tax parasites and replaced with slim, career-obsessed female students. After all, who wants to bring a child into this messed-up world?

In doing so, we unfortunately forget more and more often that without these little rascals we wouldn’t be stumbling around on God’s earth at all, that maybe our little Benni will one day find a cure for cancer and – now listen up you goths – that we ourselves were once children or perhaps still are. And if not physically, then at least on the inside. You’re only as old as you feel.

So here’s our midweek question: Do you want to get yourselves such garden gnomes in the future? What if tomorrow you have to pee on your Clearblue pregnancy test and it delivers the good news in flashing letters? Keep it or abort it? One child, two children… do you even want to adopt a whole African tribe? Or do you stay true to the unofficial motto of our battered generation and keep screwing around without screaming consequences as usual? All questions whose answers you’d better think about while watching a cozy porno.

.

Sneeze Mag:

Contrary to all the more than dubious prophecies of self-proclaimed social media gurus, print is of course not dead and won’t be any time soon. In fact, local newspapers, shady smut magazines and bloated tabloid publications are dying out, but that’s solely because it’s better for the trees standing around and because corrupt editors-in-chief and journalists fill the white pages with advertisement-laced generic drivel or don’t even want to pay for the photos they use. Almost like with us. And that simply doesn’t work.

However, printed thin wood is most fun when it’s used as sexily and blatantly as in the Canadian skate magazine Sneeze Mag. This huge magazine not only convinces with skillful shots of athletic skateboarders, male and female, but at the same time also features beautiful, half-naked girls, sick cars and stylish fashion, all of which you can easily tack up on your wall as posters. My bare walls would be delighted.

After the “Big Hands” issue, the "Read Her Lips Issue" was released in the summer, which includes a great selection of photographs by well-known artists such as Tobin Yelland, JAMIL GS and my current favorite Keichii Nitta. The next version should be released in autumn and is already available on the street for two dollars, and anyone who sees it lying around in a box somewhere should please bring me a copy. I’m into that kind of stuff. Thanks.

.

Hannah in an Interview:

We simply love giving interviews to external websites or magazines and answering questions about everything that is somehow personal, dirty and excessive and that offers us the unique opportunity to force our two cents on world-shaking topics like blogs, music or baby elephants. That naturally makes us appear much more important and simply gives us an all-around good feeling.

This time the people from the bilingual Berlin lifestyle and party blogazine Stylish Kids In Riot had the unbelievable luck of being allowed to ask a few questions to our enchanting fellow blogger Hannah Banana Montana, who of course answered them with her usual charm and inimitable wit to everyone’s satisfaction. And there’s also an exclusive photo of her to admire – so what more could we possibly want?

And Stefan, who is interested in us, has even more in store, as he is announcing an entire article about our beloved AMY&PINK for this Wednesday. We’re definitely curious; we didn’t even know that we had made it into some Top 30 and of course we’re calling on you to storm their comments and take Hannah’s interview apart in a skillfully stylish manner.

.

Shin Chan Is Dead:

There really aren’t many role models who guide me through my life. Okay, Steve Jobs might count. Or the guy from the Edeka commercial. But if, yes if anyone at all may call himself my mentor and teacher, then it’s a small, spoiled brat with a big mouth from Japan who knows exactly how to deal with women, classmates and his parents: Shin Chan.

This week, police found the body of the 51-year-old creator and inventor of “Shin Chan,” Yoshito Usui, who died during a hiking trip in the mountains of Tokyo. He had previously been missing for days and was clearly identified by his teeth. The land of the rising sun and all worldwide fans of the devious kindergarten kid are mourning today.

And we too will never forget the adventures of the little rascal, remember the good times when his series ran up and down in the early evening program on RTL II and continue to laugh along with Mitsy, Lucky and Principal Enzo. On YouTube you can find plenty of episodes of the series and never forget: “Dance the butt boogie-woogie, it makes you happy boogie woogie!”

.

Attack of the Punkgrls:

Exchange of information my ass: The internet is primarily designed for the dirty aspects of life: overthrowing governments, watching cute kittens playing and downloading photos of people ideally penetrating each other. And while providers of professional porn films in particular fear the democratization of exhibitionist sex, since paying customers are running away from them in droves and turning to sites like Burning Camel, Teens Exposed and College Hot Box, Herbert next door is pleased that he can quickly and free of charge get material to relieve pressure, whereas in the past he had to sheepishly and stupidly whistle his way to the nearest video store.

How naked girls and money can still be successfully combined nowadays has long been shown by successful websites such as Suicide Girls, Gods Girls or Burning Angel, which not only impress with an exciting selection of alternative beauties, but also incorporate the long-proven social concept into their offerings: models and customers in one community – within reach.

The newest offspring of the dirty movement comes from the United Kingdom, is called PunkGrl and strikes in the same vein as its big role models with nudies like Nina Terror, Pink Trash and Dark Dolly: tattooed young girls riddled with piercings and drenched in hair dye and make-up undress for money and thereby serve the entire range of clichés of full-fledged bad girls. Naturally, I like that tremendously and that’s why I immediately registered our delicious Caro there, who would surely fit in wonderfully. Don’t you think so too?

.

WTF?! Vol. 8:

Welcome to a new edition of “Wat Ta Fak,” the show whose purpose even we don’t understand and which exists solely because you are all little piglets who land on our site with the most unromantic and mind-twisting Google search queries without even feeling ashamed. But the time has come to put a pointed hat on you and send you into the corner to repent. Let’s go—what have you been typing in lately to end up on AMY&PINK?

I had sex with my sister. Porn stars leaving the church. Do you die earlier from sex? Are you ugly! Whores in Tokyo. Vasta naked. Tongue doctor. Smoking fucking. Marcel best porn star. Mister Gaga. Does sex hurt the first time? What do the numbers on Billy Boy mean? I smell like fish. Sick tits. Teens in the mud. Who did Harry Potter kiss for the first time in the movie. Pants down, legs spread.

Blog similar to Titty City. Hairy genitals. What happens to my stomach after losing weight? Types of vaginas. Leopards to print out. Who is the model from the Milchschnitte commercial. Fir trees in my back, how to get rid of them? Repeat of Hannah. Better than LastNightsParty. The video with the drunk guy fucking a slut on MTV. Everything for the horde. Shit on a conveyor belt. Red hair meets Holland. Ass wide open. Naked freckles.

.

Sushi Mixtape:

As you all know very well, thanks to my fabulous Japanese course I’ve finally found a convincing excuse to spend all day hanging out on Asian websites that nobody knows and that stand out because of mysterious characters, brightly colored GIF animations, and constantly smiling Cheshire cats. As if I wouldn’t have done that anyway—after all, I’m an absolute Nippon freak.

And what does a wannabe Japanese guy like me love most of all? Of course: listening to sushi tunes. Ever since the first Sailor Moon episode aired on TV I’ve been crazy about it, and at my funeral someday a catchy J-pop song will be played instead of some lame piano piece. And that’s even though I don’t understand a word beyond “Watashi” and “Sayonara”—but that will change soon enough.

Until then, I firmly believe that each of these tracks is about emotional depth and creative brilliance, and I now condemn you to listen to all my current favorite sushi songs in the following order. One after another. Go on, start: Scandal – BEAUteen, Ikimono Gakari – Yell, Ai Otsuka – Smily, Abe Mao – Anata no Koibito ni Naritai no desu, Shiina Ringo – Tsugou no Ii Karada, Asian Kung Fu Generation – Fujisawa Loser, Kaela Kimura – Happiness!!!, Stereopony – Smilife, Spitz – Hotaru, Orange Range – Onegai! Señorita, Maaya Sakamoto – Mameshiba, Utada Hikaru – Deep River, the brilliant green – Rainy days never stays.

.

The Internetz Is Awesome:

Honestly folks, yesterday I laughed in disbelief and cried tears of proud joy when the story of a small poster unfolded in the ultimate Merkel flash mob. And everyone was like: “Yeaahh.” In moments like that I always know why I waste my life surfing the internet and running a blog instead of satisfying a girl.

Election coverage, zombie flash mobs, even entire parties are forming from groups of people who grew up with chats, weblogs, and forums, who carry notebooks around like books and understand the limitless power of the newest medium. And while the newly hatched neo-nerds have shed their muteness toward the real world and loudly tweet their throbbing pride in the knowledge they command, the rest—including entire states—feel hopelessly overwhelmed by the digital revolution, which manifests itself in aimless censorship, fearful laws, and persistent antipathy toward surfers and keyboard tappers. What frightens you, you fight. By any means necessary.

That’s why I’m proud. Of you, of us, of everyone who has devoted themselves to digitalism in order to change, improve, and dominate the world with it. Despite the risk that a kind of two-class society could develop through this network elite, in which geeks someday seize the helm, install Linux on every computer, and communicate only in binary. The thought gives me chills, but it can hardly be worse than what we have right now. In this sense, keep it up. “Make way, we are from the internet!”

.

Avril Lavigne, I’m Coming!:

Alright, the plane tickets to the States are booked… I’ve packed condoms and fresh underwear, and otherwise all I need is my sexy smile and the ability to comfort crying girls. Because it has finally happened—what I’ve been conjuring for over six years with voodoo spells and running over black cats: Avril Lavigne, whom I’ve had a crush on since birth, is—everyone hold on tight—single again! And everyone’s like: “Yeaahh”!

On her blog, the 24-year-old writes that she recently separated from her now ex-husband and Sum 41 singer Deryck Whibley, but that she still considers him the greatest person in the world and respects him more than anything. But we all know: that will change when I jump naked out of a surprise cake on her birthday and play “Complicated” for her on the ukulele. Yes, feel free to picture that. Hurts, doesn’t it?

Of course, I do feel a bit sorry that their crazy marriage didn’t last, but anyone who occasionally watches a certain kind of trash on MTV and VIVA knows that relationships between two (rock) stars never last long and are more or less doomed to fail. Good for me, bad for everyone else. And even if the whole thing turns out to be just a publicity stunt for her upcoming album, when a hot rock chick calls for mental support, I’m the first to throw myself onto a plane around the world for her. Avril Lavigne, I’m coming!

.

Watashi wa Marcel desu:

High schools have this oddly unique smell of well-to-do overachievers, teachers from the ’68 movement, and brain matter stuck to the walls that immediately reminded me of my temporary time attending that fitness camp for brains, from which I was thrown out headfirst after a short while. Mind you, without ever having seen the treasure in the basement. Nevertheless, yesterday evening I bravely entered the John Lennon High School to finally learn the language I’ll need someday to marry Sailor Moon: Japanese.

Instead of the promised female teacher, a Japanese rock musician stood before our group of fifteen—consisting of little schoolgirls, burly policemen, and the funny Abdullah—who were all into that crazy island nation just like I was. Daisuke Hasegawa. Lively, wild, constantly laughing and fooling around. In short: we loved him.

Diligently, diligently we learned to write our names in katakana, played little group games, and by the end we were able to introduce ourselves. Iie watashi wa Detlef dewa arimasen. The pronunciation and speed are still lacking a bit, but I’m confident that soon I’ll be able to order three Japanese prostitutes to my room. Until then, from now on I’ll bombard you with Far Eastern art until you see nothing but lots of little red dots—from the “Hello Kitty” PC to beautiful views to musical high art. Watashi wa Marcel, dozo yoroshiku.

.

Pussy of the Week: Kanye West:

Without a doubt and without beating around the bush, our award for the biggest pussy in the universe this week goes to the exceptional talent, the down-to-earth one, the irrevocably God-sent Kanye West, who once again managed, with the restraint and sensitivity of a swine flu, to be the center of attention.

What kind of person must that be, I ask myself, who rips the microphone out of the hands of sweet Taylor Swift at the biggest and happiest moment of her music career, declares her competitor the actual winner of the evening, and then leaves the stunned newcomer standing alone on stage in front of a bewildered music channel and an audience bursting with envy?

Not without reason was he crowned the clueless Gayfish by the creators of the series "South Park," and because of his diss against the blonde young thing, the self-proclaimed musician is currently mutating into an absolute internet hype. Whether Pokémon, the recently departed Patrick Swayze, or even my beloved Keyboard Cat, Kanye pops up everywhere and ruins the fun for all of us. And anyone who even gets dissed by Obama is without a doubt our Pussy of the Week.

.

What The 4Chan?!:

The internet – infinite expanses. While the well-behaved citizens of this tranquil globe browse their favorite reads at bargain prices on Amazon, cultivate friendships on Facebook, and scour Chefkoch for fresh recipes, the bad boys band together into Pirate Parties, download movies and music for free from The Pirate Bay, and illegally publish videos from MTV on YouTube. And then there is 4Chan.

4Chan is the realized nightmare of every housewife, mother, and Ursula von der Leyen. The imitation of a Japanese website long since lost in the fog of obscurity is the terrorist, colorful mixture of homosexual racists, necrophiliac child molesters, and pubescent petty criminals that has developed into the inviting, warming home of the worst scum this planet has to offer: us!

Because this little garden of sin gives its visitors exactly the three prerequisites needed to escape their humanity for a few moments and develop into a perverse shadow of themselves: internet, anonymity, and the feeling of moving within a group of like-minded people. That is the reason why, especially on /b/, everything seems to be allowed: jokes are made about dead Jews, photos of naked ten-year-olds are rated, and cute little kittens are abused – and after just a few moments the spook is over again.

But while many view the site as the concentrated and unstoppable evil of humanity that must be smoked out and banned immediately, I believe that 4Chan is merely a mirror of our dark, true nature, far removed from kindness, love, and respect, where hatred, racism, and disgusting excesses of base perversions reign. And how exactly do you intend to destroy something that is anchored so deeply within yourself that the mere thought of it makes you shudder and you do everything to ensure that this monster never emerges? Exactly: not at all. Therefore, it still applies: Tits or GTFO and PedoBear is watching you...

.

Gay Killer Viruses from Mars:

You love us, we know that. Hannah knows it, Caro knows it, I know it. I mean, we love you too, after all. Every single little nerd, wimp, and lamer in front of the screens. You’re just like us. Only without the halo. And you can’t go on without your daily dose of AMY&PINK. But listen carefully, out there – yes – there are also forces that absolutely do not like us, one could almost speak of hatred.

So please don’t be too shocked when I tell you that yesterday we were the victims of a nasty, insidious attack. It must have been around 2, no 3 p.m., when our site was bombarded simultaneously by Christian associations, Scientology, Kanye West, and gay killer viruses from Mars with hundreds, thousands, even millions of requests – in mysterious nerd language that’s called a denial-of-service attack. No wonder our server didn’t feel like dealing with that anymore, and whoosh, AMY&PINK was unreachable for hours.

And those of you with glasses, polo shirts, and side parts who are currently compiling your Linux kernel and haven’t yet been admitted to the oxygen tent due to excitement, please enlighten us as to whether there is a technical, reasonably understandable way to fend something like that off if some bored chancellor candidate thinks he can come at us again with his death server. And if you have no idea about technology, firewalls, and home savings contracts, you can at least play detective with us and speculate about who could possibly hate us so deeply that they want to see us offline. Great, now you’ve made Hannah cry...

.

Lamers Save the World:

Doing something good for our planet and everything around it isn’t that easy anymore. We are constantly led astray by money, fame, and delicious ice cream, feel lost in a wide field, and have to find our way in a dog-eat-dog society in which everyone thinks only of themselves. But if everyone does that, at least everyone is being thought of, right…?

Sara with the new haircut and I therefore set out this weekend on a three-stage mission to save the world – which may not even deserve it – from itself. Without a plan, without weapons, and without common sense. We found ourselves in the midst of the largest gathering of nerds who had crawled out of their basement lairs especially for the "Freedom Instead of Fear" demonstration and took to the streets with us against data retention, against surveillance, and against censorship. The "World of Warcraft" servers and Linux memorial forums probably haven’t been that empty in a long time. And while we were peacefully hopping around next to the van of the Pirate Party, we really felt like we were making a difference. I can has privucy?

After we had successfully helped humanity to more freedom, in the second step we of course had to take care of the other inhabitants of Earth. No, not animals and certainly not plants, but naturally the extraterrestrial shrimps who were vegetating there, lonely and abandoned in their holding camp. Through our sheer willpower while sitting in the cinema, we transported them from "District 9" directly back to their home planet. Or something like that. The movie was pretty good, even though I constantly wanted to punch that jerk of a main character in the face. If he shows up again in the sequel, I swear...

At night, Sara and I had no choice but to help ourselves. We were on the guest list for the Vice Party for the preview of the game "Dirt 2" at the Cargo and sneaked together through the parallel world of pretentious hipsters, laser shows, and game screens projected onto the walls. And despite the delicious water, we decided to leave the party crowd shortly thereafter, found ourselves on the subway a few minutes later, and came to the conclusion that we are absolute lamers. But at least we saved the world.

.

Ed Hardy Is Very Beautiful:

I really don’t know what you all have against Ed Hardy. Okay, the clothes might not be quite as trendy as American Apparel, Zimtstern or Carhartt, but at least they dare to try something. They have wonderfully creative and colorful patterns on their shirts, printed with the fiercest creatures of the animal kingdom and marked with that discreetly subtle lettering. THAT is art.

And I’m not the only one who loves the brand of this completely down-to-earth and extremely likable fashion designer god more than steamed vegetables, snowstorms in the morning and rotten eggs in the fridge. Our favorite pseudo-goth Marilyn Manson likes to wear it just as much as loser Hilary Clinton and the suck-up hero from “How I Met Your Mother”.

That should finally prove once and for all that not only antisocial dimwits, ghetto-style illiterates and tanned short-haired yobs are into Ed Hardy, but also respectable, honest and wealthy people we look up to. And if anyone claims otherwise again, I’ll come by with Justin and Jaqueline and there’ll be some real trouble.

.

Nothing Lasts Anymore:

Nowadays we all live in a generation full of short-lived trends, we get bored quickly and farewell and new beginnings are constantly passing the baton to each other. Emotions, feelings, adrenaline – we want to lead a fulfilling life full of fun, excitement and surprises; there is no more room for anything else.

There should be lots of sex, heaps of money raining down, happiness popping up on every street corner. We want to be cheerful, to give something positive back to the world, to be surrounded by good friends who love and respect us and to whom we give the same in return, to meet people who make us laugh and inspire us, and to have relationships in which we feel secure, challenged and fucked. Everything has to be special; routine is dangerous, stagnation is death.

Nothing lasts forever and we have learned not to let people and situations get too close to us anymore so that we can quickly separate from them again if necessary. Because life is too short to let negative influences ruin your day, and that is exactly why it’s right to give things that bore / annoy / depress you a roundhouse kick à la Chuck Norris in order to quickly create optimal space again for the people who lift you back up. Because every farewell carries within it the wonderful feeling of a misty summer morning when you have thrown off the old burdens to devote yourself to completely new tasks. Baby, it’s a wild world.

--> .

Your Personal 9/11:

There are days in every person’s life that, mildly put, are a catastrophe, push us to the brink of despair internally and change our here and now abruptly from one moment to the next—without warning. When that happens, all you can do is watch as the rubble of our hard-built existence collapses over us and try to limit the damage. And it doesn’t even take an airplane crashing into a skyscraper.

It can be the death of a good friend who was still sitting in a bar with you the evening before, laughing and beaming with joy as he told you about his future plans in Brazil. It can be the moment you realize that your long-term girlfriend has been having an intimate relationship with her professor for some time. Or it’s the answer to a question you should never have asked.

Blows of fate happen again and again, everywhere, and once the smoke of destruction has cleared and the view is directed at what remains, the question is written across the victims’ faces like a tattoo of an often very unfair life: “Why me?” Therefore, on the anniversary of the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center, we would like to know from you: What has been your personal 9/11 so far? And how on earth did you get through it?

.

Bat For Lashes – The Two + Two:

One listener describes the fantastic Bat for Lashes, a.k.a. Natasha Khan, as possibly “the greatest musical gift of the 21st century,” and I can only fully agree. “Daniel” was an absolute revelation; to her music you can have great sex, indulge in depressive suicidal thoughts, or simply sit in Mauerpark beaming with joy—only very few musicians can boast such a range of possible listening scenarios.

Very soon the special edition of her album “Two Suns” will also be released here, which, in addition to bonus tracks, includes a documentary called “The Two + Two” that gives us a look behind the scenes of the recordings, photo shoots and into the very private life of Natasha Khan. The standard edition is already one of my favorite albums of the year.

At the end of October, the stunning brunette will once again give a concert at the Postbahnhof in Berlin, and until then I advise each of you to listen to the anthem about the “Karate Kid” star at least five times a day, then buy the two albums and afterwards joyfully engage in suicidally good sex in Mauerpark. That was an order: chop chop!

.

Pixie Lott and I in a Private Jet to London:

Thanks to the charming Jessie, I spent the short night at the Hilton Hotel in London after we, together with the editor-in-chief of BLANK Magazine, Johannes Finke, accompanied the British singer Pixie Lott for a day on her promotional tour organized by Baby-G. With the roaring support of her slightly tipsy girls in tow, I chatted with the blonde star about her favorite band The Kooks, how incredibly proud her parents are of her, and how happy her best friends are about her success—because they get to accompany her all across Europe.

And although most of her songs are a bit too poppy for my taste, even the ProSieben team constantly buzzing around us would have to admit that Pixie has a powerhouse voice live, which she proved both at the Delight Studios and at the London Forum. Voice, looks and chart compatibility are definitely there; I would have preferred more courage and a little less Hannah Montana, though.

Thanks to Britta and Lakshna for the wonderful day, and now I’ll throw myself into the sunny shopping streets of London, grab the record by Pixie’s sexy support act—whose name I unfortunately never properly understood, which makes the search noticeably harder—and then take in the sights of the city: British women with big breasts but strange faces, checking out all the Tesco branches and snagging FRONT at purchase price. Goodbye folks!

.

The Big AMY&PINK Tumblr Porn Guide:

If you belong, like me, to the pitiful species of full-time nerds who only know the primary and secondary sexual characteristics of girls from the internet, then first of all you should probably hit the gym more often, and secondly you shouldn’t waste the very limited time you could be spending coding NASA websites or leveling your "World of Warcraft" characters by endlessly searching the web for pink slits. I mean, what do you have little Marci for? I practically LIVE in the dark internetz, and that’s exactly why I’m presenting to you, in three stages, the sexiest Tumblr blogs on the net. Come along. Haha, wordplay.

Level One - Faces: Let’s start gently with a few pleasant little internet pages that simply bring us closer to the beauty of sweet bra-wearers. On websites like Dead Girls, Fuck Yeah Skinny Bitch or Skinny Dream we find partly amazing photographs and skillful self-portraits of young ladies who eat no more than a slice of bread without butter and bread per week and still manage to breathe, just like on Dirty Little Style Whore, Emo Girls and Distillation. MCSG SYM brings us Japanese girls, Heroines brings art, and Blue Pony brings warm dreams.

Level Two - Tits: Stage two is like a medical checkup for bronchitis, because now some of you are seeing living breasts for the first time in your existence. Okgirls shows girls topless, just like SexSets and Hot Chicks In Panties – some titles simply deliver what they promise. If you’re still not ready for the ultimate level, you can prepare yourself by visiting Yimmys Yayo, Looklook or Ikandi. Now you’re definitely ready for the grand finale.

Level Three - Cunts: Welcome to the premier league of Tumblr blogs. Nothing is left to be desired, no items of clothing remain on, and no body parts remain unstimulated – we’ve arrived at the full-on sex sites. WareHouse, That Hipster Porn and Tendres Cousines are wicked and notorious and strike the same chord as Fuck Me Like That, SEXTR and Bend Me Over.

With such Christian prospects, falling asleep shouldn’t be a problem anymore, and if any of you know additional Tumblr gems, just drop them in the comments – fresh meat is always something nice. In that sense, good night, and you’d better stock up on screen cleaner. Have fun!

.

School:

Which of us old sacks doesn’t fondly remember what it was like to be in school back in the day. We were constantly brewing new magic potions, playing Quidditch high up in the air and fighting dark forces at night with our little magic wands. Oh wait, that was Harry Potter. For us, on the other hand, it meant getting up at 6 a.m. five days a week just to have our day ruined by pubescent pizza-faces and unqualified teachers who had just been left by their spouses. That can be fun too. Not.

The result is that every one of us is probably damn glad to have escaped these torture chambers scattered across the nation and that only a few pedophiles regularly want to return to this place of horror. Or me, because despite my advanced, wise age, I have the great pleasure of finishing what feels like my tenth final school year in order to finally complete my training as a web designer.

And for those of you old geezers who have ever even remotely dreamed of sitting in a classroom again so you could fool around with your friends in the schoolyard and make out with underage girls: forget it! Because since the 1930s, at least when it comes to educational institutions, absolutely nothing has changed. The books are still the same, the teachers have replaced their physical bamboo sticks with psychological ones, and various cliques and groups have continued for generations to fight for dominance over the schoolyard. The only difference is that now there are also a few self-harming emos hanging out in the bathroom.

But such a senselessly wasted day can also be fun. For example, if you have a sexy Yvonne Catterfeld lookalike in class. If you can make fun of Gülcan’s bulging eyes. Or since technology has advanced so far that even the last ghetto gangster brings a MacBook to school in order to gallantly play "Plants vs Zombies" when the education officer isn’t looking. That makes pseudo-learning twice as fun. You can find photos of this waste of lifetime here, and my deepest sympathy goes out to all fellow inmates out there: never stop reaching for the stars, after all you’ll soon be the elite of the country. And heaven forbid a university student feels addressed now.

[audio:money.mp3]

.

24 Hours Berlin:

For over 12 hours now, the longest documentary of all time about our collective favorite city, Berlin, has been running on Arte, on RBB and on the internet, and what strange people we have gotten to know and love so far. The old granny who prepares a delicious potato soup for her relatives and then comfortably dozes off in her allotment garden, the extremely likable and not at all controlling-looking BILD editor-in-chief Kai Diekmann, and a quiet contemporary who simply hangs out comfortably in the basement of an apartment building.

But the event isn’t only taking over screens around the world; there have also been and still are all kinds of events happening in the capital itself. Including readings at C/O Berlin, experimental music at the bar künstliche BEATmung, or the “Schöne Party” at the Kalkscheune. And don’t worry about missing anything: the documentary is running everywhere in the city on large and small screens.

And it’s getting particularly interesting right now, as it slowly gets dark in this live look into the past, the night owls crawl out of their holes, and the party life gradually gets into full swing. So if you haven’t tuned in yet, you should do so quickly to get both a detailed and manageable and sympathetic insight into the lives of 3.4 million Berliners and their visitors.

.

Lisa Mitchell – Coin Laundry:

Average little pop starlets who bounce around on stage, breathe their tiny little voices into the microphone and try to compensate for their inadequacy by wiggling their butts truly exist in this world like sand by the sea. But really good singers who touch your heart and make listeners cry with their vibrations… we’re slowly getting an abundance of those as well. Just think of Regina Spektor, Charlotte Martin or Lady Gaga. One of those was a joke, by the way.

Nevertheless, we gladly welcome the adorable Lisa Mitchell into this circle—born in England, raised in Australia—especially when, as in her new video for "Coin Laundry," she lives sweetly inside a washing machine and asks for coins, stories and memories. What a charming idea that is, please.

At the moment, the 19-year-old is only touring around Australia, but hopefully wanderlust will grab her soon and bring her to autumn-infested Europe to enchant us with beautiful songs like "Incomplete Lullaby" and "Neopolitan Dreams," known from a detergent commercial. We’re keeping all three thumbs crossed.

.

If I Were a Girl…:

We all have certain types of toys hanging between our legs that, from birth, determine the rest of our lives. What color our childhood bedroom is painted, whether we’re allowed to like “My Little Pony” or “Transformers,” and that at some point a time comes when some of us shouldn’t run around topless at the swimming pool without getting strange looks. And then, of course, there’s the matter of sex.

To stick it in or to have it stuck in: unless your name is Lorielle London, you’re a manga character named Ranma, or you simply belong to the gay faction, you probably only know one of those worlds. Yet for science, for humanity, for the entire planet, it would be an absolutely desirable and enlightening experience to know both sides.

The sexual level of us guys would probably skyrocket by two hundred points if each of us had once had a finger on a clitoris, a penis inside us, and experienced that strange vaginal orgasm. It’s obvious that we poke around like a blind fisherman in the ocean, drool around like Lassie, and wait for you to finally start moaning like crazy—because we only know the whole thing about pleasurable penetration from a sick mixture of cheap porn, wildly exaggerated locker-room talk, and our first time with the town slut. It’s no wonder nothing useful comes out of that.

So dear fairy godmother, grant me just one wish and give me a Ferrari Nora Tschirner just for one day the miracle of womanhood, so that—besides touching myself all day and taking showers—I can finally get properly screwed. For the sake of science, of course. And what would you do if you suddenly woke up in the body of the opposite sex..?

[audio:girl.mp3]

.

Do You Have That in Ugly?:

It is widely known that clothes make the man and people in turn make the clothes, but dear fashion world—you designers, fashion bloggers and vintage victims—let’s be honest for just a moment. Let’s hover briefly above the billion-dollar fashion circus and sit together on the cloud of self-discovery. Because if we place our hands on our hearts for just this instant, then fashion itself is nothing but hot air, marketing, a sales argument, the engine of a huge industry. And nothing more.

When I look at the upcoming campaigns of fashion houses like 47Street, Via Snella or Butterflysoulfire, I certainly see plenty of hot, skinny girls photographed in fairytale or stylistic scenarios by the best photographers on the planet—but the clothing itself is secondary, sinking beneath the eye-catchers and fading behind the artificial dream world. Presentation is everything. And it has always been that way.

Of course, an anorexic 16-year-old with long legs, a sweet face and blonde, velvety hair can put on a Turtles T-shirt with nerd glasses, ripped jeans and bright green Chucks and look young, attractive and sexy. Karl Lagerfeld himself could sew her into an Aldi plastic bag or a diamond-studded evening gown: a Lisa Olsson, Filippa Smeds or Felice Fawn will always look good in it. But that probably applies to only about two percent of the people living on Earth.

So while we recently asked when one is old enough for fashion, today I’m even wondering whether fashion itself isn’t just a farce, a money-making scheme, an involuntary compulsion to set yourself apart from others or to blend in with them. Proving whether fashion itself is beautiful—and not the perfectly staged mix of presentation, models and photography—would probably only be possible through a directly comparative photo series showing the two extremes of human existence.

So let a photographer or even a label like Levi's, American Apparel or H&M take one of the seasonal catalogs lying around and shoot two identical versions of it—once with sexy, slim, graceful showcase models and once with unattractive, pimply, overweight Herberts from the street. Then we could finally see whether the fashion itself is really that great—or just the image sold to us in the media.

.

The New Scala:

Without a doubt, Berlin has the most multifaceted and distinctive nightlife in the nation. Whether clean disco electro, dirty indie rock, or simply a chill house lineup—every form and color of personal taste is catered to. And whether you’re a Jappy slut or an unshaven studded-belt wearer, if public transport cooperates, you can easily party 24/7.

But there are only a few clubs that truly have that certain charm, a history surrounded by legends. Bar 25 certainly belongs to that group, as does White Trash or the Scala, which closed a few months ago. How we cried, suffered and cursed at the farewell party, but when it gets dark, a ray of light comes from somewhere, because the Scala is coming back.

Its creator, party legend and organizer of the Berlin Festival, Cornelius “Coop” Opper, has now given an interview to the Berlin city magazine Proud, in which he not only talks about his inspiration, his work and his most extraordinary moments, but also proudly announces that by the end of the year the successor to Scala will open. There will be a surprising location, it will be different, and without a doubt it will be legendary again. So keep your eyes and ears open for the city’s new best club.

.

Zombie Flashmob Berlin:

Yesterday was a beautiful day to die. At least for Sara, Till and me, because together with a bunch of other blood-soaked and scarred weirdos, we played were the spawn of hell, rotten flesh between life and death in search of the only thing that would save us from the eternal purgatory of hell: brains!

So we marched from Potsdamer Platz past the Reichstag all the way to the Brandenburg Gate, regularly collapsed onto the ground there and then limped after a screaming girl, while the VIP zombies choreographed the song “Thriller”—in memory of Michael Jackson and his birthday yesterday—and, incidentally, we also crashed another flashmob.

It was insanely fun, especially when we continued walking through Berlin in full bloody and torn outfits and ate sandwiches at Subway. I will never forget the expression of the little girl who, with wide frightened eyes, asked fellow zombie Sara what on earth was going on here. Photos and videos are available here, Jeriko wrecked his camera, René missed it, and I have one white T-shirt less. But whatever: BRAAAINS!

.

A Wild Snow Leopard Appears:

Where once there were valid reasons like religion, skin color or simply money for Homo sapiens to catapult each other out of life with pitchforks and torches, today in the Generation Upload (heh heh) it’s about the most essential choice of all: what operating system runs on your computer. And you should choose wisely the path you intend to take before heading to the MediaMarkt checkout.

For basement kids and nerds who have no clue about fashion, vintage and the geek look, but wear glasses because they’re simply blind as a mole, there is Linux; for the majority of humanity who doesn’t know any better, Windows simply installed itself onto their gray boxes; and for the creatives, the chosen ones, the gods among us, there is the word that makes connoisseurs tremble with pride and subordinates fall to their knees: Mac OS X.

The latter will release its long-awaited sixth edition tomorrow for a mere 30 euros, nicknamed "Snow Leopard" (because Apple foresaw the ultimate internet trend years ago and gives everything and everyone cute names of sweet kittens), and for the freaks among us in some cities even starting at 0:00—just like Harry Potter.

The good piece doesn’t bring killer features; instead everything just becomes nicer, faster and better, and besides, that orgasmic feeling is built in that you haven’t gotten lost in the code jungle of the constantly somewhat backward-seeming Linus Torvalds, nor fallen for Bill Gates’ zombie boxes. That’s exactly why the better ones among us will be getting a new pet tomorrow and nibbling from Uncle Jobs’ LSD tree. Apple FTW!

.

Dolly Rockers – Gold Digger:

Okay, I admit it: It can actually happen from time to time that I introduce certain chicks with boobs here whose music I might somehow find okay to freak out to, but whom I simply just want to sleep with. Pixie Lott was one of those candidates, just like Lovers Electric or Those Running Days. Okay, although I actually think they’re pretty great again.

Long story short: The weird island with the quirky queen and the best TV series in the world has once again thrown a pop mutation of the finest kind onto the market. Dolly Rockers is the name of this spawn of sleazy, dick-driven music producers; their little song "Gold Digger" has been making the rounds there recently and God is my witness: I want to make love right now and right here to the one in the middle. Watch the video and you’ll know which of those dolled-up bouncing dolls I mean.

And I could start another Q&A now about how much staged sexuality and zero talent should legally be allowed (see the half-man with the penis), where once again nobody would answer me anyway, but my God, how irrelevant is that when you look at THE ONE IN THE MIDDLE! I think her name is Brooke Challinor. Or Lucie Kay. Or Sophie King. Ah screw it—and don’t any of you dare come at me now with the Spice Girls.

.

Geffffunden!:

What would the world be without the beautiful images in life, memories of better times, photos in your head and on your screen. And the most beautiful of these masterpieces nowadays aren’t only found on various Fuckyeah Tumblr pages or the grand blue hyperlink collection to your left, but above all in our sleek FFFFOUND! corner. Large format and unbelievably sexy.

If you hurry, with one click you can currently see, for example, Kate Moss riding a bike in a bikini, feast your eyes on the amazing photos of a certain Carl Heindl, who was recently featured at Jeriko, and admire the exposed breasts of a certain Dominique van Hulst. If that’s nothing, then I don’t know what is.

If you’re still not completely satisfied after the 25 pictures, you’re also welcome to visit our FFFFOUND! account and click wildly and freely through the world of the most beautiful photos. And if you happen to find photos online that either make our eyes pop out of sheer beauty or tear our laughing muscles apart (like here at Fuck Yeah 4Chan), feel free to send us a link via mail or Twitter. We’d be happy.

.

Stadthunger at the Lake:

Seven incredible parts of our serialized novel "Stadthunger" have already been published, and I’m happy that the story about the dreamy runaway Sina, her best friend Paula, and the party photographer pissed off at the whole world is being received so well. The texts come from the heart, formed from painful memories, shattered dreams, and the ever-blossoming hope for true love. And I hope you can feel that.

Chris from Pratschwitz (who doesn’t know it), near Dresden, has now sent us this beautiful photo of the printed-out “Stadthunger” being consumed at the lake. And that makes me a little proud. Doesn’t it you too? “I turned your blog novel into paper format and took it to the lake. Rocks, I like it. But waiting a whole week each time is pretty tough. It’s like during Ramadan not eating, drinking, or being allowed to think about sex all day.” That’s what it says. That’s awesome.

I’m now really hoping that the big boss or his assistant secretary from a major German publishing house reads this, seizes the unique opportunity, and signs us exclusively right away so that the story about longing, sex, and sour candy reaches even the last Herbert. But you know what? Actually, I like it the way it is right now. So look forward to the eighth part, reread the chapters already published if needed, and stay curious about what happens after Sina’s rushed move-out, the bloody dream, and the ringing at the door. It’s like television in your head.

.

I’m In Love With Lisa Olsson:

You know we’ve had them all in our little Q&A session. Whether my favorite redhead Filippa Smeds, the incredible MTV host Palina Rojinski, or Rockie Nolan, who cuts a fine figure both in front of and behind the camera. The beautiful and (well maybe less) rich have already answered our questions. Only one has now turned us down twice despite our request.

Lisa Olsson is the name of the 15-year-old Swede, who is a fashion blogger, cheerleader, and model all in one and absolutely refuses to be interviewed by AMY&PINK—which somehow turns me on. And even though, despite a recent late-night meeting with two Nordic schoolgirls, I still don’t understand a single word of Swedish, I read look through her blog carefully, know that she’s already been in Teen Vogue, likes American Apparel, and rides a skateboard. She has the greatest legs on the planet (which she knows too, otherwise she wouldn’t photograph them so often), a sweet little scar on her forehead, and apparently likes to sit in the sun. Otherwise she wouldn’t be that tan.

So you can see how much I’ve already found out about her without understanding even the tiniest bit of her language. The internet really is an illustrious thing. And if you still want to know what she likes to eat for breakfast, what her favorite color looks like, and where she got that awesome pink watch, you should first try translating the sentence “På datorn och på en extern hårddisk.” into German and then bookmark her blog.

.

War, Death, Doom:

War, my dear children, is something extremely cruel. It destroys human lives, tears families apart, and costs a hell of a lot of money. More than I earn in a year. So I’ve heard. And you can really count yourselves lucky that you’re still able to read these lines from me, because that means I’m still alive. Because yes, it’s true: We were at war yesterday!

And forget everything you’ve ever heard from Grandpa or read in BILD about the opposite of peace. Vietnam, Russia, France—that’s all peanuts: I’ve got bruises everywhere, sore muscles, and a ripped-open elbow! Because I slipped… But that’s beside the point, because I witnessed the horror with my own eyes. Everything was covered in pink paint and burst jelly balls. My comrade Pedder was even hit in the head… he had so many dreams left…

And before I cue the heroic orchestral music and address the relatives, just quickly for the dummies: We were playing paintball yesterday, in the woods and in abandoned buildings, there were sausages and lots of shaved heads with a slightly too realistic taste in combat outfits. You can find more photos in Rioo’s Flickr account, and I’m going to play "Call of Duty – World at War" now before I do something like that again. But next time I’ll take out more than just two helpless girls. Promise!

[audio:dunkirk.mp3]

.

Bring Me Keiichi Nitta!:

The Japanese photographer Keiichi Nitta is, as you know, one of my absolute favorite photographers alongside Terry Richardson, Richard Kern, and Dash Snow. He shoots Polaroids of Lady Gaga, eats disgusting fish, and above all photographs lots and lots of naked Japanese women. And I envy him so much for that. So much.

In Taiwan, Terry Richardson’s protégé has now opened an exhibition where he presents some of his works, clearly showing why he is simply the Japanese god of nudity. The walls of the cool, futuristic Apple-style art venue are adorned with life-size nudes, one of which Hannah could easily have brought back from Tokyo for me.

And that’s why there are now two options to restore my inner peace: Either a reader living in the land of the rising sun sends me one of these Ayumis, Nanamis, or Ricas by airmail to Berlin, or Mr. Nitta personally drops by, plays a bit of Tine Wittler, and redesigns my apartment so I never have to leave the house again and one day you’ll have to carry me out of there dead with a grin on my face. The choice is yours!

.

Alice In Wonderland:

I bought Hannah’s favorite movie “Alice in Wonderland” on DVD, I’m going to enjoy it now with the right kind of helpers and then crash Sara’s party. Have a nice evening!

.

Welcome To The New Viceland:

Well look at that. Since yesterday the latest issue of our favorite magazine VICE has been floating around town, and the German goofballs have finally managed to adopt the web design of their American colleagues. It’s much cooler and clearer and just better overall. And of course there are boobs again.

This time from the extremely attractive half-Egyptian Zaida, who got naked for Richard Kern, of whom there’s much more to see on VBS.TV. There’s also a special dedicated to the artist and photographer Dash Snow, who unfortunately recently died of a heroin overdose, and they skillfully demonstrate why waterboarding is for pussies. Wusses.

So you see, a lot is happening at good old VICE, and although our national comrades are making an effort when it comes to translating articles and writing their own entries on their blog, their colleagues overseas are unfortunately already one step ahead again, because they’ve figured out how to win elections in Germany: with an unwashed and permanently drunk guy named Leslie, who looks like the last Herbert from Neptunbrunnen and whom you just sit down in front of a keyboard. And just like that the CDU has an anthem. I know why I’m voting for the Pirates.

.

Two Years in Berlin:

Surprise: I’m not even a native Berliner! Yes exactly, I’m one of those newcomers everyone loves so much. Who would’ve thought. For some of you, your heads have probably just exploded, a whole world collapsed and your faith in humanity vanished; others might not sue us right away but at least delete us from their feed reader. We understand that, but it simply had to come out.

And what has little Marci experienced here over the last two years, apart from riding the roller coaster of emotions, shutting down a Berliner schnauze here and there, and exploring the districts of the city piece by piece like in a 90s role-playing game? Exactly: nothing.

Work, school, blog, sleeping, eating, gatherings of people at night… there wasn’t much time left to save the world, adopt orphans, or simply wash the dishes. But that’s not so bad, because for that we’ve got Obama, Angelina Jolie, and (as soon as I can afford her) my personal cleaning lady on the job.

Of course, an important part (and probably the most important) of such a retrospective is the outlook. So what does the future hold for the unique me? First of all, the third year of my cute apprenticeship at aperto, the final round of vocational school with my better half Gülcan, the crazy Thomi, and lots of pretty girls (someone should really turn that into a series), and of course my long-awaited Japanese course (for which I’m now looking at everything and everyone only in Far Eastern language), my wedding to Nora (to which you are all warmly invited), and my resulting appearance on MTV Cribs. Look forward to it — I certainly am.

[audio:nordpol.mp3]

.

Bring Back The Lyrics:

I know that a small piece of your heart died, that you were sad and already pulled the rope out of the closet when Sara announced she would hack her SeptemberRave to pieces. She looked straight into our empty little brains, recognized the problems of the world and wrote beautiful, profound, almost poetic texts using the filthiest expressions on the web. About puking, fucking, love, friendship. And it was great.

But times change, life goes on and people venture into something new. Saripari recognized that and with her new project dragstripGirl she is combining her individual passions, taking an interest in topics such as music, design and the web, and saying goodbye to the essentially profound.

To celebrate the day, we of course did not go together with her Australian roommate to the extremely boring Vimeo party at Stadtbad Wedding, make fun of the people there and steal oversized posters that work great as carpets, but instead spent the night chilling with a few beers and a load of “Scrubs.”

And now, my friends, hurry over to dragstripGirl, subscribe to her feed and start an online petition so that Sara comes to her senses and once again pours properly dripping lyrics of sorrow, happiness and desire onto the net — or at least publishes a book with her collected works. Or both. Bring back the lyrics!

.

Against Nazis with Blumio:

Fitting my revived (but never really dead) love for Japan and my upcoming language course, the likeable Düsseldorf rapper Blumio has now made it into the playlist of MTV Urban and thus into rotation on the former music channel. Congratulations at this point!

In his video for “Hey Mr. Nazi”, bursting with wordplay and intellect, the 24-year-old of Japanese descent skillfully sings about love, racism and the culture of the Land of the Rising Sun and does not fail to mention that his daily shower is important to him in order to do well with the women of the nation. I call that true to life.

His “Yellow Album” was already released in June on his own label Japsensoul and can be ordered at Hipstore. And I really have to say that I like the overall work of art that is Blumio quite a lot, with clever lines, an endearing manner and disarming joie de vivre against the brown mob — that’s what I appreciate!

.

Grey’s Analtomy:

Admittedly, the title is really more than unimaginative, childish and pubescent and would at best be suited for Joko and Klaas’ “Porno Ping Pong”, but it serves as the introduction to the next major American sex scandal. That Americans are more than prudish is an open secret, at least as much as they are hypocritical. They are downright panicked by nipples, doctor games and mothers breastfeeding their little ones. So how much must sex (that thing with the holes, penetrations and something about plugging) throw them off their virginal path?

Because after such silly figures as Paris Hilton, R. Kelly and “High School Musical” bouncy doll Vanessa Hudgens, a new scandal revolving around hole-plugging is currently shaking the land of unlimited possibilities. This time starring: “Grey’s Anatomy” series favorite Eric Dane.

He and his lovely wife Rebecca Gayheart were long considered the model couple par excellence, until, yes until recently this video surfaced showing them splashing around in a tub with Hollywood starlet Kari Ann Peniche, smoking crack and then making the walls shake a little.

The US of A freaks out, we remain calm. Because oh shock, who would have thought: a married couple has sex. Admittedly not alone and nasty, nasty drugs are involved as well (keep your hands off drugs, kids, they’re bad, m’kay?), which personally makes oily McSteamy even more likable to me.

And now the big question at the end: how bad are sex scandals really? Are they the end of civilization? Do they kill the little souls of our children, or is the whole thing simply a feast for Christian heavy-hearts who go after the protagonists of such videos and photos with pitchforks and torches, while in their little community every Sunday they nail innocent missionaries to the cross? Or do you perhaps have little filmed secrets of your own lying in your sock drawer that you plan to publish to the highest bidder in order to finally make it big? Use them — this is your chance!

.

Stadthunger: The Infinite Truth of Being:

Sina celebrated her 18th birthday at Bar 25. We danced closely entwined to the hard beats, were completely wasted. In the bathroom two girls absolutely wanted me to take photos of them and undressed each other. I had a headache and had to resist the constant urge to just throw up loudly. The taller one gave me a blowjob while I counted the white, glossy tiles on the wall. When she was done, I went back to my birthday girl to continue the interrupted dance. “Can we go home? I’m tired.”

That night Sina’s tears wouldn’t stop flowing. “Why do I even put myself through this shit?” she screamed hysterically through the room and threw a basket full of apples at my head. “I love you, you asshole, but you’re a coward, a freeloader, a hypocrite. You hate this world, but you exploit it. You hate these people, but you fuck them. You hate these drugs, but you keep snorting one line after another.”

She threw the packet against the wall; like snow the little white dots slowly drifted to the floor. I sat on the bed and watched her crusade without reacting. “This world means nothing to you, I mean nothing to you, love means nothing to you. How can I give myself openly to someone to whom love means nothing? Explain that to me!” “I’m not answering that trick question.” She grew even angrier.

She stomped into the kitchen, came back with a large knife and began stabbing the pillows and the mattress. I leaned against the wall, smoked a cigarette and calmly watched the spectacle. The feathers flew around the room. Sina looked like a naked exploding angel. “I have to get out of here,” she suddenly screamed and dropped the weapon. She began stuffing some clothes into her Hello Kitty backpack and ran out of the apartment before I had even remotely grasped what was happening.

When I finally snapped out of my paralysis and ran into the hallway, she was already slamming the door shut. I ran to the balcony and looked down the dark street. When I spotted her reddish-blonde head, I shouted down. “Sina, where are you going?” No answer, no explanation—she disappeared into the next subway station. I grabbed an orange juice from the fridge, took a sip, and then hurled the carton against the wall in a fit of rage. A large yellow stain still decorates the white surface to this day. Her phone lay on the bed. I grabbed one of her slips, snuggled into the torn-up pillows with it and repressed the dark time.

That night I had a tragic dream, the abrupt ending of which sat deep in my bones for hours after waking up drenched in sweat. I staggered into the kitchen, poured milk and cornflakes into a bowl and still saw her corpse-white face, which I pressed tightly to me while screaming half the city together, right in front of me.

That peculiar smell was still in my nose and I looked down at myself so that the blood I had just been able to make out at the corners of my eyes, which seemed to cover half my body, revealed itself as a cynical play of light and shadow. When I dipped the spoon in and brought a load of cornflakes to my mouth, I recognized the faces of the night again, who had screamed her name with me in front of the club, loudly. Over and over again. In one hand I held my phone, in the other the tequila bottle.

The people around me told each other she had disappeared completely drunk with a more than shady guy from the Chan Shin, no longer in control of her mind. I screamed for my life. Her name. The louder I would scream, the more everything would turn out fine—I was sure of that.

Opening the window now seemed like a good idea. The cold, fresh air washed around my throbbing wounded thoughts and I tried to chase away the memories, how the way to her was shown to me, I ran, I cried.

And when I turned the corner and saw her lying there so defenseless in a filthy backyard, everything was over. All the feelings in this world concentrated into that unreal moment, like a shot, a bang, a blow. I ran to her, screamed words that didn’t even seem to exist, but so loudly that I hoped they would still reach her.

The faces around me merged into one huge mash of pity as I held her so tightly until everything around me burst. I choked on blood and tears and the last thing that burned itself into my thoughts was the image of her unhappy, restless face, whose dull eyes seemed to admonish me as the one who was not with her when it happened. The phone rang.

This was the seventh chapter “The Infinite Truth of Being” from the furious blog novel project “Stadthunger,” the serialized novel at AMY&PINK. The photos this time are by Daniel Douglas. This part contains a revised adaptation of a previously published short story. You can continually find all parts under the category “Stadthunger.”

.

Japanese for Beginners:

In my life plan carved in stone, it is well known that not only my wedding to Nora Tschirner and control of the entire world are firmly written down, but also that I will one day flood Berlin in order to then spend my twilight years in Tokyo. Twilight years means by my thirtieth birthday at the latest. At the latest. Live fast, die young and so on.

And what do you have to master in order not to just babble something like hello and goodbye in the land of the rising sun? Exactly: Japanese! That’s why from mid-September I’ll be attending this beginner’s course at the John Lennon Gymnasium with a certain Saki Matsuda, to learn the snappiest language in the world and finally understand what Ayumi Hamasaki and Utada Hikaru keep screaming into the mic at me. Maybe they’re constantly singing about death, doom and sex—who knows?

Anyone who wants to sign up is warmly invited (invited in the sense that I’d be happy), the reduced price is quite okay, and if anyone can recommend tips, literature, memory games, websites or people who can help get this rather complex language into my small softened brain, please get in touch—we can go eat sushi sometime.

[audio:bluebird.mp3]

.

The English Front:

I’m currently on a bit of an English trip, which may be especially due to the fact that here in Berlin we constantly have to drag some kind of tourists around—be they Swedish schoolgirls, the cousin of Reamonn or a somewhat camp-looking perpetual questioner. And through my nightly “Skins” flat-rate watching, I’ve picked up an elastic slang that is second to none. London and Exberliner are calling.

Unfortunately, British girls in particular are not exactly known for their radiant beauty (Emma Watson excluded), but even though Montana recently told me that print products will soon be a thing of the past, since we’re from the internet and will wipe them all out, one magazine proved the opposite to me: Front.

I haven’t seen so much concentrated hotness on 160 pages in a long time. And their blog is no slouch either. From sexy skater girls to exhaust lovers to the breathtakingly awesome Jessica. And not to forget the soxy column by Alex Sim-Wise. I’m deeply impressed.

So if there haven’t been enough tits, penises and vaginas flying around your ears here lately, you can now calmly run to the international newsstand of your choice and grab the current Front with cover girl Vikki Blows. Something tells me that’s not her real name, but one can still dream. So, are you on your way yet?

.

Who Sells Me a Charge Plug?:

I’ve really become a lazy bastard lately. True to the motto “sport is murder,” I’ve skillfully avoided my once beloved leisure sports like soccer, swimming or cycling. But that’s going to end now. The gut has to go.

Being typical me, during my search I specialized in one very specific product that is supposed to have me speeding like the wind through the streets of Berlin very soon: the Charge Plug, the hottest bike beyond the hemisphere in my little eyes. But when I asked at the bike dealer I trust, he almost fell off his chair laughing. I was years too late; the thing had been so sought-after that it had literally been torn from their hands. I should wait for next year’s edition. Next year..? No no, good man, I want it now!

But in the small head of even smaller Marci it rumbled and rattled… if so many of them are buzzing around here in Berlin, then surely there must be someone who doesn’t feel like having theirs anymore and would let me have it for a fair price. Right? So if anyone has a Charge Plug, knows one of its owners or can steal one for me: get in touch!

.

Caro Is Now One of Us:

For over half a year now, Hannah and I have been doing our thing together with the new AMY&PINK, and so far it has been a grand time. We’ve produced a lot of shit, written texts about masturbation, heartbreak and big cities that smell like semen, and with our obsession we’ve made friends and enemies, lovers and haters, fans and blockers. And it was great.

But it was clear from the beginning that we didn’t want to remain just the two of us forever, that we wanted to—no, had to—transform our cozy flower-sex relationship into an orgy of creativity. Because alone we can hardly withstand the pressure of constantly showering you with the hottest shit on the street, bringing the music, the parties, the art, the sex into this blog that is so down-to-earth. For the people. To bring fresh wind in here, to create more uninhibited wordplay and to reach a new level of pseudo–lower class.

And salvation was so close at hand that it fell from our eyes like burdensome scales. We couldn’t see the tree for the forest. That red hair, the moles in her head and the sexual intercourse with Til Schweiger on my couch… it can only be about one person, the unique, indestructible and more birds in her head than in the sky-having… Caro Carö Carolin!

She is the chosen one who simply snuck onto our straight path to world domination and from today on will supply us at AMY&PINK with turnovers, horror stories and nude photos. So please warmly welcome the newest member on our ride on the aerial railway, and now all we’re missing is a brunette, then I’ll be satisfied, change my name to Charlie and from then on only give comments and instructions by telephone.

.

Nora and I:

You may now all sink to your knees, kiss my Chuck-clad little feet, and from this moment on murmur my name in an eternally continuing chorus. Because today, here and now, I may ceremoniously announce that I have achieved my life’s goal, that I will now log off from the internet and from life and can die a happy death. Because yes, it is true: I met Nora Tschirner.

We talked, we laughed, yes, we even hugged. And it should be clear to all of you that from now on I will never again wash certain parts of my body. Thanks to my favorite project manager Na-Young and Basti for mentally helping me not to suddenly forget my abilities—painstakingly learned over decades—such as speaking, standing, or breathing in Nora’s presence.

You can download the two photos of Nora, Basti and me here and here, print them out and have them framed, and I’ll just call the nearest church right now and set a date for the wedding. Summer next year sounds great, doesn’t it? You’re all invited, Nora and I will be delighted.

.

Amanda Blank – Might Like You Better:

The American showcase rapper Amanda Blank may have more hair on her forearms than I have on my head, but she’s just one hot piece, there’s no other way to put it. On The Boobs I’ve now come across her new video "Might Like You Better" from the album "I Love You."

In bright colors and with understandable lyrics, after collaborations with greats such as Santigold, M.I.A. and Ghostface Killah, she now sings a romantic story about intercourse, red hair and monogamy. Perhaps expressed a bit differently, but the meaning remains the same.

The aforementioned album with the somewhat daring yet emotional title is in no way inferior to the feeling of the video and convinces with clever tracks, a handful of retro, and with "Leaving You Behind," a heart-wrenching ballad featuring Lykke Li. Speaking of Swedish exchange singers: where is something new from Lykke, anyway? I’m slowly getting impatient.

.

Aperto Is Looking for the Super Apprentice:

I could now give you, as usual, a long, imaginative and intimidating introduction to the topic we’re about to address, but let’s talk straight and get down to business: We at aperto are still looking for a clever young guy, quick-witted girl or over-intellectual German shepherd whom we can put through a grand apprenticeship in Digital and Print Media Design. And preferably quite spontaneously.

And we don’t want just any losers who have only just learned how to get Solitaire running on a PC—no: you have to be seriously good in all the areas that matter to us—just like we are. Pause for laughter. You have to live the internet, consider design the highest art in the world, and be able to code websites until Firebug starts smoking. Ideally, you also have your own blog, feel at home in the social web, and impress with passion and charisma.

The lucky winner of this whole presentation can look forward to a breathtakingly good apprenticeship that sharpens and perfects your already existing skills, unconditional involvement in many groundbreaking projects, and invaluable knowledge that will open doors for your future. On top of that, we have the prettiest girls, Bionade and breakfast to die for, and last but not least you even get to spend the day—and if you’re female, tall and blonde, even the night—with your favorite star, namely me!

So what on earth are you waiting for? Put together an application so grand that it hurls us across our sunny agency in Berlin Mitte, and we’ll soon welcome you to the heart of the design world. Further information about your ticket to happiness is beautifully written on the aperto blog, and you can apply on our page specially set up for you. Good luck!

.

The Aston Shuffle (feat. Danimal Kingdom) – Do You Want More:

You know the problem. Ever since last Christmas you’ve been lugging around a big belly in front of you, desperately wanting to lose it through excessively healthy eating, fiber-rich foods and a tiny little fasting week (but definitely without physical exercise), yet before you know it you’re sitting at McDonald’s again, waiting in vain for Heidi Klum and her top models.

But it doesn’t have to be that way, because now there is "Do You Want More," the new video by The Aston Shuffle featuring Danimal Kingdom, which I discovered here at TO:WEAR, the blog of the Frontline Shop. In it, a few strange characters stuff themselves through a menu full of delicacies, throw up, and are then led one by one through a mysterious door. But just watch and see what awaits the winner…? Yummy, yummy.

So the next time you get a massive craving for bratwurst, pizza and bean stew, just watch this delicious video all the way to the bitter end and I promise you, afterward you won’t even feel like eating a stalk of rhubarb. And if even that doesn’t stop you from the big feast, you may reward yourself by watching the guy running around in his underwear. Bon appétit!

.

City Hunger: The Farewell:

He collapsed to the ground in front of me, yelping, gasping. “Right in the balls!” Paula shouted to me jubilantly and beamed from ear to ear. It was dark, it was cold, but through this good deed I was practically glowing inside. I felt so liberated. What a victory, what a triumph. Johnny pulled a face twisted in pain, his brain-amputated buddies looked at me like paralyzed rabbits. “Go ahead, come at me, you idiots, I just discovered Chuck Norris for myself!” I yelled at them and glared as fiercely as I could. I had nothing left to lose and they were supposed to feel that. Johnny howled.

“Sina, hurry up, the damn train is about to leave!” I grabbed my backpack and started running. I ran away from my old life, my boyfriend, my family—just get out of here. Johnny shouted after me: “You bitch! If I catch you, I’ll kill you! CUNT!” At that word we jumped onto the train, the doors slammed shut loudly behind us, and shortly afterward we were on our way to a new, better life. I was so relieved that I knelt down and just started crying.

Paula was my best friend. She had big breasts and an even bigger heart. I loved her, I adored her, I would have given my life for her. When I opened my eyes we were lying tightly in each other’s arms. Outside, trees, mountains and houses shot past us. I snuggled into her lilac sweater that smelled so wonderfully of roses and breathed in deeply. “How much longer?” I murmured into her ample bosom. “A few hours,” was the short answer from above. “Oh man…”

When we arrived at Berlin Central Station, we first trudged happily and exhausted at the same time to the nearest Burger King, ordered the fattest menu plus bacon and large fries and rejoiced in our newly gained freedom. I was happy, truly happy.

“If you want, you can quickly go to the bathroom, I’ll wait here for you.” Paula had put on her brightest smile. I nodded cheerfully, took another quick sip of my cola and ran off. When I came back she was gone. At first I thought it was a joke, didn’t stop smiling and acted completely unfazed so as not to grant her a victory as soon as she jumped out from the next corner. But she wasn’t behind any corner. She was nowhere.

Slowly panic crept up inside me, I ran along the station, every platform, every shop, every corner. She had my phone. With my last bit of change I called home and tearfully explained my situation. But my mother only laughed cruelly, said it was my own fault, that I should see for myself how to get out of it and muttered something about reaping what you sow. Everything was spinning. I found myself on all fours, calling only Paula’s name. But she didn’t hear me.

This was the sixth chapter “The Farewell” from the furious blog novel project “City Hunger,” the serialized novel at AMY&PINK. You can continuously find all parts under the category "City Hunger."

.

Je m’appelle Marcel:

On Sunday at noon, after a two-week recovery break in Good Old Bavaria, I arrived back in the capital and I have to say that I really missed Berlin. Even though Montana and I watched dirty manga porn, André and the two Silvis danced competitively with me at Schön&Wild, and Ira and I devoured expired chocolate cake and not-so-fresh pizzas. I miss Bavaria, but the big B is the here and now.

And this time I really have to thank the people at Deutsche Bahn for still not taking their job all that seriously and occasionally making the S-Bahn disappear without a trace, because otherwise I would never ever have met Chloé. An exchange student with an entirely sweet French accent. We laughed, sang and practiced French — it was absolutely adorable.

We then let the weekend fade out at the Spreeterrasse, where the Sunday Seance Summer Affair Open Air Party took place that evening and where we met such funny people as the flamboyant Frank from iHeartBerlin and the sweet Juliane from Reigen. With them we chatted about such important topics as confetti, slave labor and grilled sausages, and I strongly hope that Mr. Frank will once again have breathtakingly good going-out tips at the ready this weekend. Or won’t he?

.

Heroes of Our Time: Steve Jobs:

Drugs are shit, dear children. They make you addicted, sick and infertile. If you throw too much of that stuff into your system, you’ll inevitably end up at Bahnhof Zoo, selling your battered little bodies for a few euros to the stinking john next door and putting an end to your pitiful life with a well-aimed golden shot. There’s no other way out. Unless, of course, your name is Steve Jobs.

For all the snobbish nerds of this world (myself included), the former extreme junkie is leader, prophet and god all in one. Because while other junkies just ride pink elephants and then wet themselves because they think the wall wants to eat them, Mr. Jobs, together with his chubby clone who is also named Steve, managed to use the power of LSD to build the greatest company in the world from the ground up. No, not Nintendo, but Apple!

I attentively read his biography to find out firsthand how this spoiled only child of a brat (just like me, he is!) went from being an annoying and misanthropic dreamer to the coolest geek of all time. And now I’ve uncovered his secrets to success. Listen closely.

First of all, he cheated everyone around him out of money — including his closest friends — cried like a little child when he didn’t get what he wanted, and flatly refused to leave a room until everything went exactly the way he wanted it to. Steve asked every new employee whether they were still a virgin and then kept them like slaves. He also vehemently refused to pay child support for his illegitimate daughter Lisa. That’s what you call saving money wherever possible.

And what do we learn from this? You have to be an asshole in this world. Otherwise you won’t achieve anything at all — certainly not building a cult like Apple. Oh Steve, you little rascal, for me you are and will remain the greatest hero on earth and I want to be just like you. But that also means I’ll first need a shopping cart full of LSD. Just send it my way, thanks a lot.

.

When Are You Old Enough for Fashion?:

The fact that, as the pimp of a fashion blog these days, you can make it to more than just a brief mention in trade magazines can be seen especially in recent developments — the boom that the possibilities of the participatory web, combined with an increased identification with fashion, have triggered. They find themselves in the middle of large-scale photo spreads, give interviews on television and have become an influential movement in the international fashion circus. Among them well-known names such as the cute girls from Les Mads, the wanderer from Facehunter or the sun-tanned Lisa.

Tavi Mugs is a delicate 13 years old, writes on her own blog Style Rookie about fashion magazines, Thomas the Tank Engine and Karl Lagerfeld, and has the same haircut as Twiggy in her best years. Her extraordinary sense of style and the courage of a girl who has only just entered puberty to approach her own definitions of trends and color choices have now even landed her on the cover of the current preview issue of LOVE Magazine.

And Tavi is not alone in the ranks of babyfaces. Whether Andrea, Bronka or the just eight-year-old Arlo Weiner — they all fascinate and shock in equal measure with their grown-up style of dress and raise the question of when one is actually old enough for fashion. Whether children who immerse themselves too early in the style-dictated world of fashion victims give up part of their carefree lives far too quickly, and how much of their clothing choices are truly their own? You decide.

.

Skins:

The cancellation of “O.C., California” changed me deeply inside and brought me a dreadful dry spell in the search for another series I could cling to, that could give me support and warmth, by which I could align my interpersonal goals. And as a native television child, I probably would have starved mentally if at some point the British series Skins hadn’t started airing on E4, which I had already mistakenly described back then as the British counterpart to my former favorite series.

As so often, it’s simply about the various relationships between a few teenagers, but the depth, realism and the way the whole thing is told — funny, sad, shocking and relatable — keeps you captivated by this oft-quoted world of drugs, sex and love. And as is well known, I’m totally into that kind of shit, like Amy is into Drake. And so are you.

Why I’m once again showering you with endless hymns of praise is obvious, because finally the series that saved me from suicide on many a multi-hour ICE trip is making it to our territory as well — on the pay-TV channel FOX Channel. As probably the last country on this planet, and even in our lovely language. The first episode can kindly be watched for free on this MySpace page, and yet I still urge you: get the seasons in the original version on DVD from Amazon instead.

But no matter how, when or why you want to watch “Skins” (or not): just do it, no matter what! The enchanting and somehow constantly high Cassie, the sympathetic asshole Tony and his best mate Sid — oh, I simply love this series. Thanks to Pasue and Stiller for the great tip.

.

Hangover:

There’s a certain party movie in our circle that is simply legendary. A few teenagers drink, screw and smoke their way across Europe, make out with their siblings, bond with hooligans and prank the Pope. Scotty doesn’t know and all that — the film is called “Eurotrip.” And we would have considered it absolutely impossible for any other movie in this lifetime to come close. But then it happened.

Because last night we finally went to see “Dude, Where’s My Car?”Hangover,” and it was so insanely funny that from here on I could only write the rest of this article in smileys, hahas or those disgusting pseudo-Asian grinning eyes. This story, these guys, Mike Tyson — I laughed, I giggled, I covered my face with my hands, all like a little Japanese schoolgirl in the evening.

The result is that I hereby issue an absolute recommendation, no, even a command, to the last two remaining people who haven’t seen the film yet, because you must know: “Hangover” will change your life. Really.

And to all aspiring directors out there I can only say: if you’re planning to make a totallyyyy funny movie soon, and deep down you already know while reading the script that it will never ever be as good as “Hangover,” then just leave it. Just leave it be. That will save both of us a lot of trouble. The bar is simply too high now.

.

Vöri Importänt People:

It hasn’t been that long, maybe just a little over a year ago, when I grandly announced that we were just about to make the totally important entry into the German Blog Charts. That would have made us part of the unmistakable elite, the upper ten thousand, the decision-makers, the truly important ones of this whole shebang. Since then, they had punished us with contempt.

But oh behold, in the early morning dawn, Denkfabriq, bursting with joy, pointed out to us that as of today AMY&PINK is represented in the list of kings. And straight in at number 55! We thank our producers, God, the hordes of loving fans and Nora Tschirner, who will surely call me any minute now to properly congratulate me.

And since from now on we belong to the absolute Vöri Importänt People (as if we weren’t before...), starting today we expect invitations to all the important upper-class parties, to the press ball, the fashion weeks, film premieres, world tours and everything where there are free gifts and delicious finger foods. That’s really not too much to ask, after all we’re famous now. World domination and all that — here we come!

.

The Lookbook Look: Rockie Nolan:

The 19-year-old student and photographer Rockie Nolan has been one of my absolute favorites since last year with her sun-drenched photographs. As part of our Lookbook Look series, I now had the opportunity to talk with her about her work, first great love, and the curse of red hair—and I also had to endure the embarrassment of considering Jenny Lewis and Rilo Kiley as two different people. I am just so professional.

You really take breathtakingly beautiful photos. Are there any particular secrets to shooting such amazing pictures? How do you do it?

I’m glad that you like my work. But honestly, I don’t really have any secrets. I love scheduling my shoots at sunset and I really enjoy creating my own little characters in all of my photos. At the moment, I only use a 50mm f/1.8 lens, and I plan to stick with that.

You grew up in plain old Texas—what’s it like there? What kind of environment do you live in, and do you think the USA is a very fashion-conscious country?

I live in the second most conservative city in the entire United States. And that sucks because I’m very liberal myself. My city is full of cattle ranchers, Bible worshippers, and pregnant teenagers. There’s a college here, which is why a few young liberals have moved here. That makes it a bit more livable. And we have a fairly modest music and art scene.

I think that, for the most part, the USA is very fashion-conscious. At least in certain areas. In the city where I live, Lubbock, I sometimes get strange looks when I walk around in clothes that don’t fit the typical student image. That’s how many people dress in this city. People here simply don’t expect you to walk around in a style they themselves don’t consider attractive.

I absolutely love red hair. Your favorite singers Rilo Kiley and Jenny Lewis are well-known redheads—just like you. Is that just a lucky coincidence? Do you think your red hair gives you any advantages or disadvantages, and how do people react to it?

Jenny Lewis is actually the lead singer of Rilo Kiley. And I’d say it’s just a lucky coincidence. When I met her for the first time, she was thrilled that I also have red hair. That was a really beautiful day. But I don’t think it gives me any advantages. Supposedly redheads have a higher pain tolerance. And I can get skin cancer more easily. When I was little, I was constantly teased because of my hair color, but despite all that, I wouldn’t trade it for any other color in the world.

What inspires you, what drives you? Where do you get your outfit ideas from, and do you have any role models?

Jenny Lewis really inspires my style, but most of my outfits simply result from spending too much time browsing through thrift stores. I rarely spend more than $20 on one of my outfits. My biggest role model is my mother. She passionately supports my artistic endeavors and is an amazing woman. I’m proud to have her :)

How did you meet your boyfriend Andrew? Tell us a sweet little love story. And what kind of people are your best friends?

We both study photography at the Savannah College of Art and Design—it was simply fate. We both had many mutual friends, and our group had already been messaging each other online before we started at SCAD. When we finally went to college together, I wasn’t even sure if he liked me at all.

One day we watched Scrubs together in my room, and I was really excited and nervous because we had never done anything alone together before. Shortly after that, we started seeing each other regularly, and in about a week we’ll have been together for nine months. You can check out his portfolio at www.andrewhefter.com.

My best friends are simply fantastic. We’re really very similar. We’re into silly things and start dancing for no reason. We can philosophize about coffee for hours. I hate having to leave them again and again when I go back to Savannah. But I’m truly lucky to be blessed with such wonderful friends. Sometimes they model for me as well.

What kinds of movies or TV shows are you into? What kind of music do you like to listen to, and which magazines do you prefer reading?

My favorite movies are Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, The Virgin Suicides, Spirited Away, and Amélie. On TV, I like watching The X-Files, Adult Swim, and lately tons of movies on Lifetime. But please don’t ask me why—I just always end up watching them when I’m awake at 3 a.m. and can’t fall asleep.

Musically, I’m into Jenny Lewis, Thao with The Get Down Stay Down, Tegan and Sara, Dear and the Headlights, The Decemberists, Yeah Yeah Yeahs, Mates of State, Soko… but I’d better stop now, because I could go on for hours. I enjoy reading Vogue, JPG, Nylon, and i-D.

In your opinion, what are the best websites for fashion, photography, and lifestyle?

Definitely Lookbook.nu. Carbonmade is a fantastic site for artists to create their own portfolio. And I love We Heart It.

To come back to fashion, what do you think will be the upcoming trends for the end of the year—or is that completely irrelevant to you because you wear whatever you like anyway?

Hmm, I’m not sure. I usually just find things that I like and hope others feel the same way. I’m pretty bad at predicting upcoming trends. I think vintage will inspire upcoming looks and remain popular. At least I hope so, because I’ll keep wearing it.

And what are your goals for the future, besides continuing to wear vintage?

I really want to become a fashion photographer. It would be an absolute dream to shoot for the Urban Outfitters catalog. I worked on several fashion shoots this summer, and I hope to continue focusing on that and advancing my career. Hopefully it will pay off. If not, I’ll probably end up either owning an antique store or becoming a cat lady. But either one would be fine with me.

Thank you very much for the wonderful interview, and you can find more photos of Rockie on her own portfolio site, DeviantArt, Facebook, and even Twitter.

.

Bat For Lashes – Sleep Alone:

There are only a few albums that have truly carried me away this year. “Horehound” by The Dead Weather is one of them, for example. Or “Hands” by Little Boots. But of course also “Far” by Regina Spektor. So you see, I’m simply into female singers – someone please have a psychologist explain that to me.

And honestly, who hasn’t been into the enchanting, graceful, mysterious and altogether wonderful Bat For Lashes, aka Natasha Khan, at least since her second album “Two Suns”? What a woman, what a voice, what intense songs. Since “Daniel”, she has been, alongside Lykke Li, one of my absolute favourites.

Now the 29-year-old presents the insanely great video for her third single “Sleep Alone”, which, as usual, comes wrapped in bittersweet melancholy, soaked in misty melodies and perfect for making out by candlelight with a good bottle of red wine. I love this woman. But honestly, who doesn’t…

.

Element Skateboard’s “Make It Count”:

The label Element with its striking and memorable logo and the cute girls’ brand Element Eden is as much a part of every skateboarder’s life – and their numerous eager groupies – as decks and wheels. And besides surfers and rock stars, there’s probably nothing sexier for prepubescent girls than talented skaters.

Now this mammoth among skate labels has put the first part of its large-scale documentary “Make It Count” by Kirk Dianda online. In four parts inspired by the elements, it tells the story of the sport, the rise of the brand, and its unique appeal. Element founder Johnny Schillereff as well as numerous companions and pioneers reminisce about the best years of the skateboard.

On the first of every month, following the initial chapter “Wind,” another part will be released. And now that I think about it, I’ve probably rediscovered my weakness for uber-cool skater girls. I’m going to listen to the corresponding song by Avril Lavigne and be annoyed that in my early years I wrecked three boards in a row and never tried again. If only I had, I’d be Tony Hawk by now.

.

Stadthunger: Adam and Eve:

We ate lavishly on their rooftop terrace in the evening. Sina and Eva had cooked: lasagna with salad, pudding with little chunks in it. Just the way I liked it. Adam talked about the business. The club. The Chan Shin. How difficult it was these days to keep a thriving place running. There was so much competition in the city that the clientele kept getting stranger, but also more entertaining.

He was tall, with monumental tattoos on both arms, lions and eagles, stars and roses. Piercings adorned his face, eaten away by madness, and his dark voice underscored everything he said with an unavoidable emphasis.

Eva, on the other hand, was small, slim and slender. Together with her blonde, shoulder-length hair, she often transformed in my imagination into the figure of a bright fairy. Her voice was gentle and composed. I would love to have Eva read me a bedtime story sometime.

I nodded incessantly, but basically I didn’t give a damn about anything Adam was explaining to me at such length. I was one of the most dazzling figures in the business and I couldn’t care less. Sina knew that. She looked at me with an understanding expression and took a big bite of lasagna. At the time I found it cute when she stuffed large pieces of food into her mouth.

“Why does this world make you so happy?” I ask her as we walk home. “Which world do you mean?” She loosely wraps her arms around me and then dances cheerfully across the cobblestones. “The parties, the clubs, the over-the-top people. The drugs and all that.” She stands still and slowly turns toward me. “Because you live in it.”

I look at her in disbelief. “But I hate it. And you know that.” “And why?” “Because none of it is real, everything is overblown and artificial. People suppress their problems and worries, wash them down with alcohol and push themselves into some kind of mental worlds with drugs before crashing all the harder onto the ground of reality the next morning.”

With a smile she comes toward me, takes my hands and presses a kiss on my mouth that is as tender as it is passionate. “I’m real,” she whispers softly. “And we both live in this world.” A glaring beam of light pierced my murky thoughts, ruled by darkness. Howling and screaming in pain, the demons of my self shattered into a thousand pieces and made way for a green, healing bud that broke through the cold, withered earth.

A grin spreads across my face, which just moments ago had been so thoughtful and grim with deep conviction and aversion. “See,” she says, then runs off and spreads her arms. “Come on, let’s fly!” she calls and disappears around the next corner. Wait for me.

Sina was like a little child, a whirlwind. She reminded me of my own resolutions and convictions that I had lost through life here. Her nature was always cheerful, carefree and full of positive surprises. She was Ernie, I was Bert. “Don’t be such a Bert.”

I enjoyed every minute I spent with her. At least that was the feeling I had in retrospect; in truth she often annoyed me with her overly naive view of existence. Maybe I was just jealous.

I often looked at her bright body, photographed it, caressed it. I knew every freckle on her, every scar, every tiny hair. I knew how to stroke her stomach so that she would start giggling like a chicken, which places she didn’t want to be touched, and how I could drive her to inner despair and all the way to orgasm.

Sina was an open book to me, and yet so many pages still seemed unread. Maybe unwritten. And I was afraid of them. A past that was waiting for me, but that I didn’t want to know about. Because it would change everything, destroy our world, annihilate our existence.

This was the fifth chapter “Adam and Eve” from the furious blog novel project “Stadthunger,” the serialized novel at AMY&PINK. You can continuously find all parts under the category “Stadthunger”.

.

Pixie Lott – Boys And Girls:

I simply don’t get it. Pixie Lott, a crisp 18 years old, English, blonde, tall, slim, talented and equipped with a thousand times more sex appeal than our favorite transvestite Mr. Lady Gaga, in my opinion absolutely has what it takes to make really awesome, modern music. Something along the lines of Lykke Li, Robyn or, if you insist, Little Boots. But she doesn’t.

If you watch her new video for “Boys And Girls” without sound, you’ll be flooded with crisp, fresh impressions: sexy models who could have come straight out of the Kate Moss clone machine, uber-cool guys making out with disco balls, and a location that would do justice to the most underground Berlin club. And damn, Pixie Lott looks hot in it. Like, really hot.

But then you turn on the damn sound and what do you hear? Insignificant, almost embarrassing generic pop that doesn’t fit at all with the pumped-up world you’ve just been lulled into. Unfortunately, the entire album “Turn It Up” promises no improvement, so we either have to wait until someone finally gives Pixie something better than Diet Coke, or until the tripped-out island monkeys lose interest in her. Until then, we’d better watch the clip on mute and play a soundtrack by La Roux over it.

.

Hannah on TV:

-->

I know, it’s been a long time, but do you still remember the fantastic year 2008? Exactly, strain those gray cells. The one that, when you think about it excessively, wasn’t all that fantastic and could boast only a handful of positive events and aspects.

Among the highlights and as one of the milestones in Hannah’s career as world ruler (next to me, of course) was certainly her appearance in the culturally extremely high-quality show “Mitbewohner gesucht” on our favorite channel VOX, which, among other things, broadcasts favorites like “Gilmore Girls” and “O.C., California” almost daily, and where she wanted to rent a room in her cute shared apartment to the totally likable and not at all snooty-seeming Linda—a room that Hannah already presented to us here.

And thanks to the incredibly great service of VOX Now and the help of a small program called ScreenFlow, after a short waiting time of just one year you can see this grand piece of television history here with us today and experience our universally beloved Montana together with her sexy playmates in front of her sparkling clean bathroom, right next to Scientology, in her stylish turquoise slippers. With so much concentrated femininity, you immediately want to move in.

.

WTF?! Vol. 7:

Some of you may already know these modern websites that redirect you to other pages after you first enter a few terms that interest you. Google is one of them, for example. Or Bing. Or Yahoo. And since some many of you are little piggies who like to type in perverted stuff there, here comes number 7 of our pillory series, neatly structured to show which curious search terms brought you to AMY&PINK. Cast off.

How do I get my parents to let me go to Frequency? How tall is Palina Rojinski? Gays sunbathe in Berlin. Small breasts jiggle. Little Lilly fucks her best friend’s father. Hot ladies from Lower Bavaria. Bambi, where were you? Hot sex with disabled people. Women stick shit up their asses. Naked Swedish girls. Doctor games in the children’s room. Lose weight like Keira Knightley. Hot emos. Screw metrosexual – I’m going to chop wood now! Rent a porn star. Go mow the lawn. Family mattress gets fucked by everyone.

What does “paffen” mean? Free porn with women who are breastfeeding, no registration required. Is Emma Watson shaved? Bouncing tits. How do you “paffen”? Emma Watson with a cucumber in her vagina. Hentai Bambi. Is Pink English or American? Watch photos and films of former porn stars for free. Vagina nerves. Cobra in old German script. I came home from school and saw my mother having sex with the mailman. Sister’s boyfriend seduces. What are the hottest Oakleys? Running robot. Only vanilla sex. Hot turd. Lady Gaga topless. What do men think about ex-girlfriends?

.

Wish for a Film!:

Films are something great. Tearjerkers make us cry, horror flicks make us cuddle, and action movies turn us into pseudo-superheroes who crash into the nearest tree while drifting right after leaving the cinema. But what’s even better than just plopping down in front of the TV or the big screen? That’s right: making your own movie!

Roman, one of the organizers, pointed us to the Jugendfrey Film Festival in Berlin, founded by the association Freygeist e.V.. Selected participants up to 25 years old can grab a camera and a few friends until August 20, smear them with fake blood or set them adrift on the Wannsee armed with nothing but a spoon—and even win some great prizes with their recordings.

So that interested parties don’t have to search forever for a brilliant idea, we want to know from you: What have you always wanted to see in a film of your choice? Vegetarian aliens, pirates allergic to salt water, or finally Megan Fox naked in a new robot movie? Your ideas are wanted!

.

Jessica Daniels:

I tend to prefer that certain kind of person who can’t immediately be shoved into a specific drawer, but instead keeps everyone’s imagination running with little secrets. There’s nothing sexier. Except cheesecake, of course.

And that’s exactly the category American Jessica Daniels from Los Angeles falls into, whom I stumbled upon here at Sex in Art. Even while looking at her photos, I couldn’t quite figure out what role the girl actually plays in this soulless internet. What is she? Nude model, musician, photographer? Or all of the above?

In any case, her Flickr account is full of great shots that stimulate my already endlessly perverted imagination like crazy. Whether sexy suggestiveness, dirty groupie shots, or sugary-sweet childhood photos—here you’ll find no answers, only more questions. But perhaps these pictures with Eric Kroll reveal more than they should. And now I want a piece of cheesecake.

.

Vomit Girls Are Sexy:

-->

New York star photographer Merlin Bronques became a luminary of the international party scene with his brilliant website LastNightsParty, inspired me among others to create the main character in "Stadthunger," and even triggered a real boom among third-rate pseudo-photographers. Since then, parties have had to be even flashier, sexier, and more over-the-top—they might end up on the internet, after all.

Now, after his successful photographs—some of which were published in book form in 2006—Merlin has ventured into the world of moving images and presents boozy videos from the wild parties of Brooklyn and the rest of the world with LastNightsParty.tv. “Ruff Night” is the first installment. And many more are to follow.

And I could almost get jealous that I’m not spending my dreary existence in the dark world of the New York underground, but only in completely harmless and sparkling clean Berlin. And until a drunken bird abducts me to the American East Coast, I’ll sit here with popcorn and a Coke in my mouth watching puking models, fucked-up junkies, and rich hip-hop snobs. I think it’s great. Oh, what a wonderful world.

.

Stadthunger: My Name Is Sina:

Close friends describe me as a little stubborn brat who, like a sudden raging storm, can fall head over heels for things and people with full passion, only to drop them just as quickly out of boredom. In my short life, there are only a few scenarios that cause me bone-chilling fear. One of the worst among them: that I might one day become wealthier than my father.

Because in my sweet little head it’s proven: all that money is to blame for the idiot constantly jetting from metropolis to metropolis with an army of blonde, anorexic secretaries no older than me, while his loving family always comes up short. That he’s sleeping with at least half of those soulless Barbie dolls—my mother doesn’t know. Or maybe she just doesn’t want to.

Another uncontrollable fear I definitely have is of small children. I don’t know how to deal with them, I don’t know what to do with them, and I especially can’t handle how eight-year-old gnomes with thick pants and even thicker balls can either call me a slut or constantly grope my ass at the bus stop. And when you slap them, suddenly they start crying and call for their bull of a father, who then tears into you with a mix of disgust and dripping horniness. Thanks for that lovely morning.

But what truly, really disgusts me most is the idea that someday, during a daring jump into the swimming pool or Lake Stollensee, my bikini might float away. That happened to my best friend Paula last summer. Since then, the whole school knows that she has the biggest boobs and the ugliest nipples of all time. And not only those precocious bitches from fifth grade find it hilarious—Johnny, self-proclaimed total moron and destined winner of the BILD newspaper reader of the year award, loves to ride that topic too.

Although at that particular moment he was probably more busy riding me, making disgusting grunting noises and almost falling off the bed while trying—and failing—to finger me at the same time. So he decided to leave it at that.

Which was probably better for both of us, since he was only slapping around on my stomach like a deranged lunatic anyway. At least during his very personal interpretation of World War II I didn’t have to look into his eyes, so I used the opportunity on that sunny day to glance out of the open window into the park and think about the important questions of life.

Whether Paula also forgot the history presentation Mr. Dächler had assigned her. How many women at that very moment were on all fours in front of their beloved, counting clouds with intense concentration. And whether I should finally redeem my voucher at Douglas tonight.

There was this new Calvin Klein perfume that smelled like a mix of vanilla and raspberry and blended incredibly well with my phenomenal natural scent. I had to have it. “Turn around, you slut!” someone shouted from behind, and before I knew it I was on my back and Johnny’s miniature version of a penis was heading straight for my nose.

The idea of going to Berlin to completely turn my life around and finally figure out what I really wanted to do with my existence came to me a few minutes after that splashy experience in Johnny’s grimy bathroom.

I had just rinsed my face with warm water and reached for the towel when I accidentally stared straight into my deep green eyes, which almost looked back at me with disdain. Slowly I examined my face while the post-romantic sounds of Rammstein echoed from the living room. The smell of marijuana drifted into my nose.

In that moment it became clear to me: I was more than just a little red-haired girl whose sweet face merely served as a sperm graveyard. I had character, I was fucking creative, I was something special. And I had great tits, too. With this realization in tow, I ran into the living room, grabbed my clothes, shouted a loud “Adios, you wanker!” as I passed Johnny, and stumbled out the door into the courtyard, relieved.

The deaf-mute elderly couple sitting across from me on a green bench by the house wall seemed to enjoy my striptease outdoors. I took my time getting dressed, pulled a cigarette from my pocket, and headed toward the bus station. And heaven forbid there’d be a gnome standing there now.

This was the fourth chapter “My Name Is Sina” from the furious blog novel project “Stadthunger,” the serialized novel on AMY&PINK. This part is a revised adaptation of a previously published short story. You can continually find all parts under the category "Stadthunger".

.

Evan Rachel Wood Strips Down:

After both Lily Allen and Lady Gaga already got naked for i-D Magazine out of boredom, publicity, or simply for the money, the fledgling and former lover of Marilyn Manson has now also stripped for the tree killers.

Evan Rachel Wood appears in the current August issue of the magazine, which could slowly push the aging Playboy into the background, posing sexy in patent leather boots, lasciviously with two fingers in her mouth, crawling naked on all fours in front of photographer Terry Richardson. Just like Miss Allen, and equipped with a bit less up top, small breasts seem to be totally on trend at the moment. And I don’t even mind.

And although I find the thought that goth Manson has already hopped around on the girl a bit gross, I’ve been totally into Wood ever since one of my favorite films, "Thirteen," regardless of the fact that she hasn’t really accomplished much in years—or am I mistaken? I’m just curious who will be the next to drop their clothes for the magazine.

.

Will The Real Japanese Please Stand Up:

Lately I haven’t given my favorite country (I almost just wrote homeland) nearly enough attention. And I’m sorry for that. After all, it’s such a crazy, quirky and yet unbelievably creative nation that those cute slant-eyed people have built up over years of tradition. And I actually had to catch "The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift" on TV for my love of Nippon to awaken again from its slumber. Oh Han, I want to be like you.

Anyway, just this very moment on the not entirely watertight Nerd Planet I found these magnificent Polaroids from a Japanese Halloween party in 1964. And now tell me: aren’t they wonderfully ridiculous and stylish at the same time?

For exactly that reason I’m going to devote myself once again to the culture, the knick-knacks, and the often incomprehensible incomprehensibility of the Land of the Rising Sun. If you’re lucky, I might even let you share in my discoveries from time to time. Maybe I’ll even take a language course again. Are there actually any Japanese people reading this? Does one of you want to be my friend? That would truly make me happy. Get in touch with me. I don’t bite. Unless you’re into that.

.

Heroes of Our Time: Eric Cartman:

It’s time to finally honor the true heroes of our generation, to forget Obama, Gandhi and Mother Teresa, and to orient ourselves toward the teachings of a handful of extraordinary people who have truly changed the world.

Our number 1 in this new series is therefore the little asshole Eric Cartman from idyllic South Park, Colorado. Sure, he’s a racist, manipulator and murderer, but there are plenty of positive aspects to be found in his soul steeped in darkness.

From him we can learn to reach even distant goals with ease by never letting up, acting in unconventional ways, and viewing the mechanisms of the world from a bird’s-eye perspective. True to the motto: what doesn’t exist doesn’t exist.

In doing so, previously unseen paths open up to us that promise quick and uncomplicated success. Additionally, his enormous obesity unconsciously nudges us more often toward enjoying a fresh fruit salad instead of grabbing greasy cheese nachos.

Anyone who now feels called upon to change the world themselves—and preferably every evening—can attend a free session on August 6 on Comedy Central. There will be a very special Cartman special, after which you will surely also want to become a rock star, process your parents into chili, or exterminate the Jews. Or redheads—just as you please.

.

Win Awesome Stuff with bebe Generation:

You probably still remember the sweet girls you were able to vote into the four shared apartments of the bebe Generation recently. I hope you voted diligently, because sixteen selected pretty girls have now been chosen and can look forward to moving into their dream WG.

Whether music, fashion, lifestyle or active—there’s something for every taste. Berlin and Cologne have already welcomed their newcomers, and they’re already making quite a stir. The music crew is calling for cheerful karaoke singing while the fashion freaks from the capital (who live just around the corner from us) are preparing to design their limited edition jeans.

Only Munich and Hamburg are still missing, whose future residents will be moving into their brand-new homes in the coming days. But why am I telling you all this? Because you can actively participate in all the bebe Generation activities and snag some really great prizes. From digital cameras to music vouchers to surf sticks, everything’s included. So join in and cash in, I’d say. Good luck!

.

Ron’s Sexy Little Sister:

Okay, let’s be honest. Ginny Weasley aka Bonnie Wright isn’t exactly a sight for sore eyes even in the current "Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince." Small, red-haired and always walking around with that crazy psycho look. Like a little gnome. Even though I’m actually into gingers. I always preferred model student and would-be model Emma Watson. Even if the topless photo of her that recently circulated in the media turned out not to be entirely real. Unfortunately.

But after seeing various photos of Ron’s little sister on Buzzfeed, I have to revise my opinion. There, Mrs. Harry Potter shows herself as a stylish, chic girl, hopping around at the premiere of her new film in a sexy dress by Miu Miu and posing incredibly well for Grazia magazine.

That certainly makes the decision not so easy anymore: Hermione or Ginny? The 18-year-old has definitely convinced me with her stylish and (so far) scandal-free appearance. I’m curious to see how the Potter crew will have developed by the next film, and now you can place your bets on which of the young stars will experience a total breakdown first. Will it be Harry? Ron? Or Neville? We’re excited...

.

Nick Turns Your Naked Ex-Girlfriend into Art:

I’m a self-confessed fan of Nicholas Gazin. To be honest, I don’t really know why. Maybe because he has an insanely good clothing style. After all, he’s 25 years old, an artist and lives in the New York underground. He has to have it. Or because in one of the last issues of VICE he talked about grabbing pictures of random naked ex-girlfriends from the internet and turning them into magnificent drawings.

Or maybe because he creates art featuring crucified eyes, mutilated people and skeletons annoyed by the entire world. Brain-licking demons, devil-possessed ice cream and murderous plums. Goddesses licking fried eggs off feet, rockets flying into giant, hairy vaginas and dead Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles.

And all this modern nonsense is earning Nicholas plenty of female fans, worldwide fame and his own exhibitions. So those are probably enough reasons, and now I slowly understand why I quite like the nice gentleman. Or maybe I’m just into him because he has the best Facebook profile picture of all time. Yes, that must be it. Case closed.

.

Urban Hunger: Blood and Sex:

Basically, everything we did was about sex. Not about love, not about dancing. When she let that disgusting junkie take her on the toilet at the opening of Chan Shin, while I was busy taking funny photos of the party crowd that disgusted me, I didn’t really mind.

And yet I beat Sina bloody in the parking lot when she happily told me about it. With every punch, every blow, every kick, his face flashed through my mind—how he mounted her like a wild animal, having no idea about her dreams, her longings.

That she liked to drop three cubes of sugar into her coffee. That she snorted like a little pig when someone said something funny on TV. And that she wore pink underwear when she had her period. That asshole had no idea about any of that when he pressed her against the wall and shoved his disgusting thing into her again and again. And he didn’t give a damn.

When they pulled me away from you, you were lying on the dark concrete, gasping and crying. The blood flowed gleaming down your beautiful body. You stood up and looked at me like a mother looks at her son who has done something stupid but incredibly sweet.

“You love me, don’t you?” you ask me as we lie together in bed at night, taking turns on a joint while I kiss your wounds. “What makes you think that?” I reply curtly. “Because you were jealous. Because I fucked Cosby in the bathroom.” You giggle cheerfully. “I hate you,” I say, turn my back to you, and fall asleep.

I wake up the next morning to the clicking sounds you’re making on the laptop. I blink, see you sitting on the floor in your white nightgown, and kneel down behind you. The rage foams up inside me—you’re chatting with Cosby, early in the morning. I grab the MacBook and throw it out the window. Like a Frisbee. You look at me, puzzled, give me a kiss on the cheek, and make us some scrambled eggs with bacon. “Buy a new one, I want to listen to music.”

This was the third chapter “Blood and Sex” from the furious blog novel project “Urban Hunger,” the serialized novel on AMY&PINK. You can continuously find all parts under the category “Stadthunger.”

.

The Fallen Angel:

Oh Mischa dear, what on earth is going on with you? Sure, you miscalculated a bit when you left “O.C., California,” you didn’t exactly hit Hollywood like an atomic bomb in 1945, and you really had to struggle through some pretty lousy B-movies, but everyone makes mistakes. Relationship problems, wrong beauty ideals, depression…

But that doesn’t mean you have to attempt suicide. Especially now, things were finally looking up for you again. You had a new series, “The Beautiful Life,” on CW, you got to play a stalker under the direction of Morgan Freeman in the new film “Homecoming,” and you’re finally no longer with that disgusting Cisco Adler. Or is that exactly the crux of the matter…?

But it’ll be okay. Everything will be fine. The usual stuff. As your biggest fans on this planet, we wish you a speedy recovery. And if I ever see the idiot who wrote this MTV news piece, there’ll be a proper beating. One left and one right while I shout, “This one’s for Mischa!” See what I’d do for you.

.

The Big Putpat Giveaway:

It’s music that keeps us all alive. That saves us from ultimate despair, wraps us up warmly when we’re lovesick, and sets the tone when we’re freaking out. And because rhythmic melodies combined with a voice delivering more or less valuable lyrics basically save your life, here’s a batch of insanely good music—and you can even win something. So, who’s the best?

We’re giving away five completely exclusive invitations to the beta phase of Putpat, the new revolution in music shining in the firmament. And that’s saying something. All you have to do is listen to these insanely awesome songs and post in the comments which one you like best and why. It runs until Monday, and even if you’re not into the pseudo-lottery: the tracks are definitely worth it. So tune in and enjoy.

Colourless Colour” by La Roux. “Oasis” by Amanda Palmer. “Home Sweet Home” by Those Dancing Days. “Lisztomania” by Phoenix. “Two More Years” by Bloc Party. “Longing For Lullabies” by Kleerup. “Eet” by Regina Spektor. “Earthquake” by Little Boots. “Extraball (feat. Amanda Blank)” by Yuksek. “Little Lies” by Fleetwood Mac. “Sick Muse” by Metric. “Mistaken For Strangers” by The National.

.

How Mandatory Vaccinations Are Supposed to Kill Us All:

Do you remember that the government wants to get rid of every one of us? And we laughed about it? Well, my dear people, the greatest genocide of all time is slowly taking shape. Because this fall, the Ministry of Health wants to forcibly vaccinate 22.5 million Germans against swine flu. And other countries are planning similar measures.

That sounds like a good thing, but according to Austrian journalist Jane Burgermeister and the FBI, this is the beginning of the end. They are known to believe that both swine and bird flu were bred in a laboratory by the WHO in cooperation with governments and pharmaceutical companies in order to usher in a new world order, after which only important individuals will survive the pandemic and the lower classes will either disappear or be kept as slaves.

What sounds like a bad 1970s science fiction movie can unfortunately be supported by some facts. In the USA, there are already over 800 functioning concentration camps, guarded around the clock, fully operational, but completely empty. Officially, they were built in case of a massive increase in illegal immigration. Experts, however, assume they are intended for the surviving slaves after the swine flu.

It is also strange that all well-known individuals who have recently contracted the virus have gotten away with a black eye, while others die from it quite quickly. That is because there are supposedly two different vaccines. One helps, one kills. Twenty-one homeless people and one ferret have already died from the potential poison cocktail called Tamiflu, for which Roche had already forecast rising sales figures before the outbreak of the flu wave.

By forcibly vaccinating doctors, nurses, and the police, the helping units are to be removed directly in order to save money and time. After all, who would then treat those who are not on the list of the chosen ones? Problems like internet censorship, demonstrations, and overpopulation would suddenly dissolve into thin air. And if none of this is true, Uwe Boll can at least make a bad movie out of the story. Amen.

.

Style And The Family Tunes Loves Us:

Paper is dead, long live the screen. The death of the established old guard is currently on everyone’s lips. But especially the sexy fashion magazines in the glossy high-end milieu still have a certain charm of exclusivity despite—or precisely because of—these critical times. Large photos you can touch, culture to read, print for eternity. Paper, after all, is patient.

A shining beacon of hope amid the somewhat calcified Vogues and Elles is the lively magazine Style and the Family Tunes, which not only skillfully talks about fashion, music, and culture, but also occasionally invites some of the most important people on earth for a little interview. Including greats like Jette Stolte, Sascha Funke, and the adorable Lisa van Houtem.

And now guess who they took directly to their soft bosom for their latest inquiry? That’s right: the one and only… often copied… never equaled… me! So seize the opportunity and soak up my wisdom about hell, broken noses, and pulled-down pants for free and right here. And always pay attention!

.

Here’s To The Crazy Ones:

Nothing burns itself into our memory—whether positive or negative—like the special moments in our lives, the ones that remind us we are still here, breathing, bleeding, laughing. They are the stories in which we defy the well-established rules of the nation, throw all doubts about the beauty of our existence overboard for a short time, and perform acts that seem absolutely senseless but still give us so much more than all promotions, declarations of love, and hymns of praise combined. Because they come from the depths of our own selves, led by the heart, spontaneity, and the invincibility of the moment.

Whether we run naked races through the dark streets of the night with our best friends, transform a wall in front of her house into an eternal canvas of our torn feelings with colorful paint while suffering from heartbreak, or stand alone in a vast open field screaming our lungs out in sheer happiness or deep pain. Giving your best friend a tongue kiss, emptying your savings account and jetting off to Iceland, getting the Statue of Liberty tattooed in bright colors.

But only a few let go of their inner reins, and those of us who dare to do so through alcohol, drugs, or pure bliss do it far too rarely—or even regret having granted ourselves that freedom. Because of the looks of others, the constant need to justify ourselves, the embarrassment we exposed ourselves to. And could have avoided.

But if we look beyond that, if we believe in ourselves, in the short life available to us, and in freedom from everything and everyone, then we can be crazy. Dare things without having declared them to exhaustion beforehand. Take risks that can change everything. And escape the everyday life without meaning or reason.

Be brave. Be crazy. Be different. And now tell us: What crazy thing have you done in your life? Was it great, was it terrible, did you cry afterward? For love, for friendship, for yourself? And what do you absolutely want to try? Learn deep-sea diving, celebrate orgies, save lives? Here’s to the crazy ones. The misfits. The rebels. The troublemakers. The round pegs in the square holes. The ones who see things differently.

.

The Killers – Goodnight, Travel Well:

-->

I was really looking forward to the new video by one of my favorite bands, "The Killers," but while watching it I genuinely felt a cold shiver run down my spine. The story being told is so dark, so sad, and painfully real.

In collaboration with MTV Exit and Unicef, the viewer is drawn into the cold and icy world of forced prostitution, where young girls are humiliated like animals, held captive, and forced into sex. The dramatic, recurring beat, the hopeless lyrics, and the gloomy visuals burn themselves into your memory and refuse to let go.

The question that naturally arises at this point is what can be done about it. About this abuse, about this disgusting trade in lost souls, about the lives of these poor girls and boys. A dark topic that demands attention—and internet censorship is not the right answer. Because the abuse happens in the real world. Here, there, everywhere.

.

It’s Getting Hot In Herre:

The city is simmering beautifully right now, my fellow humans and colleagues are groaning and sweating under Berlin’s humid, cloudy sky, and the water supply of world ruler Danone is slowly running dry. Before we later get completely plastered on ice-cold Bommerlunder sangria together with a messed-up lower Bavarian school class, we’d like to heat you up properly one more time and, as we do at least once a month, draw your attention to our snazzy FFFFOUND! corner.

There you’ll currently find not only the hottest photos from The Cobra Snake, The Lovely Bones, and Lindsay Lohan Is Better Than You, but you can also uncover the secret of a good cook, watch the incredible Hulk tackle heavy everyday work, and take a peek into the future of your favorite superheroes.

That way, the heat becomes fun and twice as easy to endure. All you need are plenty of naughty bits, pretty girls, and a pinch of pseudo-art. You’ll find all that and much more in our constantly updated FFFFOUND! collection. Enjoy making big eyes.

.

Zweiohrküken:

As you all know, Til Schweiger and I have been total best buddies since this summer. Back then I had the hottest haircut ever, by the way. The good Marc has now drawn our attention to the first trailer for "Zweiohrküken," in which Nora Tschirner wears the same sexy facial expression the whole time as I’ve been wearing lately. But enough about me.

Because in the sequel to "Keinohrhasen," things get serious in pony-farm land. When Ludo runs into one of his former flings, Anna flies into a jealous rage. He, in turn, can’t stand this jealousy at all. He finally wants more freedom and time for himself—but quickly regrets it when Anna’s ex-boyfriend Ralf shows up. "GZSZ" on a grand cinematic scale.

And maybe this story, taken straight from life, will remind one or two of you of your own existence (now dig deep inside yourselves and rummage around), and from this film I simply wish for lots of Nora Tschirner. Lots of funny dialogue from her, lots of sweet facial expressions from her, and ideally another nude scene. With her. And with me. Not with Til Schweiger. Thanks.

.

Stadthunger: Tears on Your Face:

The first time I saw you, you were sitting in the middle of Alexanderplatz. Huddled together, unwashed, with greasy hair. You were hiding behind a cardboard sign on which a message was scrawled in shaky handwriting that flowed straight into my heart. “I’m homesick. Please give me money so I can afford a ticket back home.” I sat down on some steps a few meters away from you and watched you.

You were crying. People walked past you without a glance, avoiding you, practically despising you as the dirt of society. Spring hadn’t really arrived yet and it was slowly getting dark. I couldn’t bear the sad sight any longer, stood up, and slowly walked toward you. “Come with me, I’ll buy you something to eat.” At first you didn’t want to listen, resisted my help, resisted me—but then you gave up your fortress. You stood up, brushed a strand of hair out of your face with your long fingers, and then walked beside me at a proper distance.

“My name is Sina,” you muttered while stuffing a big bite of cheeseburger into your mouth. I found that disgusting. “Why do you look like that?” While I waited for an answer and increasingly wondered why I had even brought you here, you disgusting little thing, my thoughts took me on a journey through Berlin’s nightlife. In that moment I could have given in to my urges, my feelings, my thoughts, gifted myself a trip into nirvana, and then slept with some cheap emo in my huge apartment.

It didn’t seem to escape you that I was grinning broadly, and so you began to spill the beans to draw the attention back to yourself. “Paula and I ran away from home. She’s my best friend.” You almost choked and first took a big sip of your Coke. I felt nauseous. From your demeanor, the smacking, that disgusting smell. “I was in the bathroom at the main station, and when I came back she was gone. With my backpack, my phone, and my money. That stupid slut.”

A tear ran down your freckled face. Inside me, a feeling of pity flickered up. Now I remembered why I had ended up in this unspeakable place with you and, smiling, ordered two more meals. We talked all evening. You told me about your awful family, your stupid ex-boyfriend, school, the feeling of not knowing where you belong. And that Berlin was your last hope to finally get your life together. I knew that feeling all too well.

In return, I babbled about my job as a party photographer and how I had always wondered how I could make so much cash with such an unholy occupation. I didn’t tell you anything about the drugs, the excesses, and the prostitutes coming and going, but I did reveal that my father never took me seriously, that my very first love had sex with my two best friends, and that I once went to prison. Why remained my secret—for now.

“If you want, you can stay at my place tonight and tomorrow I’ll buy you a ticket home.” You looked quite bewildered. “Why would you do that? Why would I do that?” “No idea. I have money and you need money. I was raised Catholic. You know, sharing and loving thy neighbor and all that crap.” “Fine, but if you touch me, I swear…” Suddenly you were a cat, with fangs and claws and that look full of mistrust, fear, and self-protection.

I liked your strength, bursting with vulnerability and inner greatness. In your sparkling blue eyes, I seemed to meet myself before I had lost the fun in all of this. The voices of many ghosts overcame me as we finally kissed in the dim light of the streetlamp. You were pale, unknowing, innocent—your being so full of pain and strength. That was the most beautiful part of it all.

We did it all night. In the bed, on the table, against the wall. And the next morning you didn’t want to leave anymore. I tolerated you with me, like my house cat. My little monkey. And step by step I introduced you to my world, which after a short time seemed to give you more feelings of happiness than it had ever managed to give me.

This was the second chapter, “Tears on Your Face,” from the furious blog novel project “Stadthunger,” the serialized novel at AMY&PINK. You can continuously find all parts under the category "Stadthunger."

.

Scarlett Johansson Hanging Out:

Just last night, a friend and I once again watched my absolute favorite film, "Lost In Translation." Without sound and with a different main activity, but during a breather we talked about the fantastic Scarlett Johansson—and about how, unfortunately, she became too Hollywood for us after that movie.

Now Kevin sends me this stack of magnificent photos showing our little Scarlett just hanging out at home. So to speak. In underwear, lounging in the garden, or with those totally awesome sunglasses and a cigarette between her lips.

And that’s when I realized: maybe I just need to change my opinion of her again by watching some of her films. So fans of the blonde and busty angel, pay attention: recommend your favorite Johansson movies to me—preferably ones where she’s as naturally sexy as she was in Tokyo. And then just come over for a DVD night. I’ve got popcorn too.

.

Love Us on Facebook:

All you little voyeurs out there can rejoice, because after slates and cave paintings, Montana and I have finally arrived in the 21st century and now have our very own snazzy fan page on the face-book! That we should live to see this.

From today on, you can follow us, love us, and adore us there, never miss grand links, videos, and funny bits and bobs again, and discuss hippie stuff, your annoying little brother, or cheesecake with us late into the night. Provided we feel like it.

So become a fan of AMY&PINK on Facebook today, decorate your own profile with a charming color somewhere between purple and magenta, and be closer to us than ever before. Mark Zuckerberg and we agree more than ever: this is going to be fun.

.

Lily Allen – 22:

-->

We are proud, as the quasi-official Lily Allen fan club (alongside Nora Tschirner and Lindsay Lohan—oh, we’re fan clubs of many things, especially of cheesecake of course), shortly after the fantastic "Fuck You" and sweet-as-sugar nude photos, to throw her new clip “22” from the album “It’s Not Me, It’s You” into your peepers here and now in a German premiere.

This time it’s about the profound topic of getting older, the midlife crisis, and the question of how one could have wasted their life like that. With an almost 30-year-old woman at the center who is dissatisfied with herself, goes out every night hoping to get a piece of love, but basically knows that her existence is already over.

Sad but true, and if Ms. Allen keeps releasing new singles at this monkey-like pace, she should be done with the album soon, which in turn means that maybe a new one will be waiting for us very soon. And that would of course make me very happy. Lily, you are a treasure.

.

Lily Allen Is Allowed to Take Her Clothes Off:

After the pop thing called Lady Gaga, shortly afterward the next well-known and respectable singer strips down and proudly presents in the new August issue of i-D Magazine everything God gave her. And that’s not exactly all that much.

But it’s not necessarily the first time that little Allen, whom as you all know I really, really adore, has offered her breasts to some strange people like us. Whether it was her hairdresser, the party crowd of the nation, or innocent bathers. But I think Lily is allowed to do that. Really. I hereby issue her official permission.

Because she has remained true to her typically rebellious and provocative nature, doesn’t let her handful of little breasts be disfigured by disgusting cosmetic surgery and cheap silicone pads, and therefore may wiggle them in front of the camera as often as she likes. More beautiful pictures from the shoot can be found here, and I’m already curious who will be the next to get too hot in their clothes.

.

To Pass Away:

Dying is the inevitable event that we all have to face sooner or later. Whether naturally, in the unfortunate impact of a truck, or while brushing your teeth—it can be over faster than you think. With this thought, we imagine our own funeral, fantasize about what kind of music will be played, what those present will be wearing, and which of our former life partners will throw themselves crying and wistful onto the coffin, deeply regretting that they ever left us. But then it’s too late.

For most, death means the end of life. Game over. Rien ne va plus. After that, most either go to heaven or hell—depending on how many good-mood points you collected on this planet and how often you ran to the priest you trust to have your soul cleansed with a few prayers. A certain Kenny McCormick experiences that quite often, by the way.

Other chosen ones, in turn, end up in boxes, castles, or in nirvana, outwit the Grim Reaper as half-dead beings, vampires, or zombies, and the truly creative are reborn as fish, trees, or happy clouds. Individual deceased people like Elvis have even been spotted at various gas stations in Nevada, and Michael Jackson has supposedly been seen here and there as well.

Since our ancestors unfortunately didn’t tell us what exactly awaits us after the final visit and what the whole point of it all is, each of us will probably have to bite the bullet and find out for ourselves. But we can at least speculate and therefore ask you and ourselves: What do you think happens after the last day, why are we here, and have you seen the King of Pop running around outside? Stories about near-death experiences through the pilot test are expressly encouraged.

.

Me Boss, You Nothing:

Dear attendees, friends, family, enemies. Before I sink into long, rambling, and extremely sleep-inducing flashbacks about the origin story of AMY&PINK and keywords like MarcelTV and Tokyopunk, I would simply like to tell you that today practically screamed to do something special that will change the future of this world and everything around it forever. You could say it was fate.

After rushing today from the trade office to the Chamber of Industry and Commerce all the way to the tax office, making phone calls as far as Timbuktu, and actually being advised everywhere by very nice and competent people, I may now, here and with my chest swelling with pride, announce that as of today AMY&PINK is an internationally operating company with all rights and even more obligations. And it was a breathtaking feeling to step outside after the whole procedure, to see the cloud cover break open and the sun’s rays let Berlin shine beneath them.

This means that with this step we are once again a little closer to world domination, so that we can finally issue fully official invoices and I am now the boss of my own company. They call that a young entrepreneur. And damn, that makes me sexy. Even my senile old neighbor wished me all the best and good luck. And that’s saying something.

My first official act as a freshly baked boss, by the way, was immediately buying the biography of Steve Jobs, which I will of course deduct from my taxes. As required reading or something like that, just to start off with the right role model. Have I ever mentioned, by the way, that business administration is my absolute passion? Yes? Well then nothing can possibly go wrong.

[audio:lisztomania.mp3]

.

Palina Rojinski in Interview: Palina in Wonderland:

Alone among men. The 24-year-old student Palina Rojinski is now attempting the unimaginable and has moved into the refreshing forced flat-share MTV Home together with star darling Joko and wisecracker Klaas in order to keep things in order there. Speaking with AMY&PINK, she now talks openly about this difficult time, her passionate fondness for fashion and music, and why she is not allowed to show Joko taking a dump.

Palina, you were swept away from icy St. Petersburg to what is unfortunately currently quite rainy Berlin. How long have you been here and what does the Big B have that your hometown does not?

I’ve been living in Berlin since I was six. That means I have two hometowns: the fairytale-like yet at the same time gray, tough, rugged St. Petersburg and the cool, multicultural Berlin.

Both metropolises have shaped me. I love classical things and kitsch, just like the architecture in St. Petersburg, but I’m also into street art, the bullet holes in buildings from World War II, and the liberated lifestyle in Berlin. But unfortunately, there are no White Nights here…

At least you’ve settled in quite well in the local nightlife, you enjoy partying and even DJ yourself. What are your favorite clubs in the city and where do you hang out during the day?

I follow the music and end up in all kinds of different clubs. I really liked the Scala, for example, because some of my favorite artists played there – including Rye Rye, Metronomy, and Zombie Zombie.

But as is typical in Berlin, the club has already had to close again. Keyword: Bar 25. I hope this great location won’t suffer the same fate, because the club is also very suitable for good vibes in the (pre-)morning hours. Freshly rested, I like to go there and do early dancing instead of early exercise. Walks with my French bulldog Iwan in the Grunewald are also a refreshing balance.

In the Süddeutsche Zeitung Magazin I read that thanks to your two German championship titles in rhythmic gymnastics, you’re an absolute hammer in bed. Is that true, and is that the secret tip for all the frustrated housewives at home in front of their screens?

A little gymnastics can’t hurt.

Your boyfriend must be a truly lucky guy. How did you meet and can you reveal to us little nerds the profound secrets of perfect flirting? How and what must a man absolutely be?

You don’t have to know everything. But attentiveness, healthy self-confidence, and humor suit every man.

Okay, but there’s of course more to your life than partying, studying, and having sex. Recently you’ve been at home in music television and tidy up after Joko and Klaas on MTV Home. How did you end up in the flat-share, are the two of them always nice to you, and is it fun to run your own blog there?

I moved into MTV Home due to a requirement from the landlord. After all, someone has to maintain law and order. My roommates are more busy with themselves and love listening to themselves talk. Especially the new guy at MTV.

On my blog, to my great regret, I can’t post everything I’d like to: for example, Joko taking a dump, because a whole bunch of rights are involved that could potentially be violated. But it’s still fun. Check out mtvhome.de!

If you work at the world’s largest music channel and haven’t yet been damaged by ringtones, you must have excellent taste in music. What do you prefer listening to and who are your personal favorite bands?

At the moment I’m listening to a lot and, above all, dancing a lot to UK Funky House, Booty Bass, and Crunk. My favorites include Rye Rye, Buraka Som Sistema, Little Boots, Fake Blood, but also romantic chansons by Nouvelle Vague.

Girls are famously into great clothes from birth. Would you describe yourself as fashion-conscious, how important are current trends to you? And please try to convince even the last idiots out there to deeply hate Ed Hardy.

I’m into beautiful, unusual pieces. I like combining the most absurd items and don’t consciously follow trends. If I like something and my wallet allows it, I buy it and keep it until it hits me like a bolt of lightning and I’ve found the perfect combination for it. And regarding Ed Hardy: to each their own. You already said it yourself “…the last idiots out there…”.

So what are your plans now? What does your future look like, what do you still want to achieve in your life, and what absolutely profound piece of information would you like to share with our readers before they bite the dust?

For now I’m just looking forward to MTV Home every Friday live at 4:30 pm, then to my own show, uh, I mean my own channel. So remember the name Palina and take good care of yourselves.

Thanks for the great interview and all the best for the future.

.

The Playboy and the Country Bride:

Welcome to a new round of retro nostalgia at its finest, because after old songs and even older photos, the temporary fanatic of the past, Hannah, has dug out our yearbook. And since we almost threw ourselves out the window while reading it (well, not really), we present another rarity from the days when everything was better, I ran around with shoulder-length sexy hair, and Montana was still young and crisp. Today read: Our sunken characterizations, which somehow still apply today. Or don’t they?!

Marcel: Tall. Dark-haired. Slim. Marcel. Our playboy, who made himself very popular with our girls in a charming way. It would have been too nice if he had shown the same enthusiasm for classes. Because despite constant attendance, he managed to get caught up in a nasty entanglement of eating and chatting, caused by a certain neighbor who made it impossible for him to follow the lesson—even if he exceptionally wanted to.

Not to be left unmentioned is his Mac addiction; he never leaves the house without his iPod, and woe betide anyone who thinks Windows is better than Mac OS. Besides this quirk, he is also completely infatuated with everything that comes from Japan, which he lives out on his website that changes every two days.

We also owe his technical expertise an insanely cool film about our study trip, with which some special moments of our school year can be relived again and again. Not only the film, but also kilos of apples came out of his school bag, which were distributed to the entire class within seconds. And so we ask you one last time: “Excuse me? Is there absinthe here?”

Hannah: She is the country bride from Stötten with an Elvis car, who doesn’t always manage to tame the 60 horsepower or the reverse gear. Unfortunately, she has to get her beloved Elvis dirty whenever she has to pick up Angelika in the middle of nowhere (but what would Hannah be without Angelika? Unthinkable!). Miss “Totally Social” certainly doesn’t shy away from any backwoods area—provided she manages to find or even see the driveway in her emo outfit.

If you try to call her, you’ll first be put on hold by the Black Eyed Peas, since she doesn’t always answer. But with her packed schedule, that’s understandable. Some of her hobbies include, for example, ripping the clothes off men, dancing with several men at the same time (the party mouse), sleeping in a room with a boy in Prague (scandal!), trying to undress men in Angelika’s bed while drunk (what?), calling everyone at the rival school “sluts” and immediately battling them with Angelika, and of course acting in theater (just the way we know her!).

She has no problem with her opinion and expressing it loudly. Nevertheless, she is our favorite class representative and also student representative with vision. Sometimes Hannah also has childish fits that trigger loud laughter and giggling. But that’s what really makes social studies class interesting. In conclusion, I can only say: “Mother… why did you do this to me?”

.

Experience Berlin for Free:

The fact that Berliners may be sexy but certainly don’t belong to the wealthiest bunch in our beloved republic is likely known far beyond the borders of the A-B-B area. After all, the daily cup of coffee at Starbucks is expensive, and highly coveted tickets for sold-out concerts like La Roux or Regina Spektor don’t just fall into your lap. By the middle of the month at the latest, most of us are broke and stuck at home from then on.

But it doesn’t have to be that way. Daniel, Dennis, and Tim have been running the sleek Freeguide Berlin for several months now, sparing big-city rockers from the humbling task of collecting bottles and keeping them very up to date on all the events you can attend without spending a single penny.

Whether concerts, exhibitions, or other events – everything interesting and free is presented, reviewed, and dated by the guys. So that poor students can enjoy life again and don’t constantly have to hang out at Sankt Oberholz. A good thing, we think.

.

Why You’ll End Up Marrying Stinky Thomas Someday:

On the day of the kiss, we become even more aware of how magnetically drawn we are to the other – or even the same – gender. Because even in the age of singles, careers, and the legacy of free love, romance still holds a high status in society. A loving, trust-based, and especially long-lasting relationship between two individuals is the declared life goal of a great many people. Ideally for a lifetime, anything but being alone, let alone dying an old maid. At the beginning, you’re still picky. Thomas smells weird, I’m not letting him near me. Inge has that pimple on her forehead; being seen with her would ruin my whole reputation.

As the years pass and the ticking of the internal clock grows louder, the invisible bouncer inside yourself starts occasionally closing first one eye, then both, and before you’ve gone stale and panic about missing your chance takes over, you suddenly find yourself at the side of stinky Thomas, skipping through the park with two children who don’t smell much better.

But why do we put ourselves through all the stress of searching for our better half in the first place? After all, with the start of every new relationship, you immediately make tons of compromises, sooner or later have to justify going-out times and locations, and yet you know perfectly well that even the greatest love won’t last forever.

But that’s precisely what is said to make you blind, stupid, and naïve. Butterflies in your stomach, the first night in bed, the most beautiful sunrise the morning after. Only a chronically injured anthropophobe would still be thinking about the war of the roses, the weeks, even months full of tears and heaps of devoured ice cream waiting for you after a heartbreaking breakup.

Relationships are as different as people themselves. Long and short, intense and superficial, born out of the moment or carefully built up over a long time. That’s why we’re burning to hear your answers to the questions: Why relationships? With whom and why? How long do your romances last, and was the longest one also the most beautiful? Why didn’t it last, or is it perhaps still going strong? And did you celebrate the Day of the Kiss properly? Answers that could change the continuation of humankind.

.

City Hunger: My Dream, Your Escape:

I have no choice but to keep breathing. In and out. For all time. Forever. Until you discover me, sit deep within my soul and finally feel how great I am for you, no longer wanting anyone else in your life, sending the vultures home. My nightmares grow stronger, weaker, more colorful. Of coughing trees, blonde girls, graceful horses.

When I open my eyes again, the powder lies carelessly scattered beside you. Your breasts glow blue in the moonlight; I haven’t seen such a beautiful sight in a long time. For hours I watch the highs and lows, the rhythmic rise and fall of your being.

No trace remains of the one-sided faint after the great quake, my head clear again and soaked with the murky thoughts of recent times. How everything could change so much. You, me, both of us. Beside your reddish-blonde hair lies Hugo, smiling, drooling, sleeping.

An insatiable hunger penetrates my innermost being; my thoughts revolve around soggy cheeseburgers, greasy pizza, fried noodles baked over with eggs and cheese. I almost puke from appetite, get up without kissing you on the forehead one more time, and run naked through the apartment.

The refrigerator is filled with beer, Red Bull, and champagne. Not a trace of anything edible in sight. The room begins to spin, the bright light bores straight into my stomach, my lungs, my legs. I collapse onto the floor, start to cry, starve miserably.

When Sina sees me the next morning curled up like an embryo in the womb in front of the open refrigerator, she starts kissing me all over my body, doesn’t stop until I open my eyes, take her head between both hands, and look deep into her ocean-blue eyes.

Countless stars shine within them, the end of the world, the meaning of life within reach. My parents strike up a cheerful song, dolphins leap around. And before I can finally uncover the secret of our entire existence, the doorbell rings.

Sina smiles, gets up, and opens the door to the mailman without bothering to cover herself first. He doesn’t bat an eyelid, presses a package into her hand, and says goodbye as usual, politely and with a couldn’t-care-less attitude toward both of us. I’m ashamed. “Are you hungry?” she then asks me. “I’ll order us a pizza if you’d like.”

It takes almost an hour before I finally have something edible between my teeth. We sit on the couch watching “O.C., California” on DVD. The sun shines through the huge windows of the old apartment building. The TV tower towers on the horizon.

When Ryan holds Marissa dying in his arms, I run to the bathroom and vomit into the bathtub. In that moment it just seems more appropriate for my spontaneous undertaking. Sina follows me and we sleep together on the cold tiled floor. When I’m finished she asks me, “Do you promise me that it will stay like this forever?” I nod silently. She climbs off me.

The package contains a new camera that I ordered on the internet. It’s expensive, it’s beautiful, and the first thing I photograph with it is Sina cleaning the bathroom. Whenever I see these photos today, I get heart palpitations, an overwhelming, bone-shattering feeling of why I didn’t take better care of her. Why I wasn’t there sooner when it happened.

This was the first chapter “My Dream, Your Escape” from the furious blog novel project “City Hunger,” the serialized novel at AMY&PINK. In the future you can also find all parts under the category “City Hunger.”

.

Lady Gaga Is Now Half a Woman!:

Everyone’s favorite transvestite Lady Gaga is presenting himself topless in the new V Magazine, although he recently turned down an offer from Playboy. I had assumed that decision was due to his little secret downstairs, but at least the hormone pills now seem to have worked quite well above the waist.

According to our team of experts, the breasts also appear to be real; practical tests will follow as soon as Michael Jackson’s brain has been reimplanted. Now we can only hope that Lady Gaga’s penis also falls off as a result of the hormone treatment, and then nothing will stand in the way of a Playboy appointment and perhaps even a somewhat respectable music career.

By the way, if any of our female visitors feel inspired by these pictures to free the upper half of their bodies and present themselves to our team, brimming with professionalism, they are welcome to do so in the comments or in an email to us. Tight lines.

.

Harry Potter and the Plastic Cup – Part 5:

Anhand der Frequenz von Videos auf AMY&PINK könnt ihr ganz klar den Grad meiner persönlichen Langeweile erkennen. And that’s why I’m declaring today my personal YouTube memorial day, and because I always laugh so hard at these “Harry Potter” spoofs by the crazy Coldmirror, here’s Part 5 of “Harry Potter and the Plastic Cup” — I’m cracking up.

Wet, wet, wet — the other André once showed me all this stuff, played it for my ex and me all night long, and ever since then I’ve been able to take the wizard guy even less seriously than before. A shame, really. Oh, the sun’s shining again — I’m going to get some ice cream with Mandy the Mammoth and head to the lake, and you go ahead and laugh your brains out. Thanks. Class and stuff, my ass.

.

Dirty Projectors – Stillness Is The Move:

I fell asleep last night with exactly this song in my ears and, thanks to the girls, had the craziest dream in a long time. High and colorful and glowing and adventurous and all that stuff. If only I could have remembered the ultra-insane story, then the next big blockbuster at a cinema near you would without a doubt be coming straight from yours truly. Well, there go the millions. Goodbye personal sexy housekeeper.

I still haven’t quite figured out the concept of the band Dirty Projectors, even though according to Wiki-whatever they already released their first album back in 2002. Apparently there’s this Dave Longstreth guy who runs all kinds of people through his music group, and the list of former members is longer than Michael Jackson’s heirs.

But the song “Stillness Is The Move” is beautiful, the video has something about it too, and just like with the Those Dancing Days, the lead singer here is once again the cutest one. What a coincidence. And there’s a llama in it too. Or an alpaca. Or a stork, no idea what that animal’s called. Let’s just call it Udo.

.

WTF?! Vol. 6:

There are currently two large groups on the internet. Don’t get me wrong: both consist of perverted petty criminals. Just before the release of the movie “Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince,” one group is mainly searching for Emma Watson’s naked feet and has catapulted the girl to the top of our popularity ranking; the others are, as usual, drooling over dog penises, Sailor Moon, and porn stars on Google and end up on AMY&PINK this week as follows:

Girls who pee into their own mouths. Michael Jackson’s death faked? Who is the model from the 2008 Kinder Milk Slice commercial? Hot popsicles. Sluts secretly being looked down into their cleavage. Amy in pink and pink in Amy. Photos of sex with skinned girls. We wish you a few naughty things. I have sex with my sister every day. Naked ass in the green. What are the names of Sailor Moon sex movies? Man looks under woman’s skirt porn. I’m not hyperactive, oh a squirrel! Dog sperm goes into human pussy, watch now! Mom stinks and takes drugs.

Porn star with freckles. I’ll break your legs. Swedish girls with hairy vaginas. Old, fat, horny, anal and free. Fuck or shit are not words for school. Dumb women fuck well. How much does a polar bear weigh? Heavy enough to break the ice. The washing machine song on YouTube. Hannah is coming to my birthday. What’s the name of the porn actress with the biggest tits in the world? Buy dog penis. Swine flu bred in a lab. Hot wife fucks young hot boys in the club. Glass explodes in ass. Can virgins smell like fish? I’m too horny for this whole shit.

.

Those Dancing Days – Run Run:

It’s getting hot in here… Berlin is practically melting under the blazing ball of heat in the sky and that means for all non-Australians: sweat, fruit flies, and headaches for free! The latter is made even worse by the fact that I thought it would be a great idea to pour fruity cold sangria into myself for breakfast. And in the capital, only bums and abandoned housewives get drunk early in the morning.

And because today the conversations in the neighborhood and the ghetto revolve only around the weather, and we can’t constantly just shove the latest music clips at you here, today you get the track “Run Run,” released last year, by the band Those Dancing Days, five cute girls from the land of blondes. Sweden.

This is one of my favorite summer feel-good-and-more songs with a very high video factor, and I especially have a thing for the charming singer Linnea Jönsson, whose hair I would loooove to ruffle sometime, and who was recently running around the Technical University in Munich. And I’ve never said that about a girl before. World premiere. The urge, not the song. But that’s good too.

.

Hasta La Vasta:

Wait, before I get to the actual content of this entry, I’m on a roll… Vasta, Canasta, Laster, Pasta, Raster, Plaster, basta, Tasta… tur..? Oh whatever, Hoecker, you’re out. First of all, I’d like to apologize to the responsible investigative authority for sitting at home on a Friday night, but I’m just a loser and today I’m so dehydrated that I could crumble away on my beautiful green couch.

And what do you do when you’re stupidly alone and abandoned and at home anyway, pouring Beck’s into yourself that matches the color of your couch, while letting your Sims starve and outside a few drunk hair salon visitors are throwing a party? Exactly: you watch TV. And my comfort victim at this very moment is a certain Nadine Vasta, the new face on my favorite pre-prime-time channel VIVA.

The hyped-up program directors really came up with something great with “vasta.tv,” and I don’t even want to know how often the term “Social Media” was dropped in those incredibly creative meetings: we grab a blog, transfer it to good old television, and cast the whole thing with a super-cute noodle you can really fall in love with.

And now I need to search deep within myself and get really serious, because I’d like to offer some creative criticism: not such a totally shitty idea, but guys. If you’re already snorting one line after another in the broadcast toilet and producing half-baked brain wank, then you could have gotten so much more out of the hour. You know, more substance and all that. Stupid guests, spaced-out actions, more courage to be absolutely embarrassing. Instead, fewer bench jokes, pointless wandering around the capital, and hammering mentions of the blog. My God, I should probably charge money again for these ultra-awesome tips.

But actually I’m just riotously jealous because AMY&PINK still doesn’t have its own show and I don’t have such a chic T-shirt as Miss Vasta Canasta. So, my Sims have now starved miserably, I’m about to call the Free Broadcaster Berlin to finally demand our own show, and I can only give Mr. Pasta Laster two ultra-wise options for the future: either move out or get better. Both are also possible. So, who’s building me new Sims now..?

.

Bloc Party – One More Chance:

I’m totally into Bloc Party. Really. I practically devoured and loved their previous three albums; the songs are constantly playing up and down at my place. “Two More Years,” “The Prayer,” or “Blue Light” — the guys really have it going on. And that’s saying something.

On August 10, the summer single “One More Chance” by the London mood-makers will be released, and as usual it’s distinctive, instantly catchy, and has that typical British touch. The accompanying music video is a bit rather tacky this time, and I don’t really get the story either, but my God: screw it. Just be happy about the new material, and by the way, you can see them live at the Melt Festival on July 18. Everyone making the pilgrimage there: have fun!

.

Daria Is Back:

When those two idiots Beavis and Butt-Head by Mike Judge celebrated their comeback on the newly revamped MTV a few years ago, their catchphrases became cult at our school faster than all Pokémon and Yu-Gi-Oh! cards combined. Bunghole.

But the much better alternative cult series was "Daria," the darling of all grim, misanthropic, and socially outcast pseudo-nerds at school. The cynic Daria Morgendorffer, her younger blonde bimbo sister Quinn, and the artistically gifted Jane. I loved this show, but honestly I can’t really remember it all that well anymore.

If you feel the same way, you’ll be happy to hear that MTV’s darling will finally be released on DVD next year. Then we can dive back into the grunge era and follow Daria in that small American suburb with her hatred for everything around her. I think she even reminded me a bit of my mother back then… okay, now it’s getting psycho.

.

Hey, My Name Is Alex…:

...and I’m going to fuck you in the ass today. So forget the greatest pickup line of all time that we presented to you recently, because this one beats everything and gets you to your goal faster than going out for ice cream, red roses, and a bread maker together. Provided you swap the name for your own. Or your name is Alex.

We heard these extremely wise words at the German premiere of "9to5 - Days in Porn" by Munich director Jens Hoffmann, which we attended last night at the Central Kino at Hackescher Markt. He and his colleague spent a year and a half running around in the American porn El Dorado, the San Fernando Valley, accompanied porn stars like Sasha Grey at their hard work, and made a documentary out of it.

My companion Mr. Basti found it pretty boring, without surprises and something he’d already seen a thousand times on VOX. "Spiegel TV Reportage" or something like that. I, on the other hand, thought it was quite nice, sometimes pretty funny, and I even developed a little crush on Ms. Grey, who, by the way, has a little film called "Sasha Grey's Anatomy" on the market. Must be a spin-off of my favorite series. If you’re into "MTV True Life" and porn, I can only recommend it. Fuck it, baby.

.

Damn, I Used to Be Cute:

Come on, we all know it: everything used to be better. We wore the coolest clothes in the craziest colors, Alyssa Milano was still the sweet little girl in "Who’s the Boss?", and in the afternoons we had our first doctor games with the girls and boys from the neighborhood—staring dumbly and touching. But probably not the last.

To bring that time back to our memory at least a little, the sexy nurse of doom Carö dug out an ultra-sweet old photo of herself without piercings, red-dyed hair, and that glazed alcohol stare, and is now calling on the rest of us to do the same.

So rummage through your old shoeboxes, flip through those long-yellowed family albums, tear your portraits off the wall, and then post your childhood photos on your blog, drop them in her comments, or send them by carrier pigeon. And be sure to link to the totally awesome blog of Til Schweiger’s beloved, because we really love this blog. And so do you. Have fun surfing through the past!

.

Happy Birthday, Lindsay Lohan:

Oh Lilo, do you remember how I vehemently and so romantically defended you a few months ago when you were swimming in scandals, everyone thought you were crazy, and they all wanted to send you off to rehab? Yes? No?

In any case, you’ve really improved since then. No more drug stories, the alcohol excesses have disappeared, and those unappetizing pantyless color photos at dinner are forgotten. I’m really very proud of you, little Lindsay, even though you’re honestly starting to get a bit too boring for me again.

All of us in this room, your absolute biggest fans, wish you all the best for your 23rd birthday. Don’t drink too much, don’t snort too hard, and above all: always keep an eye on things down below. Then it’ll work out again with the next big film.

.

Fuck Me I’m Famous:

It’s time to share a dark and embarrassing secret of mine with you. While Montana is into worn-out guys whose clothes she can steal, alongside my extremely cool love for Nora Tschirner I also have a shady side to my feelings. Because sometimes… yes sometimes I’m into people like… now brace yourselves… Collien Fernandes, Sandy Meyer-Wölden, and occasionally even Gülcan—as long as she doesn’t open her mouth.

And for everyone who isn’t already marching toward me with pitchforks and torches, shouting slogans, I’ll top it off: when the planets align and it’s the Year of the Pig… I even have a bit of a thing for Giulia Siegel.

Hello, I can’t help it. I mean, she’s tall, blonde, slim, likes cold beer, dark chocolate, and trips to the jungle, posed naked in Playboy, and works as a super-successful DJane. Who could possibly say no to that?!

Apparently 60 horny guys (me exceptionally not included) can’t, because starting tomorrow at 8:15 p.m. in "Giulia In Love" they’ll be trying to mount the daughter of hit mogul Ralph Siegel on ProSieben. That obviously lowers my chances enormously, but then I’ll just stick with little Nora. In the meantime, I wish the candidates good hunting and send me a card once you’ve made it to the top.

.

I Laugh My Head Off and Sit on It:

Berlin is fantastic. Dirty charming and full of jobs with unlimited potential—as long as you don’t have to sell Motz. Tourists love coming here these days, can hardly believe that some lunatics once built an entire wall here, then pee into the Jewish Museum, spit from the TV Tower, and let their alternative tour guide whisk them off into the supposedly underground party scene—who conveniently drags the whole bunch straight to Oranienburger Straße anyway.

But that’s over now (once again), because the wise folks at VICE have recognized the signs of the times and, right in the middle of the total crisis, are bringing us a new edition of their "Vice Guide To Berlin," which painstakingly collected, summarized, and published everything truly worth knowing about the poorest city in the republic. And because they knew that we little pigs are, as usual, totally broke, the thing is completely free! Insane. Download it right here.

.

Obama Cut Off Our Juice:

Apparently the Great and Powerful out there didn’t really like that we exposed their evil plans to annihilate humanity and decided, just like that, to cut off our power.

But of course we didn’t give up that quickly. Escaping from the Iraqi high-security prison was tough; disguised as sugary camels we then hopped unnoticed through the desert and finally joined an unspeakably awesome rebel troop that welcomed us with open arms.

The far more plausible explanation for our completely unnoticed absence might also have been the somewhat clumsy move to a newer, more awesome, better, faster and altogether more magnificent server, which makes all the nerds here cheer and lets us breathe a sigh of relief.

Because you little rascals have been so busy on AMY&PINK over the past months that our amateur webspace was slowly but surely giving up the ghost with wheezing and croaking. Now we’ll quickly sacrifice a sheep to the Flying Spaghetti Monster and hope that everything here now runs totally smooth and flowy. Woe betide us if it doesn’t…

.

VICE Is Throwing a Little Party:

So if we’re supposed to drop hints about random parties in Berlin, we normally of course let ourselves be bribed with tickets, cash, or ladies’ razors. Hello, we’re not Caritas after all. But since I’ve got a massive melon in front of me right now and already have something else planned that day anyway, I’ll make an exception. I’m just that gracious.

After all, the Berlin Fashion Week is coming up again and not only is SpongeBob back home on NICK, no. Hard to miss for any capital city rocker, the Bread & Butter trade fair has also returned and to pay tribute to that, the magazine I love most besides Wendy is throwing one fat, fat poardy.

VICE is therefore calling all party- and fashion-crazy bipeds to the Michelberger Hotel on Warschauer Straße on July 2nd to really let loose there with Mickey Moonlight, GoldieLocks and the Moustache Mamas, among others. But beware: the tickets are limited and can only be won here. Crazy, right? Good luck, Sonja!

And since some people from VICE are reading along today: Hannah wants me to tell you that there are far too few breasts in the current issue. Go stand in the corner and be ashamed! Oh, now Mr. Jeriko will surely curse us. With us it’s really always just about tits and dicks… pathetic…

.

The Government Wants to Kill Us All:

Do you sometimes feel sluggish, good for nothing, and your little buddy doesn’t want to cooperate the way you want it to? Even the stress test from the church you trust couldn’t really help? Then it’s simply due to the following fact: the government wants to kill you all!

Jane Burgermeister, journalist by trade and part-time hobby detective, is currently suing together with the FBI everything with rank and name, including the WHO, teacher’s pet Barack Obama and, alongside them, the United Nations. She accuses them of having bred both bird flu and swine flu in secret laboratories and then spread them in order to be able to exterminate underprivileged sections of the population with deadly compulsory vaccinations.

Also on board are apparently the two pharmaceutical companies Novartis, whose vaccine allegedly already killed 21 homeless Poles and a ferret, and Baxter, who are said to have simply lost 72 kilograms of viral poison.

Michael Jackson, who was a passionate opponent of vaccinations and had long been convinced that the government wanted to poison humanity—which also explains the constant face mask—is said to have been a close confidant of Burgermeister until the CIA pulled the plug on him with a radiation cannon.

Sounds all very plausible and convincing and if you haven’t already kicked the bucket because of plasticizers in plastic bottles, nerve toxins disguised as flavor enhancers and the sudden spike in gonorrhea after the CSD, then the deadly arm of the government will probably get you.

So say goodbye to your loved ones and if until now you’ve been wondering why the powers that be would even want to do anything to you, what Barack Obama gains from finishing you off and what the evil WHO has to do with it, then I can only tell you that… hey who are you? What, silence me? Hello, that’s my.. help.. ahhh.. not my.. waaahhhh…!!

.

But That’s Not the Point of It!:

-->

With unlimited hallucinations in our heads, we brought Basti, who had been seriously injured after the botched sex accident, to the best clinic in the whole wide universe, the Charité, thanks to a friendly taxi driver, which apparently knew exactly how to deal with deep heartbreak wounds. In the ghetto…

While Hannah, pale and wan, was on the verge of kissing the floor, our sexy nurse Caröö had completely different ideas in her head and slid with her patient across the corridors, which strangely enough didn’t really sit well with the absolutely competent staff.

But Basti just wanted to have a little fun in the last minutes of his deprived life, to feel the scent of freedom on his perfectly styled hair and to take the last chance to see the world. Before he had to embark on his final journey to Igor, in his homeland a butcher, now a doctor. But that’s another story… Condolences please to us.

.

Berlin Smells Like Semen:

The two sweet little firecrackers Hannah and Carö, together with Basti and yours truly, took over the capital this weekend. After the obligatory visit to Tacheles, a detour to this year’s Christopher Street Day (motto: Piece by piece into homo happiness) and Hannah’s realization on permanent repeat that all of Berlin smells like semen stardust (pretty standard at CSD, I’d say), we headed off to the Kings of Leon concert at the O2 Arena.

Even though we could only snag seated tickets at the other end of the world, the crew apparently couldn’t be bothered to put up large screens, and at some point my fat ass fell completely asleep, the extended family is nevertheless a vocal miracle and together with all the Ed Hardy wannabes from the eastern districts we belted out “Use Somebody” and “Sex On Fire.”

After that we headed to White Trash with Daniel Brühl. The snazzy boy band Valient Thorr was playing there and infected by the loud enthusiasm of the singer I just slit Basti’s hand open with a beer bottle he and Caro had a tragic sex accident. It’s not funny, it’s blood!

So in the middle of the night we went to the Charité, met some junkies getting beaten up there, raced through the corridors in a wheelchair and drove dried-out senior physicians up the wall. A proper party finale has to end in blood. And according to Hannah and Caro, scars on men are sexy anyway.

The chicks left this afternoon, took the sun back to Munich with them, became regulars on the subway beforehand, summoned the curse of the squeaky duck and had sex with Til Schweiger on my magical couch. Ultra-sexy photos of the whole thing can be found here, a funky Scrubs-style video will follow. It was fun, it was boozy, and next time we’ll take over Munich. I’m looking forward to it.

.

Marina and the Diamonds – I Am Not A Robot:

-->

The fact that I was always more than terrible at accounting, I justified with my scientifically proven fear of becoming a programmed robot of the economy who day after day punches out balance sheets in a bank. A gruesome fate. Nothing, except perhaps mutated green space spiders, frightened me more. But maybe I was just a lazy pig.

I seriously doubt that the new song by Marina and the Diamonds, “I Am Not A Robot,” is even remotely dedicated to my most hated subject of all time, but robots are evil (as you’ve convincingly seen in I, Robot) and therefore I advise you: do as the nice lady up there does and don’t become a heap of scrap metal. Unless you’re Bender, I forgive him everything.

.

Heul doch, du Emo!:

-->

The cozy times of the emotional ones are finally over. Dracula, Blade and the scare before dawn were yesterday, because from winter on the whole fuckin’ world will be full of bloodthirsty, civilized vampires! And they’re not particularly nice to their human colleagues.

In Daybreakers with Ethan Hawke, the battered former outcasts and despised finally take revenge for their centuries of torment. They were imprisoned in creepy castles, weren’t allowed to be vegetarians, even if they were only into tomatoes, and were beaten with garlic and crosses.

I can understand that at some point they snap, keep the human race in blood farms as food reserves and shoot down everything that stands in their way. And of course some idiots try to stop them, a human hunter switches sides, there’s probably a love story too, blah blah. Just let them rule the planet in peace, always these revolts…

.

Michael Jackson Is Dead:

There are moments in life when I don’t really process what I’ve just been told or written, and that’s how it was this morning on breakfast television. Michael Jackson, the King of Pop, has died. Cardiac arrest. His body simply couldn’t go on, it had been battered enough.

The internet is completely freaking out. Twitter is reaching its digital limits, 2,500 tweets per minute on the subject. Features like search and top topics have already been shut down. Blogs will revolve around this one topic today, just like conversations in the cities. Taylor Swift, for example, writes that it feels so unreal, everyone running around backstage asking: “Did you hear?”

And it’s clear: no matter what Michael did or didn’t do in his final years, he will remain an icon for entire generations forever, his music unforgettable and his words, gestures and messages immortal. And I’m in such deep mourning that I can’t even make jokes about Menderes. Rest in peace, Michael Jackson.

.

I Married Nora Tschirner:

Since I am, as is well known, the reincarnation of an Ikea lamp and therefore don’t have a life of my own, I unfortunately have to cobble one together artificially. And if you’re not the soon-to-be unemployed programming director of “Big Brother,” then the recently released “Sims 3” has to do the job instead. Gülcan initially got it for 40 euros, but today it was sitting on the shelves for an incredible 50 new marks. Outrageous.

Honorably, when creating my Sims, I naturally stuck as closely as possible to reality. So here too I am the head of the Tschirner family and, as a successful doctor, firmly established in life. My wife Nora, awarded the Pulitzer Prize and a journalist through and through, is just as sweet as our little, cheeky redhead Nami. And since I deactivated the aging process, we live happily ever after in our villa with a sea view.

“Sims 3” is the sequel to “Sims 2,” which in turn is the sequel to “Sims 1,” which I, in turn, never played. Not much has changed since the last installment: the graphics are better, the possibilities are greater, and the world is a bit more overgrown. Unfortunately, thanks to the illegal nude patch floating around out there, I have fallen into severe and deep depression, because I don’t have a penis and my lovely spouse is without nipples. If only I had known that earlier. To bring these torments to a pseudo-ending, I’m now going to let a few Sims drown in the swimming pool. Let’s see if I can empty the city… tight lines.

.

Lily Allen – Fuck You:

-->

Oh, I totally love our little favorite bitch Lily Allen. She’s got a nice fat ass, likes to show her gay hairdresser her bare boobs, and probably isn’t completely sane either. Who wouldn’t be into that? And woe betide any of you popguns who dare to contradict me now.

In her new song “Fuck You,” she runs through downtown Paris after touring a castle and catching Wild Wild West flu, makes life hell for annoying passersby in Harry Potter style, and—surprisingly—isn’t in this really funny video at all. Which can be quite relaxing for a change. First on MTV and VIVA in 2016, already with us today. Wow, how awesome is that? And now fuck you.

.

A Hartz for Berlin:

In our beautiful, big little city of Berlin there’s always something going on. From demonstrations to police operations to cold-blooded murders. Now Bela B., Icke & Er and Peter Fox, among others, have come up with a brilliant idea to boost the volume quota and are hosting a charity gala on July 19 at the Zitadelle Spandau, with 100% of the proceeds going to the venerable Berliner Tafel. A good cause, we think.

In addition to what will surely be absolutely fantastic performances by Sido, K.I.Z. and the darling of all language-phobics Michael Hirte, there will also be a great design contest in which the five winning designs will be signed and auctioned off. Apparently all good things whose support certainly won’t be in vain. So join in, go there, and celebrate along.

.

Why Don’t You Go Out on the Streets Again:

Ok, now it’s getting serious, so hand on heart, you sleepers. If you’d had the chance to stop Hitler, would you have done it? You foresaw the iceberg X-Factor style—would you have warned the captain? If you could have punched the hunter in the face, would Bambi’s mom still be alive because of you?!

It doesn’t matter whether you answered even one of those questions with yes, because great disaster is currently sweeping over our country. Incompetent brain zombies yesterday passed a law on internet blocking that catapults the entire nation light-years back into the past, under the guise of fighting child pornography.

That this naturally doesn’t help a single child should be as clear as day, because just because your average pervert apparently can no longer access the dirty business of sex with minors doesn’t logically mean that this alleviates the suffering of the little ones in any way. The problem would have to be tackled at its root, as even “people” in this disgusting scene confirm.

But it hasn’t really been about Lolita sex for a long time now, because these blocks are only the beginning of a wave of national censorship that could arbitrarily hit anything the government doesn’t like at the moment. And that must not happen—the net should remain free, international, and independent.

So what are you supposed to do? The Pirate Party is calling for large-scale demonstrations in all major cities tomorrow under the motto “Delete Instead of Block – Stop Censorship!” against this decision nonsense. And we really advise you to go there—the entire freedom of the internet is at stake, or do you want conditions like in China? No? Then make yourselves pretty, put on your shoes, and get out onto the streets. It’s about time.

.

The Lookbook Look: Jennifer Medina:

The Lookbook – infinite expanses. So many fashion-conscious, creative youngsters in one place. And because we want to give their art a voice, this time we grabbed 17-year-old Jennifer Medina from sunny Florida and squeezed her for thoughts about the transience of youth, her old home, and lots of coffee.

I think I’m really jealous of you. You live in Florida, there’s sun, beach, and sea all year round. That must be amazing. And besides old retirees, there are probably lots of fashion-conscious people walking around, right?

I moved here from Venezuela three years ago, and it’s pretty different from my old home. Really different. There are so many people here from different countries. Each of them has a different style, and it’s really interesting to see and get to know them all, but I don’t think there are that many truly fashion-conscious people here.

But you seem to be one at least. The question is: if there are only anti-fashion types running around everywhere, where do you get the ideas for your outfits?

Everything that has to do with art inspires me. Music, films, people, photos, books, and images. Honestly, I don’t have any special ideas for my outfits. I just wear what I find and what I think goes well together.

And what kind of films and music are you especially into?

I love independent films because my brother has made some, so I’ve always been enthusiastic about that style. Musically, I’m into this and that. Very few people like my favorite bands, which are all in the indie-electro corner.

What about love? Boyfriend, girlfriend, dog..? And what are your best friends like?

I haven’t had a steady boyfriend yet. And my best friends all have their own personalities and individual styles. They’re very different, but very kind and open people.

Every girl loves reading magazines—tell us which ones are your favorites.

Yes, I really read a lot of them. My best friend and I always head to the bookstore, grab some coffee, and flip through tons of books and magazines. I don’t really have a favorite magazine, but I like W Magazine because it covers many of my interests.

Let’s dare to take a bold look into the future. What’s going to happen there?

Ah yes, the future… I want to do so many great things, but we have so little time. I want to shoot more videos, take more photos, compose more music, finish more paintings. And drink lots of coffee!

Thank you for the great interview, and you can see more photos of Jennifer on her Lookbook page.

.

Sexy Tickets to Win for the Levi’s Berlin Unbuttoned Tour:

We’re currently mutating into the ultimate wish-fulfillment blog, and that’s why we’re giving away 2x2 exclusive tickets right here and now for the Levi's Berlin Unbuttoned Tour on July 2 at Astra Kulturhaus. The awesome thing about it: the tickets are so damn exclusive and top secret that you can’t buy them anywhere—they can only fall into your lap through the gracious wink of fate.

On stage will be, among others, the gifted Subways, the even more gifted Amanda Blank, and the completely unknown-to-me Crookers—but my God, how gifted must they be if they’re allowed to perform at the Levi's Berlin Unbuttoned Tour?! Exactly!

To win, you don’t have one, not two, but three options! If you’re creative weirdos, you can take part in the Button Design Contest. Door number two is participating in this supposedly uncrackable music quiz, and the royal road, as always, is leaving a comment on our site.

This time we want to know from you: Where can you stick a walnut? As always, the funnier the better for everyone involved—but anyone can win. Apparently. This little game ends next Friday, and whoever writes “walnut hole” gets a French kiss from Hannah. Or from me—we’ll have to wrestle that out in the mud. Good luck!

.

Double Fat Giveaway for International T-Shirt Day:

On June 21, the monumental International T-Shirt Day will take place in Berlin for the second time, dedicated solely to the most fashionable item of clothing this side of the universe. And because I unfortunately can’t attend due to sexual obligations, a certain Tobi (hello Tobi!) skillfully bribed me, and we want to do something nice for all of you again, there’s a grand, incredibly awesome giveaway happening right here and now.

This time you can win shopping vouchers galore for the cool online clothing stores Spreadshirt and laFraise, and one extra-lucky winner might soon call this little gem from trend label seen. their own.

All you chicks have to do is throw your favorite T-shirt slogan into the comments—no matter how worn-out or cliché it already is, anyone can win. But the funnier, the more fun for everyone. And if, by God, you can’t think of any snappy string of words, you’re welcome to link to your favorite T-shirt designs or point us to a photo of you wearing your favorite shirt. For crying out loud, just come up with something—it’s about voooouchers!

The deadline is next Wednesday, and if you love T-shirts as much as we do, then come to Berlin on June 21. There you can strut your stuff on the open runway with your shirts, make out with the guys from UARRR and StyleSpion, and generally have a whole lot of fun. Don’t miss out!

.

Soooooo Many Cute Girls at the bebe Generation:

Do you still remember the girls’ shared apartments for the bebe Generation, for which we loudly called for participation here recently? In any case, tons of interesting, pretty, cute—you know, that kind of—girls applied and are now waiting for your votes to finally be allowed to move in and throw pillows at each other in their underwear.

Just take a look at the applicants here, pick the snazziest one, and vote for her. The one above, by the way, is Vany from Essen, who looks like Carö in blue and for whom I absolutely do not want to start a voting campaign here. (VOTE! VOTE! VOTE!) Because I’m totally neutral.

For anyone who now feels like participating themselves: smooth girls can still apply to move into one of the four stylish shared apartments until Friday. The final decision will be made on July 13, and if you still have time and feel like moving your mouse, you can also think about the furnishings here. If you have any questions, please write them on a piece of paper, tear it in half, and I’ll now flirt my way through the Berlin list...

.

Happy Birthday Nora Tschirner:

Darling, I know you’re mad. And rightfully so. You don’t call, you don’t write letters, and you don’t come by either. And all just because I apparently didn’t think of your birthday. But that’s nonsense, of course I didn’t forget it. Hello, can these eyes lie?

It is without question an absolute disgrace that here—on the highly official Nora Tschirner memorial blog—not a word was said about your birthday, but after all I have an excuse that I’ll be using for the next few weeks and that is absolutely watertight: I had no internet.

So I hereby wish you a belated happy 28th birthday and solemnly promise that next year we will think of you with absolute punctuality. If we’re still around by then—in these stormy times, after all, anything is possible.

To make up for it and to conclude, here are a few wonderfully romantic quotes from you: “Anyone nowadays who is lazy enough to form their taste in music solely through music channels—I still have no sympathy for them.” “Sometimes I try to look as melancholic and introspective as possible in public. But that only works until someone talks to me.” “I really like staying at home, even though many people wouldn’t expect that because of how talkative I am. I actually enjoy being antisocial. No problem. During those phases I don’t answer phone calls and postpone all my appointments.” Amen.

.

No Internet, but a Red Bull Addiction:

Murphy’s Law has fully struck me over the past few days and almost cold-bloodedly taken me out. If something can go wrong, it will go wrong. And as the saying goes, the devil always shits on the biggest pile. For poor little Marci that meant: lamps fell on my head, stoves burned me, toilet paper holders nearly knocked me out. “Final Destination” sends its regards. Certain household appliances suddenly gave up the ghost under my leadership, the Hurricane Festival is a wash for us, and 1&1 still hasn’t managed to get my new DSL running despite a technician visit and 30 euros thrown out the window for the “service” hotline. By the way, 1&1, it’s a brilliant idea to inform me about appointment changes only by email. Without internet.

Especially the last part is, of course, somewhat shitty—particularly when, let’s say, you run a totally unknown blog that, let’s say, is also called AMY&PINK. I should implement a feature that lets dried-up tumbleweeds or whatever roll past here after a few days of inactivity. We can only hope that our host and future DSL provider shows mercy and manages to get the things I bought up and running as soon as possible. Thank you.

Apart from my quasi-fatal injuries that almost cost me my left hand (at least my right one is still fully functional...), I’m doing great. I love how crazy the weather is right now—you never quite know what to expect when you look out the window. Also, I can’t start a single morning at the moment without downing at least one Red Bull and have (once again) conjured up a real addiction in that regard.

With Basti, I went on an extended adventure trip to the Ikea we trust. With Gülcan, I headed into the Arabic world around Hermannplatz to get myself a snazzy new shisha including high-quality apple tobacco and delicious baklava. So now I’m sitting around like an idiot, puffing apple clouds into the air and praying that my internet starts working again soon. Pray with me.

[audio:nicer.mp3]

.

Win a Lookbook Account!:

You’re young, fresh and sexy, can recite all the hottest fashion brands alphabetically, by color, and by founding year in your sleep, and have a figure that even Heidi Klum couldn’t pull off that well after her fifth child? Then we’re giving you the chance to catapult yourself onto the international stage of the fashion world—and all without having to sleep with a coked-up modeling agent.

Lookbook, also known from our snazzy interviews, is THE international hotspot for anyone who wants to make it in the fields of fashion, models, and Mongolians, and we are hereby giving away an exclusive membership in the kingdom of the less wealthy but all the more beautiful.

All you have to do is write in the comments why you, of all people, want to enter the elite world, send us a link to your fashion blog, or link to a sexy photo of yourself. Whether you’re male, female, or Lady Gaga, make an effort. Deadline is next Monday. Good luck!

.

WTF?! Vol. 5:

Pain itself is love, to be pursued, but there are times when toil and pain can procure some great pleasure. At other times, however, we denounce with righteous indignation and dislike those who are so beguiled and demoralized by the charms of pleasure of the moment, so blinded by desire, that they cannot foresee the pain and trouble that are bound to ensue. These cases are perfectly simple and easy to distinguish.

Pain itself is love, to be pursued, but there are times when toil and pain can procure some great pleasure. At other times, however, we denounce with righteous indignation and dislike those who are so beguiled and demoralized by the charms of pleasure of the moment, so blinded by desire, that they cannot foresee the pain and trouble that are bound to ensue. These cases are perfectly simple and easy to distinguish.

.

Konfuzius In Da House:

Hello, Konnichiwa and Ni hao my little children. So that AMY&PINK doesn’t completely sink into the swamp of big breasts and to compensate a little for Hannah’s absence due to new love and exam tasks, from now on we are blessed by the unique, the daring, and the brain-overclocking Konfuzius, whom you have already seen hopping around here and there today.

To artificially push the comments upward, he will torment you there with wisdoms, truths, and brain-wankery, thus bringing you eternal enlightenment. From today on he will always stand by me and Hannah whenever we don’t feel like replying to you, when you’ve got us so cornered that we simply can’t think of a defensive answer anymore, or when we find a new awesome Studi group that knocks us off our chairs.

So give a warm welcome to the good spirit of AMY&PINK, and we’ll kick off his distinguished arrival by letting you ask him any question, absolutely ANY question, about God, the evil cold world out there, or who your ex is currently in bed with. Because Konfuzius knows everything. And when it comes to the topic of sex, David Carradine skillfully stands by his side. Try it out!

.

Sorry I Missed Your Party:

Oh, carefree partying is just great. Really letting yourself go, being on a first-name basis with the boss, giving that little one back there a proper piece of your mind while you topple backwards contentedly and drift off with a smile and a few crumbs on your lips. Partying is what separates us from the animals. Or something like that.

And because I declared this weekend my personal trashy weekend and lazed around without going out, I really love the site Sorry I Missed Your Party, which shows gentle photos of exuberant people who by no means cross their limits. My favorites are the tunnel watcher, the beached whale, and the worst school picnic ever.

.

Social Media Idiots:

There are certain selected terms that give me scabies, diarrhea, and the urge to put my violent video game fantasies into action. In the past it was “homework” and “season finale”; today it’s “Britney Spears,” “Take your hand out of my pants,” and new but already high up there: “Social Media.” Every uncool kid who used to score points in the chess club with his math skills and the number of pimples on his ass is now a self-proclaimed “social media” expert.

This usually asthma-afflicted species likes to meet at round-table meetups, philosophizes with devoted passion about the sense and nonsense of Twitter and Facebook, and is preferably found in fresh agencies or home offices furnished with Swedish furniture. I actually still find this cute behavior kind of sweet – somehow.

Until one particularly cunning specimen among them came up with a brilliant idea: If Studi, MySpace, and these weird blogs are so in… why don’t we just push every conceivable product through there – no matter how shitty and without any added value for the customer it is? Advertising 3.0, viral marketing 2.0, so to speak. “What does it do, what’s it good for?” “Who gives a shit, as long as as many people as possible see it, woohoo!”

And because that’s veeeery baaad, you bad people, I would like to recommend two behavioral options to bring you back to the good side of the Force: Either you stop screwing companies over with your self-invented superhuman powers by making them believe you can push any useless product by forcing poor, sick people to become fans of it on Facebook, and finally find a job your parents could be proud of again.

Or you stand in front of the product you want to market and think very carefully, veeeery carefully, about whether it’s really so awesome and irreplaceable for the entire population of Earth that people would miss the meaning of their existence if they didn’t see it. If that’s not the case: throw it in the trash, and woe betide any of you smart-alecks who even remotely dare to think of the words “Social” and “Media” in one sentence! Otherwise may the curse of Darth Vader, Sauron, General Chang or whoever else you freaks are afraid of strike you like a fireball. Amen.

.

I Want My Putpat:

The model couple lia.R and mannfRed tipped me off to something pretty hot: Putpat – the music television of the future. Or something like that. The two big men behind this boozy idea are MTV cult relic Ray Cokes and VIVA-run-into-the-grounder Dieter Gorny, who by his own statements hasn’t been this convinced of anything since the Suicide Girls as he is of Putpat. That almost makes it sympathetic again. Still, my first thought about the whole thing was: shitty name and, in times of YouTube and co., a hopelessly outdated concept.

To convince myself of the superfluousness of the whole thing, I immediately logged into our beta test account, and now comes the twist: I love it. Shit, I really love it. Entered my Last.fm username at the start and since then one slick music video after another has been blasting into my eyes and ears.

The design is nice, the music is nice, and my name sits up there looking all pretty. The only thing that annoys me is that even in full-screen mode, help settings keep popping up constantly, which is worse than on any Windows, that ugly beta-test banner is permanently visible, and the quality of the videos could be better.

But what isn’t yet can still become, because otherwise this thing is better than any MTV and VIVA for letting music videos run without stupid sweetie-birds, baby-name generators, and fat mothers alongside. Best check it out yourselves and apply here for the beta test. Rock ’n’ Loll.

.

The Greatest Pick-Up Line of All Time:

So, you slackers, I know your days of joy and hope have been destroyed, it has happened—something no one would have expected: Hannah is taken. Yes, our Hannah Banana Montana, plagued by self-doubt, noodle soups, and sweet freckles, is once again participating in love, sex, and tenderness. And the boys of the nation howl, cry, even contemplate suicide.

But don’t despair, ask Marci. Because I have here for you the ultimate, most charming, funky pick-up line in the world – and the best part: it works with all three genders. You want to hear it, you want to read it, you want to know it? Okay, but only if you promise to try it out immediately and write your experiences in the comments. Let’s go.

So I don’t feel completely gay, I’ll do the example with a human with a pussy; let’s randomly call her Nora Tschirner. So you ask her with a sweet wink: “Hey you, isn’t Tschirner actually a cookie or some kind of dessert?” She, all perplexed but somehow curious: “Hm… no, not that I know of, how do you get that idea?” And now you strike: “Hm, I don’t really know either, somehow your name made me think of cookies or something delicious and sweet…”

Tada, she simply has to smile, laugh, kiss you out of bottomless delight. If not, then she’s either a robot or Mexican anyway. And now off you go into the world, try it out. At Starbucks, at the university, on Studi. And then invite me to your wedding. Thanks.

.

Lenka – The Show:

-->

Anyone who has always wondered where our quirky little oddball Kate Nash disappeared to—I have the answer for you: she had a child together with Lily Allen, and this miracle of technology goes by the cuddly name Lenka.

Born in 1978, Australian with colorful fingernails, now living in Los Angeles, and once hosted a show called “Cheez TV.” She makes loud, sweet, poppy pop; I’m not really in the mood for articles right now, and she now wants to conquer good old Germany with the song “The Show.” Will we manage that? Yes we can! After all, she’s American now. I wany my money back.

.

Jenny Wilson – Like A Fading Rainbow:

-->

Welcome to a new episode of “Reactions in One Go”! Today: “Jenny Wilson – Like A Fading Rainbow.” First lesson: read the name. Reaction: “What, who?” Second lesson: read the title. Reaction: “Dude, that’s so gay. Rainbow and stuff.” Third lesson: start the video. Reaction: “Ahhhhhhh.. oooohhhhhh.... woooooowiiii!”

The chick has already released two albums, has been roaming the music scene since 1997, and even owns her own record label, Goldmedal Recordings, where her new album “Hardships!” has just been released—but I’ve never heard anything by the Swede. And now please let all the basement-dwelling music fans who’ve of course been Jenny Wilson fans since day one tear me apart. The video, by the way, is awesome.]]>

.

In & Out:

IN: Eating yellow watermelons. Staying up for the rerun of “Grey’s Anatomy.” Brüno. Poking ugly people. Bingen. Just shutting the hell up for once. Letting “iCarly” teach you something about social media and all that crap. Maria Eugenia. Keeping the ship on course. Herb quark. Tidying up again. Arte. Drain cleaner. Daring to do something. Fritz Melon Soda. Walking a few stops instead of taking the subway. Annemarie Warnkross.

OUT: Beth Ditto. Our Windows commercial. The new “Kids” video. Sleep disorders. Chatting via StudiVZ. Calories. Following every damn fashion trend. Summer without summer. Stefan Raab. Everything that isn’t Berlin. Financial crisis. Bitter loners. Black and white. The food industry. North Korea. Little green men. Everyday worries. Annemarie Eilfeld.

.

WTF?! Vol. 4:

Yayyy, you know the drill by now. People visit Google, type in spectacularly stupid terms, misplaced letters, sometimes even lyrical masterpieces into the search bar—and whoosh, they end up at… AMY&PINK. Ta-da. You can tattoo episode four of this collection right onto your butt, it’s that good this time. Let’s go.

Who’s making out naked over there? Awesome dog dicks. I’m doing a lot today and what are you doing later haha your mother you stupid slut. Kate Moss has awesome boobs. Video of the movie that was on TV today. Young fresh girls take off their shells. Fuck grandpa. I want to look like Stéphanie Sokolinski. Crafts with teenagers. Screwing until the beams bend. Spongebob WTF. Dating agency for nerds. Hot sex for reproduction. A slut in flip-flops. Ashley Olsen with coffee to go. Nutella boobs.

What is Amy&Pink.com? Best Japanese porn actress. But I swear I’m horny. Farmer girls fucking. Is Emma Watson cutting herself? Pulling back the skin of penises during sex. Things that show you’re getting old. Penetrating trees. Fuck you Google. A free sex movie please. Making out at 13. Fler shit on you. Show me your pussy you sow. “O.C.” over, what now? Perky boobs. One week only sushi. Sorry girls, I’m getting married. Gilmore Girl in nylon. Mom what is masturbation?

.

Lady Gaga — Paparazzi:

-->

Lady Gaga, branded a hooker by the Russians, with her beautiful bellboy haircut, aka Prince Valiant hairstyle, has released her new video “Paparazzi.” Lots of sex—as always. Plus sex, sex, and sex. And also sex. With disabled people.

Basti says he even saw some hearty nipples flashing in the brilliant anti-story about wheelchairs, crutches, and dancing human poodles. And what more could you expect from a Lady Gaga video? Watch it, download it as a ringtone, and then delete it again.

.

SuicideGirl of the Week: Celestine:

Lalala, a cheer for our self-imposed boob quota. Yes exactly, dear people. No homepage without exposed female breasts. Where would we end up otherwise—after all, boobs keep you healthy. Or something like that. In any case, today’s SuicideGirl of the week, the tousle-haired Celestine, contributes to ensuring that you live a long and well-rested life.

21 years old, from the American capital (no, not New York—the real one, like the president… Washington!), hates cheese, loves the band Kill Hannah, is into guys who dare to shove her around properly once in a while, and can’t survive without sex and cheap vodka.

How likable is that? Although cheap vodka always gives me a headache, and you probably shouldn’t kill Hannah, because there would be an uprising here. By the way, Celestine doesn’t just play naked girl for the SuicideGirls, no, she also studies at the International Academy of Design. Respect, respect. And now let’s take a look at her boobs.

.

An Ode to the Hot Brownie with Ice Cream:

Oh you wonderfully delicious hot brownie with ice cream. You are so great, so phenomenal, so abysmally tasty. Better than sex in the mouth, an oral orgasm, the gateway to paradise. Whoever made, invented, or gave birth to you, I wish them all the best in life, wealth, and a nomination in every conceivable category of the Nobel Prize that exists. You chocolate-brown, calorie-packed, dream-come-true, you.

And woe (WOE!) to the fat king of the Burger King land if he ever plans to remove you from the menu, to cut you out, to make you disappear. Then we will cry, start an uprising, fight until the last fatty of us has fallen. But seriously: if you ever stop selling the hot brownie with ice cream, we’ll protest like those idiots who desperately want to save their Charmin bear. Morons. So don’t even think about it. Thanks.

.

The Virgin Suicides:

I know I’ve been throwing around the word “masterpiece” quite a bit lately, but only because there are so many amazing, grandiose things out there that touch us deep inside, that wreck us, that show us life at its very best. And that’s exactly what Media Markt sold me yesterday for five measly euros in the bargain bin.

God, I love The Virgin Suicides, the debut by director Sofia Coppola, whom I’ve adored ever since Lost in Translation and Marie Antoinette. Death, love, sex, grief… the story of five enchanting sisters who take their own lives one after another because their freedom has been stolen from them—and whom the boys next door, hopelessly in love, remember years later—is simply tragic, disturbing, and yet beautiful, just like the soundtrack by Air and the adorable Kirsten Dunst.

[audio:air.mp3]

.

Holly Miranda:

Today master mind Scott Matthew is presenting his new studio album “There Is An Ocean That Divides….” (including the alarmingly brilliant ballad White Horse) at the Passionskirche in Kreuzberg, and while following his trail I came across the unbelievably awesome band Holly Miranda from Brooklyn, Detroit, and Tennessee, who are in no way inferior to the suicidally depressive songs of their former touring companion.

And they completely leave me speechless. Such a grandiose firework of honest, renegade, and self-devouring music is rare—truly good music like this almost never exists. The group doesn’t even seem to have a record label yet; their first EP “Sleep On Fire” has been available since mid-March. And the singer is cute too—what more could you want? Have a listen.

.

Mian Mian – Panda Sex:

The Chinese scandal author Mian Mian is so far the only writer ever who has truly pulled me in completely. Her masterpieces “Your Night, My Day” and “La la la” are always within reach so I can dive again and again into her abysmal stories about love, sex, and drugs.

As our dear little reader Alex aka 粱遝 told me, on August 24, 2009 (FINALLY!) her newest work “Panda Sex” will finally be published in German. It tells the story of the young sisters Mei Mei and Jie Jie and their friends, who are at home in Shanghai’s party and drug scene and who apparently become infected with the panda virus at the funeral of their buddy Little Beetle, throwing their love lives into turmoil.

And as always, it’s about relationships, sex, and the meaning of life. Her German publisher Kiepenheuer & Witsch aptly describes it with the following words: “With shimmering lightness and melancholy, Mian Mian sketches the portrait of a generation longing for love but fearing the risk of a relationship.” Brilliant. Pre-order now!

.

Filippa Smeds Backstage:

I’ve really taken quite a fancy to Filippa Smeds, the little redhead from Sweden, whom we already interviewed here. Now she stood in front of the camera together with Linn Gustafsson, Emma Elwin, Emma Nygren, Karoline Andersson, Sandra Hansson, Miriam Assai, Signe Siemsen, and Cissi Wallin for photographer Emma Svensson, who also released a backstage video of it.

And because I also thought the music by the Swedish band The Sonnets was pretty darn nice and the sound fits perfectly with summer (if it weren’t constantly pouring rain), the whole thing was worth a post to me. Seeing Filippa in motion makes her even sweeter. I’m a fan and will immediately order her T-shirt. That’s how it is, folks.

.

The Most Pornographic Tumblr Blogs:

I noticed it again recently when we were looking for cool photo series online for Hannah’s exam. The internet is overflowing with creative, sexy, and beautiful images that bring back our childhood, transport us to other worlds, or simply turn us on deep in our hearts. But where do you find these amazing photos? Yes, where exactly...?

The three big go-to places are, of course, clearly DeviantArt, Flickr, and our FFFFOUND! stream. But there’s a small image revolution on the web called Tumblr, where the best photo collectors hang out. I’ve listed the best of them here; if you know others, feel free to keep them to yourself or post them in the comments. And remember one thing: the best Tumblrs apparently always start with “Fuck Yeah.”

Dethjunkie. Fuck Yeah Skinny Bitch. We take sour sips from life's lush lips. ♥ parti. Dead Girls. Fuck Yeah Allison Harvard. Fuck Yeah Haggard Sluts. Thinspo. A Home For Ghosts. Little girls don't know how to be sweet girls. Yanoakiko. Chihilog. Lights In Brooklyn. Ciindyy. Imagination Behind Yours. Memorandum. My Castle Of Hope. Geek In White. Clepsydra. Noise 'N' Tangerines. Fragile Images. Fuck Yeah Pretty Women. Miss Misery. Princess Giselle. Inspire Me Thin. Cid's Blog. Little Ballerina.

.

Use Your Brain:

Since little Marci, unlike big Carö, didn’t get completely wasted yesterday, he still had enough energy today to squeeze through overcrowded Berlin past annoying charity canvassers, potential hooligans, and kleptomaniac emos, and finally buy a few long-overdue clothes. Mom, they were really cheap, I swear, dude.

And because every idiot is currently filling a fashion blog with Birkenstock sandals and grandma’s clothes, today it’s my turn and I present to you: a white T-shirt with a chick on it who looks like Miley Cyrus, a red-white-blue checkered shirt that looks like one of my dish towels at home but fits excellently under my black sweater, and the super awesome, breathtaking, and worship-worthy shirt by N.E.R.D. for the new Designers Against Aids round from H&M, which even came with condoms featuring Katy Perry and Tokio Hotel. I am so fashion.

.

Bat For Lashes – Pearl’s Dream:

-->

Ever since the mega-hit "Daniel" I’ve been a huge fan of Bat For Lashes and the enchanting Natasha Khan. And her latest video for the song “Pearl’s Dream,” in which she sings about finally having to find her place, beyond oceans, kingdoms, and the sun, is once again a bit dark, full of smoke and fog, and features both a catchy voice and a beautiful, light melody. What more could little Marci want? I love it. Listen to it, like it, and become a fan if you aren’t already.

.

Bye Bye Scala:

-->

Lisa Wassmann, an insanely awesome photographer and house snapper of the Scala, captured the final, sad, and teary-eyed moments of our beloved, fallen club in a beautiful little film full of impressions, farewells, and black stickers that will hammer translucent, shimmering tears into your eyes. Take care, you crazy party crowd.

.

Package-Eating Monsters:

I hate it, HATE it, HAAAAATE it when our mailman leaves parcels and packages with one of my schizophrenic neighbors. Why would he do something like that? Hello, maybe they’re grandmas and grandpas suffering from Alzheimer’s who, the very moment they take my dearly beloved package into their sweaty hands, have already forgotten that their names are Gerda and Heinz? Maybe tomorrow they’ll be starring in “Goodbye Germany! The Emigrants” and vanish off to Canada for the next three years! Or they’re package-eating monsters who have been waiting for this exact moment and have already set the table with fine china to pour ketchup over my property and really enjoy it?

The yellow guy has no idea what incredibly important treasures are inside that package! My long-overdue lottery winnings sent to me in diamond form? My ice-cold donor liver that I desperately need by now? Or perhaps a collection of valuable AOL CDs with which I can surf the net for 500 hours for free? How dare he entrust these valuables specifically to Gerda and Heinz?!

Dear mailman, all I wish is that—if I’m not at home—you would search for me, fight your way through hot deserts, humid jungles, and dark dragon caves, just to collapse in front of me, covered in blood but with the certainty that you safely delivered my package, and gasp your last words: “Here, sir, your package…” That’s not too much to ask, is it?! Even if it probably only contains a Pokémon cookbook I ordered from Amazon… It’s about the principle, after all!

.

MyKey Berlin – 30°C in the Shade:

-->

Haha, Basti showed me this neat song by MyKey Berlin, who somehow looks like Sido’s little brother, and whose track “30°C in the Shade” I didn’t know before, but which is a masterpiece for every Berlin fan. Especially on days that aren’t quite as apocalyptic as today. And I want – I WANT – this track to become Berlin’s new summer anthem. Chop chop!

.

WTF?! Vol. 3:

Welcome to a new magnificent episode of “WTF?!” or “What do people disadvantaged by life and slightly backward humans and dachshunds type into Google as a search term in order to land on AMY&PINK for free?” And because even the hot babes from the Pimpettes have now stolen the idea (which was never ours anyway), we don’t want to waste any time and will get started right away. Pic unrelated.

My sister gives a prostate massage. Time to transform. Where can I watch the movie “Bee Movie” online for free with Flash Player? Cats having sex. AMY&PINK warning letter. Superhero with toast as a head. Love is a pain in the ass. What do young girls like most during sex? Japanese mushroom in penis form. Somebody oh oh, somebody oh oh oh oh. Can you pay with an EC card at Call-a-Pizza? Japanese porn movies on the subway. Shitty eavesdropping, surveillance everywhere. Head of man in Uschi.

Polka-dotted pony. Amelie wants döner, bring it here, right now or I’m coming! My sister put a dress on me. Freckles on the pussy. “Der, die, das .. wer, wie, was” song. Biggest sagging boobs in the world. Red-haired classmate sex stories. Impersonal mails in singles exchanges. Gross stuff. Wonderfully, wonderfully, wonderfully beautiful pics. Hairy sister. Hot grandmas at the beach. What is TinyEve? Are Aloha from Hell Catholic? Uzi sewing machine. Hair belongs on the head.

.

SuicideGirl of the Week: Cianna:

Even if the world is ending outside right now, there should still be room in your hearts for the SuicideGirl of the week, even in the darkest hours of Judgment Day. And the lady who will get your air pumps swaying this time is named Cianna, is 22 years old and comes from the beautiful, unknown little town of Toronto in the magical land of Canada.

She’s into Coldplay, counts herbal studies and looking at boobies among her hobbies, and swears she’s still a virgin. Sure. And because we’ve already pretty much fulfilled our boob quota for the week, pseudo-Britney doesn’t exactly have that much wood in front of the cabin (which I personally find kind of cute again), and because she would totally beat us all at “Mortal Kombat,” today we’ve simply gone with a dressed photo. Scandal! If you want to see more, you know the deal: at the SuicideGirls, almost nothing remains covered.

.

Girls in Sneakers Are Sexy:

Ballerinas give women ugly flat feet, only very few can walk around stylishly in high heels, and flip-flops just look unbelievably cheap. Which means for me, a little foot fetishist who has always especially been into girls in white Adidas sneakers: the one true footwear for the female gender is sporty, sexy sneakers.

The two girls and one guy from the Sneakergirls therefore deal exclusively, just for me alone, with the counter-trend to the current fashion blog scene and present tough ladies in colorful sports shoes. That’s how fetish life is fun, and my personal preferences are only topped by the opposite sex in Chucks. Someone please make a blog out of that idea too.

.

Otaku Play:

The current issue of Otaku Mag titled “Play” takes you into the arcades of Japan freaks and shows you the most beautiful and latest illustrations, comics, and videos, presents great fashion, films, and accessories, and wants to give you an overview of cool toys, anime, manga, new technologies and and and. Beautiful layout, great content – what more could you want? For 15 euros within the EU the thing is yours, order here. And the boys and girls also have a cute blog.

.

Summer Like in Brazil:

Thanks, Richard Kern. Not only are we sweating like crazy here and the entire site is on the verge of collapse due to the almost apocalyptic heat, now he’s also heating up our battered spirits with a photo series in the current VICE issue “The Brazilian Issue”, which of course is disguised as a fashion spread and in which I particularly like the bikini the T-shirt Bruna Haas. Yes, by now you should know me, and one request: please don’t look at the photos if you’re already on the verge of sunstroke – I don’t want to be responsible for any possible collapses…

.

Fuck Love Wasted Youth:

The long weekend is already over again in no time and both Banana Montana in the sunny south and my frivolous self in the northeast of the republic of retirees naturally – hopefully like you as well – used the well-deserved break extensively for chilling, partying, and stuffing ourselves with scrambled eggs and bacon. In Wedding there was a mix of folk festival and fair going on, of which I didn’t notice much because I was personally much more occupied hopping around Berlin’s nightlife with Mr. New Hat and a few other characters, trying to set Anne up using physical force, and crying really hard because TRL is dead.

And that wasn’t the only tearful farewell. The Scala, where we were on the guest list thanks to Frank, is also history as of these days – but of course not without really going out with a bang. Slightly tipsy on Black Boss beer (which really is devil’s stuff, I’m telling you), we talked with a prophet in the former gallery about the truth of essential pop culture, created magnificent art with Ollio and his enchanting companion, and had ourselves photographed voyeuristically in a portable toilet.

It was definitely a bombastic farewell, and when I finally awoke from my coma yesterday, I found myself in a sea of black stickers printed in bold white letters with words like LOVE, WASTED YOUTH, and KOWLOON (?). If anyone wants a few of them, just let me know – you can even stick them on your forehead to immediately show the world what’s what. Such stickers are a great invention.

[audio:kids.mp3]

.

We Love Hannah:

Well would you look at what I found in the depths of the internet. No, it’s not the Holy Grail. Not the formula to make Google explode either (I wouldn’t tell you that anyway). And certainly not the secret footage of the “High School Musical” porn that doesn’t even exist and that I wouldn’t have been allowed to tell you about in the first place. No.

In fact, I once again stumbled across Hannah’s old Freenet homepage, which is so cute that I simply can’t keep it from you. And since we all love our little Munich brat so very much and always, always, always want to express that, I hereby order you to go there now, especially look at the great photo number 8, and scribble something nice in her guestbook. Chop chop, you’re not getting any younger!

.

Röyksopp – The Girl And The Robot:

-->

The Norwegian music duo Röyksopp is one of the coolest bands in the world anyway, and I also absolutely adore the Swedish best friend of Lykke Li, Robyn, so the two of them recorded a great song together just for me alone, and it’s called: “The Girl And The Robot.” Tasty little treat, discovered via iHeartBerlin. Super track for partying!

.

The Excessively Fat Dofus Contest:

Man, we are cool. We’re so cool that in collaboration with Ankama Games we can easily present you with a neat little contest for the online role-playing game Dofus. And we love this game. Really. The vibrant visuals, the massive world, the cute characters. So if that doesn’t make you want to drag your tight little ass in front of the monitor and dive into a universe full of fun, action, and adventure, then we can’t help you either. And the best part: it runs on every system AND you can play the base game completely free of charge.

So what are we trying to sell you? Well, three of you have the great opportunity to win not only a cuddly Tofu plush toy, posters, and manga, but also fantastic subscriptions that let you conquer the entire Dofus world without restriction!

To win, simply write in the comments what you would name your character in Dofus. The crazier, the more fun for us – but anyone can win. The deadline is this coming Monday. And if you can’t think of anything, you can always ask Jamba! if they’ll help you out with their baby name generator…

.

Goodbye Scala:

All the whining in the world won’t help: the Scala on Friedrichstraße is closing its dirty doors forever this weekend. No idea why, since it certainly hasn’t lacked thirsty tourists, fantastic acts, or a deliciously drinkable location, and yet the party crew is following the gallery’s example and disappearing from the scene. Forever!

But of course not without really going all out one last time. Among others, the Junior Boys, Shir Khan, and Jack Tennis will be paying their final respects. Just release the hookers on O’burger around midnight, stagger around the corner, and beg for entry. It’s going to be great fun for the whole family. There’s naturally also a Facebook group about it. Be there!

.

Kish Mauve – Matthew:

-->

With some videos I really ask myself why not all videos in this damn world are transmitted into our brains in such awesome quality. Razor-sharp, without stupid black borders, and with crystal-clear sound that feels like the band is standing right next to you. My demand therefore is: shut down YouTube and hand over all the gems to Vimeo.

The band just mentioned this time is Kish Mauve (once again an electropop duo – we know that by now) from London (that’s in England, dear children), who released their new album "Black Heart" at the end of March, and from which we now get to see and hear the single “Matthew.” Roll the clip.

.

SuicideGirl of the Week: Hezza:

The whole world revolves solely around sex, sex, sex and big boobs. Naturally that’s also the case with us – you know us, after all. And since Montana unfortunately holds hers far too rarely into the camera and Carö won’t be dropping her covers until the Kings of Leon concert in July, today SuicideGirl Hezza has to get naked for us.

The brunette beauty is 25 years old, loves listening to Queen of the Stone Age, Elvis Presley, and The Doors, and comes from Uruguay. She even owns her own small fashion label, the MajoReyStore, where you can buy sexy lingerie, T-shirts, and pants. And anyone who enjoys watching “That ’70s Show” and “Two and a Half Men” on TV is simply hot. Okay, her nipple piercings probably aren’t entirely uninvolved either. Hezza, ladies and gentlemen.

.

The Incredible Insights of the Last Few Days:

Dodgeball is one of the few sports I’m actually not that bad at. Basti is a princess. Gysi is a funny guy, but I’m still voting for the Pirates – I owe that to my little internet folk. As soon as a buddy has a total alcoholic meltdown, I instantly become sober again. Philipp Poisel sings beautiful songs. Sweet messages from Montana late at night paint a smile on my face. Iceland was much better than Norway. For the IHK, a shitty Fireworks dummy is worth more than valid HTML code. Gülcan and I are a great team.

Smashing Magazine loves us. Having no internet is quite a handicap for a blogger. Older women can be pretty sexy too. I’m into the role-playing game “Dragon Quest Monsters V – The Hand of the Heavenly Bride” for the Nintendo DS. You travel faster on the subway drunk than sober. Her breasts are still pretty awesome. Not everything tastes better with soy sauce. I have movies on my shelf that I’ve never watched. Old family sitcoms soothe my homesickness. With money, many things would move forward much faster. Ane Brun also sings beautiful songs. There are some emails I simply don’t want to answer. My hair feels great. The fake Pete Doherty is funny.

.

Hannah Montana Is Back In Town!:

The eagle has landed! Five weeks can pass so quickly, and that means for us and you lucky people out there: our beloved Hannah Banana Montana has returned to good old Germany from her trip to Tokyo! Yes, bow before the great globetrotter, listen carefully to everything she has to tell us, and never come at her with sushi or noodle soups again – otherwise she might just devour you whole.

I say welcome home, sweetheart, and thanks for the tons of photos, videos, and texts that you managed to smuggle from one country to another straight through sweet communist China despite that shitty 56k-slow internet connection. You did great, and now the serious part of life begins again. Exams need to be passed, In & Out lists written, and freshly shaved Kings of Leon concerts attended.

And so you don’t immediately suffer from the German white-sausage shock and can gradually get used to the solid middle-class life here, here’s a colorful Japanese video by the not world-famous band Ikimono Gakari, which you should best play while falling asleep so you feel like you’re in the Land of the Rising Sun. Welcome home!

.

Shave The Queen:

At the crack of dawn this morning, a nice guy left me a strange little package without a sender, and my first thought was: letter bomb! Would the jealous fellow bloggers really dare go that far and blow us up for good? Helmut, Marten, namesake..? Then I wondered when such a thing would go off and how I could open it without that happening. Highly concentrated and totally contorted, I opened it piece by piece, always with the thought in the back of my mind that my beautiful right hand would be blown into a thousand pieces any second. Which would suck. I still need it.

What emerged, however, was something I hadn’t expected at all: a razor from Gillette. Venus. Sara from Heidi Klum’s flea circus had sent me a women’s razor. A women’s razor! That’s not exactly what I’ve been wishing for since childhood (or maybe it is?) and of course I’ll forward the beautiful piece to Hannah so that she’s nicely shaved everywhere when we show up together with Carö at the Kings of Leon concert here in Berlin. But certain other companies are welcome to take an example from free gifts like this. Nintendo, Ferrari, and Apple – you’re up!

.

Is It Always This Sappy?:

If you don’t happen to live in a retirement home, have to work one night shift after another, or have a penis dangling between your legs, then you simply love “Grey’s Anatomy.” The sexy bedroom stories, the spurting blood and the funny music in the background when someone gets cut open or two lesbians have their first time – all of that is great fun. For me too. I have a penis.

It’s different, however, when your friends are suddenly sitting next to you. You’ve finally made it so that at 8:15 p.m. the TV is on, the ProSieben logo is shining in the top right corner and that stupid hospital appears, and you’re looking forward to presenting yourself as a subscribed viewer of this masterpiece. You sit there with a big grin.

And what do your asshole friends do? In the best case they just sit there bored, but in the worst case they make stupid comments like “Is it always this sappy?” or “Is there a funny version of this?” And no matter how brave you are, how much you internally defend the characters and their stories, and how aware you are that this narrative arc also needs a long-winded or even embarrassing stopover now and then in order to rise again all the more euphorically afterward: at some point you cave in and admit to yourself: this episode really sucks…

And what do we learn from this misery? If your best friends didn’t co-found the “Grey’s Anatomy” fan club or don’t plan on sleeping with you after the episode, kick them out at 8 p.m., throw some popcorn in the microwave and then dive alone and happily into the fabulous world of Seattle Grace Hospital, where people screw, slice and cry until the doctor comes. Amen.

.

Die Ting Tings Move to Berlin:

Our loyal reader and passionate 1LIVE listener Marc slipped me some top-secret information that the Ting Tings (famously awarded the title “Marci’s favorite band”) will soon begin recording their new studio album and, for inspiration, will be moving not only to Paris but also – and here it comes – to Berlin! The two of them say: “We’re crazy about Berlin, but I don’t think we’ll get much work done there. There are too many distractions in Berlin.”

Isn’t that wonderful, amazing, downright phenomenal? Once again it confirms that good old Bärlin is simply the greatest city in the whole world and that, besides Nora and little old me, Jules and Katie will soon be roaming the streets as well. So Munich and Hamburg, what do you have to offer, huh? New goal for me this year: meet Katie White…

.

Make the Girl Dance – Baby, Baby, Baby:

-->

Running completely naked and singing through the city seems to be quite the mega trend right now. The bouncing ladies of the French crew Make the Girl Dance thought the same and, in their song “Baby, Baby, Baby,” send a group of hypothermic models running through Paris – wearing nothing but a few magical black bars that can even display the lyrics. The Illuminati must be behind this…

.

La Roux – Bulletproof:

-->

I’ll admit it: girls have it easier with me when it comes to earning a spot on my ever-super-duper-favorite-music list. No idea why, maybe because I simply prefer listening to female voices rather than their counterparts. Unless they unleash some Peggy Bundy-style screeching on me. Anyway.

In any case, the English band La Roux, led by the sweet Elly Jackson with the freaky hairstyle, are releasing one single after another at a breathtaking pace, and after “Quicksand” and “In For The Kill,” it’s now “Bulletproof” that’s here to pamper your eardrums. I’m totally into it.

.

SuicideGirl of the Week: Vice:

Well look who’s back! Exactly, our favorite category with the hopeful title “SuicideGirl of the Week”! Because in order to keep our promised boobs-and-dicks quota consistently high, sometimes tough decisions have to be made. Attention, I’m sticking with the wordplay now.

The lady who is saving us all from too much non-naked skin this time is called Vice, is 23 years old and comes from the US and A. She’s into Johnny Cash, porn and tequila, describes herself as emo, geek and gamer, and has incredibly great red hair. I’d love to play a round of Wii with her. More of her, as always, at the newly redesigned SuicideGirls.

.

Hot Games with the Copy Machine:

Those of you who are neither unemployed nor working construction know this: there’s a sexy copy machine just standing around, its lid wide and invitingly open, and not a soul in sight. And what do you do as a loyal working inmate? Exactly: pants down, sit on it, push the button and off you go!

My favorite rascals from VICE picked this up as a topic and, under the guise of a “fashion series” (yeah right), sat kids naked on the machine and let the glowing beam run its course. Lots of naughtiness and bonus shots are available here, you perverts.

.

Plastiscines – Barcelona:

-->

Well, look who’s back again. My favorite Frenchy posse: the Plastiscines! Their debut album “LP1” with awesome tracks like “Loser” and “Mr Driver” may not have been bought by a single soul, but I still thought it was great. And of course that has absolutely nothing to do with the fact that I’m totally in love with the front chick Katty Besnard. No, neeeeever!

Anyway, now they’re back with a new style, lots of tailwind from Nylon and the new track “Barcelona,” and I have to say… girls… I liked you better before. Or in bad internet French: Je m'appelle Marcel. Je déteste le nouveau style. Voulez-vous coucher avec moi (ce soir)? That should do. Katty, you know where I live.

.

The Lookbook Look: Sonya Twinklepop:

Once again, we’ve grabbed a poor, innocent Lookbook fawn and squeezed it out on the topics of fashion, photos, and all that other creative stuff. This time with us: 17-year-old Sonya Twinklepop from Moscow, who tells us, among other things, why and where she had a girl’s name tattooed on her body.

You’re passionate about modeling, photography, and journalism. Which of these three areas do you enjoy the most and why?

I left modeling school last year and for a while I didn’t feel like doing anything except going to parties and doing photo sessions. But that got boring pretty quickly, so I decided to approach things a bit more professionally. I wrote many texts and reports, and a Russian magazine even published my work. But at the moment I simply don’t have the time to write, and photography is much more fun for me. I even bought myself a professional Canon and use it to photograph people at various parties and my friends.

Moscow is certainly a pretty interesting city. Tell us a bit about it, and do you think Russia is a fashion-conscious country?

Moscow seems to be a pretty crazy city for everyone, but I’ve lived here since I was born, so I can’t really relate to that. But that might also be because I’ve gone a little crazy myself here. Still, I like it here; it’s beautiful. Fashion in Russia isn’t developing much differently than in other countries, but in my opinion it’s currently a bit brighter, and clothes are often cut from a single piece of fabric.

Where do you get your ideas for your photos, clothing, and texts? What inspires you, and do you have any role models?

I actually get ideas for my outfits from everywhere. But sometimes I like to copy small, interesting details and incorporate them into new styles. I’m especially into Cory Kennedy, Mary Kate and Ashley Olsen, of course, Twiggy, and Edie Sedgwick.

How are things in love? Are you in a relationship? And what kind of people are your best friends?

At the moment I’m having a few problems with my male admirers—they’re driving me crazy. And because I’m bisexual, I also have a girlfriend; her name is Asya, and four months ago I had her name tattooed on my leg. All my friends are very creative people. I met many of them at parties, and most of them are musicians and DJs.

What kind of films, TV shows, and music do you like? And which magazines do you enjoy flipping through?

The last film I watched was “Joy Division,” and I thought it was really good. I hardly ever turn on the TV, but I listen to a lot of music. It ranges from Santigold to Elvis Presley. At the moment I’m also listening to a lot of electroclash (Ping Pong Bitches, Ugress, Peaches, etc.). My favorite magazines are Vogue and Nylon.

What are your favorite websites when it comes to fashion and lifestyle?

I think it’s Lookbook. At the moment it’s simply the best website dealing with fashion.

What do you think will be the upcoming fashion trends for the second half of the year, and do you even care that much about it?

History and fashion always repeat themselves. So I wouldn’t be very surprised if Roman and Greek-inspired clothing becomes the trend this summer. Elegant sheer garments are also totally in this year. They were popular in the ’90s, in 2006, and they will be again in 2009.

What are your personal goals for the future?

I want to focus again on my modeling career and invest more of myself in it in order to finally make something of it. Also, later this year I will enroll at the Faculty of Journalism.

Thank you for the great interview, and you can find more photos of Sonya on her MySpace page.

.

WTF?! Vol. 2:

Welcome to a new edition of: “What the hell are some nitwits actually typing into Google to end up on this weird site?!” And I’ll tell you just this much: There are SOME seriously sick minds out there. Truly sick.. And coming from me, that’s saying something. So here is another list of Google search queries that were illuminati-style redirected to AMY&PINK..

Sex with uncle. Living room color ideas by Tine Wittler. Biggest sagging boobs in the world. Intellectual porn. Fucking like mom. Real name of La Dolce Vegas. Bambi in the land of horny bucks. My ex-girlfriend, the stupid slut. What’s the name of the monkey from Tokio that smokes. Cigarette in the swimming pool. Hello Spongebob. Sexy photo of Nora Tschirner for free. Tine Wittler do it with me. I slowly pushed my hand into her pajamas. Girl on deserted island. Apprentice suck-up. I have feelings too, damn it! We haven’t seen each other in a long time and I don’t give a shit. Mutual masturbation with cucumber video. Whoever sleeps with my roommate gets the bread rolls in the morning. Tongue doctor Berlin. Why doesn’t the little prince have to be sad even though there are so many roses? Pus coming out of the penis. A blind man walks into a fish shop and says: “Hey ladies!” Doesn’t Gesine like Yannick anymore?

Whistling bird at the moment of death. Pubic hair stories. Her little pussy is filled by grandpa. Good morning, spring is here. Monkeys fucking. A vagina. I stretch my fingers toward them to feel them deeper inside me. Gushing lesbians. Emancipated women hairy. Mutual masturbation. Maybrit Illner naked. Boys groping girls. Ugly Marcel. Learn to fuck. Where can you get laughing gas? Evil boobs. Cobra with sledgehammer. Cake fight orgies. Redheads have no soul. Lena you wanker. Being happy is a state of feeling that one likes to have. Whipped cream or chocolate sauce. I have sexual fantasies about my teacher. Destroy Google. I am sweet and nice, but appearances are deceiving. Where can I get crazy sunglasses like Fergie? Perverse shaving in the intimate area.

.

Hardcore Personal Ads: Owney:

Name: Owney. Age: 29. Height: 1.86 m. Place of residence: Dresden. Profession: Media designer. Zodiac sign: Pisces. Friends say: a romantic soul. The ex says: hard to get him out of his moods again. I go weak for: cucumber salad and herbal tea. When I’m in love: you have to be prepared for anything. ;O) I’m good at: reading stories aloud, just standing still for minutes on end. I’m not good at: screaming and doing cartwheels. My distinguishing feature: right eye, because it’s colorful. Secret passion: gummy bears (dark red, yellow and green). No-go: gummy bears (orange and white). I say: Sex is often underrated. I believe in: magic. My quirk: taking a bath almost every day.

“I’m not a stereotypical man. I certainly won’t engage in duels, won’t watch football matches (except the World Cup), and cars are merely means of transportation for me. I can’t offer a strong shoulder (physically speaking) either, but instead a perfectly seasoned mix of romance, silliness and depth paired with a good shot of realism. If it were up to me, I’d introduce an unconditional basic income for everyone tomorrow and give the whole world a big fat vacation first. Relaxation instead of stress. With that maxim, you’re at the right address with me. That’s also why Kings of Convenience, William Fitzsimmons and Anna Ternheim are among my favorite bands. Though you can’t really dance to that ... and dancing, I’m totally into that! So ... great location, good DJ and I’m off the dance floor for a few hours.

Now I’m no longer 21 like Hannah, but already 29 years old (uhm, young) ... many of my friends already have children and I’d be lying if I said I don’t want any. Yes, of course, I want children too, at least two, and not in five years’ time. I love these little creatures and I’m really looking forward like crazy to fully loaded diapers, sleepless nights and the moment when one of them will call me Dad! And of course there should be a woman to go with the children ... and that’s where you come in!

So if you think you could play model like Hannah and like to wear sneakers, that’s already a good start. ... I’m totally into sneakers on women! If you also prefer The Brothers Lionheart to Dostoevsky, that’s another plus point. Sex, you’re really into it? Wonderful, another point. You plaster my apartment with homemade crafts and play with me in the sandbox sometimes? Perfect! Then write to me now! ... and remember the sneakers! You can of course earn bonus points with red hair, green eyes or freckles! ;O)

If you want to get to know Owney, just send him a nice email or write something lovely in the comments. And if you’d like to take part in the hardcore personal ads yourself, send your meaningful text and a nice photo by email to us. Have fun! This section was shamelessly stolen from NEON.

.

Ruckus and Hullabaloo:

No no no, did you wake up this morning too and the weekend was simply over again? As quickly as it came? And not only is it Monday again, no, in Berlin it also kept pouring endlessly in the evening? That’s simply a scandal! I demand a repeat!

But nevertheless we made full use of the few days to party, lived exclusively on Burger King and sandwiches and constantly saw Flintstones running around everywhere. Thanks to Style and the Family Tunes Magazine we were on the guest list on Friday for the Remmidemmi party at the Michelberger Hotel, had fun there with lollipops and balloons and – now hold on tight, because this even tops the story with Til Schweiger – met the one and only Peter Imhoff! Yes, you’re right to be speechless. What, you don’t even remember who that is? He once had a talk show on Sat.1, but he was still quite nice. And to the chick with the blue hat who mouthed off at me: You’ll get yours!

Saturday went differently than planned. Plan A: Show up at the Ting Tings concert! Forget it: T-Mobile hates me. Plan B: Celebrate Anne finishing her final exams! Canceled. Plan C: Head to Scala and dance a bit! Apart from Okay & Okay I thought the acts were crap. Plan D: Meet two girls at Friedrichstraße! There was a fight, one of them felt terribly sick and then the special task force showed up. Plan E: Put on duck masks and run quacking through downtown! We just weren’t drunk enough for that yet.

So under the influence of alcohol we watched ten episodes of “iCarly” on MyVideo, then let a taxi driver – who, mildly put, should rather not participate in “Who Wants to Be a Millionaire” – chauffeur us through the city and finally met up with Maike and her people at the “White Noise Club” in White Trash. That way the evening was saved after all and we already have a date for next Friday in the bag, because dear Maike is celebrating her birthday then. I’m looking forward to it and hopefully you had a somewhat more planned instead of misplanned weekend. And now back to work, you lazy bums!

.

The Konami Code Lives!:

Alright kids, after years of Tokio Hotel nonsense and DSDS brain mush you probably don’t really remember this anymore, but there was once a time – back then – when everything was better. The flowers smelled better, the ice cream tasted better and the video games were better. Especially if you were lucky enough to own a Super Nintendo.

And besides such magnificent games as Mario and Zelda there was a small game company called Konami, which was known not only for its awesome games, but especially for the ultra-secret Konami Code, with which you could score at any kids’ birthday party and make out with the hottest girl under the slide. Up, up, down, down, left, right, left, right, B and A. That was the key to success. Unfortunately, this pick-up line eventually faded into oblivion...

But now it’s back, more beautiful and better than ever: on – of course – the Internet! On Konami Code Sites you’ll find a sharp list of websites where you can use the code to unlock ultra-secret features or just a lot of nonsense. If that isn’t wonderfully retro, I don’t know what is.

And as the site tells us, up, up, down, down, left, right, left, right, B and A works, for example, on Facebook, Digg and even Google Reader. And those surely aren’t the only ones – do you know any others? Because as I’ve heard, the Konami Code is even pulling some strings on AMY&PINK... So type your fingers sore!

.

My (and Your) Favorite Videos for the Weekend:

-->

No idea if I’ve ever posted two videos at once before, but this week there are two pieces that are just so insanely brilliant that I can’t avoid presenting them to you here and now (almost) at the same time. Promise me that you’ll download both tracks from iTunes immediately, put them into their own playlist called “Marci watched MTV Brand New,” and let it run all night long.

First up, something sweet and mellow from the even sweeter Hamburg native Mariha, who was already on the scene a few years ago with “It hurts” and is now striking again with “Heart Keeps Beating,” pulling us onto a frivolous party that then turns out to be a bit more low-key. Very beautiful song.

-->

The second one has been playing up and down on my iPod for weeks and until now I didn’t even know there was a video for it. Today Mr. Kavka set me straight, and when he announced the band with this song, I slipped out of the bathtub naked and soaking wet just to catch a glimpse of the video.

The video itself isn’t really that much of a burner, but the track “Help I’m Alive” by the Canadian band Metric, fronted by the hot Emily Haines, is all the more awesome. Especially because instead of “hammer” I always understood something about a ram, which somehow made the song even more endearing to me. And with these pointless words, I now release you into your well-deserved weekend. Please roam the city, spark gang wars of goodness, and just make us proud!

.

The Better Amys and Pinks:

Well, things can change quickly in this fast-paced internet hell. Just yesterday we were the hype, the underground tip, the site your grandma doped up on Stannivalium always warned you about. So fresh, exciting and sooo damn sexy. Ah, those were the days, and I think back on them wistfully—but now it’s over. And even if neither you nor we would have thought it possible: out there exists the better AMY&PINK.

The parents of lia.R and mannfRed must really hate them for giving them such weird names, but what they’ve got going on, called Sexdrugsblognroll, is truly fantastic. The Mannheim duo writes with dirty wit about the top models, Annemarie and mindfucking Facebooks, gives away clothes, and even talks to you via audio.

I’m insanely jealous, would love to crawl into a hole, and now command you to delete us from your browsers, feed readers, and minds and instead paste in Sexdrugsblognroll. So, thank you very much. And since nobody can read me here anymore anyway, I’m going to go sleep with lia.R and then head to the zoo. Hannah gets mannfRed—she’s apparently looking for a boyfriend after all.

.

Since Yesterday I’ve Been a Trekkie:

I really didn’t have particularly high expectations when we went to the preview screening of “Star Trek” yesterday, but holy moly, what J. J. Abrams delivered was seriously awesome. Okay, the story was a bit generic, but the action, the visuals, the music, and not least the atmosphere were absolutely fascinating. It was the best Trekkie film I’ve ever seen!

But then again, it was my first. But don’t you dare disqualify me from rating this movie so highly just because of that—“Voyager,” for example, was my favorite series for quite a while. And I was really damn sad when it was canceled ended. But there are always some hardcore Trekkies who think the whole remake sucks; I thought it was great and can only recommend it. It could easily have gone on for hours longer. Hopefully they turn it into a series. A spaceship flying around through space. Would probably be a success.

.

Eating Like at Mom’s:

-->

At the beginning, we were only keeping ourselves alive at lunchtime with slimy canned ravioli, cheap instant spaghetti, and leftovers from the breakfast buffet, but now we’ve finally leveled up enough to take over the kitchen at aperto and let our cooking skills run wild (very wild!). And the great thing about it: we didn’t even have to be admitted to the Charité!

Whether it’s pasta salad with baguette, schnitzel with fried potatoes, or some kind of fried egg thing with bacon—we juggle pots, pans, and bowls and conjure up something new and delicious on the table every day. And quite often, by the end, nothing on the plate is moving anymore. We’ll keep this up until we reach the next level of the food ladder, which is called: screw the kitchen, we’re going to the Thai place every day from now on. But that’s still a long way off, and for now it’s back down to the kitchen: eating yesterday’s leftovers.

.

Paper Moon:

-->

A game like a small, sweet nightmare. Done entirely in black-and-white children’s book style, designed like Paper Mario and accompanied by sugary-sweet melodies, Blurst has released the jump ’n’ run “Paper Moon.” To play it you’ll have to install some stupid browser plugin, but at least the thing then runs on Windows and Mac and is also free. That’s worth it, isn’t it? So what are you waiting for? Start playing!

.

bebe Young Care Puts Tough Girls into Shared Apartments:

If I had just one wish, I’d definitely use it to move into a shared apartment with a bunch of nice girls. Preferably together with the cute gap-toothed Dari Maximova from the bebe commercial, whom I’ve actually developed a little crush on. Personally, I can only dream about that for a long time, but the people at bebe Young Care have informed us that at least a few stylish ladies have the unique chance to move into one of four awesome shared apartments in Hamburg, Berlin, Cologne, and Munich for four weeks, to really let loose in terms of lifestyle, music, fashion, and active living.

For the bebe Generation, a total of 16 girls between 16 and 24 years old are being sought who feel like dealing with each other and like-minded people on the internet with the true topics of life: Which styles are really trendy? Which music is best for partying, chilling, or making out? And how can I best combine fitness and fashion? If I weren’t a guy, I’d probably do anything to be allowed to move in there, so hurry up and apply for the shared apartment of your dreams. God, I’m poetic again today.

.

War in Kreuzberg:

As we walked up the stairs and I turned to the left, a beer bottle burst in Sarah’s face. From everywhere masked figures dressed in black were shouting leftist slogans; it should already have been dark, but the burning Molotov cocktails, the camera flashes and the constantly rotating blue lights kept the sky above Kotti unnaturally alive. Sarah collapsed against the tiled wall, her blonde hair hanging blood-smeared in her face. She cried, sobbed. We had walked straight into a trap. The subway station had become a single fortress. The floor was speckled red, it smelled of vomit, alcohol and sweat. Armies of green-armored police officers had surrounded us, helicopters circled loudly overhead. The defenders of our castle threw bottles at the waiting attackers; they had closed the gate by their own force. “You come out and you’ll get punched in the face first thing,” an old man whimpered before disappearing again into the depths of the subway.

It was hard for the paramedics to fight their way through to us. The large green steel gate was opened and they immediately began to treat Sarah provisionally. I held her hand, but suddenly we heard deafening screams and trampling behind us. The cops had only been waiting for this chance and stormed toward us like a green wave, beating with batons. The paramedics threw themselves protectively over Sarah, cursing at the attackers. We raised our arms and shouted at the top of our lungs “Stop” and “Injured,” but it was useless. The green wave crashed over us with a dull thud, my lip split open. In slow motion people slammed against the wall and fell down the stairs – in my ear “Nothing To Worry About” by Peter Bjorn and John was playing. I cast one last desperate glance at the bloody spot on the wall, but one of the officers dragged us out and hurled me against a group of press guys, from whose side the lightning storm of flashes did not cease.

“Got a light?” an old drunk pulled me back to my feet and staggered off behind the wall of onlookers with their mobile phones and digital cams. Two girls danced around the police unit singing the Tetris melody, traffic lights and signs were knocked over and someone dropped his pants and took a dump on the ground in front of the Greens. The crowd roared, laughed and cheered. Then again loud screams and pounding footsteps. This time they weren’t green but black. They seemed more heavily armored and ran at us spraying pepper spray. Maybe I shouldn’t necessarily have shown up at this absurd theater of war all in black with my hood pulled over my head, but again I was grabbed and pressed with the force of a bull into the crowd standing at the side of the street. Gasping for breath, I managed to save myself onto a traffic island. The whole ground was covered with shards of glass and ripped-up cobblestones. We were surrounded.

All around us things were burning, the crowd was heated and threw everything it could find on the ground at the officers who positioned themselves around us. An ambulance drove away from the subway station, which was immediately sealed off afterward, and I hoped that Sarah was safe inside and that the injury only looked worse than it actually was. My head was pounding and for the first time I could get a picture of the situation, which was dominated by violence and beer-serving kebab stands. But it didn’t take long to figure out where you could stand in relative safety and how you had to react to the shouts, “Gas” warnings and loud steps without constantly being crushed by our crossing friends. Much worse were the projectiles that rained down crisscross over Kotti and did not distinguish between police officer or demonstrator, spectator or passerby. People around me kept collapsing screaming and covering their faces with their hands, again blood dripped onto the asphalt and again the cops ran over us without paying attention even once to the injured, paramedics or passersby.

It was a bizarre spectacle full of unleashed rage, violence and an amusing fairground atmosphere, and when I finally managed to escape into the subway a few stations away late at night, completely exhausted, I was suddenly back in the normal world. In that small microcosm there was war, a state of emergency, a violent mixture of fire, stones, glass and blood, yet here everything was so peaceful, so quiet, so normal that you were no longer quite sure of the reality of what you had just experienced. And with that thought I finally fell asleep while warm blood once again ran from my lip.

[audio:kreuzberg.mp3]

.

Passion Pit – The Reeling:

-->

Sarah LaPetite writes: “Great song. Great video.” What more could I possibly add? And although Passion Pit have been around since 2007, they’re only releasing their debut album “Manners” next month. Good things take time, and now I’m going to put a talking shopping bag over my head and disappear into my magnificent dream world. Nora and Keira, I’m coming…!

.

The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus:

Sometimes there are things in this seemingly endless Internet that I just sit in front of, astonished and scratching my head, thinking: No way, that can’t be true, wtf, are they serious or not? That’s exactly how I felt just now while researching the film “The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus,” which not only features my lovely Lily Cole, but in which Johnny Depp simply plays Tony. And Jude Law also plays Tony. And Colin Farrell also plays Tony. And Heath Ledger also plays Tony. Who the fuck is Tony?!

Is this film really supposed to exist, apparently premiering on September 24 in Holland? In my search for the official trailer I first ended up here (haha) and then eventually here. And that somehow looks quite… real, doesn’t it? And IMDb apparently knows this film too. Are they all trying to mess with me?!

So please PLEASE dear Internet community, have I completely lost my mind? Does this movie actually exist or am I just the last idiot in an endless food chain who fell for this fake / marketing gag / April Fool’s joke? But at least Lily Cole, she’s real… man, is she real!

.

Sigur Rós – Gobbledigook:

-->

I’m sick. It must be swine flu or something equally terrible. My throat is scratchy, my nose is running, and my head feels like it’s exploding. And I’m out of cornflakes, too. How bad can things get for a single human being? That’s why I hereby declare today the official “Have Pity on Poor Marcel” Day, and I expect you to immediately raid your medicine cabinets and send me all the aspirin, Grippostad C, and, for all I care, Ritalin that you can get your hands on.

As a reward, here’s a video that contains everything a poor, small, sick Marci loves: one of his favorite bands, a beautiful melody, and lots of naked people. The band is called Sigur Rós, the song is “Gobbledigook”, and being sick suddenly becomes twice as much fun. And now I need to find some cornflakes somewhere…

.

La Roux – Quicksand:

-->

God, I absolutely love this song. “Quicksand” by the English electro duo La Roux has now been released in the USA after the UK, and the album will be out in June. The new video by Elly and Ben for the new single “In For The Kill” is already out as well, but I like this one better. Besides, the clip is properly, wonderfully trashy.

.

At Least The Kooks Were There…:

Oh Coca-Cola, what on earth were you thinking?! First you lure crowds of people to the Arena with a free Kooks concert and then you torture them for hours with six dreadful up-and-coming bands that reminded me of random barn parties in deepest Bavaria. And last year’s winning band was by far the worst, didn’t want to leave the stage, and anyone who ever voted for them on MySpace deserves a good, repeated kick between the legs from me personally. I want my money back!

But thank God there was at least one small miracle at this year’s Coca-Cola Soundwave Discovery Tour 2009: the boys from Bad Wimpfen, Andioliphilipp, rocked the hall with their insanely awesome German punk and rightfully earned their trip to Rock am Ring. So if you’re going this time: check out this crew!

The Kooks honestly seemed a little sorry to me, having to appear at the end of this mostly excruciating event (during which The View’s song “Face For The Radio” kept spinning around in my head), but they truly saved the evening with their amazing tracks like “Naïve” and “She Moves in Her Own Way.” Thanks for that—and a request to the red world ruler: next time, please pay a little more attention to who you unleash on such a large audience. You can find photos from the event and everything around it, for example, here. And now I’m going to drink a Pepsi…

.

The Ting Tings Live on Arte.tv This Afternoon:

Many thanks to Pasue for the tip—otherwise I probably would have completely missed this major event of postwar history. Because this afternoon you can watch my absolute favorite band, The Ting Tings, live as part of the Festival des Artefacts in Strasbourg together with Patrice and Miss Kittin & The Hacker on Arte.tv. And if you miss it, I’ll punch you once from the right and then once from the left. I’m so excited.

.

Mando Diao – Gloria:

-->

I have to admit that “Dance With Somebody” started to seriously annoy me after a short time. And I know that puts me pretty much alone out there. But now and here comes the big chance for reconciliation between me and Mando Diao, whom I really liked at Rock im Park 2007.

Because the new song “Gloria” really appeals to me again, comes with a damn cool video (including a pretty model), and the shouted name, echoing the melody, sticks in your head instantly. And I hope, I beg, I pray that MTV and NRJ Berlin will show some mercy and not play the song into musical overkill on permanent rotation again. Not because the song isn’t good, but because otherwise I’ll seriously feel like throwing up.

.

The Lookbook Look: Felice Fawn:

Today, from the huge pool of creativity-crazed Lookbook folks, we picked out the 20-year-old fashion photographer Felice Fawn, and she tells us quite a bit about her sources of inspiration, her relationship with her boyfriend, and which band she would staple to her ears.

At what age did you start taking photographs? When did you decide to do it professionally, and is the job as great as you imagined it would be?

I started taking photos for the first time at around 14, but it wasn’t anything serious back then. Just fun snapshots of our pets and my family. Two years later it developed into a real hobby for me. Before I even considered that I could do it professionally, I first completed an apprenticeship as a tattoo artist in my hometown of Cambridge. At 19, I then started my job as a fashion photographer and haven’t looked back since.

What do you enjoy more: photos you take for work or for yourself privately?

I think private projects are usually more fun. I can put much more creativity, time, and passion into my own stories, but of course you simply have to love what you do—whether it’s for yourself or for a job—in order to achieve a result you’re happy with.

Tell me about your hometown of Cambridge—is it nice there? And is England really as fashion-obsessed as everyone says?

Cambridge is simply wonderful for me; it offers a brilliant mix of countryside and city, and I absolutely love vast, wide landscapes. Almost all of my father’s family lives just around the corner—that’s totally perfect. And England is incredibly fashion-conscious. Especially in London, there’s a huge selection of amazing shops that instantly excite you. Personally, I’m completely addicted to fashion, and I have to be careful not to spend too much on it.

Where does a fashion photographer get ideas for new outfits, and are there people you look up to?

Ideas are constantly swirling around me, but they don’t necessarily have to come from the work of artists or photographers. It can range from cute little shops on the corner with great window displays to my favorite music—my eyes and ears are always open. And I’m a big fan of Patrick Demarchelier’s work. He’s simply indescribable, and I believe he will always be the epitome of my favorite photographer.

How about your love life? Are you in a relationship, and what kind of people are your best friends?

Yes, in April I will have been with my boyfriend for five years, and we are extremely happy together. We’ve even been living together for four years, and I can say with certainty that we’re inseparable. I have three really good friends with whom I’ve been inseparable since I started at the same school as them at age 12. And that’s not going to change. We simply share the same kind of humor, and I think that’s what counts.

What are your favorite magazines? Do you like watching TV, and what kind of music are you into?

I actually read the cliché magazines like Vogue, Harper’s Bazaar, and any fashion magazines I can get my hands on. My all-time favorite film is “Girl, Interrupted,” but instead of movies I tend to watch comedy shows like “Family Guy” and “American Dad.” Music is the most important thing to me, and I could talk all day about a huge list of amazing bands, but my two favorites are probably Thom Yorke as a solo artist and Radiohead. I could listen to them forever.

Do you spend a lot of time surfing the internet? In your opinion, what are the best websites for fashion and everything that goes along with it?

Wow, where should I start? I just recently signed up at Lookbook.nu, for example, which I find really interesting because the site feels so homey. It’s like a fashion blog for all the fashion-conscious people around the world. And it’s truly amazing what an impact all these trends have on young people everywhere across the globe. I think the opportunity to receive feedback on how you dress is fantastic, and you can get a lot of inspiration from others who share the same interests while also passing it on at the same time.

Spring has begun, and with it lighter fashion has returned. What do you think the trends are this year, and how much do they interest you personally?

I’ve always been a huge fan of pastel tones and floral patterns. I regularly go to Topshop, and I was really excited to see that they’re selling more and more feminine fashion with soft colors and patterns.

What do you wish for yourself in the future?

That I continue to feel young, stay happy, and enjoy what I do.

Thank you for the great interview, and you can find more photos of Felice on her DeviantArt page.

.

FFFFOUND!:

Once again we would like to point out our fantastic FFFFOUND! section, where creative dreams come true, steamy thoughts are born and breathtakingly beautiful photographs become visible. This time, featured for a short while: the sweet Keeley Hazell in the bathtub, photos from Girl meets NYC and such a true quote by Mark Twain. Check it out before new photos roll in again! Because you know: our FFFFOUND! page never stands still!

.

Making Fun of Little Kids:

-->

The internet isn’t just full of pornography, Nazi crap and monkeys peeing into their own mouths, as these cute little clips from CuteBreak prove — a wonderful site full of harmony and peace. Little kittens that have to sneeze so sweetly, mutated sloths that simply want to be scratched, and puppy dogs that look so adorable that you instantly forget your stupid boss, your dumb ex-girlfriend and the unfair salesman from earlier.

Whether it’s really that cute to make fun of little kids and pretend you want to sell their baby brother, I’m not entirely sure. But it’s still better than pornography, Nazi crap and monkeys peeing into their own mouths, and since Roseanne, little humans have been teased in every halfway decent sitcom — and so far that hasn’t harmed anyone.

.

Mom, Can I Fuck the Cat?:

The human race penetrates pretty much everything that isn’t up a tree by the count of three — and sometimes even that. Whether cucumbers, bottles or goats, it just has to fit somehow, somewhere, and the well starts flowing in order to satisfy one’s own sexual pleasure. And afterward, you wistfully get to wipe away the whole mess.

The professional pigs over at Vice Magazine were inspired by this dreadful Milow song and are now pulling down each other’s pants to finally test what otherwise only happens in dark bedrooms or boozy farm parties. The toothbrush vibrates, the cucumber breaks, the cat purrs — and of course it’s all purely for scientific purposes. With extensive ratings, naturally. And that reminds me that “American Pie” was on somewhere again recently…

.

Marmaduke Duke – Rubber Lover:

-->

Good morning, Berlin, Germany and the whole world! Now that’s a beautifully sunny day out there. Not! And that’s why we’re bringing a bit of pseudo-sunshine into your living room, office or bedroom in musical form, hoping it might prevent one or two people from carrying out their planned rampage.

Marmaduke Duke is the name of the band, “Rubber Lover” the song, and even though I always feel like a slightly slow radio host making announcements like this — and the video itself kind of sucks — at least the song is pretty awesome and puts you in a good mood. And that’s what really matters anyway.

.

Experience The Ting Tings Live in Berlin for Free!:

-->

Dude, today we’re really on a roll with free, ultra-secret stuff. My current absolute favorite band The Ting Tings are playing on May 9 in the former women’s prison in Charlottenburg, Berlin, and T-Mobile Street Gigs (yes, the ones with the mega network outage who are now letting you text for free all Sunday long) are giving away loads of free tickets. Obviously you’ll have to register with their weird community first, but it’s totally worth it for me to finally see Katie and Jules live. So join in — but don’t you dare snatch all the tickets away from me!

.

The New NYLON Issue for Free!:

The American NYLON is one of the freshest and most beautiful fashion magazines in the world, also convincing with great taste in music, and its editorial team likes to think outside the box as well. The current issue, titled “Almost Famous,” which among other things features the 45 hottest newcomers, can now be downloaded here for free and legally as a complete PDF. Simply click on PDF in the top right corner of the page and enjoy.

.

The Lookbook Look: Winifred Ng:

We continue to recruit interesting people from the playground of international creativity, Lookbook, and today it’s 19-year-old Winifred Ng from Perth, Australia, who speaks openly with us about her own jewelry, the return of floral prints, and her pseudo-schizophrenia. Let’s have a listen…

You say about yourself that two characters live inside you. Is that true and how does it affect your environment?

Some people call me Wini and others call me Fred. Over time I’ve developed two different sides that constantly get in each other’s way. One part wants me to organize and plan everything properly, while the other just wants to party and constantly have fun. But I like to keep that to myself. To notice this inner conflict, you really have to get to know me better.

You live in sunny Australia. Are you a very fashion-conscious nation and do you like it there?

I really love living there and I’ve been very lucky. The sun seems to shine constantly in Perth, but winter is still my favorite season. And I think Australia is becoming more and more fashion-conscious, maybe more than ever before. Australians also love to express themselves freely and aren’t afraid to play around with fashion.

Where do you get your ideas for your outfits? Is there a specific source of inspiration and are there role models you look up to?

I get most of my inspiration from street style blogs and online magazines. I wouldn’t necessarily say that I have specific role models. Most of the time I just wear whatever I feel like. I like trying out new things and experimenting with my wardrobe, seeing what works and what definitely doesn’t.

You make your own jewelry but then find it hard to part with the pieces once you’re finished. How did you come up with the idea to produce something like that yourself, and do you do other exciting things as well?

I just get attached to my pieces and that’s a real problem. To make it easier to part with them, I tried making lots of jewelry, but that didn’t work either. I just can’t bring myself to sell it. I’ve given a few pieces away as gifts, but that’s about it.

I like spending hours looking at different materials; it allows my mind to drift off into another world. I really enjoy living out even the craziest ideas, and if it doesn’t look good in the end, at least I tried. I like transforming my old clothes into something new so I can reuse them, and I also enjoy designing plush toys and iPod socks.

Photography is something I truly love, and I wish I had the time to learn the craft and the art itself. Photos simply make me smile—they capture memories and allow us to look at things from a different perspective.

Do you like watching TV or films? What kind of music do you like and which magazines do you enjoy reading?

I can pretty much sit down and watch anything—from classic black-and-white films to cartoons, from romantic tearjerkers to action. Music has to make me want to move: I like indie, rock, pop, and RnB the most. Online magazines are a revelation at the moment. They’re free and so easy to read. N.E.E.T., Attitude, Prim, Lula, Pages, Mylookbook and Pockettozine are the top candidates on my list. But of course I also like reading classic print media such as Vogue, Harper's Bazaar, Yen and Frankie.

In your opinion, what are the coolest websites for fashion and lifestyle?

Lookbook.nu, Chictopia, Street Peeper and Fashionation are really great websites for fashion. You can browse them very easily and they show so many different styles from all over the world. Cool Hunter and NOTCOT are the best sites for lifestyle and also fashion. My favorite blogs are The Sartorialist, Face Hunter, Stil in Berlin, Jak & Jil, Stockholm Street Style, Altamira NYC, Copenhagen Street Style, Style Clicker and so on… I could spend hours on these sites.

What do you think will be the upcoming fashion trends for 2009, or do you not really care and just wear whatever you want anyway?

It’s always fun to see what designers present and to follow fashion trends, but I think it should always be a priority to wear clothes in which you feel most comfortable. I believe power dressing with slim-cut styles, cut-outs, and structured shoulders will be big this year. Lots of glitter, sparkle, and sheer sequins will flood this spring and summer. Old-fashioned roses and nature-inspired looks (textures, floral prints, and earthy accessories) will return.

What are your goals for the future?

A career in the jewelry and fashion design industry would be the greatest thing for me and is my main goal. Hopefully I can start selling my jewelry soon, but at the moment I’m simply happy with what I have. I think I’ll just take things slowly for now and then see where I end up.

Thank you very much for the great interview, and you can find more from Winifred on her blog.

.

Til Schweiger and I Are Now Total Besties:

Today in Berlin was such an awesome, sunny day that I simply had no desire at all to go to the agency. Instead, together with GossipGirl and Stylewalker, I had been invited by Braun to attend the shoot for Til Schweiger’s new commercial for the "Forbidden to Look Good" campaign and to idly watch as he was dragged into a black delivery van and kidnapped by two hot models. I really did feel kind of sorry for the poor guy…

The set itself was totally fun. Nice crew members constantly supplied us with drinks, fruit, and sweets; the best job was held by a guy who had to spray everything down with a huge hose the entire time so that the van could slide smoothly across the Kreuzberg backyard. Til himself had brought along his cute little daughter Emma, who delighted everyone with stones she had collected herself. Also fantastic was a school class that happened to wander in by chance—at the mention of Til’s name they screamed throughout the entire shoot and immediately whipped out their digital cameras.

Big thanks to Christina, Nina, and Jens, who spent the day with us, went out for delicious food, and supplied us with red-hot information on the topics of outdoor pools, big mouths, and top stars. The commercial will be on TV starting mid-May, and we can gladly do this more often, because as you know: I’m cheap and willing. And that’s definitely not a hint with a fence post aimed at Nora Tschirner’s management… who would even think such a thing…

.

A ♥ for Blogs:

Kai from StyleSpion is calling on us and the rest of the German blogging community to take better care of one another again and to introduce the German-language blogs that are close to our hearts. Sure, we’re in. And since everyone already knows the long-established blogs anyway, I’ll just throw out a few fresh and unspoiled ones that have recently flown under my radar. You can of course find all our other eternal favorites day and night in the link list on the right, which I warmly recommend to everyone.

Lalila - Lisa floats through the world of fashion. Les Pensées Bizarre D' Amelie - Caro’s Fucking Wonderland. xFuckerx - Hotzen’s uber-awesome design and photo blog. Budimon - Simon and Budi game like there’s no tomorrow. iHeartBerlin - Beautiful bilingual blog from the depths of Berlin. rckrz - Adrian rocks the blogosphere. Simmey - The emo pirate. C33 - Just discovered today: Hotzen’s big brother. Style and the Family Tunes - Sexy blog for the magazine. Rawwr.net - Fresh blog by Pasue. Pimpettes - Cheeky bunch of girls. Vice Blog - The Vice blog, obviously. Indigoidian - Lovely blog to read.

.

Loic Peoch:

There are photos that are simply beautiful, extremely sexy and absolutely stylish. Loic Peoch from Paris creates exactly this kind of photography, often in an elegant black-and-white look, but also a complete delight in color. And the guy himself doesn’t look too bad either. No wonder he gets these super-gorgeous models in front of his lens + French accent = unbeatable. “Ish booms you on ze stone...” (via ♥ parti)

.

M.I.A. Glows In The Dark:

Dude, how awesome is this please? M.I.A. has just successfully finished her pregnancy and is presenting herself in Indio, California, wearing totally awesome glowing clothes that — I don’t give a shit whether they’re actually glow-in-the-dark or EL wire — will hopefully HOPEFULLY become the trend for club nights in 2009. Just imagine where you could wear that stuff! Pants, glasses, shoes... Whoa, I’m already getting all tingly. Let it glow as much as it can!

.

Jon Hainstock – I Don’t Understand:

-->

To round off Sunday and mentally prepare for the upcoming work-, school-, or pre-TV-sitting-and-watching-Oli-Geissen day, here’s a new song by Jon Hainstock, who is (perhaps rightly) so unknown that he doesn’t even have his own Wikipedia page, but who immediately grew on me the first time I listened to and watched him.

Firstly because he has the coolest hairstyle in the world (the same as mine, obviously) and because he keeps singing even when some horny guy runs him over with his junk car. What an amazing man. And if anyone asks me one more time when I’m finally going to the hairdresser again. That’s the trend for 2009: indie mullet, woohoo!

.

Fresh Meat from Old Plums:

Dear readers. If you can see this sentence here, it obviously means that at some point you somehow ended up on this wonderful website. Via other blogs, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s secret favorites list, or through our old friend Mr. Google. And the fact that you found your way here via the latter is already unbelievably great, but HOW is much, much greater.

What you’re about to read is a particularly magnificent selection of the search terms that you used today, April 19, 2009, to land on AMY&PINK via Google. And all I can say is: Shame on you. You pigs! So let’s begin...

Gay sex in the woods draft examination. My ex the slut. Going for a smoke. Nonsensical rules in everyday life. Sexy pictures of Emma Watson. Free porn man’s fuckin dock’s. Red-haired girl sexy. Berlin transvestite streetwalk. Can you also wear a sweater with a miniskirt? Drunk Russians. Hot girl loves animal sex. Saggy tits Rapidshare. Fresh meat from old plums. Porno no.

A video where a woman and a man sign up and undress during sex. Lisa records herself. How big are dog penises? What was the name of the episode where the white Power Ranger appeared for the first time? By the power of Grayskull: I have the power! Anne hot bitch. Lindsay Lohan and her freckles. Shitty alarm clock musical. Media designer sex. Why is Aggro dead? Cute female student for sex in Munich. Sex games with girls in the disco where they undress down to their underwear. Nivea in pussy.

.

Les Pensées Bizarre D’ Amelie:

Tada, the time has come once again and you get to be a significant part of this incredibly important event: A new blog is born! And nooo, it’s not just another 08/15 blog from the Nuremberg pet and breeders’ association, no no, much better: Hannah’s better, crazy half Caro has made it her mission to give all those dusty pseudo fashion and lifestyle blogs a solid kick in the ass and, with Les Pensées Bizarre D' Amelie, presents a dirty mix of fashion, naked bodies and intimate confessions of the highest caliber.

So give her a warm welcome into the hard-core mafia world of the noble blogosphere, shower her with sugar-sweet comments that would make even your grandmother happy and proud, and do everything you can to make sure our little mini-goblin doesn’t immediately lose her passion for blogging again – you know how hard it is to be the new kid in class. Besides, I can now fall asleep peacefully because I happen to be the lucky one who deflowered Amelie. In the comments, you pigs. And hihi, I think I’ve got a crush.

.

Flutschfinger:

While Hannah Banana is currently cruising around Tokyo more or less cheerfully, Mr. “You-shouldn’t-always-call-me-spastic!” Basti and yours truly headed to Maike’s and her huge, hilarious shared apartment’s housewarming party in order to successfully carry out and check off the ever-popular three-point plan: Arrive, Take Off, and Crash.

On our journey through the culinary refinements of Kreuzberg’s alcohol-mixing artistry, which basically followed the principles of “Pour in whatever you can!” and “There’s still some left, finish it!”, we encountered blind cats, praying Italian girls and sexy-sounding pseudo-Swedish women, belted out DJ Bobo’s “Pray” until we were red with shame, and drove around in orange shopping carts. Or into a wall – I’m not entirely sure anymore.

Maike, I have to tell you that was an amazing party, please do this every weekend, and you can find photos from our fun, brutal evening nicely arranged in alphabetical order here. By the way, the evening ended for us after Svenja and I couldn’t hear the lousy word “make-out party” anymore and embarked on a romantic subway ride, soaking wet from the rain, while a guy behind us kept belching loudly as if he were about to puke at any second. But by then we didn’t give a damn anymore…

.

GameOne De Ee:

I love "GameOne." Absolutely. Seriously, no joke. Whenever I see those two lunatics, Budi and Simon, in the measly fifteen minutes of airtime MTV has granted them, I feel like throwing myself out the window laughing. The ideas, the lines, the segments – I lose it.

Unfortunately, summer break has now begun for the best show on German television, and every informed fan knows that the fun continues on Budimon.de, buuut now comes the big BUT, because: “GameOne” now has its own, magnificent website called: GameOne.de! How imaginative, how poetic, how meaningful. And even though I’m no longer quite as connected to the gaming scene as I was as a little brat, I’m thrilled like Horst about their contributions there. I love those two. Really. And they’ve even got Twitter. Glorious.

.

Intimate Insights into the Fashion World: Modelfeed:

What do models actually do in their free time? Are they even real, living beings who, like us mere mortals, eat, screw and tear off their toilet paper? Modelfeed aims to get to the bottom of these irrelevant questions. It’s a collaboration between international models who use the site to share experiences, photos and videos of themselves and the outside world.

Whether feeding horses, hunting for Easter eggs or taking care of photo shoots: the camera is always there, resulting in intimate glimpses into the world of the rich, beautiful and slim. Or something like that. In any case, it’s a cute idea, and that whole heart thing really seems to be spreading around the globe. Spread the love!

.

Sebastien Tellier – Kilometer:

-->

Sebastien Tellier is living out my secret life dream in this hyper-erotic music video. As a slimy messiah with heaps of pretty, half-naked girls who love playing NES and constantly keep their mouths open so as not to miss any of my movable sausages covered in mustard, residing in a 1960s villa.

So come on, just admit it: that’s how everyone would like to spend their retirement. But as we all know from certain films, this way of spending your days is only one step away from total collapse, so we’d rather watch his video “Kilometer” with a sense of schadenfreude and be glad that things aren’t that shitty for us. NES-playing girls. That can’t even be real..

.

Scary Girl:

For all the long-term unemployed and slackers, or simply for people who don’t feel like moving more than a finger in this beautiful weather, let alone working hard, I’ve got the cutest flash game ever for you: Scary Girl. In its colorful scary world you have to help a girl find the mysterious guy who is behind her strange dreams. There’s also a weird honey bunny, an octopus with a nasty mug and a hairstyle like mine, and Dr. Maybe, who lives behind the big city deep in the ocean. Makes sense, right? So just give it a try, and if you like it you can immediately blow your savings on the merchandise as well. Welcome to the free market economy.

.

Wildfox Couture:

The stylish girls from Les Mads found these awesome images of the fresh Californian fashion label Wildfox Couture by designers Emily Faulstich and Kimberley Gordon over at Knight Cat—whose domain seems to have one ‘T’ too many, or am I crazy? They feature sexy vampires, cuddling girls in a bathtub, and overly red lips on models wearing sexy shirts.

Their multifaceted client list also looks delicious, including names like Miley Cyrus and Fergie. Jessie criticizes the fact that the provocative promo shoots distract too much from the actual products, which she doesn’t find exactly mind-blowing, but as a small-brained boy I still have to admit that I could instantly fall in love with every single one of these pictures. Hehe, sexy vampires. It doesn’t get any better than that.

.

Bat For Lashes – Use Somebody:

The band Bat For Lashes, fronted by the charismatic Natasha Khan, makes awesome, heartfelt indie electro-pop and, not least since their mega-hit track “Daniel,” has been one of the hottest acts of the coming year. And that’s a good thing. After the remix between her and The Cure, there are now also some brilliant cover versions by Natasha, including “Use Somebody” by Kings Of Leon and “I’m On Fire” by Bruce Springsteen. Listen to it and love it.

[audio:usesomebody.mp3]

.

Sorry Darling, You Smell Like Fish:

-->

Who doesn’t know this (all virgins please wait for the next entry). You meet a cute girl at a party, you get along great, maybe you’ve even developed a little crush on her. You make out, go to Starbucks and the movies together the next day, and then head straight to the nearest bed. The blue Disney birds are chirping, clothes are flying through the room, and you can barely contain your anticipation—until you suddenly grimace and only one word shoots into your head: fish market.

Todd Strauss-Schulson tackles this issue in the funny short film “Big Pussy,” in which a poor guy has to somehow tell his beloved that not everything about her smells like roses. He seeks advice from his friends, doesn’t want to hurt her under any circumstances—and then everything turns out differently than he thinks. Totally sweet.

.

The Lookbook Look: Rosey Jones:

The Californian website Lookbook has developed into a huge pool of chic and creative people who all have a lot to say, follow the certain flow of art, and concern themselves with the beautiful things in life. And that’s exactly why, starting now, we are continuing down the path we began with the interview with Filippa Smeds, grabbing a few interesting people from there and grilling them about God, music, fashion, and love.

Today’s candidate on our quiz show is therefore 16-year-old Rosey Jones from the Netherlands, who not only has an incredibly awesome sense of style and is blessed with sexy tattoos and piercings, but also takes great professional photos that she presents to the world on her MySpace page.

You describe yourself as a model, photographer, writer, and geek. Which of these gives you the most satisfaction?

I like the photography part the most, probably because I’ve been doing it for over three years now. Don’t get me wrong, I love all of these things – but photography (and writing) gives me the greatest opportunity to express myself. Modeling was something I thought would just be fun, although it’s becoming more serious now. But photography is definitely my passion; it has my heart.

What inspires you, where do you get your ideas for your outfits or your art, and do you have any role models?

I don’t have a specific source of inspiration. My best friend has an incredibly great style that gives me new ideas about how I can dress myself. Most of the time I just grab random clothes, and if they don’t look good together, I don’t really care, because I can learn from those “mistakes.” My role model is probably Mary Kate Olsen (how cliché), but she just has a great style.

How do you feel about the Netherlands, what kind of environment do you live in, and is your home country particularly fashion-conscious?

To be honest, I don’t like the Netherlands at all. I live in a small village where the words “style” and “fashion” are unknown, so I love traveling to big cities like Amsterdam and Utrecht, where you can find fashion-conscious people – although you still really have to search for them. It rains a lot here and it seems like people don’t really care how they look because of that, which absolutely sucks. Walking in the rain and seeing all these kids in their black jackets, pants, and shoes depresses me, I think. That really sucks.

Are you in a relationship? What kind of people are your friends?

Nope, I’m single, but my ex-boyfriend is still on my mind, and even though he’s currently dating my best friend, I just can’t get him out of my head. After the breakup I dated a few guys (and one girl), but I just can’t manage to build a relationship with someone else while he’s still haunting me.

I have a few “best friends,” three of them are girls. One is my ex-girlfriend, another is currently messing around with my ex-boyfriend, and the third I’ve known for over two years, and a few weeks ago we spoke again for the first time after more than five months of silence. Neither of us has any idea why we had nothing to do with each other anymore – we were probably both just too busy.

Those three girls are the only ones I trust completely. Honestly, I don’t particularly like having girls as friends. Nowadays they turn everything into drama, and if there’s one thing I hate, it’s pointless arguments. Get a grip. So 90% of my friends are guys – and I love it. Just hanging out, enjoying the sun and smoking a cigarette while we talk about girls – that’s how it should be.

You have piercings and tattoos. Where do you have them and what do they say about you as a person?

Yes, I do. I once had nine piercings in my face, but I had to take them out in January because of a modeling job. I’m often asked whether I got tired of people constantly staring at me, but honestly, I didn’t. The piercings were just another way of expressing myself. Since then I only have two piercings left, because my work as a model simply comes before the piercings, and I’m fine with that. But I still have a smiley that you can’t see, and one under my lip, which is just a small silver stud.

I also have two tattoos, and I love them more than anything. I have the words “Stay True” on my wrist, because I believe everyone should stay true to themselves, and I got it done at exactly the right time, because after years of torment I was finally able to leave behind a part of myself that only did what others expected of it.

I had that done in October 2008, and a few months later I wanted another one, this time something you couldn’t see right away. I had already decided to get the word “Proud” tattooed somewhere – so I decided to have it done inside my lip, because you somehow “speak” proud. Why did I choose that word? Because my ex-boyfriend once told me I had too much pride, and I thought that was something good instead of something bad. Just a different perspective, I guess.

Do you like watching TV? What kinds of films and music do you like and which magazines do you read?

I don’t really watch films very often; somehow I don’t have the time for that. The same goes for magazines – I only read books. You know, all those smart-ass books. About psychology and all that stuff. It makes me feel like a nerd, but I love it.

Let’s talk about music. I’m totally into acoustic music. City and Colour (with Dallas Green) is my favorite band so far. I wake up with them and fall asleep with them. Fantastic. I also go to a lot of metal and hardcore concerts, and even though I’ll probably go deaf from it at some point, most of the lyrics from those kinds of bands somehow amaze me. The energy they put into their shows just makes me feel alive.

What are the best websites for fashion and lifestyle in your opinion?

Honestly, I have no idea. I’m not really at home on those kinds of websites. I think style is something you just have to have. You can buy fashion, but you need the right style to make it look good.

What do you think will be the upcoming fashion trends this year, or do you not care and just wear whatever you want?

I don’t really care about upcoming trends. I wear whatever I feel like anyway. But I think skinny jeans won’t disappear, even though they’re trying to push flared pants as the next fashion trend, which also applies to the huge sunglasses that I love and small white dresses. But I’m not sure – that’s just what I think.

What are your goals for the future?

I want to shoot photos of lots of bands, and even though I’ve been photographing bands for years now, I would love to get bigger by taking promo pictures for more well-known bands and not just small, local live acts. And I will definitely achieve my goal. And I want to take more photos of models, maybe for clothing labels, and believe me – one day you’ll see my pictures on more websites and in magazines, and you’ll remember my name!

Thank you for this great interview. You can find more photos of Rosey Jones on her DeviantArt page.

.

Jonathan Leder:

That women, alongside the African long-tailed swallow, count among the most beautiful creatures on this earth—we’ve known that for a long time. And although the prettiest models among them look even better on gigantic billboards and filtered and retouched with Photoshop, that’s true as well. But true beauty, a touch of realism and magic, only really comes into its own on the coolest analog photographic medium—Polaroids.

Jonathan Leder, a photographer born and raised in the Big Apple, creates really wonderful works of really wonderful women by capturing them on Polaroids, 6 x 6, and 35mm film, immersing them in super-beautiful color tones. I’d gladly show him my breasts voluntarily too—if I had any—and aside from that, Jonathan probably has the cutest self-portrait ever on his bio page.

.

Across The City #1:

Berlin is sooooo damn huuuuge and we’re constantly taking all sorts of stupid photos that will never end up in their own post, so I’ve now decided to steal the Drive-By idea from LastNightsParty in order not to withhold these often unique pieces from you. And as Merlin Bronques so beautifully puts it: “The Drive-By Series is the random stuff that happens between the parties.” I couldn’t have said it better myself.

Of course I didn’t call the whole thing the same (otherwise I’d be totaaaally uncreative), and yesterday while watching GameOne (show not related), while devouring Grandma’s delicious Easter lamb and enjoying a cold Beck’s with it, a tremendously bad title occurred to me under which the remaining stock of our photos will now be collected and published irregularly: “Across The City.” Wow, I’m a genius. You can find the first part here, and Hannah and her friend Kristin are taking so many photos of themselves and the manga cuties in Tokyo that they’ll surely take over an episode or two as well. Awesome, right.

.

Gossip Girl:

So, next Saturday afternoon the time has finally come. For the girls (and a few strange guys, myself included), after "The O.C." and the "Gilmore Girls," a new era of American soap operas begins. In addition to the spin-offs of "Beverly Hills 90210" and "Melrose Place," the series so adored by Americans, "Gossip Girl," will also celebrate its German premiere.

The Waffles Girls write about nothing else; the music, the clothes, and the story of an elite New York clique—whose rumors, party excesses, and love affairs are chronicled by an anonymous blogger—have swept America into a new fashion wave that will arrive in Germany on April 18 at 4:00 p.m. on ProSieben. We can be curious.

.

Hrystia Kaminska:

Since I work in a fast-paced industry where standing out is everything, feelings are best hammered into people’s heads with a sledgehammer, and even AMY&PINK is anything but a wallflower when it comes to choice of words and appearance, I love all the more the quiet things in life that come along with a small melody, delicate colors, or a tiny barely recognizable story.

The 18-year-old Kosmodisk, aka Hrystia Kaminska from Ukraine, creates with her soft photographs exactly that feeling in me that is best compared to an unexpected summer rain. And before I drift even further into kitsch, you’d better take a look at her photos. Summer rain… the kitsch is really starting to get out of hand here, I think we need big tits and penises again. Hell yes.

.

My Personal Keira Knightley Memorial Evening:

Since I spent the entire day today dealing with special films and didn’t feel like throwing myself into Berlin’s crazy nightlife, I made myself comfortable on the couch with Keira and watched two great film adaptations of novels by Joe Wright.

First up was the fantastic "Atonement," which is set during the Second World War in England and in which little Briony destroys the lives of her sister and her lover through a lie. And the ending is so surprising, overwhelming, and simply incredible that I really get teary-eyed every single time.

After that I was so Keira-crazy that I immediately watched the beautiful "Pride & Prejudice" by Jane Austen, which just happened to be on VOX afterward, in which Keira plays a headstrong girl at the end of the 18th century who wants nothing to do with her mother’s obsession with marriage and then falls for the unbelievably arrogant and proud Mr. Darcy (looks and is called something like me, haha).

And anyone who actually believes, in some absurd delusion, that I’m satisfied after all that is gravely mistaken. Because now my cute little Keira and I will move from the couch to the bed. Yes, you may be deeply jealous. Wish me luck! With whatever.

.

The AMY&PINK Song:

-->

As you of course know, a few days ago we asked you to come up with something really amaaaazing in order to be among the three (or five) lucky ones who would receive a personal, handwritten postcard from the megametropolis of Tokyo, kissed to sleep by Hannah.

But what Anna from Svantespeak conjured up is truly incredible. She posted a song about us on YouTube, and it knocked our socks off so much that not only is a card from Crazy Japan guaranteed for you, but from now on the song is officially the AMY&PINK song. How awesome is that? Now we’re curious to see whether anyone dares to top it. And… is that even possible?!

.

The Best Japanese Films of All Time – Part 1:

While Hannah Montana spent her first night in Tokyo, on this sunny day I tidied up my place a bit and at the same time sneezed my soul out of my body. Why? Because it’s fun—quite simply. In the process I came across my seemingly endless library of cinematic masterpieces ever made by the Japanese. And the fact that cinema in the Land of the Rising Sun offers far more than just anime, horror, and porn films is shown by my list, dripping from me, of the best Japanese films of all time. Although of course I won’t do without the porn—I’m not stupid!

And since we’re already in a summer-sunshine mood, I’ll begin my little journey through the art of Japanese film with "Kikujiro’s Summer," which I saw for the first time on Arte and which tells the story of the small journey of a lonely boy together with a good-for-nothing (Takeshi Kitano from "Takeshi’s Castle" and so on). Sweet, calm film that somehow simply makes you happy.

Next comes something a bit harder, again with Mr. Kitano (and I think he’ll show up again later, as long as I stick to the list in my head). "Battle Royale." A school class wakes up on an island sealed off by the military and has to kill each other with Uzi, hammer, and frying pan. I worshipped the film so much back then, for the simple reason that its psychological magnitude just wouldn’t fit into my head and to this day I still ask myself the one true question: What would you do?

And to quickly escape that ever-recurring question in life, now something funny. "Kamikaze Girls" is a film about the friendship of two girls who couldn’t be more different. One the embodiment of the fashion-doll Lolita world, the other the tough, unpredictable member of a motorcycle gang. Hilarious film.

In contrast, "Nobody Knows" is again a calm, almost sad film that revolves around four siblings in Tokyo who one day are abandoned by their mother, who herself never managed to grow up, and since then are left to fend for themselves in the big city. Quiet and thought-provoking.

A special prize in the category “Most Ridiculous Japanese Anti-Bush Sex Film” clearly goes to "The Glamorous Life Of Sachiko Hanai," whose lead actress is a porn performer who becomes omniscient after being shot in the head, finds George W. Bush’s finger, and sleeps with everyone who crosses her path. What more could you possibly need in a good film?

And tomorrow we’ll continue, among other things, with the “best non-Japanese Japanese film of all time.” I wonder which one that is… Stay tuned! And if you have your own suggestions and know famous or forgotten gems of Japanese cinema, bring them on.

.

Aggro Berlin Is Dead:

Yes, it’s official, as Farbwolke also writes: The Atzen are out of the picture. After more than 9 years, the German hip-hop veterans Sido & Co. are saying goodbye, farewell, and see you again, and are leaving the show business with “Ansage 8.” The reasons aren’t entirely clear to me, because 1. I didn’t think the new record was that bad and 2. Fler’s exit from Südberlin-Maskulin surely didn’t leave that big a hole in the Aggro family.

With that, AMY&PINK bids farewell to probably the best and most controversial hip-hop club in the republic and wishes the Berliners continued success in the scene, after all one or another of them will probably carry on. Maybe this is all just a belated April Fool’s joke and we’ll now go watch the cutie in the Aggro Party Bus again. Or maybe not, because YouTube has no sympathy for the departing crew. Move your ass!

.

Hannah Live from Setagaya:

At the moment, Japan isn’t exactly living up to its reputation as a highly technological and progressive country—at least not in Hannah’s eyes. On her first day in the Land of the Rising Sun, she’s already had to deal with all sorts of problems, has hacked into the open Wi-Fi of an unsuspecting fellow countryman, and is now sleeping on the floor, Japanese-style. With constant technical interruptions, she reported her misery to me in ticker form. Now it’s time: comfort Hannah and give her lots of encouragement!

"The internet barely works at all. I’m using some Japanese guy’s internet because he has an unsecured network. Everything here is just a matter of time. So I’ve been awake for 30 hours now, maybe slept two hours, and I’m pissed off beyond belief. We don’t have any beds in our apartment. Apparently—APPARENTLY—that’s Japanese. We’re sleeping on the floor. We bought bedding first thing and complained to Sakura because the bedding is so disgusting. I bought myself a blanket and a fresh sheet and I’m going to cover the ‘mattress,’ which actually isn’t even a real mattress.

It’s super cramped here, but the city is great. Everyone walks around wearing surgical masks and I’m the only blonde. I think it’s going to be five long weeks. If you ask someone on the street where something is, they just walk right past you. But if you ask in a store, they’re totally friendly and happy to help. You don’t need English here—hardly anyone can speak it anyway.

The scenery is beautiful, cherry blossoms are blooming, the flight was exhausting. I haven’t slept since the moment I left. I don’t even remember what sleeping feels like, and then on the floor… You arrive, just want to lie down, and first you have to walk all through Setagaya to find bedding because everything is so disgusting.

Then we spent another two hours looking for a store where you can buy a hairdryer. Man, I’m just completely done right now. Otherwise it’s actually pretty cool. But five weeks are probably going to feel long. And I can’t even upload photos here, which is probably because of the slow internet.

The apartment here is so tiny and from the outside it looks like a client could come up to us at any minute. Like in a horror movie. Or we’re the prostitutes. But Tokyo is really beautiful and cool. It looks like America, just the writing is Japanese. And at every traffic light that turns green or in the subway, there’s this little chirping bird melody playing.

The city feels cozy somehow. Only people in suits walk around here and a few flamboyant types, but even they wear muted colors. All the men here carry handbags, and when we arrived at the airport I saw Uri Geller. Uri Geller! I was almost standing right behind him at the immigration counter. Crazy, right?

And now I just want to sleep. I have to figure out how to arrange my mattress so I can sleep on it without dying, and after 30 hours without sleep I guess I’m allowed to sleep. Do you even know how shitty you feel? So I’m going to sleep now, it’s 8 p.m. here. Good night."

.

Sonny Moore – Mora:

-->

If I listen to a song more than five times in a row and I find the video on Vimeo, then it gets posted. Sometimes life is that simple. And with some examples, everything is just right: the sound, the design and… well, the guy himself looks a bit like Antony from Antony and the Johnsons in his younger years—on crack.

Sonny Moore is the name of this squeaky-cheerful little party freak from Los Angeles, and I feel like a second-rate radio host introducing him like that. His track “Mora,” which can be found on his record “Gypsyhook” (the title track, which has the same name, is awesome as well, by the way), is already a strong contender for a spot on my iPod. But only if it doesn’t seriously get on my nerves after the tenth listen.

.

Poor and Embarrassing?:

Anyone who features us so awesomely and with such a delightful point of view simply has to be mentioned here as well. Malte Christensen, a freelance designer from Berlin who has also worked at aperto, thinks we are, ahem – and I quote – “simply AWESOME,” even though we are unfortunately not the “budget brand of a supermarket chain.” We are “super authentic” and “take a stand on trashy or borderline topics.” Hehe, I love it when someone spreads honey around our mouths. Or was it around our bellies? Whatever.

In any case, we thank the colorful head for his hymn of praise about us, briefly send all our haters over to him to bash us a little in his comments for fun, and while reading the text two thoughts immediately came to mind. First, that I wanted to go play badminton with Malte, and second, that we’ve been neglecting sex a little around here. Where did the SuicideGirl of the week actually go? I’ll go look for her, and until then all that remains for me to say is: We love you too, Malte.

.

Summer, Sun, Sunshine:

No matter how gay this may sound: over the past few days Berlin has repeatedly been bathed in a shimmering light of spring. The sun is simply awesome, refreshing, antidepressant. Leaving the window open at night, grilling in the garden with friends in the evening, strolling through the streets of Berlin with a cold bottle of Beck’s and watching thin girls in even thinner skirts licking ice cream. That’s just living.

And so now let’s just forget that today, at the Türkaliener, confused, wet drops fell from the sky and hope—no, pray—that it stays hot, hot, hot over the holidays. Because I really need this mini vacation. Seriously now. Hands in your lap, face down, and now we pray (or hum “You’re as hot as a volcano”)..

.

Mono – Follow The Map:

-->

I’m a huge fan of Japanese soundtracks. Whether it’s Joe Hisaishi, who, among other things, pulled his orchestra out of the closet for the anime “Spirited Away” and “Princess Mononoke,” the divine Yoko Kanno, who is considered an instrumental superstar in the land of the rising sun and whose musical score for “Arjuna” together with Maaya Sakamoto I’ve been listening to again and again for years and which has a permanent place on my iPod, or the old master Yasunori Mitsuda, who was responsible, for example, for the “Chrono Trigger” soundtrack and who is still regarded by fans of the genre as a milestone of everything and anything. It’s simply the best music for switching off or quietly being creative.

Mono is a Japanese post-rock band from Tokyo who released their fifth album, “Hymn To The Immortal Wind,” last month, which is also doing pretty well in the US. When you listen to it, you can only sit there in silence and not even remotely be aware of what’s actually happening around you—it’s that grippingly beautiful.

.

Knaack Action:

Honestly, I can’t remember too many details from Saturday night. Only dark shadows with hazy outlines climbed up my memories, and when I looked at the photos the next morning I really had to think for a moment about whether my long-lost twin brother had experienced all of that. Strange people on the tram, adventures in the middle of Berlin—I didn’t even know that I had actually made it to Knaack. Only a crumpled ticket confirmed it for me.

But in fact it’s simply true: the less I remember about an evening at all, the better it probably was. Although when I’m drunk I apparently become a constantly laughing pain in the ass, as the videos show, which I’ll spare you out of respect for a minimum level of decency here—and for your perception. There are still a couple of photos to see, right here, and now let’s all hope that on my next visit to Knaack I might actually remember a bit more than just that I rambled on to the bouncer. But he simply had to get used to that, after all I did it to everyone who crossed my path. Compared to that, the confused old man on the tram who kept mumbling to himself was a joke.

.

The Bloody Beetroots feat. Steve Aoki – Warp:

-->

Okay, the holiday weekend is already over as quickly as it came, but you can at least start preparing mentally for the next tour. And since you all know that I’m a huge Steve Aoki fan, and for me he’s the only one far and wide who is allowed to bring club music to my delicate little ears in this disgusting swamp of cheap Kosmos doodling, I’ll quickly introduce you to his collaboration with the Bloody Beetroots.

“Warp” is the name of the song with, without a doubt, the coolest music video of the year so far, in which stylish people smash cool-looking alarm clocks (I wanted that one!), violate the anti-mask law, and train their leg muscles by jumping around like crazy. So what on earth are you waiting for? Turn it on and start jumping along!

.

A Little Trip Back in Time:

Okay, if I have to write another relaunch text today, I’m going to shoot someone. But let’s review the past week. You have to know: I get bored of things pretty quickly. Whether it’s girls, music, or flavors of ice cream. No matter how great they are, after a certain amount of time I can’t stand the sight of them anymore. That’s how I felt about the old—and now once again new—style of AMY&PINK.

It became too impersonal for me, so the logical conclusion was: it needs more soul again. And how do you do that? Exactly: with more profound texts and a design that frames the whole thing nicely. That’s how the notepad layout came about. Some liked it, others didn’t, and someone even thought it was an April Fool’s joke. I liked it because I enjoy trying new things and it was simply something different, but after a few days I realized: it somehow doesn’t really suit us.

On a stormy night like tonight, I then designed a new layout that looked super good both in my head and in Photoshop, which might also have been due to my elevated blood alcohol level. I published it—and you hated it.

That means I managed to mess up two designs in one week, both of which diminished the charm and sustainability of AMY&PINK. If I were the head of the railway company, I would probably be announcing my resignation now. And that’s why you’re seeing the only right decision here and now: we’re traveling back in time—exactly one week.

As you can see, the old and beloved AMY&PINK is back online. A few features are still missing because I sometimes like to delete things without thinking much about it, but overall everything is as it was seven days ago. The left-hand column will also be packed full again. So let’s just say Lil’ Amy was in rehab and is now fully back on track after being released. Only one thing will still change here: we will once again be stuffing more personal content in here—of course in a good balance with all the style stuff. And to finally distract from this whole embarrassing story: Marten has stopped blogging! That should keep you busy for a while. I’ll just stroll off whistling.

.

Productive Under the Influence of Alcohol:

After our last design, which—worth mentioning—wasn’t even online for a week, split the nation (opinions ranged from love to brand rape to a possible April Fool’s joke), I cobbled together a new layout for our Lil’ Amy last night after a trip to the Knaack, which I can only remember in fragments. Totally drunk, of course. It should now be worthy of her again.

What inspired me was half a pack of aspirin, a Turkish pizza that I had no idea where I got it from but carried with me the entire way home without ever once considering the absurd idea of actually eating it, and a divine page from Computer Arts that lay open in front of me on the floor, which was cluttered with clothes.

By the way, the photo has absolutely nothing to do with me; it’s from Cobrasnake and served as my visual template throughout the entire design process, which is why I didn’t want to withhold it from you. I don’t really want to say much about the layout itself because I can’t be bothered and instead have an even worse headache, and I’m not even finished yet. Among other things, I still have to adjust the subpages and the comments, but for now I’m hungry and going to make myself some delicious mini schnitzels with potato salad. Greasy food against a hangover.

.

Kerli – Walking On Air:

I have the bitter impression that MTV only ever plays awesome music videos when I come home drunk at night and switch on the TV to unwind. Then I sit there under hyperactive influence and watch, for example, the song by Kerli, "Walking On Air," flicker across the screen.

And I immediately fell in love with the song, the album, and with Kerli as a whole, and wondered why she hasn’t become big here yet, even though she’s doing really well in the US and Australia and was even in the charts in Switzerland. Hello Germany, wake up and love the little Estonian girl!

.

Lisa Solberg:

-->

When it comes to other people, there is nothing I appreciate more than when they express their creativity and personality in some way that inspires me. Whether it’s in photography, the art of painting, shooting small cinematic masterpieces, writing texts, or in variations the world has never seen before.

Lisa Solberg is an artist from Los Angeles who is sponsored by Element Eden and featured in Cooler Mag, and she conjures up wonderful paintings on canvas detached from mainstream conventions or boundaries. She also has a really distinctive voice and lives in a huge loft that exists solely for the purpose of creating art. And I’ve never been able to resist huge, empty lofts with that special touch of magic anyway. So, who’s going to buy me this painting of hers? It’s painted, among other things, with champagne. Champagne!

.

Die Mensa:

I never imagined student life to be particularly glamorous, but exciting, thrilling, and somehow left-wing. Constantly broke, hanging around the city, drinking away worries about the future at wild private parties, and always wearing the same clothes because you can’t afford your own washing machine and the walk to the nearest laundromat feels longer with every thought than it actually is.

Okay, somewhere in that vision I slipped into my own life, but yesterday I got to experience a touch of legendary student life firsthand—we went to eat at the cafeteria of the Charité. “Wow, how insanely exciting,” the Bennos among you might be thinking, but for me it was actually something special. Even though the food was damn expensive, the seating area hopelessly overcrowded, and Basti kept rambling the whole time about rotten, unshaven riffraff and whales falling from the sky.

At least I kept a grand souvenir from lunch: a cafeteria card with 17 cents on it. I’m happy. And maybe it was simply the spring-like weather and the beautiful lawn full of unshaven female students that made me find the place and everything bustling around on it quite exciting, and I would have liked to know the story behind some of the many faces. But they’re probably just constantly broke too, drinking at private parties and always running around in the same clothes. Amen.

.

Bedeutungslosigkeit der Sternstunden:

Today I actually bought a book. Rocko Schamoni. Sternstunden der Bedeutungslosigkeit (Peak Moments of Meaninglessness). Against the quarter-life crisis—or for it, depending. Recommended by Pausmann, even though he’s still too young for it. That was shortly after I looked deeply into Gülcan’s eyes while a piece of metal was being driven through her ear, and after I almost stupidly ran into the arms of my ex-girlfriend as we were getting out of the elevator after handing in our intermediate media design exam. A brief smile at her best friend, then that moment of horror was over too. But it looks good. The piercing. It sparkles so nicely.

And as I flip through the first pages of the Schamoni novel on the subway and some Reinickendorf yob criticizes my Chucks, I do find some pleasure in the chaotic yet unremarkable life of Michael Sonntag and his friends, and yet for quite some time now I haven’t really been able to immerse myself in such stories, because while reading, a feeling of disappointment keeps spreading inside me—why do so many good authors have to hide behind pseudo-characters so close to their own identities?

Rocko writes neither as poetically light as Haruki Murakami, nor in that visionary, inspiring way like Mian Mian; he simply writes. In the now and honestly, just the way one speaks. And yet: Why does this Sonntag even exist? Why can’t Rocko Schamoni just write a book in which he admits that he has a crush on his neighbor? That he had a hard time getting over his lost love? And that he has terrible bad breath?

The same goes for all those Charlotte Roches and Rebecca Martins out there. Just admit that you’re into anal sex and Avril Lavigne. That you like jumping into bed with guys who won’t even look at you again afterward. Or vice versa. And that you pick your nose and occasionally like making out with girls. Come on, just admit it! Okay, I’ll gladly start if you don’t dare. My name is Marcel Winatschek. I’m into Avril Lavigne, I stick my finger in my nose, and I like making out with girls. See, that wasn’t so hard, was it? And now you. As for the anal sex, though, we’ll have to talk about that again...

.

Seelenlos:

I have to admit that lately I’ve personally lost the fun in Amy & Pink. Degenerated into a soulless list of links and commercialized by an unstoppable flood of finds from the web—completely without charm and personality. Unfortunately, the depth has fallen by the wayside—as some of you had predicted. And that’s why it was time to pull the emergency brake.

I don’t want to regret anything here; the path was the right one and it was quite fun trying out something new. Hannah and I learned a lot through the blogazine experiment, got to meet new people, and developed further in many ways. But now it’s time to breathe more soul back into this blog, and we have what it takes—you know that.

As of today, Amy & Pink is our shared digital notebook, into which we can write the things that move us, that we can take a lot from into our own lives, and that we would like to share with you. The design is meant to reflect this step back to the roots while at the same time looking toward a great future. We’re happy that you’re taking part in it and wish you continued enjoyment.

[audio:gruss.mp3]

.

La mort.:

So what else? Must. There are times when I quite literally despair at life, at love, at the future of existence. In those moments I neither know how things will continue nor where they are heading. Weeks of uncertainty then drag me into a deep black hole I never wanted to be in and yet in which it feels so bittersweetly good. Then I can really deliciously write my suffering, my pain off my soul and watch, as I publish it, how it drifts away.

The other side of the coin is floating on cloud nine. Because of a girl, a career, or simply because it’s a sunny, fresh day. Then I love life with all its quirky creatures upon it and sing hymns to the sun, to love, and to freedom. What feelings—great they are, intense they are.

At the moment I’m standing on neither side. Neither are whistling blue Disney birds flying around me when I leave the house, nor do I feel like bursting into loud tears at any second. I’m just living along. Without particular highs or lows, without the feeling of a special tingling. I go about my job, laugh at parties, make out with girls, and listen to music. It’s like the thousandth rerun of a magnificent film that you once loved above all else. But now I just know it inside out.

No matter how great and exciting my life may be—the routine has spread out. The very thing I feared like nothing else as a child and against which I swore a blood oath with my friends has now become reality. And now it doesn’t even feel that bad. As if I had given up a long-fought battle and surrendered to the bittersweet defeat, laid down on the bow and stared into the sky until someone finally strikes. The living death has befallen me. I am a zombie.

[audio:isitreal.mp3]

.

V V Brown – Crying Blood:

Okay, shit, it’s official: I can’t get this song by V V Brown called "Crying Blood" out of my head anymore. It’s just… too… pounding… this 50s-on-The Ting Tings-style melody / voice / music. It’s inside me and won’t come out again and now I’m going to do the same to you. Come on, click on the video. Boom, boom boom… hehe. Now you’re infected too. Lock ’n’ Loll!

.

Joanna Kustra – Paintings:

Once again you can see what people are able to tease out of the combination of photography and Photoshop. These images by Joanna Kustra look like art from the 18th century come true and immediately carry my thoughts off into enchanted worlds like “Pride & Prejudice” and “The Duchess.” That makes me think again of the beautiful language of that time. Maybe I’ll write a post in that style sometime. And heaven help you if you all run away then.

.

New Look:

New Look is a fresh electro-soul band from Brooklyn that actually hails from Toronto and used to be called “Jungletalk” a few years ago—but who cares about that today. I got to know them through an interview in Cooler Mag and a story in Dazed & Confused Magazine, and Sarah and Adam make really beautifully chilled music that’s perfect for simply living into the day or working. Unfortunately the two still haven’t found shelter with a proper label (their collaboration with an indie record company fell through), but that has the advantage that they offer their songs for free download. And that’s a nice thing indeed.

.

Trippple Nippples:

Arte really is such an awesome TV channel. First there was a film about the dark nightlife of Berlin and now on “Tracks” an absolutely amazing insight into the insider tips of Tokyo’s party and fashion metropolis, which featured, among others, the Trippple Nippples, ultra-secret fashion shops, and a drag queen who lives together with 17 tarantulas and 340 wigs. You can watch the episode for free on Arte+7 for one week starting now. The Tokyo segment comes somewhere in the middle, but the whole episode is worth seeing. Don’t miss it under any circumstances!

.

Kate Moss – God Save The Queen:

You can say whatever you want about Kate Moss. That she’s a small, coke-fueled diva who likes to harass girls in the bathroom, that she has breasts like a grandma, or that her ex-boyfriend Pete Doherty, dissolving in lovesickness, makes her life a living hell. But if you (generously) look past this façade of drugs, excesses, and soap-opera drama, the 35-year-old is and remains one of the most exciting women of our time.

She proved that, for example, in 2002 during the Craig McDean shoot for i-D Magazine, which was entirely under the motto “God Save The Queen” and resulted in some truly amazing photographs. Or maybe I just have a thing for little troublemakers. Despite the sagging boobs.

.

War of the Cuddly Toys:

-->

Okay, after the cult film “Battle Royale,” in which beloved classmates slaughter each other and schoolgirls pee on one another (link removed for the Pope), I’m already used to quite a lot from the Japanese with their perpetual grins. But this time they’ve really outdone themselves. In the truest sense of the word.

With “Cat Shit One,” a computer-animated film is set to hit theaters in the Land of the Rising Sun in early 2010, in which cute cuddly toys shoot each other in Iran (or Iraq, no idea), carry out terrorist attacks, and gun down little rabbits. It leaves you speechless. And don’t anyone start again with killer video games. Compared to this, they’re a joke.

.

ProSieben Redesign:

As a small-time media designer, I’m of course really looking forward to the new on-air design of ProSieben, which is set to launch on Sunday at 8:13 p.m., just before the free-TV premiere of “Pirates of the Caribbean 2,” with a new image trailer supported by the Pussycat Dolls under the motto “E-Motion.” It’s supposed to be silver and, naturally, more modern, cleaner, and functional across platforms. Let’s see whether that works and whether they can really boast about being the “Apple among TV channels.” We’ll know the day after tomorrow.

.

Kanye West, Santigold and Lykke Li – Gifted:

-->

Finally, there’s now a video for the awesome track “Gifted” by Kanye West, Santigold, and Lykke Li, which Jessie from Les Mads posted. An absolute killer track that unfortunately is now making the rounds with a rather meaningless comic-style video. I would have preferred a proper storyline with the three of them, but you can’t have everything. Watch it before YouTube deletes it again.

.

Caroline Winberg:

For me personally, the Swedes are among the most beautiful people on this planet. Often blessed with straw-blonde hair, cute freckles, and natural charisma, they have not only turned the music world upside down for decades but also feel right at home in the international fashion world. Supermodel Caroline Winberg belongs to this category, and I’d love to immediately father lots of little Marcels with her so they’d all be born with that radiant smile. If you can’t quite follow my reproductive urge in this regard, you should check out these amazing photos—any doubts will vanish on their own.

.

Where The Wild Things Are – Trailer:

-->

I have to admit that I’ve never read the book "Where the Wild Things Are" by Maurice Sendak (and by that I don’t mean the pseudo-homosexual soccer players from the woods), nor was it ever read to me (tough childhood and all ;), but the trailer looks really great and especially the head-people from the USA are totally thrilled and are already insanely excited about the movie. Me too.

.

So That Was the Intermediate Examination:

The word that has been robbing us of sleep for days, if not weeks, is finally behind us now. At least the theoretical part. The two-part examination took place quite nicely at the Berlin Fashion Center under the supervision of constantly circling IHK employees who somehow reminded me of those Dementors from "Harry Potter," and it went surprisingly well. At any rate, I wrote something meaningful everywhere and didn’t have a blackout either – two things that are definitely something to show for. Now I’m going to eat some fries and recover, and then it’s straight on to the practical exam – creating a homepage for some kind of museum. I’m looking forward to it. Not.

.

Happy Birthday Keira Knightley:

May she liiiive, may she liiiive, three tiiimes three cheers! So guess who has a birthday today – you’ll never guess. Okay, the headline and the photo didn’t exactly make it difficult, but still I hereby proclaim with profound admiration: my epic cutie Keira Knightley turns 24 today! Yes, that’s how fast it goes. And if you’re not already hopelessly in love with her (like I am), you can either fall for her right now at the cinema or be convinced of her super-hotness because of her upcoming short film. And woe betide anyone who says anorexia now.

.

Super Mario In The Big City:

-->

What, are we degenerating into a cheap video blog? Nonsense, who would even say such a thing? Unfortunately this one here is also too awesome to leave unknown, and since I’m currently on a video game nostalgia trip anyway, today there’s a little journey of our favorite chubby plumber who suddenly finds himself in the big city after entering a warp zone and doesn’t handle it well at all. And what would such an appearance be without a huge boom at the end. Funny.

.

Superpowerless – Wasted My Time:

-->

Okay, this video just aired in full length as a commercial clip on MTV and now we’re asking ourselves on Twitter how viral this Vodafone clip really is, because the band Superpowerless actually seems to exist. Or is it just a marketing gimmick that wouldn’t exist at all without the big network provider? I have no idea – if anyone knows anything, please say something. A little hint with a fence post to all former Mannesmann employees.

.

I’m Studying!:

Well I’ll be damned, I’m sitting at the agency right now actually studying for the intermediate exam coming up on Thursday, the big mid-way hurdle to finally rise to the lofty rank of master media designer. Surrounded by masses of coffee, mock exams and this huge summary, I’m trying to cram tons of more or less interesting material into my little head, and Jenny and Angeli are no different. Good luck to all fellow sufferers, and maybe we’ll run into each other on Thursday. Wish me success!

.

Scott Matthew – White Horse:

-->

The German language lacks words that go beyond love, adoration, and absolute worship. Scott Matthew is as unknown as he is brilliant and yeah yeah I know, posting two videos in a row is lame, but his new song "White Horse" is simply too bombastic to withhold from the world. And it’ll bring tears to your eyes, too. So turn everything off around you, crank the speakers up to full volume, and surrender to this beautiful moment. A masterpiece.

.

Lily Allen – Not Fair:

-->

I have no idea why Lily Allen chose this song as her second single from the album "It's Not Me, It's You," after all, with "Everyone's At It" and "I Could Say" there are, in my opinion, much better candidates for that spot. But as usual Lily is good for surprises and presents herself in "Not Fair" in an old country style with awesome clothes and an even better hairstyle. I’m curious to see how well it will be received.

.

Karate Kid:

Man, I just love this movie. Daniel, Mr. Miyagi, small board, right hand... big board, left hand... “Karate Kid” was one of THE movies of our childhood — the story of the little boy who, with the help of his new sensei, fights his way through tough battles, love, and the wonderful art of painting fences. And yes, I even liked the fourth part with the girl. The only frightening thing is how current the fashion and music in the film still feel — and no wonder Natasha Khan dedicated her new single to this great movie. Mr. Miyagi forever!

.

Ryan McGinley by The New York Times Magazine:

-->

Good morning, world. I hope you all had an eventful, stirring weekend that brought you a little closer to the meaning of life. Mine was none of those things; instead, at the party last night I drank vodka with dish soap (Sladdi, you owe me a bottle of Absolut), witnessed a man-eating girl gang at the end of the world who were kicking each other in the crotch, and poked my ex on Facebook. And because I’m now farting soap bubbles, here’s a wonderfully relaxing video by photographer Ryan McGinley for the New York Times Magazine that instantly brightens up this dreary Sunday morning. Chill out.

.

Lil’ Amy’s Big Adventures – A Story to Continue Writing:

Lil’ Amy had finally had enough of standing around all day as the logo of a second-rate website, grabbing herself in the crotch. At night she still dreamed enthusiastically of Hannah’s distraction post. So she grabbed her two best buddies, the know-it-all magical dildo Waldo and the permanently depressed zombie bride Mort, and moved with them into a kebab shop to fight the evil Klabautermann, whose name was not to be spoken, from there on out.

One day Waldo’s former owner Hermione Granger knocked on the door of our superheroes. “You have to help me!” she cried pleadingly. Lil’ Amy and her homies put aside the kebab sauces and listened. “The evil Klabautermann, whose name must not be spoken, has kidnapped my enchanted cat, and I can’t fall asleep without it. Please bring her back to me!” Lil’ Amy nodded. Together with Waldo and Mort she threw herself into their kebab time machine. It hummed, it hissed, time flew past them. When they came to, they opened their eyes and saw a talking mailbox. It said: “Greetings, strangers. You have arrived just in time to…”

.

Renata Raksha:

Renata Raksha takes beautiful photos of beautiful people for beautiful clients like MTV, Disney, and Nylon Mag. That sounds more boring than it actually is, because her work bursts with creativity and imagination. Guys covered in gold glitter, girls wearing pig masks, and private glimpses into her circle of friends. That’s fun. And whoever finds a boob gets to keep it.

.

Shut Up!:

There are moments when you just need some peace and quiet. To switch off, to relax — maybe you just want to sit back comfortably and watch a music video by your favorite band on YouTube. But YouTube is annoying: blinking banners everywhere, comments from antisocial petty criminals, and glittering call-to-action buttons to rate, embed, and click onward… who wouldn’t lose it?

Now there’s a small bookmark called Quietube to fix that. Just choose a video, click it, and all those attention-seeking distractions disappear for good. What remains is the pure video. So lean back, enjoy a cold Beck’s, and watch “We Walk” by The Ting Tings here — the way it’s supposed to be. Free and undisturbed.

.

The Tokyo Diaries:

David Schumann experienced Japan firsthand. Flown in from Germany, the student suddenly found himself dealing with the local modeling business, the parties, the girls, and the subtly intense everyday life — and it left such a mark on him that he even wrote a book about it. “The Tokyo Diaries” is the name of his little work, which I’ll probably pick up next to read. In it, the tattooed punk rocker describes autobiographically how he is approached on the street by a Japanese photographer and soon rises to become a supermodel in the land of the rising sun — with all the highs and lows that come with it. Sounds exciting, and you can find a current interview in Jetzt.

.

Tourette Syndrome:

Fuck seriousness — the Brazilian web design agency Gringo mixes its services with swear words from all over the world, is still looking for new flash designers, and gives its partners the chance to really let loose. Ass grenade, big pussy, grandpa stuck it in me. I didn’t quite grasp the deeper meaning after five minutes of dumb clicking around and Brazilian translations of cock and tits, but still, funny idea. We just have to make sure the Knights of Standards and Practices don’t suddenly show up…

.

Green Hill Zone:

Mikaël Aguirre creates beautiful art from the memories of small handheld nerds like me. Whether it’s Yoshi carrying Baby Mario on his back, Chun-Li with her seemingly thousand legs, or Sonic in the Green Hill Zone — his images make the children in our heads happy, and with more than one piece I wish I could just hit play and start gaming.

.

Anna Selezneva:

Oh, I could now write some pseudo-intellectual crap about how black-and-white photographs are so emotional and profound, how no other media variation conveys feelings the same way and appears as elegant as it is tactful, but these shots of supermodel Anna Selezneva for Hedi Slimane simply look so fucking amazing that you’d like to laser your eyes and see the whole world only in shades of gray.

.

And What’s Going On With You?:

We all know that life is fucking short. Basically, each of us should immediately quit our job and apartment, buy a mobile hippie canister, cruise through the Australian tundra and run over a few koala bears. Which of course nobody does. Instead, I’m now going to write down the ultimate list of all the things I still want to do before a VW van catapults me off this planet:

Learn to surf, start my own agency in London, mix milk with beer, make out with Keira Knightley and Nora Tschirner, preferably at the same time, write a book, see the world from above, get mocked on The Simpsons, put a million into a bum’s hand, act in a movie with Johnny Depp, conquer a small country, be in a photo on LastNightsParty, buy MTV and broadcast nothing but The Ting Tings all day, own a monkey butler, have sex with Siamese twins, and if that doesn’t work then with the Olsen twins tied together, visit Tokyo, time travel, have sexy female karate bodyguards, pee off the highest mountain in the world, just shut the hell up for once. And what are you planning to do?

.

Gülcan and Coleen:

Studying is always such a thing. Either you’ve got it — or you don’t. Today Gülcan and I armed ourselves, student-style, with two fat binders, notepads and the most modern writing utensils and sat down at Starbucks at Hackescher Markt to really hit the books. Pun intended. Of course that worked out less than planned — screaming children and strangely smelling Eastern Europeans ruined our mood. So instead we kept ourselves entertained with chicken döner, sunshine and pigeons practicing cannibalism. And that was way more fun anyway. Studying is gay anyway, or what was the name of that one student group again..?

.

Hurricane Festival 2009:

The festival season is about to start again and this year, too, the familiar questions arise: Go or not go? Big or small? One, two or even three? We had actually decided to stick with the tried-and-true big German music broadcaster and settle down at Rock am Ring. However, the almost legendary line-up of a competitor threw a wrench in our plans.

Because the Hurricane Festival up in the far north has confirmed such amazing bands that our children and grandchildren would beat us up if we didn’t rush there. Among others, my sweet Lykke Li, Ladyhawke, Die Ärzte, Blood Red Shoes, Clueso, Editors, Duffy, Katy Perry, Faith No More, Kings of Leon, Fettes Brot, Franz Ferdinand, Less Than Jake, Moby, Nine Inch Nails, Paolo Nutini and my favorites The Ting Tings will be there. So Becca and I had almost no other choice but to decide on this dream come true. Who’s in?

.

Love Boobs And Hate Cancer?:

Last month a good friend of SuicideGirls Fractal died of cancer. As she writes herself, he was a poet, artist and passionate supporter of the Burning Man community. Now, together with a few of her colleagues and photographer Cherry Vega, she has launched a fundraiser using the talent the SuicideGirls are known for: they take off their clothes. Anyone who donates $25 or more through them to The City of Hope Comprehensive Cancer Center via PayPal to the address fractal.suicide@gmail.com will receive a print of the above revealing appeal. A damn awesome thing, if you ask me. Thanks to Jeriko for the tip.

.

Uh Huh Her – Not A Love Song:

-->

Oh God, seriously, you’re so lucky, you have no idea. You would actually be reading a super positive post about Metro Station and their video “Seventeen Forever” right now, which I only wrote to hook up with a few cute pseudo-emo chicks, but that still wouldn’t have saved me from hell once I saw that Miley Cyrus (of course plus her money-hungry dad tagging along) appears in the video — and she is so not emo that it would have backfired twice over.

So instead you get to see the two girls from Uh Huh Her in their video for “Not A Love Song,” walking down the street with a mini unicorn and colors flying through the air. The song may be a bit older, but I’ve listened to it at least a million times on the subway, which means you get to share a tiny bit of my messed-up life and that’s worth something, too. Fuck Metro Station. Thanks for listening.

.

Keiichi Nitta – Bowery Boys:

The cute Japanese guy Keiichi Nitta is the little protégé of porn uber-photographer Terry Richardson. And he must have been a damn good teacher judging by how awesome his work is, which he is publishing in April in his first photo book “Bowery Boys,” inspired by the New York gang. Naked girls, crazy guys and Japanese flair — what more could one (I) want?

.

Lauren Peralta:

Through Maria I came across the fantastic work of American photographer Lauren Peralta, who skillfully plays with female eroticism, striking black-and-white photos and, compared to some colleagues, an unusual openness about herself. On top of that, the 19-year-old has extremely hot tattoos and — guys, pay attention now — she’s still single! No idea why, so first check out her pictures and then go get her. Don’t let anything burn.

.

Bloc Party – Signs (Armand Van Helden Remix):

-->

Bloc Party is simply a damn awesome band; there’s no need to argue about that any longer. And Franzi writes that on May 11 their third album will be released as a remix compilation, which, as we all know, is always quite a burner (I’m just reminding you of the wonderfully marvelous “Blue Light” remix). “Signs,” reworked by Armand Van Helden, is the first single release, which you can even download for free here. Nice thing and strange video.

.

Slumdog Millionaire:

-->

Starting next week, this modern fairy-tale epic will finally be showing in German cinemas, telling the story of Jamal Malik and his brother Salim, who grow up to become very different men on the harsh streets of Mumbai. In order to find his lost great love Latika again, Malik goes on the TV show “Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?” and fights his way to one correct answer after another.

Rolling Stone writes: “What I feel for this film is not just admiration, it’s insane love!” And I instantly fell in love with the trailer, which of course is not least due to the magnificent choice of music. This film, which has swept every possible award at local ceremonies, is therefore mandatory for us. There’s no getting around it.

.

Show The Love:

So, since yesterday you valued readers of our little trend and feel-good blog can rate the schmaltz we scribble together here, the videos we adore, and the discoveries we make in this little pond called the internet – I’ll just call the whole thing, in an over-the-top way, love. From now on, you can love our posts.

If you find something really snazzy here and are too lazy to leave a comment, just click the pink heart at the top right and voilà, the magical counter climbs up by one. Don’t even try to vote more than once for entries; it won’t work, and woe betide you if you try. The most loved posts can be displayed popular-ologically by clicking the button on the right below the ads (or here). So what are you waiting for? Love as much as you can!

.

William Fitzsimmons – If You Would Come Back Home:

-->

Okay, everyone who’s in a super good mood right now should immediately stop and kindly start bawling like crazy, and all those who are constantly whining anyway because of the shitty weather, the underpaid job, or unfair love may continue to do so, because bearded fellow William Fitzsimmons sings in his song “If You Would Come Back Home” so sadly, so melancholically, and in such beautiful imagery that you just want tears streaming from your eyes.

.

Keira Knightley and Her Short Film:

In Lula, a fashion magazine by former Voguette Leith Clark, there are enchanting glossy photos from the soon-to-be-released short film with the more than complicated title “The Continuing And Lamentable Saga Of The Suicide Brothers,” which was produced last year by the Brownlee Brothers and in which the best actress in the world, Keira Knightley, plays a good fairy. Unfortunately, I haven’t discovered even the tiniest hint of a trailer anywhere, but I’m definitely curious to see what awaits us. By the way, Keira can be seen in the cinema from March 26 in the film “The Duchess.” And topless. I’m certainly not going to miss that.

.

I Am the Frame Story:

Last night I had a flash of inspiration and the explanation for why I don’t invest the energy in many life situations that they actually deserve, why I prefer to laugh instead of bursting out crying, and why I focus more on the events outside—the spider on the wall rather than the main character, the bonus levels rather than the main path, the small recurring melody instead of the text worshipped by everyone. Because games have certain rules by which they function, which is proof that life is just a game, and that in turn might mean that there are hidden gaps everywhere here waiting to be explored, paths that only make sense to me and to no one else, and that this big whole and the way it functions is far more exciting to me than actually playing the game itself. I am the frame story.

I don’t listen to songs as what they actually are, but with the thought in the back of my mind about in which extreme situation I could play them for others in order to convey a feeling of myself to them. I imagine intros and end credits, one more opulent and more final than the other, to take the audience’s breath away, to leave them behind with a pounding heart and stirred-up thoughts. In them, the actors love, hate, die. But I only pay superficial attention to the actual film content. It is secondary, meant to be produced by others. The story up to that point doesn’t matter to me. What counts is making that moment infinite.

Is that why I’m so superficial, is that the reason why I prefer to stand above everything? Always testing the boundaries, wanting to see how far I can go, because if I keep running further and further, at some point an explanation for all of this must appear, a warp zone, a message from the game master that clears the fog and finally lets me see clearly. Finally leaves me with an answer I can continue with. That leads me to that specific point after everything. There, where actually nothing should exist anymore, where no one else has access and where I have left everything behind, turn around, and can smile at this microcosm.

As I stroll down the street toward Mitte, small children run toward me, loudly laughing as they chase each other. Playing a game. One that moves within a frame. With time-outs and rules. And that they can end at any time. I watch them wistfully and then I can put it into words. I prefer creating games to playing them. I prefer creating lives to living them. I am the frame story. A redeeming realization.

[audio:tooyoung.mp3]

.

Bat For Lashes – Daniel:

-->

The British band Bat For Lashes with their enchanting frontwoman Natasha Khan strikes again and presents with the video for the song “Daniel” a little preview of the album “Two Suns,” which will be released next month. Awesome track with a haunting, surrendering melody and a voice that immediately carries you into the depths of being. Awesome, give it a listen!

.

Tim Burton’s “Alice In Wonderland”:

According to Hotzen, here, after the set photos that already surfaced last year, the first glossy photos from Tim Burton’s new film “Alice in Wonderland” have now appeared, in which he wants to bring the fairy tale back to life through a mix of live action and 3D animation. Of course Johnny Depp is on board again, this time as the Mad Hatter, and for Alice Tim has brought the sugar-sweet Australian actress Mia Wasikowska on board. I’m really looking forward to the film and just love the collaboration between Tim and Johnny. And not only since “Sweeney Todd.”

.

Lisa Wassmann:

Berlin photographers are simply the best, and the 28-year-old Lisa Wassmann fits perfectly into this somewhat stereotypical image. Sexy, edgy, and always real, she portrays messed-up to model-typical people and manages with every photograph to create her own world. It’s great. Here’s her portfolio, and if you want to see awesome party pictures by her, you’re in good hands at the Scala Blog.

.

The Ting Tings Make a Mess:

-->

I’m into the Ting Tings, I’m into Adidas Originals, and I’m into chaotic messes in the apartment. In a slick video, these three uniquely standing terms have now been brought together, and I think I now know what I’m going to do with my huge white wall in the living room. Although we’d probably have to have a few drinks first. But that’s standard anyway.

.

The Lion:

Guys armed with a cheap digital camera running through their hometown snapping shots of grandma’s birthday onto digital paper are a dime a dozen. Myself included. That there is also the complete opposite on the market is proven by Berlin photographer Murat Aslan, who has had Peter Fox, the guys from Südberlin Maskulin, Marius Müller Westernhagen, and also my favorites from MTV GameOne in front of his lens. He absolutely rocks amazing stuff in his private work too, and regular visits to his blog are mandatory. Check it out!

.

Time to Transform. Not.:

Oh, those were the days when we sat in front of RTL with endlessly overpriced merchandising, binge-watching one episode of “Power Rangers” after another, only to then, totally hyped up, want to protect the world from slimy monsters making weird noises. Okay, we didn’t really manage that, but instead we jumped around like idiots on sacks full of dirt, shouting “Time to transform!” and the names of dinosaurs through our small town. I think people thought we were totally nuts.

But after 17 years that’s finally over, because as the New York Post reports, after what feels like a thousand seasons and ruthlessly burned-through actors, it’s now transformed for the last time – “The Mighty Morphin Power Rangers,” which have been absolute cult since the ’90s, have now been officially canceled by Disney. Why will probably remain a mystery to us, because like no other series, the five color-coded profiles managed in every episode to tell a unique story, with such grand ideas and twists and profound supporting characters that couldn’t have been written better. Not.

Nevertheless, in my heart I will always be the Red Ranger and my very first make-out girlfriend will always be the Yellow one. And even though we no longer hop around with evil looks and plastic toys, one message from the series has deeply rooted itself within us and will bear fruit there until our death: We are chosen and must save the world. Against all those Lord Zedds and Rita Repulsas out there! Because if not us, then who? Go Go, Power Rangers!

.

Sexy Emma Watson:

Wow, I don’t even know my favorite wizarding apprentice this sexy when he carelessly steps out of a car wearing a see-through pair of briefs. From the Allgäu-born and internationally renowned photo icon Ellen von Unwerth, Emma Watson has now been photographed together with a dancer, a bird, and a mishmash of Charlie Chaplin and the sad clowns from Cirque Du Soleil in stunning vintage dresses, and these photos really show what an amazing direction our little know-it-all has developed into. Respect.

.

Vice Fashion – Stood Up:

The photographic genius of Vice Italy, Lele Saveri, stood up model Alice this month and photographed her waiting for Mr. Right in clothes by Agnes B, Vivienne Westwood, and Levi’s here. Armed with a lollipop, balloon, and cake, truly beautiful, calm images emerge, capturing an impatient situation that everyone has probably experienced at some point.

.

Call The Police:

Of course we are the real super-, pop-, and pop stars, otherwise we wouldn’t so often, under enormous beer influence, arm ourselves with microphones and butcher the hits of the ’80s, ’90s, and the best of today—and apparently so horribly, standard-style, that the neighbors even call our good friends from the police to turn off our tap. Which sooner or later was probably better for everyone involved anyway. Photos are available here, and I promise you, this time no audio or video recordings of the evening will surface a few days later. Really, I swear, dude.

.

Rogue Wanda – Cardoor:

-->

There are things that are like a traffic accident and no matter how hard you try – you just can’t look away. That’s exactly how I feel about this video by a guy named Rogue Wanda or Tim Cash, who keeps grinning “Cardoor” into the camera while pretending to drive a car. I should drink less Beck’s in the evenings. Seriously, people. Too many hallucinations aren’t good..

.

Overheard #3 Remix Special:

Ah, remixes are something wonderful. They let your favorite songs shine in a completely new light, turn even the sappiest original tracks into danceable tunes fit for crack parties, and are usually interpreted by well-known artists who simply slap on a few punchy beats and then sell the package hot and greasy for cash.

In the latest mixtape there’s a selection today of the hottest remixes on Mother Earth, including the usual suspects like The Ting Tings, Lykke Li, MGMT, Bloc Party and Amy Winehouse. It feels like I posted a similar list somewhere just recently and yes, it’s true, there’s even a remix by – all the cool kids look away now – Silbermond. Especially for Becca and because the new song really isn’t that bad after all. Enjoy!

.

Steve Aoki Is a Damn Hot Beast:

Steve Aoki is the only guy I even have a poster of hanging on my wall. And that basically says it all. The American club DJ, born in Miami and raised in California, not only has the most worship-worthy sister on this planet, but with his album “Pillowface and His Airplane Chronicles,” which came out last year and which I have FINALLY downloaded, he hit me right in my otherwise depression-ridden indie and wimpy pop-scarred heart. As if he had asked me beforehand: “Hey Marci, tell me your favorite songs and I’ll turn them into the most intense remixes ever, okay?” he refines insanely awesome tracks (including bits of Justice, Uffie, Peaches, Bloc Party and Franz Ferdinand) on this little masterpiece and spits them back out as top-tier party bombs. God, I’m already breaking out in club sweats, I need a cold shower fast.

[audio:helicopter.mp3]

.

Hand-Signed Polaroids by Mischa Barton to Win:

My forever favorite O.C. chick Mischa Barton is giving away two hand-signed, really sweet Polaroids of herself on her Celebuzz page. All you have to do is think about what you love most about spring and post it in her comments. Mischa, who by the way loves the blossoming flowers and the melting away of winter—which really drags down her mood—the most about the new season, will then pick two lucky winners. So what are you waiting for? Sit down, write her something nice, and then drop a copy of it into our comments. And even if you don’t snag anything, you can still follow Marissa Mischa on Twitter like I do, which enriches my life enormously.

.

Metronomy – A Thing For Me:

-->

I just got back from a buddy’s birthday party and as I throw myself half unconscious into my apartment and briefly switch on the TV, this music video flies at me on MTV. The band is called Metronomy, the video “A Thing For Me,” and I think both are so great that I’m going to publish it on AMY&PINK right this very moment and then collapse into bed dead but happy. Shit, it’s already Sunday.

.

Exclusive Interview with Filippa Smeds:

The little redhead Filippa Smeds is one of Sweden’s most well-known fashion bloggers and is gaining more and more fans worldwide. She is a Lookbook.nu kid, and on her blog Gillo Filippa she presents herself as young, open, and stylish to a steadily growing audience. AMY&PINK has now conducted an exclusive interview with her about the pitfalls of the fashion circus, her great love, and her parents’ divorce—and she reveals to us the surprising secret of how to turn your blog into a major success within a year.

Every day you become a little bit more famous. You were featured in Elle Girl and on Les Mads, and the daily newspaper Metro named you the “best-dressed girl in Stockholm.” How do you feel when you see things like that?

These things make me really happy for a brief moment, and it’s important for me to receive that kind of validation, but then I move on pretty quickly. I’m always searching for something bigger, and sometimes I wonder whether I will ever be satisfied.

Your personal blog is very well known, especially in Sweden, even though it’s only a year old. Your readers leave 50–70 comments per entry. Did you expect such a response when you started writing, and what do you think is the secret behind this success?

Yes, honestly, I did expect it. It sounds a bit conceited, but I have always believed in myself and that my blog would become very big someday. There simply was no other option for me. I don’t think there are any secrets—either you’ve got it or you don’t.

What inspires you? Where do you get your outfit ideas from, and do you have any role models?

I find inspiration everywhere, but at the moment I’m especially fascinated by rock legends, their girlfriends, and their groupies. My mom is probably my role model—she’s really the coolest. When she was younger, she hung out with many Swedish stars from the music industry because she worked at a record label. I would say she was a kind of muse, since Sweden’s most famous band at the time wrote a song about her and she appeared on the covers of several records and cassette tapes.

What kind of guy is your boyfriend Adam? How did you get together, and what does he think about your fashion ambitions and your blog?

Adam isn’t into fashion at all; he’s more into music. He’s just a really sweet and kind person. We went to the same school, and I thought his hair and his skinny jeans were super hot, so I walked up to him and grabbed him, haha. He’s proud of my fashion efforts, but honestly, I don’t think he likes the attention I get all that much. He wants me all to himself.

What feelings do you have for your home country Sweden? What kind of environment do you live in, and why do you think so much fashion power is currently coming out of Sweden?

I like Sweden a lot, especially my hometown Stockholm. At the moment I live with my family in a house outside the city, but my parents are getting divorced, so I don’t really know where I’ll be living now. My dad just bought an apartment in the city, but he’s living with his girlfriend, so I might move in there. It’s in the most beautiful part of the city (if you ask me), so that would be great!

Is it true that you lived in Germany for a while? Why was that, and what do you think about the country?

Yes, I lived with a German family in Düsseldorf for a month, and it was a great time. I’ve been to Berlin three times and also to Hamburg. I absolutely love Germany, and I think it’s a real shame that some people still have such a negative image of the country, but I believe that’s slowly changing. I definitely want to come back soon!

Your most striking feature is your red hair. Do you think your hair color brings you any advantages or disadvantages, and how do others react to it?

At the moment, I would say it gives me advantages because it makes me stand out. But when I was younger, I didn’t like it at all, and I hated the attention I received because of it. I just wanted to fit in. Today, however, I’m quite happy to be different in a world where everyone is craving attention. It’s nice to be something special without having to do anything for it, haha. I’ve always gotten reactions from people. I think that really made me shy, and the way I look has been very important to me ever since. I mean, my brother and my sister are both blonde—the typical Swedish look—and I don’t think they waste a single thought on the way they look. Just a thought.

You’re still very young. What do your parents and friends think about this whole fashion thing, and how do you react when people claim you’re too young to understand the true scope of fashion?

My parents are always very interested in it, but my “non-fashion friends” don’t seem to care much. I don’t think 19 is that young, but I get reactions from people who believe I’m much younger. No one has ever told me that I’m too young to understand true fashion.

What kinds of films and TV shows do you like to watch, and what kind of music do you like? Which magazines do you read?

Very mixed. I love films like “My Neighbor Totoro” and “Spirited Away,” but also adventure films like “The Da Vinci Code” and “National Treasure.” Well, I love all kinds of films! On TV, I like watching “Miami Ink,” “Sex and the City,” “Scandinavia’s Next Top Model,” and “Project Runway.” My current favorite band is Muse, but otherwise my taste is very mixed. I read Elle, Vogue, Dazed & Confused, Inked, Self Service, and so on. I loooove magazines.

What are the best websites for fashion and lifestyle in your opinion?

I like Lookbook.nu. I don’t think there is a single website that has everything, so I like reading blogs to get a good mix.

What are your goals for the future?

Well, I’d like to be a rock star or a treasure hunter (at the moment). I’m trying the rock star thing this year, but maybe it will end up being fashion in some form. I don’t know what the future holds for me, but I’m sure it will be something great, and I’m very excited about it!

Thank you very much for the great interview.

.

What Do You Need?:

Our favorite Big Brother Google is always good for a bit of fun. Found on BuzzFeed and translated into German – I call the game “What Do You Need?” It’s suuuuper simple: just type in your first name + the word “needs” and write the first result in the comments. Because Google is so almighty, they already know what you need. My answer was: “Marcel needs our help!” Nice to know and yet so true. And what do you need?

.

Are You Still Thinking or Are You Already Coming?:

So, didn’t manage to pick up a girl at the club even at five in the morning? The guy on the bus once again wasn’t up for a midnight coffee at your place? Or just before you reached your happy ending your parents stormed into your room with a cake and chased away your naked girlfriend? Well then, I guess there’s nothing left for you to do but draw the curtains, turn off the lights, and have some real fun with your better right half or Uncle Finger to relieve that unbearable pressure.

Even if it probably goes completely against the Pope’s grain: nothing on this earth is a bigger industry and generates more revenue worldwide than masturbation. The internet is a massive collection of both legal and illegal pornography. Everything else (including Wikipedia) is just alibi educational material anyway. You can even order dildos from the OTTO catalog. And we only bought Bravo magazine every week back then because some drugged-up teenagers got naked in it and talked about how their first time went.

But what do we actually think about when we lock ourselves in the bathroom or our room alone? Is the rumor that sitcoms and gossip blogs have pressed into our brains true—do we really imagine having sex with Brangelina in our most intimate moments? Or are there far more past moments swirling around in our heads—do we even think of our ex-partners? Fantasies about the teacher, the guy from the café, the neighbor’s limping dog? White sheets or backyard? Truth or fantasy?

The number and variations of thoughts racing through our minds while we screw ourselves, and the way in which we do it, are probably as diverse as there are people on this planet. And since nowadays we know that we neither grow hair on our hands nor unintentionally reduce our spinal cord from it, we shake, push, and penetrate orgasms out of our bodies in every possible way until the neighbors start yelling.

But so that Germany doesn’t die out completely, it’s probably time for us little wankers to close TinyEve and Boob Feed, shut down the laptop, and drag ourselves to the next club—even if our eyes first have to get used to the bright light—to maybe not just pick up the next one-night stand there, but perhaps even meet the great love of our life. And even if that doesn’t work out, at least you’ve gathered new mental material for the next ego trip. Lights off, blanket over your head, and off you go.

.

Fashion: People on Laughing Gas:

Of course, these days it takes a lot more than just sending a few stick-thin models back and forth along a long runway to present awesome new fashion. Magazines throw them into swimming pools fully clothed, labels let them attack each other with ketchup and mustard, and Vice has now had theirs inhale a few balloons filled with N2O and photograph them high as kites by photographer Maciek Pozoga. And looking at these photos, I can’t help but think wistfully of the old days when we used to get blissfully wasted on laughing gas at the fairground—before we had even the faintest clue about the harder stuff.

.

Tamar – Purified:

-->

Even if the weather doesn’t look like it right now, spring is just around the corner. And that also means that all across Germany it’s time again for butterflies in your stomach, half-naked couples making out in the park, and borderline encounters in clubs. So this time, our little music box delivers something from the romantic kissy-kissy boom-boom corner. Tamar is the name of the 21-year-old Californian who belts out her ballad “Purified” at us here with powerful black-and-white imagery, trying with all her might to convince us of the purest force of all: love. And for those emotionally stunted basement dwellers among us wondering what that might be—no, you can’t eat it. At least I don’t think so.

.

SuicideGirl of the Week: Evan:

Our SuicideGirl of the week is unfortunately no longer active with the rebellious girls, but since I really thought she was incredibly sweet, she gets an honorary spot from me. Despite—or maybe because of—her enchanting potential, she only ever released a single set, but it hit the community like a red fireball, matching her hair color, and was still a topic of conversation months later. Evan was part of the Captivity premiere party and is now modeling for various photographers. Best of luck to her—and you can still find her photos and all the other sexy girls at the SuicideGirls.

.

The Most Awesome Game in the Entire Wide World:

Ladies and gentlemen, it is my great honor to present to you the greatest, biggest, most enchanting, most beautiful, most breathtaking game of all time—one whose intensity cannot be surpassed: "Chrono Trigger"! It’s been over ten years now since I, as a little rascal, went on the most awesome time-travel adventure ever with Crono and his friends on the Super Nintendo. Because I couldn’t save back then and had to play it through for three days and nights straight, the characters, the music, and even the tiniest details burned themselves into my brain like a brand.

Today I wandered all over Berlin for hours to finally get my well-deserved copy of the remake for the Nintendo DS. I got home completely drenched, turned it on, and bam—I was instantly back in it. As if I had only briefly put the controller down to go take a leak. Man, I just love this game, and I even gave the characters really great names. I’m Marcel, Becca is my arts-and-crafts friend, and Hannah is the spoiled princess. I just don’t know what to call the frog yet. Frog, maybe. That would make sense.

.

Mag Watch #2 and the Return of Blond:

My dear victims of fashion, emotions, and naked girls, it’s time once again for our monthly glance at the trusted newsstand to lend a helping hand to the endangered species known as print media. And since I’m feeling particularly emancipated today, let’s begin with the women’s faction. For example, in the current Cooler Mag, alongside a feature on the hottest Australian surf beaches and a lively interview with snowboard legend Kjersti Buaas, we also find a super sweet photo spread with rider Juliet Elliott, who still looks great even with her arm in a sling. Things are, as usual, less sporty in Nylon, whose cover this time features the adorable Kristen Stewart, who plays Bella in “Twilight,” among other roles, and who warns us about her fashion sense right from the start: “No one should ever wear what I say in a magazine.” Likeable.

NEON, as always, tackles the big questions of the emotional world (something Galileo Emo-Science on ProSieben will soon attempt as well—the title alone says it all) and wants to know how ambitious you really are. And if you honestly couldn’t care less about answering that, you can still read up on why so many people settle for bad sex and how students are legally occupying vacant villas in London.

Things remain less squeamish in my favorite magazine VICE, which once again has such awesome topics that only a simple list will do them justice: it’s about penis-shaped mushrooms, about the Vancouver punks White Lung, about a guy who has been taking a Polaroid every day for 18 years, about the breast milk cookies already mentioned on AMY&PINK, and about Laura, who lets Richard Kern photograph her naked while brushing her teeth and sitting on the toilet. Plenty of fun for all of us.

And indeed, this month something has happened that we long feared and whose dreadful premonition has already caused us sleepless nights: Blond is back. Mutated, castrated, and run through a glossy copier. Blonde with an E is what the creature now calls itself; its editorial team has recognized the signs of the times and now wants to follow in the footsteps of millions of girls’ and fashion magazines. There wasn’t enough for a new homepage yet, but the first fan, Marilena, is already enthusiastic: “Oh. My. God. I can’t believe what was in my mailbox. A high-gloss polished fashion-magazine BlondE is a fashion girl, yeah-yeah—with incredibly uninteresting articles like ‘Copenhagen is the new Stockholm.’ If I want to dress against the ‘evil uncool’ mainstream, I don’t need a magazine that compresses and generalizes the counter-movement into a tabloid-style publication. BlondE is the Bild newspaper of fashion magazines.” What has crawled up out of its well-deserved resting place can safely be described as a fashion-conscious magazine zombie. What’s next?

.

Hannah Montana Greets Marzel:

-->

My favorite girl from Munich sent me an adorably sweet video in which she gives a proper shout-out to me and the hometown of Peter Fox and gives us a tour through her cute little apartment. And even though it might seem as if she downed Red Bull (sugar-free, of course) and caffeine pills just before the shoot that had been planned for weeks, I can reassure you—unfortunately—by saying that our Hannah is actually always like this. Have fun watching, and we’ve hidden 64 Ford Kas in this video. Catch them all!

.

We Followed the G:

I have to admit that at first I really couldn’t have cared less when I heard that GIGA was finally having the plug pulled. My God, one bad TV channel less in this world—come on, who really cares? And I didn’t even want to say a word about it here, because I had already come to terms with the whole thing in 2006 when Green and Real came to an end. But after my little nerd heart forced me today to watch a few old clips from the good old days, my heart really opened up and tears in my eyes were guaranteed.

Of course, GIGA was much more than just a channel about computers and video games. It was a kind of family you could laugh, cry, and chat with. Never had we been so close to any hosts, and never did we feel as at home with them as in the improvised TV of the green channel. Man, I used to come home after school, leave the TV running in the background, and just laugh myself to death for one hour after another. When Etienne fell off his chair. When everyone suddenly had to leave the studio because of a fire alarm. When Daniel almost had a heart attack. When Budi ran in dressed as a cheerleader. Or when your brain started rattling because you were trying to understand which program tips Jana Ina was reading to us.

We were nerds, the Netzis were nerds, GIGA was nerd. But it was fun, it was real, and it was something very special—far removed from ratings, profit neurosis, and corruption. At least until now. They were great years with the big green G, and let’s remember it for what it originally was: chaotic, awesome, and full of surprises. Goodbye.

.

The Official AMY&PINK WordPress Theme Collection:

Bow down, you nerds, designers, and future rock stars, because your boldest dreams have just come true. AMY&PINK is opening its ultra-secret elf workshop and, starting today, is offering you a total of eleven absolutely fantastic WordPress themes, including five brand-new releases, so you can finally give your blogs the look they deserve—available for free download.

Show us that you’ve got what it takes to handle these little masterpieces. In plain terms: I’ve only gone over them briefly once more, there are surely bugs and adjustment issues, but that’s part of the charm. That way everyone can hammer out their own individual and personal design from these unpolished diamonds. Have fun tinkering. Post showcase material, questions, or Nora Tschirner’s cell phone number in the comments. Hey, you can at least try.

.

Lovers Electric – Could This Be:

-->

Oh God, people, this is about to get insanely poppy—you won’t believe it. Pop The Glock. Not. And at this very moment I’d like to apologize for subjecting you to this sugary-sweet song by the Australian Lovers Electric, who look like a mix between The Ting Tings and cotton candy dipped in ketchup. But I made the mistake of letting it play in the background once, and now this damn “Bababababa” won’t get out of my cerebral cortex. And now you get to suffer for it. Oh yes, suffer sooooo much! Mwahaha, world domination here I come—and now I’m craving ketchup too. Have fun.

.

On Safari at Four:

For a few Earth hours now, the new beta version of my favorite browser Safari has been out, and it can do sooooo many awesome things. Sure, they’re all shamelessly stolen from Chrome, but I couldn’t care less. Because now this thing can do so many great things. For example, the start screen shows my most frequently visited websites, it has CoverFlow on board, always displays search suggestions, and is generally much faster, better, and more stable than anything that has ever seen the light of day. And it’s from Apple. What more is there to say. You can download this free masterpiece here, and maybe I really should look for a support group if Safari already shows me so many porn sites as favorites the first time I open it. Oh, that reminds me—I need new tissues.

.

Kings Of Leon – Use Somebody:

-->

Man, there’s just nothing better to listen to right now than the voice of Caleb Followill, the singer of Kings of Leon. They’re actually playing in Berlin at this very moment, and for everyone who can’t be there, Hannah and I are serving up “Use Somebody” as a bedtime treat, because the song is just fucking awesome and we love it. Seriously, we love it. Wow, that voice! And Hannah would also like me to pass on the following: 1. “Hannah said I’m an idiot because I used the left blinker thingy on the left, I’m stupid.” and 2. “fiiiiiiiiiiiiiiick.” With that, I’d say the highbrow lyricism here has officially broken the sound barrier.

.

Cute Little Pussies:

-->

Yeah yeah, by now we all know that whenever I use the word “pussy,” I’m really just talking about little, sweet, maybe sometimes slightly wet kittens. The joke is getting old. But cats are awesome, especially if they would stay forever as small, sweet, and damp as they are in the beginning. They don’t, but at the moment we don’t have anything better. Because Hannah is currently getting smashed at the very last climax of Carnival, and I’m in the middle of putting something together that really should have been published a year ago. But back then the stupid muse just hadn’t kissed me yet. The cow.

Nevertheless, let’s snuggle up together on this disgustingly cold Sunday afternoon, sip some hot chocolate with marshmallows, and listen to this cute little girl reading to us from her cat book. And it’s really funny. Because when a tiny little girl says “BOM CHICKA WOW WOW!!” that’s funny. Got it? Now sit down and listen!

.

To A Young Artist:

You could be 18, 30 or 50, you are young to have decided to be an artist at this time in your life. First let me congratulate you on your choice. From here on, you enter the endless magic life of being an artist. The world is your oyster: It will provide you with unlimited material for your art. Look at it again from that point of view. Suddenly the world is a different place, so interesting, so beautiful, and so mysterious. Have fun with it. And share your fun with us.

You, as an artist, will unfold the infinite mystery of life and share it with the world. It may be just two people your work will communicate to. Don't be upset. Be upset if you are not happy with your work. Never be upset about how many people have seen it, or how many reviews it has received. Your work will exist and keep influencing the world. Moreover, your work will keep changing the very configuration of our world no matter what kind of attention it gets or doesn't get. So even when you are an unknown artist, be caring of what you make and what you give out. Your work, no matter what, affects the world, and in return, it brings back 10 times what you've given out. If you give out junk, you get back junk. If you give out confusion, you will give yourself confusion. If you give out something beautiful, you will get back 10 times more beauty in your life. That's how it works.

You are now like a tree in the park. Your existence is making the city breathe well. So relax and be yourself. Rely on your instinct and your inspiration. Go with it! By the way, my thanks to you for being an artist. I am aware that I will be one of the many, many people who gets the benefit of your decision. I wish you great success. I love you! Yoko Ono, New York.

.

Shiny Toy Guns – You Are The One:

-->

Another song from the popular category “Marci’s little favorite songs that sweeten his day when it’s storming and snowing outside and everything is screwed anyway.” The Shiny Toy Guns (you have to love them for the name alone) chirp their song “You Are The One” in a winter-appropriate setting with storm and snow and all that. That makes me even colder. We can only hope and pray that spring will come soon and tear the clothes from our bodies.

.

Lucas In Love:

Ah, isn’t that sweet. Lucas from Design Has No Name in Buenos Aires has fallen hopelessly in love with the red-haired beauty that Drake already posted here, and asked us to publish this heart-wrenching cry for help because the photographer Oceanwave, who published this photo on Flickr, won’t give out any information about her. Understandable, because who knows what kind of perverted mass murderer Lucas is. But this request reminds me so much of my infatuated appeal to find Aydee that I just couldn’t say no. Unfortunately she never contacted me, just as a status update two years later. So if anyone knows this freckled face, please write to Lucas from DHNN—oh come on, of course write to ME instead. Who the fuck is Lucas anyway…

.

Get in Touch with Me, Will You!:

I’m currently flipping through the March issue of Computer Arts, which in the first part of a large series explains how on earth to best open your own studio. Whether web, design, illustration or whatever. Which is super important for me, of course, because as we all know I’m going to start my own business in London or Tokyo at some point. Obviously, right?

And in summary, you can compress the seven pages into one single keyword: contacts. You simply need contacts in this world, connections, nepotism. That’s the only reason why we bother with our own website, why we post even the last fart on Twitter day and night, and why we network with every nerdy-looking fool in StudiVZ. Because we want contacts, need them—yes, without them we couldn’t set foot in this shark tank of the upper ten thousand.

So make yourselves aware of it once again. Take a deep breath. Exhale. Repeat. Use every opportunity that presents itself to make contacts. Go even to the party that sounds completely idiotic, talk to people, get their number, address or bra size and see life as a huge chess game in which every tactically clever move can pay off, and also remember the old saying: “You reap what you sow.”

I hope you’ve all gotten that into your tiny, sweet brains. Yes? Good. That’s it for the word on Friday. I’m going to memorize the article now, draw up a 20-year plan and think about where I’ll be in five years. Probably drunk on some couch, but that’s beside the point here. After all, that’s part of networking too. By the way, it doesn’t say anywhere here that I also have to master the language of a country if I want to build a business there. Japan will be easier to conquer than I thought. Banzai!

.

God, Are You Ugly!:

DE:BUG writes about the online dating site Darwin Dating, where only the most beautiful of the beautiful master race are allowed in. Anyone who wants to belong has to tick off an endless list of physically non-existent flaws. Literally, among other things, you must not have acne, love handles, sagging breasts, a lot of hair, monobrows, blue eyeshadow, freckles or red hair in order to belong to the estimated ten people who have been squeezed through an offline Photoshop. And now we’re totally sad because we’re not allowed into this exclusive club and have to keep dealing with second-rate StudiFotze flirts. By the way, it’s funny that these amazing people have only managed to create such an ugly website. Go sign up there; I want to know which of us super nerds actually makes it in.

.

Boombox:

-->

The guys at Spreeblick posted an insanely awesome video by Ely Kim, who performs 100 dances to 100 songs at 100 locations over 100 days. And because it’s so funny, the chubby American with a preference for hairy pussies also has an extremely strange website. Watch it and like it.

.

Peter Bjorn And John – Nothing to Worry About:

-->

Ha, the new song by Peter Bjorn And John and at the same time the new video “Nothing to Worry About” are so freaked-out that, for me as a secretly anti-Japan fan, it’s quite a tasty little treat. Greasy pseudo-yakuzas slick back their hair, cruise around the city on their hot bikes and spend the afternoon playing leapfrog—only to hurry back home before the Sandman arrives. Too good.

.

1999:

-->

I had scraped my knee while fleeing from the police. The concrete that rushed beneath my legs at breakneck speed was transformed by me into a red-dotted work of art. “Man Marcel, run faster, dude, before those idiots catch up with us!” I could see Eniz’s and Ali’s faces in the darkness of the night ahead of me. We jumped over fences, climbed over hedges and ran along Zugspitzstraße. No idea whether the greens were still chasing us after we had sprinted crisscross through the entire city for fifteen minutes, but I was completely out of breath and limped the last few meters to our refuge. We flung open the wooden gate to the playground, climbed into the little house on the slide and collapsed on top of each other. I could hear the others’ hearts pounding just as loudly as mine. A few fireflies buzzed around us and the trees, and the bright moon bathed the green paradise in a pale, eerie glow. We crouched there quiet as mice, stared at each other for minutes without making the slightest move, until a few dark figures stormed loudly through the gate straight toward us, shouting our names and falling around our necks laughing. That was them. The ZSC. My best friends.

It had been the hottest summer night of the year, and the millennium was about to change all our lives. That was almost ten years ago now. I’m lying in bed and just before dreams drag me into a confused parallel world full of violence, sex and ponies, I wistfully think back to the time of all times that shaped me like nothing else into who I am today. I dive in and in an instant I’m sitting on the couch with my buddies in the afternoon playing “Super Smash Bros.”; right away we’re lying in the tent by the campfire again and Eniz and I are making out with Anja, and as if the time in between had never existed, we’re jumping off the cliff into the gravel pit lake, breaking into the trailer, curing Chrissy syndrome, crying at Fritz, fooling around behind the stand with Kerstin and Mela and getting properly smashed for the first time at the Mücke.

I miss those summers because they were the most intense experience of life I’ve ever felt. Years in which we were invincible, in which we swore that it would always stay that way. That we would never bow to society. That everything we did was something special, something that would promise us eternal life. And we definitely had the very best Pokémon team, too.

When I’m deeply lost in my thoughts and the old songs are rushing out of my iPod, I imagine suddenly waking up in the middle of our meadow. All my old friends are standing around me. They ask, “Marci, are you okay? You just got hit in the head with a soccer ball.” I look around in confusion until I realize that the entire ten years that have passed since that moment never happened and only played out inside my head. But I don’t have time to think about it for long because I’m already busy chasing after Sabse and Onur; everyone’s laughing. I’m drinking a Freeway soda from Lidl and later we’ll drive to the lake. And while I jump into the cold water at the same time as the others, I think about Becca. About the FOS. About Berlin. And I’m happy that this here was only a dream after all.

[audio:age.mp3,miles.mp3]

.

Pirates Ahoy!:

The new season of your favorite US series has been flickering across American screens since last year and ProSieben refuses to broadcast it in Germany before World War III breaks out? The album of the moment is already blasting from all the iPods in town, but iTunes search still comes up empty? Or you simply want a perfectly normal backup copy of your Windows Vista dealer DVD for emergencies? Then the word “torrent” is one of your favorite words forever.

But your dream of happiness could soon be over, because the most famous and headline-grabbing torrent site in the world, The Pirate Bay, has been on trial in Sweden since today. The Scandinavians themselves don’t really have much against the pirates, but the evil, evil music and film lobby is breathing down the blond people’s necks. They want to board the pirates, and a conviction would set a precedent for the future freedom of people to share their possessions with others and would fundamentally change the term “copyright.”

The buccaneers themselves, typically, don’t see it that grimly. Naturally, they’ve already announced in advance that their site will never ever go offline, even in the event of an unfavorable verdict. Anyone who sides with the pirates can buy a T-shirt to show their support here and then watch the (alleged) live stream from inside the courthouse over at Nerdcore. So dear music and film bigwigs: after YouTube and The Pirate Bay, when are you finally going to take care of this hell-spawned RapidShare? It’s really about time the internet became clean again.

.

SuicideGirl of the Week: Scoli:

Our SuicideGirl of the week goes by the name Scoli, is into tattoos, dirty hair and fake boobs, and prefers listening to Against Me!, Queen and Foreigner. A real rocker chick, then, whose immortal heroes also include our fuzzy-haired Bob Ross (Rest In Peace). I used to be able to watch him for nights on end, too. Scoli – can be found at the SuicideGirls.

.

Your New Life XXL:

We all know from our own experience that it only takes a single second, that one unpredictable moment, for our lives to suddenly change drastically. And I’m talking about far more than your underage girlfriend breaking up with you or Oliver Geissen reuniting you with your father who’s been missing for 30 years in a media spectacle. Human existence contains certain scenarios that can instantly and without ceremony catapult you out of society and force you to go underground. If you accidentally (or not, who knows?) kill the president with a stone. If you realize that Luigi and Gino are heating up the acid barrel for you because you’re sleeping with the Don’s daughter. Or because, without meaning to, you’ve mixed together the cure for the HI virus from your medicine cabinet and now the pharmaceutical industry is no longer particularly interested in your health. If you find yourself in one or more of these examples, then it’s time for you as well: pack your things and get the hell out of here!

Your first move will be to empty your bank account, throw away your mobile phone, and race to the airport with only the bare essentials in your backpack. You won’t need clothes, keepsakes, or your CD collection anymore, because everything you ever liked or that connects you in any way to your former life is now taboo. There you’ll have yourself transported to a country where there is no compulsory identification and that you have never claimed to like or whose language you speak.

Once you arrive, you will first have your appearance changed to the core. This includes, among other things, a radical change of hair color, length, eye color, facial and pubic hair, fingernails, and even your gait. And if you have the necessary cash, you can drop by a surgeon and have your face reshaped. You immediately buy new clothes that are not too conspicuous and that you would never have thought you’d ever wear. Your fashion style, shaped by years of experience, died forever the moment you took off.

From now on you’ll keep your hands off the internet, which will be hardest for you, little nerd. Your old digital life—your registration on StudiVZ, blogs and Flickr albums, or the self-shot photos with your girlfriend and Rex in the zoophilia forum—you leave untouched; you don’t delete them either. Someone might be able to trace back your IP address. Contact with friends and family is also dead forever, because these people no longer exist for you. Mom will know that you love her. And your girlfriend will surely find comfort with your best buddy—don’t worry.

Now there’s not much left for you to do except fully integrate yourself into your new social environment. Think of a new, inconspicuous name, write a résumé that has absolutely nothing to do with your former existence, and memorize it. Get yourself a small job and slowly work your way up from the bottom.

If you’ve tattooed all of this advice onto your brain, then nothing stands in the way of your new life in Ireland or some other third-world country. And the better you pull it off, the smaller the chance that your weaselly little neighbor—who just happens to be Don Vito Corleone’s cousin—will get suspicious and rat you out to his familia. We wish you the best of luck, Mr. Smith.

.

Chilly Willy:

Guys, I’m completely wrecked, seriously. My best friend Becca was in the City over the weekend and she really kept me busy. We gradually fought our way through Tim Burton’s breathtakingly beautiful "Corpse Bride", cooked a rustic mush of cheese-baked seafood with chunks of potatoes, and with the awesome B-boys (and girls) we had a really chilled shisha night with tasty drinks, broken thumbs, and fantastic musical accompaniment personally selected by me—music that would make any indie-rock-nerd DJ in the world totally proud of me. Photos are available here. Now I’m brain-dead and I’m going to spend the time until The Simpsons come on lying on the floor staring at the ceiling. Come on, join in. Stare-At-The-Ceiling Day or whatever.

[audio:rehab.mp3]

.

They’re Walking Again:

Yes, it’s that time again. Lots of tall, anorexic well-toned girls who all want to be lifted into Topmodel heaven by the Cheshire Cat are invading the fashion capitals and television sets of the nation, and not only the entire Twitter nation is sitting there chatting along when it comes to pimped-up boobs, deluxe catfights, and stolen hairstyles. I’ve of course already picked out my favorites and I hope that this time someone a bit more distinctive and prettier wins than last year. We’re curious to see what strange antics our already-beloved Tessa will pull off, whether someone will finally puke during bungee jumping, and whether that one blonde I wanted made it to the next round. At this very moment, I happened to look out the window. Idiot that I am.

.

Overheard #2:

As requested here by Maria, there is once again a mega-enormous mixtape right here, which this time includes, among other things, magnificent heavy hitters by Pete Doherty, Lily Allen, Ladyhawke, and Sigur Rós, whose track "Saeglopur" may not start out very promisingly but ends in a firework of gentle emotions. Listen to it, buy the songs you like on iTunes, and already look forward to the next time. Then, among others, featuring the Bee Gees and Abba. Just kidding.

.

MGMT – Time To Pretend:

-->

Ah, I’m just going to throw out all the awesome songs that are currently making my iPod glow. Of course everyone already knows this one, but alongside "Be The One" by The Ting Tings, "Time To Pretend" by the way-overhyped New York band MGMT is one of those songs that instantly puts me in a good mood, no matter how damn snowy and crappy the day is like today. I should post a good-mood playlist sometime to save some of you from impending suicide. I’m such a good person. Okay that’s enough now, listen to the song and feel good, chop chop.

.

Come on, Let’s Play Work:

It’s well known that the crazy Japanese have always spent a bit too much time with Super Mario, Zelda, and Pokémon — and you can kind of tell just by looking at them. I’m no different, after all. But now a Japanese company has really taken it to the next level. Inside their sacred halls, everything runs like a giant role-playing game. Not that they’ve released slimy monsters into the building and handed employees swords and magic hats — no, but almost.

Every employee starts at Level 1 and can collect experience points through fast and precise work, overtime, and bonus programs, which can later be converted into promotions, Amazon vouchers, or higher pay. Each employee’s score is displayed in large numbers on their desk; when they level up, a congratulatory fanfare sounds. How awesome is that? So dig out your carnival costumes and head off to the cursed castle work to rescue the fair princess project manager! And make sure you bring Epona.

.

The Mother of All Mixtapes:

Even if you combined all of your mix- and muxtapes, they’d still be a joke compared to the one from Favtape. On this brilliant site, you’ll find — categorized by year of release since 1901 (!) — all the hits from selected 365 days. From Lady Sovereign to Elvis Presley to Van Halen, it really has everything a music lover’s heart could desire. And of course, it just haaappens to look exactly like the old Muxtape. Have fun browsing.

.

30 Days Without News:

Every single day we are harassed and tortured by thousands of news items. British teenagers spend 87 hours a year on porn websites, some American chick has the biggest boobs in the world, and a twelve-year-old boy gets a Lego set for his birthday and dies of excitement. Spiegel Online, Yigg, and ShortNews bombard us nonstop with the latest from politics, business, culture, and more. But does any of this really provide tangible added value?

According to the current issue of VICE (and as we all know, they only ever write the absolute truth), the former singer of the Crucifucks, Doc Dart (who now calls himself 26), doesn’t want to be informed about absolutely anything happening out there in the world. He doesn’t give a shit who the current president is, whether there’s war in the Gaza Strip, or whether China consists of little censorship monkeys. If someone tries to tell him, he covers his ears.

Now for the question that really interests me: What are the personal and social consequences of no longer knowing what the world currently has to announce? Do you simply miss out on laughing along at certain stories, does your IQ drop, do you turn into a total outsider — a hermit who gradually starts inventing their own news inside their head? Do you end up in a mental institution because you go crazy without the constant flow of news?

This practically screams for a self-experiment: 30 days without news. Although even here countless questions arise: How broadly is the term “news” defined? How large does a unit of communication have to be to qualify as current world events? Would AMY&PINK suffer greatly from this temporary incompetence? And who the hell would even take part in such a stupid experiment? Questions upon questions...

.

We Are Wolves – Coconut Night:

-->

I’ve now spent far too much time dealing with this video not to publish it. Because the Canadian indie rock band We Are Wolves delivers such a disturbing story with absolutely delightful costumes in the clip for their song “Coconut Night” that you simply HAVE to see it. Three naked people wake up in the middle of a deep forest surrounded by very strange folks, and it all leads to them suddenly having triangular holes in their chests and being sacrificed in a Lufia-like scene. And then it all starts over again. Or did I just completely misunderstand the whole thing?

.

We Are Shit:

For almost a month now, we’ve been delighting our beloved readership with the new, completely revamped concept of AMY&PINK. Bigger, hotter, and more vibrant — that’s what it was supposed to be. And so far, that seems to be going over very well. We have more eager voyeurs than ever, experience even more hilarious discussions with you, and alongside personal thoughts and dramas we deliver great music, sexy girls, and links to the must-see sites on the web faster and more elegantly. Nothing better could have happened to you.

Unfortunately, this temporarily limited pseudo-fame also has its downsides, because something has happened that Hannah and I wouldn’t even have dreamed of at our eternal party in the Hundred Acre Wood: our favorite cook Chrissy hates us. Well, almost anyway. She writes that since our relaunch we’ve focused only on tits, dicks, and superficial half-stories instead of giving insight into the deepest, darkest abysses of our two souls. And she thinks that’s shit that’s her criticism that’s her opinion.

Even though something like that would normally totally pass us by, unfortunately at that exact moment the drugs stopped working and so we had to think about it a little. Is she right? Have we possibly lost our depth along the way? Even though we thought we proved the opposite here, here, or here? Does she perhaps miss the melancholic texts full of sorrow, heartbreak, and alienation? And is anyone even paying attention to that totally awesome light-green column with the most absurd links in the world? People, talk to us! Let’s draw up a short summary together of what you want, what you miss, what you like and what you don’t. We are so totally not open to criticism.

.

The Ting Tings – Be The One:

-->

Guys, no joke now, I just can’t get away from this song. I sent it to Hannah months ago, she thought it was so-so, but I HAVE to listen to it at least five times a day. It just triggers enormous happiness in me, and when I think back to the bad record review that NEON posted back then, I could seriously puke, because they’re just soooo great and anyone who thinks otherwise belongs straight in their editorial office. Makes sense, right? So let the video run five times in a row now, then you’ll feel like I do. But who would even want that.. Yay.

.

And The Winner Is…:

I hope you had a weekend that was just as chilled, stressful, annoying, overthought and hungover as ours, and now we can hardly wait to announce the winner of the crazy Show-Your-Fuckin'-Awesome-Desktop-Weekend.

Guys, you were really awesome: We never ever expected such a heap of submissions and it was seriously hard for Hannah and me to pick a digital desk that outshines the others by miles in the categories charm, grace and sex appeal.

But in the end we did find that one that shall rule over the other desktops. And indeed, macScrubs’ shameless flattery actually led to victory. His monstrous design with awesome wallpaper and super sweet icons by David Lanham simply convinced us. May he rejoice like crazy that he prevailed over 45 opponents and expect a perverse photo of the highest class, personally defaced with our signatures by Hannah and me. One tip: Better pull your pants down while you can still think clearly. Congratulations!

.

SuicideGirl of the Week: Majiya:

Before we dig through the surprisingly large number of submissions for the Show-Your-Fuckin'-Awesome-Desktop-Weekend, we of course don’t want to neglect the favorite category of all drooling, horny bastards (myself included) and today, with the SuicideGirl of the week, we’re delivering a really sweet cutie: Majiya. 24 years old, has a total of eight earrings and totally loves The Simpsons, ice cream and chocolate. She hates rotten oranges (we all probably feel the same way) and had her first sex with herself (which many of us still haven’t done differently to this day). So just show the little one some love and visit her at the Suicidegirls. And now off to the desk battle.

.

Show-Your-Fuckin’-Awesome-Desktop-Weekend:

Before I explain what this is about, I’d like to point out that this charming and easily implementable action is stolen down to the smallest detail from our beloved Jeriko. Well, almost anyway. For the next almost 48 hours it’s all about the thing you probably spend a good 16 hours a day in front of: your desktop. We want to know how you’ve set up the holiest of holy rectangles, where you got the wallpaper from, the skins, what your favorite programs are. Hannah and I will pick one on Sunday evening that we particularly like, and the winner will receive a totally perverted photo signed by both of us.

So upload your nicely pimped desktop as a screenshot to your own blog, ImageBam, Flickr or wherever, drop the link in the comments and chat a little about what you like so much about it. In realtime we’ll try to turn the link into a clickable graphic in the comments. And just as info for the total nerds: Pingbacks are a bit problematic at the moment. And now enough said: Let the big Show-Your-Fuckin'-Awesome-Desktop-Weekend begin! (By the way, my wallpaper is from the lovely Hillary the mammal.)

.

Nick and Norah:

To get a girl, apart from alcohol and illegal liquid drugs, there’s nothing better than romantic comedies. With beautiful music, lots of heartbreak and every now and then a sympathetic laugh because you can identify so nicely with the main characters. This genre includes, among others, “Cruel Intentions,” “Romeo & Juliet,” and “Amélie,” all three of which count as my personal and Marci-guaranteed means to an end. And anyone who makes it to the third scene without any groping is an absolute loser. Although sometimes the last of the three mentioned is almost too good for me to miss anything.

On February 19, a potential successor to the dusty make-out movies from the shelf starts in Germany, which I was able to see in a preview today: “Nick and Norah's Infinite Playlist” (sorry, I just like the English title much better) tells the story of the poor loser Nick, who plays in a band and repeatedly sends awesome mixtapes to his ex. She doesn’t give a shit, of course, and is already making out with others, but her friend Norah is all the more into the songs and quickly falls for the guy. Or rather for his songs. They meet unknowingly at a gig and experience an exciting night together in New York. Wow, how beautiful, and surprisingly accompanied by brilliant indie tunes. So drag your beloved to the cinema as soon as possible and even if she doesn’t let you under her top in the dark, you can still enjoy the songs and the sweet story. You really can’t lose.

.

Manicure – Another Girl:

-->

I don’t know the band, I have no idea what the singer’s name is and I don’t even know where they’re from. I’m just going to guess Moscow and the surrounding area, because the entire crew that worked on the awesome video has Russian-sounding names. The song “Another Girl” is good, it’s typical post-punk in Brit style. And even though Manicure only know one line of English, I’ve already played it three times in a row and that can only mean something good.

.

Are You the Hottest One in Berlin?:

Man, admit it. You’re the absolute top dog when it comes to the German capital. You know the hippest spots, go to the most run-down clubs, and with your uniquely artsy vibe you pick up the girls one after another. That’s you! And someone exactly like you is now being sought by the most sophisticated magazine in the world in cooperation with sneaker manufacturer Adidas (yes, the one with that absolutely awesome commercial that’s currently running everywhere). The two of them are looking for Berlin’s Most Original. So just take part and win great prizes from the company with the three stripes. Girls can of course participate as well—just read the entire text again and replace “he” with “she.” Sometimes it really is that simple.

.

We Love Lily Cole:

The majority of international supermodels seem to consist only of expressionless, anorexic broomsticks without any kind of charisma. That makes it all the more refreshing that this wonderful woman has entered all of our lives. Lily Cole. What a name, what an absolutely fairy-tale-like appearance. The 20-year-old Englishwoman models, acts, and is even an ambassador for Global Angels. Hello, that is absolutely incredible. She can currently be seen in Sally Potter’s film “Rage,” which is also being shown at the Berlinale 2009. I have absolutely no idea what the film is about, but… who cares: Lily Cole is in it!

.

Which Bitch?:

Ever since one of those booze-soaked nights with weird people when we listened to "Same Jeans" and "Wasted Little DJ's" over and over again, I’ve been a big fan of The View, and I was like a little stoned kid in anticipation of their new album, which was released a few days ago. And then I had it. And then I listened to it. And then I had to realize that it sucks. Dumb, right. So I put the thing far away and instead went back to listening to the Zipfelbuben.

Until today. Because it’s really awesome weather this Thursday in Berlin and as I trudged to the subway, Kyle Falconer’s singing with his typically dirty Scottish accent slipped into my ear and he was singing something about a Sunny Day. And that made me so happy that I just kept listening and had to realize that my first impression was completely wrong. "Which Bitch?" is not at all a bland, copied, overly familiar and unworthy successor to "Hats Off To The Buskers." No, it’s fantastic, full of brilliant lyrics, sophisticated melodies, and that dirty, real sound that makes us feel like we’re sitting in a run-down pub after an awesome day, sipping on a tasty shandy. Recommended tracks: "Give Back The Sun" and "Unexpected." Give it a listen!

.

Lindsay Lohan Is Awesome:

There are people you are absolutely justified in hating and despising. The little Austrian with the speech impediment, for example. Or guys who fatten up their wives only to sexually abuse them afterward. That’s obvious, right. But there’s one particular person for whom I really have to go to bat now. Okay, she snorts overpriced drugs, but who doesn’t these days. She drives drunk, but hand on heart, my young friends, who hasn’t quickly gone to get more supplies for their 14th birthday after three vodka-O’s and a crate of Beck’s in Dad’s Mercedes? Exactly. And okay, she’s a bitch from hell, her last song was terrible and she’s more anorexic than the operator of the indexed anorexia blog.

But come on people, let’s think back to all the wonderful hours Lindsay Lohan gave us when she wasn’t yet an underweight, bleached firecracker. How she ended up in that devious girl clique before realizing who her true friends were? Or when she dedicated that incredibly sad song to her father? Or here, when she switched bodies with her mother. In the movie. What, still not convinced?

Well then I guess only the visual approach will help. Take a look at this picture here, for example. Isn’t it sweet, beautiful, almost artistic? (I know you think I’m being ironic, but click on the damn picture so I can convince you otherwise!) Do you see those sweet freckles all over her body, her face, her eyes. Beautiful, right? Okay, and everyone over 18 can now click here (don’t worry, it’s not a pussy shot, that exists somewhere too, but not here, not today.) Those sweet freckles everywhere—aren’t they totally adorable, don’t they make you completely giddy? No?

Well then I can’t help you either. So I’m left with only one thing: to assure you that I really (really!) think Lindsay Lohan is absolutely awesome and that I’m about to print out her pictures and jump into bed with them. Because if no one else wants her, then she belongs to me. Well, tough luck for you. Nora, scoot over a bit. Thanks.

.

M83 – We Own The Sky:

-->

An insanely awesome song that I’ve been carrying around with me on my iPod for what feels like months now, and that the French band M83 delivered with “We Own The Sky.” The art director for the accompanying music video was the still rather unknown Matei-Alexandru Mocanu, and we’re left with no choice but to find the overall package pretty damn good.

.

StyleSpion Loves Me:

Kai from StyleSpion asks bright minds of the here and now 15 + 1 questions about their homes, their way of life, and everything that comes with it. And now I was the lucky one who got to face his questions. It really was fun to actually put some thought into certain things for a change. Thanks to Kai, and go leave some comments over there, no matter what – everything there is awesome. No, seriously.

.

The Ultimate Blog Roundhouse Kick:

Alright my dears, the time has finally come to properly feature all the blogs we absolutely adore, deeply revere, rightly hate, or simply skillfully ignore, in order to show you and the world who else is buzzing around in our beloved blogosphere surrounding AMY&PINK. So let’s not waste any time and just get started.

The Beauty. The Frog. The Hitler. The Hotzen. The Sluts. The Cutie. The Little One. The Cook. The Berliners. The Partymaker. The Waiting One. The Media Designer. The Monster. The Pussy. The Comic Artist. The Dead Ones. The God. The Sarah. The Ghost. The Guy. The Indestructible One. The Crazy One. The Emigrant. The Self. The Comic Artist II. The American. The Wankers. The Buddha. The MC. The Almost-No-Longer Student. The Couple. The Couple II. The Animal Abuser. The Emo Pirate. The Digital Ones. The Photographer. The Unner. The Favorite Emo. The Japanese Girl. The Egoist. The Colorful One. The Hairdo. The Good-Looking One. The Rocker. The Profound One. The Wapanese. The Italian. The Bunny. The Super Hot One.

The Trendsetters. The Student. The Pop. The Reality. The Pupil. The Creative One. The Munich Guy. The Tokyoites. The Sweet One. The Elephant. The Actress. The Popper. The Awesome One. The Two. The Student (Female). The TV Lady. The Redhead. The TV Stars. The Ice Cream Lover. The Northerners. The The. The Head. The 12-Year-Old. The Favorite Author. The Snapshot. The Hot One. The Studio. The Waffles. The At. The Klaus. The Big Mouth. The Shifts. The Agency. The Magazine. The Fashion Junkies. The Lilac One. The City Lovers. The Birthday Party. The New Yorker. The Daily Ones. The Fashion Icon. The Beautiful One. The Austrian. The Smile. The Stylized Ones. The Girl. The Nerd.

So, now I’m completely exhausted. But it was worth it, because I’m damn sure that one or another of you has discovered a new favorite blog here. Did I at least catch all the ones worth mentioning? No? Well then drop your own or your favorite blogs into the comments – this is your goddamn chance!

.

Asobi Seksu – Me & Mary:

-->

The new video by the New York band Asobi Seksu (which roughly translates as “casual sex”) is bursting with beautiful illustrations and ideas created by Dan-ah Kim from Brooklyn, perfectly complementing the song in an airy, light way. And if you can’t get enough: Yuki Chikudate and her boys will be playing live on February 25 at the Magnet on Greifswalder. A must for every indie rock fan!

.

Marci’s Little World:

First of all, I’d like to say thank you to everyone who shared their absolutely awesome ideas and link tips for the “Sheets on the Wall” campaign with me and all of us. And now I can proudly announce: I’ve found a way that suits my personality, is easy to handle, and can be expanded however I like: I just plastered the damn sheets all over the wall, crisscross. The chick from “Marching into Four Walls” would probably babble something about a creative idea corner, because it’s really awesome: whenever I feel a certain emptiness in my head (and God can attest: that happens quite often), I just lean back, look up, and bam: I’ve got an idea. Or I’m turned on—whatever.

And since my mom still hasn’t seen my new place, I took the opportunity to snap lots and lots of beautiful photos showing where I lounge around when I’m not at work or at Burger King. These will probably also be the last photos of me for a while, because I dropped my digital camera on the floor of the S-Bahn while drunk yesterday I didn’t do anything at all. So enjoy the wonderful impressions.

.

Mag Watch #1:

If there’s something we love at least as much as other blogs, it’s these stylish and trendsetting things made of paper that wait for us to flip through them at so-called kiosks: magazines! So we grabbed a nice stack and took a look at what interesting stuff is inside, to guide you through the jungle of this seemingly endless, tree-killing industry.

In the current PRINZ Berlin, five big-city dwellers write about love, drugs, and longing, including Hadnet Tesfai and Bürger Lars Dietrich, while a few pages later the current blogosphere—including a mini interview with René Walter—is put under the microscope. There are also sexy girls in lingerie (including pieces by Triumph and Stella McCartney), photographed by David Fischer. As usual, things get a bit harder in VICE, which offers an interview with the Japanese cannibal Issei Sagawa, nude photos of the enchanting Ana Lucia (photographed by Richard Kern), and stories of death, drugs, and pubic hair, this time measured with a Sadness Meter.

Things continue on a deeper level in NEON, which this time deals not only with animal sex and the color purple, but also explores what you should and absolutely shouldn’t do after breaking up with your boyfriend or girlfriend. In the girls’ brigade this time are NYLON, which besides the cover story “Pretty Cool – Hot Pink Lips, Dangerous Dresses & Killer Heels” also features Franz Ferdinand as the “Best-Dressed Band In The World,” and cooler, which includes an interview with the sweet rider Kjersti Buaas and gives ten tips on how to protect the environment during winter sports. Unfortunately, there is still no sign of blond. Enjoy reading!

.

Fashion Week, Here We Come!:

Because we here at AMY&PINK are ultra-priority for the entire German society, Hannah and I have been invited to Berlin Fashion Week tonight. Unfortunately, Mrs. Montana can’t attend in person due to her even more important competition for Triumph and the fact that Munich, despite Stoiber, still hasn’t moved any closer to the rest of the world (as if being at the main station in 10 minutes). That’s why I’m simply dragging our beloved little Mandy along to the coke party instead. And even though we will most certainly be the biggest rednecks at the entire event, I’ve dressed up nicely and am really looking forward to it. Especially because I already have my two pick-up lines for all the pseudo top models prepared and patented. Number 1: “Come with me, I’ll make you really, really big!” and number 2: “Do you want to eat Cini Minis with me tomorrow morning?” Cute, right? They’d definitely work on you. The second one is a little inside joke, especially since they’re not allowed to eat stuff like that anyway, right? And I’m supposed to kidnap Vivienne Westwood for Hannah. Shouldn’t be a problem. Wish us fun!

.

Lykke Li – Tonight:

-->

The enchanting Lykke Li, alongside the Ting Tings and Ladyhawke, is one of the few artists from last year who truly and deeply blew me away—and of whom I also have a charming black-and-white portrait hanging on my wall. “For me it was always clear that I wanted to do something with art later on. Life is a mystery that can best be approached through art. Once I realized this, it was obvious what my calling would look like. I considered whether it might be fashion or painting, until I chose music as my form of expression,” she explains about her vocation herself, and the video for her new single is hardly to be surpassed in purity and expression. We love her. And you do too.

.

Anne and I Tell Jokes. Or Something Like That.:

-->

Ha, do you remember? I told you there were no audio samples from our gigantic SingStar evening. Do you remember that? Yes? Good, because I totally fooled you, as I just realized. By chance, while wandering through the depths of my digital camera’s memory card, I stumbled upon a lost video of Anne and me when we apparently were already a little tipsy. Well, as mentioned, I was only high on my delicious Hohes C multivitamin juice, of course. So listen to our truly wise words and laugh with us at the joke of all jokes, which is lurking somewhere hidden in this little film. Academy Awards, here we come!

.

Leaves on the Wall:

Alright folks, now I’m relying on your tips. I have a huge white, damn empty wall at home. To be precise, I have several, but I’m focusing on this one for now, okay? Good. On top of that, we have a magnificent FFFFOUND! account here with so many great photos and images. I’d now like to print out the most beautiful ones and stick / pin / staple them to the aforementioned wall—whatever works. The question is: How do I do this in a really nice, stylish way without looking like a teenager with Bravo posters or some trashy guy with a “dolphin flying through a rainbow”? Tips, links to great sites, and DIY craft instructions are very welcome! Gracias.

.

11 Porn Stars Who Tweet:

Twittering has become the disgusting sport of millions of attention-hungry nerds all over the world. And what do nerds (myself included) love even more than sitting in front of their computer for days and nights on end? Of course: watching porn. So here’s a list of eleven internationally known porn stars who are also tweeting around: Jenna Haze, Belladonna, Stoya, Jessica Drake, Joanna Angel, Roxy Deville, Sasha Grey, Sarah Blake, Jesse Jane, Marie Luv and of course AMY&PINK. Have fun.

.

Sorry Mom!:

Alright girls, the time for revenge has finally come. On i bang the worst dudes you can settle the score with all those impotent, foul-smelling and cheating-on-their-own-wife jerks you ever let climb on top of you in your young, stupid years. And to top it all off, you can round off your whole miserable story with a photo of the cuckold. Hannah, your chance. I’m curious when and how often I’ll show up there. Place your bets.

.

SuicideGirl of the Week: Kokeshi:

Our weekly SuicideGirl this time is the Italian girl Kokeshi, who is into pretty much everything that I also enjoy: Japan, graphic design, photography and masturbation. No wonder that even the rather negative traits are quite similar to mine: that she’s a bit too addicted to the internet, often gets far too attached to certain people and during sex loves positions where she doesn’t exactly have to do much. Who could possibly resist that? You can find Kokeshi on SuicideGirls.

.

That SingStar Thingy:

There’s nothing better than getting nicely wasted with your friends on a Saturday evening (even though I only boosted myself with Hohes C multivitamin juice) and playing a proper round of SingStar on a pink PlayStation. Except maybe sex with the enchanting Nora Tschirner. In the most wonderful DSDS style we warbled our way through “Umbrella-ella-ella,” my SingStar all-time favorite “Wir beide” by Juli and even a few Disney classics from “The Lion King” and “The Little Mermaid” until late into the night. Photos of our performances are available here; audio samples were confiscated immediately after their appearance by the Ministry for Domestic Terrorism. Your luck.

.

I Need a Stage Name:

Let’s be honest: Many great artists would never have achieved the recognition they deserved, the abundant success or the major social role if they hadn’t swapped their boring bourgeois names for a pseudonym bursting with creativity before their breakthrough—one with which they have since toured through world history. Take for example just my favorite author Mian Mian, Ärzte frontman Farin Urlaub or Cher, the siren without a last name. And Falco, alias Johann “Hans” Hölzel, would probably never have won a flowerpot without changing his name—whereas in Japan it’s even considered good manners to adopt a socially compatible name if you stay there permanently.

That’s exactly why I will soon need a functioning, easy-to-remember and good-sounding stage name that underlines who I am, what I do and what I live for. And since I’m not entirely sure about any of that myself yet, you’re up: What stage name would you give me, or which pseudonym would you give yourself if you had the once-in-a-lifetime chance to choose one here and now and have it entered into your passport?

.

Mao Abe:

-->

I know, 1) I’m a little Japan freak and 2) I already posted a video today and two in a row are shitty, but I don’t give a damn right now, because I simply couldn’t help it: I am so absolutely blown away by this mood-boosting track by the 18-year-old Mao Abe. Really, I love this track. No joke, I’m about to feel sick from so much love for this song. Simply just wow. I’m going to listen to it all night and then I’ll buy the album. That’s exactly how it’s going to happen.

.

Scouting for Girls – Heartbeat:

-->

As of tomorrow, the single “Heartbeat” by the British pop/rock formation Scouting for Girls will finally be available in Germany, Austria and Switzerland as well. I already loved listening to their love song “She's So Lovely” back in 2007. The music of these three guys is definitely perfect for a sunny, feel-good day and for chilling after a long night of clubbing, and it shouldn’t be missing from any iPod.

.

Queen of Nu-Rave:

The London-based Namalee Bolle is certainly one of the most dazzling personalities in contemporary culture. She is a model, author, musician, mother of the debatable SuperSuper Magazine, and she stands out everywhere with her unique style, which she lovingly calls maxi-maximal Cartoon Couture and which mainly consists of neon colors and brightly colored accessories. Her songs can be listened to on her MySpace page, as long as you can even find them due to the acute risk of eye cancer.

.

Why We Always Believe the Last Thing We Hear:

Our lives seem to be determined by a multitude of streams of information which, taken together, can drive us pretty crazy. What’s for lunch in the cafeteria tomorrow? Have they found the little missing girl again? How is Susi, who moved to Canada? And when will the new season of “Grey’s Anatomy” finally air on television? If we had to follow each individual thread step by step, our heads would eventually explode or we would spend the entire day doing nothing but keeping records of what changes have occurred and in what priority. Anyone who also wants to check them for credibility has turned their hobby into a profession.

That’s why we’re grateful to anyone who more or less exclusively tells us that there will be tortellini for lunch tomorrow. He thinks. That little Mandy had only stayed overnight at her friend’s place. He heard. That Susi has long since moved back in with her mother in Castrop-Rauxel. And that the new season won’t start until late autumn. At least that’s what it said on Serienjunkies. And since every new piece of information is like an update, the latest refresh of a topic, an increased version number, because of our acute lack of time we really believe every bit of bullshit. Even though, by God, we’re not usually that easy to convince—but it’s still easier than calling the university or Susi now to have this half-true information confirmed firsthand. It’ll be fine.

.

My Death Space, I’m Coming!:

Sometime for sure, my friends. But at the moment I’m simply sick. What do I have? Some mutated mixture of flu, a cold, and bronchitis that unfortunately cannot be eradicated with antibiotics. So since Thursday I’ve been sitting on my bed surrounded by used tissues, eaten everything that was within arm’s reach, and annoyed the internet with my constant presence. The air smells of peppermint oil and hot ginger tea with honey, and my mood is steadily sinking—not only because my pseudo-dying caused me to miss great parties this weekend, but also because there are still no signs of improvement.

I know, men are little crybabies when it comes to illness or when they get cut by a treacherous sheet of paper. I’ve heard that over the past few days from just about every female being who has crossed my virtual or telephone path—and who are no longer getting in touch because they’re either on a study trip in Prague or because I could only respond to their two-hour monologues about how shitty life is with a permanently annoyed groan. And that was by no means sexual in nature.

So wish me luck that I’ll finally start to feel better soon and be able to fulfill my duties next week in top form. Although I’d probably be the only one, because half of Berlin seems to be wildly ill right now. At least that’s what Gülcan told me earlier—she’s got a delicious stomach flu. In that sense: hail the pharmaceutical corporations and may they soon invent a pill that gives me a shove back to health. Although a hearty bite into a green apple noticeably did more than all the Aspirins and Grippostad Cs I’ve poured into myself over the past few days with juice, tea, and still mineral water.

.

SuicideGirl of the Week: Bambu:

We’ve recently struck a cute little advertising deal with the girls from SuicideGirls that allows us to introduce one of their tattooed goddesses every week—provided we deliver new paying customers in return. Sounds fair, right? And so we’re starting today with the enchanting 23-year-old Bambu, who is not only into singing and dancing but also dreams of someday being eaten by a shark that will catapult her into the next life. How exactly that’s supposed to happen and how one even comes up with such an idea: no clue. But since she’s still single, I hereby call upon all shark fanatics and Buddhists to get in touch with her.

.

Overheard #1:

Next week—whether for working, skipping school or studying lazing around—is just around the corner, and you simply won’t survive it without good music. That’s why here comes the ultimate blast of fresh tunes, this time including Lily Allen, Shiny Toy Guns, School Of Seven Bells, and Empire Of The Sun, among others. As usual, you can listen to them on our temporary tracklist, and you’re best off making your purchases at iTunes.

.

Honey, I’m Going to Mow the Lawn!:

Back when we were little shits, there was nothing more risqué on the weekend than sticking to the TV late at night with your sandbox buddies, keeping yourself awake with cola and then watching heavily censored erotic films on VOX or tm3 until you could barely recognize anything. And there wasn’t just bouncing breasts, incredibly creative dialogue and great locations to marvel at—no, the highlight of those formative hours was the fleeting glimpse of pubic hair. These fur-like things, which you previously only knew from your own head or the neighbor’s dog, were suddenly hanging between the legs of those terribly out-of-breath sugar daddies and nurses. They were a sign of growing up, the gateway to something new and exciting, a stylistic device of the hippie movement and a forbidden fantasy for every little brat like I was.

Until, yes until one day some chick got the idea to take her dad’s razor and shred her intimate area. Armpit hair included. Whether that happened on purpose or not is hard to prove today, and any historical records are more than scarce. However, this fashion spread through smut magazines and women’s magazines faster across the Western world than iPod and Twitter combined, and suddenly female body hair was considered impure, dirty and simply out.

The question that arises is the same as after seeing the ratings of the jungle camp show or the excessive beer consumption of the German nation despite its nasty bitter taste: Is intimate shaving just the result of a social peer pressure that has spun out of control? Do adult, emancipated women really want to look down there like 8-year-old elementary school kids? Like bald, plucked chickens? Only now unfortunately with red bumps resulting from the sharp shave? And can we guys in good conscience say that we like sleeping with girls who apparently have more to do with child pornography than with former idols from “Emmanuelle” and the “Schoolgirl Report”?

All of this almost gives girls who let their natural charms run free a rebellious touch. Either because they don’t allow themselves to be dragged into this hypocritical vicious circle of prejudices and fabricated fashion trends and simply stand by the natural development of their bodies. Or because maybe they’re just too lazy to keep “deforesting” down there all the time, perhaps don’t care enough about their hygiene and don’t really mind the hinted touch of fish market in the evening. And no matter from which side you look at it, the solution to the phenomenon is obvious: just get properly smashed at the next party and then most people won’t care anyway how many pubic hairs they’re riding on afterward. Amen.

.

And Then It Went Boom:

We are writing the year nine after the apocalypse. And what a properly shitty start 2009 has been for all of us. Blogs are suddenly dead or are being sold off for a pile of cash, the coolest TV stations, magazines and websites are going under, and the Zipfelbuben are warbling their official jungle camp single straight into our brains, already weakened and softened by ringtones. Crisis mood on the markets, terror in the world, depression in Germany. But that’s over now—because we are the official counter-trend!

As you can see, Amy and Pink are back in action with a design that attentive readers might find somewhat familiar, and behind the entire site there is now not only a completely new concept—no, to finally do justice to our snazzy name, as of today we are actually two people! Our beloved Hannah Maria Paffen (aka Hannah Banana Montana) is back on board after repeated requests and will, together with me, turn AMY&PINK into something truly special.

From the two coolest cities in the republic, we will from this very moment supply you sleepyheads with the most interesting developments from the fields of design, fashion and music, pick up where other sites stop and introduce you, at an increased frequency, to new artists, bands and freaks. And because pretty much every faceless pseudo-magazine on the open market is trying more or less unsuccessfully to do exactly the same thing, you will of course continue to get the beloved personal level including nude photos, naive subjectivity and pigsty metaphors. Otherwise we wouldn’t be able to look at ourselves in the mirror anymore. Or okay, only once more.

We hope you like this development, that like Hannah and me you think it’s a step in the right direction and above all that you can feel that crackling too, which announces the beginning of something big, of a lot of fun and joy. Or of a faulty power line. Either way, we wish you lots of enjoyment and hope that we can quickly and successfully turn the many ideas currently buzzing around in our little heads into reality. Stay tuned. And to warm up, you’d better watch the new video by Peter Fox with “Schwarz zu blau” right now, and all that remains for us is to quote a well-known German band: “Hey, don’t be such a square, we just want to experience something!” In this sense: Curtain up for the brand-new AMY&PINK!

.

Marta Streng:

I love her pictures, I love her subjects, her colors, the very special light magic that can be felt in every single shot. Wow, fantastic, wonderful! Something truly special—those are the photographs of the 19-year-old Marta Streng from Poland. Just rediscovered through the inspiration bomb yay!everyday.

.

Follow Us on Bloglovin’:

This service from Sweden (first they take over the music world and now the blog world as well) is currently very popular, especially among fashion and design blogs, and so I followed the example of Lookbook, Les Mads and Stylespion and signed up for Bloglovin'. So if you use this service to stay updated on your favorite blogs, you can follow Amy&Pink here from now on.

.

New Film with Nora Tschirner:

Are you already as excited as sauce for February 26? Of course you are, because that’s when Nora’s new film "Murder Is My Business, Darling" will be released. This time it’s a crime comedy in which Nora, alongside Rick Kavanian and Bud Spencer (!), plays a scatterbrained publishing employee who is fallen for by a mafioso who then pretends to be an author in order to be close to her. You can watch the trailer for the film here. I’m really curious, but Nora’s in it, so it has to be good. Hello, no question.

.

The Power of Love:

Being single really is a great invention. You can make out with whoever you want, you don’t have to justify to anyone how drunk you were or how late you stumbled through the front door, and you don’t have to struggle every day with the nagging question of whether you might still find someone better. Unfortunately, the cold winter throws a wrench into the works, because… (could that damn bird outside please shut up?! How is anyone supposed to concentrate on writing a coherent text that pays attention to proper structure with a conclusion?) well, because right now especially you could use a warm body for cozy DVD evenings for two. For fun cooking moments. Or for wine nights in front of the fireplace. Well, okay, who actually does that anyway…

And for all those who don’t have a partner during this couple-heavy season, the creators of Le Love have focused on presenting the most beautiful, most romantic and cheesiest photos of wonderful love, which you can scroll through and let your soul unwind. And if the pictures start to annoy you by the third page, then just run outside afterwards and shove a few happy couples over in the park.

.

Los Amigos:

If you wake up in the afternoon with a skull that’s bigger than the planet you live on, then you either know that you partied well – or that you’re slowly but surely turning into an old geezer. Today both were probably pretty accurate and although I’d most like to have the aspirin implanted directly into my brain, the first thing I did after getting up falling out of bed was upload the photos from yesterday, in which we can be seen boozing it up at Rosi's. And congratulations: with my unbeatable vitality I now get to go to Alexa with Mandy to shop again. And because of that I’m unfortunately missing “How I Met Your Mother”.. Whaaaaat a shame. I’d rather stuff myself with a few Mon Chéris now just to stay on a certain level.

[audio:dancingshoes.mp3]

.

Poladroid Beta is Out!:

As a media designer I of course can’t really handle Photoshop or Fireworks properly and therefore have to rely on programs that edit images completely automatically for me. And a really awesome little gem of this kind has now been released as a free beta! With Poladroid for Mac and PC you can very easily create totally beautiful Polaroids from ordinary images via drag ’n’ drop. Including tones and the typical instant-camera waiting time. If that’s not nostalgia, then I don’t know what is.

.

I’m About to Freeze My Ass Off:

And that’s exactly why I was at Alexa with Mandy yesterday, bought myself a new fat, insanely awesome jacket there (photos to follow on my fictional fashion blog) and then stuffed myself with her at McDonald’s. Unfortunately I didn’t win a Wii or one of those red beanbags (not even a soft serve), even though I treated myself to an overpriced Monopoly maxi menu. But it’s all a scam anyway, at least that’s what a friend told me recently who works at the restaurant with the Golden Arches. So she has to know.

Tomorrow we’re probably heading to the run-down Rosi's with the usual suspects for Karrera-Klub. Awesome tunes. And since we’re talking about indie pop, alternative and pretty girls (were we?): Hannah, you promised me that Nora Tschirner would show up at my birthday. But she’s still not here… where is she? Hm? It’s always astonishing how skillfully and subtly I manage to slip Nora Tschirner into my posts. Don’t you think?

.

I Have a New Camera:

Since my 7-year-old almost-2-megapixel snap-box completely gave up the ghost a few months ago (may it rest in peace), I finally bought a new digital camera from Casio on Friday that has such a high resolution that I could use it to photograph life on Jupiter. Well, almost anyway. And although I had the feeling that fate didn’t necessarily want me to throw money out the window for it (just before I was about to pay, all the registers at Saturn went down for half an hour, a very East German voice from off-screen tried to calm the customers and promised free coffee on the first floor), I’ve decided to carry this little piece of technical jewelry with me everywhere from now on and stuff the new year full of my visual outpourings.

And because I of course need a super-genius platform for that, I’ve turned my back on Flickr and finally revamped my photo section, completely stole the thumbnail design from LastNightsParty and will provide my stalkers and voyeurs with even more material to blackmail me and my family with these pictures someday. Cool, right?

.

Happy Birthday To Me:

Yeah yeah, the rumors are true. As of just now I am 25 years old. A quarter of a century. That means I am now damn wise, mature and definitely not childish anymore. I am now a worldly, full-grown man who stands firmly in the middle of life and lets absolutely nothing throw him off track or distract him from his goal. Notice anything? Exactly, total bullshit. That’s why I’m getting drunk on sparkling wine now, letting the congratulations rain down on me and looking forward to the next quarter century! I’m just soooo awesome!

[audio:ionsquare.mp3]

.

This Is a Hannah Distraction Entry:

Hannah is a very busy person. She has to listen to music, drink coffee and sit at her sewing machine a whole lot for her fashion design career in order to sew really great clothes, uh, well, sew them. And you can imagine that it can get pretty boring to sew for hours—no, days on end. During breaks you really need a bit of distraction, something you can look forward to and think about.

And that’s why we’re going to build a story now. Of course this could totally flop and it’s possible that nobody gives a damn and participates, but it’s worth a try. I’ll start and you continue it, okay? Good. Sooo: Hannah Montana is a little princess. She lives together with her best friend, the goldfish Hugo, in McDonald’s Land and her greatest wish is to one day marry Ronald McDonald. One beautiful day, while taking a walk through the Cheeseburger Forest, she finds a blue mirror. She picks it up and sees the face of an evil witch inside it. She says..? And now it’s your turn!

.

Yen Town:

Dude, insanely awesome film. The story of little Ageha, who after her mother’s death is raised by the Chinese singer Glico and introduced to the world of sex-, money-, and power-hungry Yen Town. Through a chance discovery in the corpse of a john, the small group of Japanese, Chinese, and Americans soon becomes rich and buys a nightclub where Gilco begins her path as a star, while the others slowly sink into greed and crime in the underworld and, in the end, are even hunted down by a gang of killers. Japanese, dirty, real: just the way I love it.

[audio:swallowtailbutterfly.mp3]

.

Marci’s Music Mix of the Week – Best of 2008:

So before we finally head into the new year, here once again are the songs I blasted to the limit in 2008, the ones that touched my heart, got me partying, crying, and pulling myself together, and whose performers irrevocably sang their way into my and your hearts. No idea whether all the tracks are actually from this year – probably not… no, actually definitely not – but good songs are immortal anyway, blah blah. Featuring greats like Ladyhawke, The Ting Tings, Lykke Li, and Santogold, among others. Simply the hottest tracks in my Muxtape! If I forgot a must-have of the year, please remind me in the comments. And you know: You can easily buy all the songs!

.

Motto for 2009 Is Clear: Move Your Ass!:

It’s about to start, folks: New year, new luck, or however the saying goes. You want to know my resolutions for 2009? Uhm, yeah. Buying curtains is right at the top of my list. Because just as I can stare straight into the apartment of my neighbor who constantly runs around in skimpy hot pants, the entire block is just as happy to stare back. Which I honestly couldn’t care less about, but things here aren’t always entirely suitable for minors.

Then I want to go to more concerts again, finally drop by Scala, and look for a badminton club in Wedding, which I’ve been meaning to do for a long time. That actually seems to be the only sport I’m somewhat decent at. Hitting shuttlecocks, hehe. I’ll gladly leave the detailed formulation of the 2009 slogan to the guys from Ansage 8: Move your ass! God, I’m so damn cool. Happy New Year!

.

I’m Really Not Easy to Convince… Ok!:

The more often I shuttle back and forth between Berlin and Bavaria, the more these once so monumentally different worlds start to blend together—worlds that used to simply block each other out for me. The friends, the surroundings, the experiences—everything felt like a short dream that had nothing to do with reality. Today it’s different, and it’s nice to spend a few days at home.

The peaceful Christmas season with the family, however, didn’t last long. After all, over the past few days I was busy rushing from one party to the next, getting wasted with old friends, gawking at AC/DC Wolfi at Melo, quenching my insatiable thirst, trying not to dehydrate, trying not to fall asleep on the spot at the after-Christmas dinner at my grandma’s, and surviving porn-worthy extreme scenarios. And it was all so exhausting that tomorrow I’m heading to Munich with Becca to go shopping. After all, I want to see the first German Apple Store with my own eyes. And I also need a new game for my Nintendo DS. A return trip to Berlin can feel damn long. Merry Christmas, by the way—belatedly.

.

Michael Wrote Me a Letter to the Editor:

Oh man, you know I absolutely love letters to the editor that flutter into my electronic mailbox so beautifully irregularly and unexpectedly. And this time Michael—hardcore fan of Apple, John Lennon, and chocolate pudding—from Mein Blog liebt dich actually dared to prove his endless loyalty to me with a few lovely words. Let’s take a look at what he has to say, and afterwards you’ll all diligently visit his blog, deal?

"It’s been about 3 months now since Ingo recommended your website to me: ‘Hey Michi, check this out, the guy reminds me a bit of you.’ Since then I’ve loved your site ... I don’t even want to write too much, I just want to say thank you. Thank you that I get excited whenever my RSS reader shows a new update, thank you for the design, thank you for every single post. Shit, not that you’ll think I have a crush on you..."

.

So That Was Two Thousand Eight:

Since basically every year is just a repetition of the last, you have to focus on the details that made the year 2008 so much better, worse, more beautiful, newer, more heartbreaking, more paralyzing, fresher, cheekier and more pulsating than any before. The first half of the year simply wasn’t worth living, let’s just say it bluntly. First the separation from the little redhead, the resulting failure at school, and then they also took my best friend away from me — just like that, without warning and without me being able to say goodbye. Jumping off the TV tower would have been the logical consequence of all that. But that would have been pretty lame, guys.

And so we come to the beautiful parts eight years after the end of the world. The parties, the people, the job, the school, the new apartment, the city — all things that boosted that wonderful feeling of being alive to immeasurable heights. And the music — guys, the music! My iPod regularly burst at the seams because there was so much great stuff again this year that was there for you in every situation in life. Lykke Li, The Ting Tings, Santogold or Ladyhawke. It would have been fatal if I had missed all of that, right?

And so I bow to this educational, unfair year, crammed full of emotional rollercoasters — Two Thousand Eight — and Mandy, Basti and I agree: 2009 will be better. It has to be! In memory of my little, sweet angel whom I would have loved to have with me at the turn of the year. Don’t let the fireworks hit you.

.

Blood and Tears:

On that night I had a truly tragic dream whose abrupt ending still sat deep in my bones hours after I woke up drenched in sweat. I staggered into the kitchen, poured milk and cornflakes into a bowl and still saw her corpse-white face that I pressed tightly against me while screaming half the city together, right in front of me. That peculiar smell still lingered in my nose and I looked down at myself, so that the blood I had just been able to make out from the corners of my eyes and that seemed to cover half my body revealed itself as a cynical play of light and shadow.

As I dipped the spoon in and brought a load of imitation Smacks to my mouth, I recognized the faces from the night again, the ones who had shouted her name with me in front of the club, loudly. Over and over again. In one hand I held my phone, in the other the tequila bottle. The people around me told each other that she had supposedly disappeared from the Melo totally drunk with a more than shady guy, no longer in control of her head. I screamed for my life. Her name. The louder I screamed, the more everything would turn out fine — I was sure of that.

Opening the window now seemed like a good idea. The cold, fresh air washed around my pounding, wounded thoughts and I tried to chase away the memories of how someone showed me the way to her, how I ran, how I cried. And when I turned the corner and saw her lying there so defenseless in a filthy backyard, everything was over. All the feelings in this world concentrated into that unreal moment, like a shot, a bang, a blow. I ran to her, screamed words that didn’t even seem to exist, but so loudly that I hoped they would still reach her. The faces around me melted into one huge mess of pity as I held her so tightly that everything around me burst. I choked on blood and tears and the last thing that burned itself into my thoughts was the image of her unhappy, restless face, whose dull eyes seemed to admonish me as the one who was not with her when it happened. Then I woke up.

[audio:untitled27.mp3,vesion.mp3]

.

I Have Sinned:

Yes, it’s true. I have sinned — and how. For a total of 2601.13 €. For a visit to the confessional I’d have to take an entire week of vacation, from now on no one will trust me anymore or shake my hand without a scrutinizing look. And all of this just because of that stupid test that Thomi sent me: The Sin Calculator. Just a small selection from my endlessly long receipt of sins: I have taken drugs — 20 €. I sometimes lie through my teeth — 15 €. I once woke up in the morning and didn’t know who was lying next to me — 75 €. I once had sex in a church — 100 €. I’ve been with more than one person at the same time — 200 €. I hid bad grades from my parents — 30 €. I once made a dirty home video — 15 €. And the worst of all: I once stole fruit — 0.05 €. And now it’s your turn.

.

You’re the Best Designers I Know:

Totally sweet! The little ones who recently visited us at aperto thanked us with cute, self-made letters for the fun day when we made Christmas cards with them. That really brings on the Christmas spirit.

.

Christmas, Nightmares and Stuff:

We vocational school students sometimes have such a stressful, inglorious and suicidal life that at least on the last day of school before Christmas we skipped databases, print rasterization and sports theory and watched my all-time favorite Christmas movie ever with cookies and coffee mixed with toilet water: “Nightmare Before Christmas” by God Tim Burton. And even though half the class was annoyed by the singing and you really should watch the film in English, I’m still fascinated by the wonderful magic this awesome classic still radiates today. And also heartbreakingly beautiful: Fiona Apple’s version of Sally’s Song. Lights off and cry.

[audio:sallys_song.mp3]

.

I’m Back:

Yes, that’s what happens when you forget to simply ignore the bill your provider regularly sends you so lovingly and instead prefer to spend your money on oatmeal: they just go ahead and cut off your power. Mine! Experiment failed, I’d say. But now I’m back and you’re allowed to really love me properly again, as usual. Behind me lie the aperto Christmas party, Marco’s birthday party and the separation from Lisa. Yes, you heard that right — things can happen that fast. Easy come, easy go, or how do they put it so nicely in Sweden? And it wasn’t (only) because she didn’t separate the trash…

.

I Run Up the Hill:

I heard the song again recently at Franzi’s and immediately had to think of the version by Placebo vs. Kate Bush that was playing somewhere on “The O.C.” back then and instantly brought tears to my eyes. “And if I only could, Make a deal with God, And get him to swap our places, Be running up that road, Be running up that hill, Be running up that building...” Simply too good. And in the same breath I also want to draw attention to another Franzi who is somehow back again and published a text today at Sara’s. I’m definitely happy about every lively girl who lets us peek into her world.

.

Marci’s Music Mix of the Week:

This year, too, is slowly but surely coming to an end. And to brighten your days, it’s not only the daily reach for the Advent calendar, the cozy winter cuddling with your partner, or the emerging mix of joy and panic about the upcoming New Year’s Eve party that contributes—no, Marci's Music Mix of the Week has also been freshly recorded and delivers magnificent songs by even more magnificent artists such as We Are Soldiers We Have Guns, Architecture In Helsinki, and Anna Ternheim right to your home. As usual, you can buy them here.

.

Uniquely – The Movie:

In the current issue of Cooler Mag there’s this absolutely awesome killer film by Oakley, which has something to do with a sunglasses collection. But aside from that, “Uniquely” is probably the greatest snowboard/surf/whatever film I’ve ever seen. Amazing editing, awesome cinematography, cute girls, and magnificent music. And the best part is: you can download it here totally free and legally. Have fun!

.

Let’s Run Full Speed into the Wall:

My old classmate André had settled in at my place for a long weekend, and besides heaps of loud pseudo-gay insinuations in public, we experienced adventures right in the middle of the ghetto, got drunk with my girlfriend and a funny pair of siblings while playing Taboo, and watched South Park and the Harry Potter parody on YouTube night after night. Disguised as an American exchange student, I even dragged him along to school, and only watching my favorite film “Lost in Translation” with Lisa in my arms and a well-filled bottle of magic potion in my hand could surpass those feelings of happiness. It was fun with you, man, and we’ll see each other again in two weeks in good old Bavaria anyway.

.

Lena and Paula: Chapter 1:

In my life, there are really only a few future scenarios that genuinely terrify me and sometimes even give me sleepless nights. For example, the thought that I might one day earn more money than my asshole of a father. In my head, it’s a proven fact: all that damn money is the reason that idiot constantly jets from one world metropolis to another with an army of blonde, anorexic secretaries who aren’t even older than I am, while his dear family always gets the short end of the stick. My mother doesn’t know that he’s sleeping with at least half of those soulless Barbie dolls. Maybe she doesn’t want to know.

Another uncontrollable fear I clearly have is of small children. I don’t know how to deal with them, I don’t know what to do with them, and I certainly can’t handle how it’s possible that eight-year-old gnomes in baggy pants with even bigger balls either call me a slut or constantly grab my ass at the bus stop. And if you slap them, they suddenly start crying and call for their bull of a father, who then chews you out with a mixture of disgust and dripping lust. Thanks for that lovely morning.

But what scares me most—really more than anything—is the idea that someday, during a daring jump into a swimming pool or the lake, my bikini might float away. That happened to my best friend Paula last summer. Since then, the entire school knows that she has probably the smallest breasts and the ugliest pubic hair of all time. And it’s not just those precocious bitches from fifth grade who find it hilarious—Torsten, self-proclaimed complete moron and prime candidate for “Bild newspaper reader of the year,” loves to harp on it too.

At that particular moment, however, he was probably more busy riding me, making disgusting grunting noises and nearly falling off the bed while unsuccessfully trying to finger me at the same time. So he left it at that. Which was better for both of us anyway, since he was just clumsily slapping around on my stomach like a deranged idiot. At least during his very personal interpretation of World War II I didn’t have to look him in the eyes, so I took the opportunity on that sunny day to glance out of the open window into the park and wonder whether Paula would bring me my history homework and the voucher for Douglas that afternoon. There was this new perfume by Puma that I absolutely had to have. It smelled like a mix of vanilla and raspberry and went incredibly well with my phenomenal natural scent.

“Turn around, you slut!” came the shout from behind me, and before I knew it I was on my back and Torsten’s miniature excuse for a penis was heading straight for my nose.

The idea of going to Berlin to completely turn my life around and finally figure out what I really wanted to do with my existence came to me a few minutes after that defining experience in Torsten’s filthy bathroom. I had just splashed my face with warm water and was holding a towel when I accidentally found myself staring straight into my deep green eyes, which almost looked back at me with contempt. I slowly examined my face while post-romantic sounds of Rammstein drifted in from the living room. The smell of marijuana filled my nose. And in that moment, it became clear: I was more than just a little red-haired girl whose sweet face served merely as a graveyard for semen. I had character, I was damn creative, I was something special. And I had great tits too.

With that realization in tow, I walked into the living room, grabbed my clothes, ran past Torsten shouting loudly, “Adios, you asshole!” and stumbled relieved out the door into the courtyard. The deaf-mute elderly couple sitting on a green bench against the wall across from me seemed to enjoy my striptease in the open air. I took my time getting dressed, pulled a cigarette from my pocket, and made my way to the bus station. And there had better not be a single gnome standing there.

.

In the Christmas Bakery:

Yesterday we actually had 20 adorable kids from the SOS Children’s Village in Marzahn visit us, and together we designed really awesome Christmas cards on the Mac and then printed them out for further crafting. With plenty of cookies, cocoa, tours, and photo shoots with costumes, the little ones (and us too) definitely had a lot of fun together—especially since the whole thing was also for a good cause. You can find the photos here.

.

Yvonne Catterfeld Gave Me a Dumb Look:

Anyone who was foolish enough to think that I would hang up my acting career after the ratings hit “Love Greeting to an Angel,” which was praised by the press in the highest terms possible, is very much mistaken. Because despite snow and rain, a few brave colleagues and I ventured out today to the Christmas market at Kulturbrauerei—and who do we see there? Yes, exactly, you guessed it: Yvonne Catterfeld (the one who’s dating the guy from “Stromberg”).

Media-hungry as Basti and I are, we immediately befriended her cute make-up artist, and Elli and the others were able to admire how, after a few cups of mulled wine and delicious Kaiserschmarrn, we managed to wander around in the background grinning stupidly and aimlessly while Miss Catterfeld (the one who’s dating the guy from “Stromberg”) kept making out with some tuna-type guy.

In plain language, that means: If you watch some movie with little Yvonne Catterfeld (who, as we all know, is dating the guy from “Stromberg”) on TV next Christmas, we’ll be running back and forth in the background during the romantic finale. And tomorrow we’re going to go annoy little kids—that’ll be fun. I’ll push the clouds away for you..

.

Morning Exercise Drives Away Worries and Sorrows:

And one and two and three… come on, everyone join in. Yes, you couch potatoes from school gym class, no pretending to be tired! Left two three four, left two three four. Like the ants back then. In Maya the Bee. And to loosen things up, here’s a nice video of this somewhat stimulant-fueled pink-haired girl. Together with Lil Jon. Obviously.

.

All Eyes On Asia:

Yeah yeah, I know, MTV is dead and all that, but with examples like the Game Awards and the Europe Music Awards, they still occasionally prove a certain greatness in terms of design. The same goes for the portal MTV Iggy, which is aimed specifically at Asian global citizens and will be launched tomorrow with a concert by BoA in New York City.

The site looks awesome, comes in bright, modern colors and typography, and MTV simply slaps a contrast ratio on every photo and video that really packs a punch. I like it, even though MTV and the entire music television industry are basically going down the drain—we all know that.

.

The Letter of the Dead Pigeon:

I just want to briefly remind you that tomorrow we can finally be admired on television. At 8:15 p.m. on Sat.1 in the Hollywood blockbuster “Love Greeting to an Angel” starring Caroline Beil, Raphaël Vogt, Keira Knightley, Oliver Korittke, and Bürger Lars Dietrich. If you see a totally stylish design agency, that’s ours—and if we’re lucky and they didn’t cut us out, you’ll be able to see us hopping around in the background for a few minutes. And I can only repeat it once more: Pay attention to the scene where I throw an entire file folder across the agency. By accident, of course. Christian Pötschke plays the security guard, by the way. Just so you know.

.

How The Day Sounds:

Who would've ever known it could be this easy. Oh, I was a long, long way off. And just like that it's over. Everything that I knew of love. I was a long, long way off. And I think I like how the day sounds. Like how the day sounds through this new song. Thank you for opening the window. The sky is clear as my mind is now. I was a long, long way off. Join me in welcoming the sun in. It's much brighter than the night I hid in. I was a long, long way off.

And I think I like how the day sounds. Like how the day sounds through this new song. From a long way down. Yeah, it's well worth the time that it's taken to get here now. Yeah, it's well worth the time that it's taken to get here now. So go ahead and bang a gong. Nothing can drown out the sound of the whisper of my love. And I think I like how the day sounds through this new song. And the lines have all been drawn. I know where I belong, where I belong. Oh, won't you sing along? Oh my love, won't you sing along?

.

Mumbai:

Two young men with rifles are walking along Shalimar Estate Drive Road. They already stand out because hardly anyone else is moving along this main street. They are at most 20 years old, poorly shaved, wearing green T-shirts and jeans. Islamist terrorists? “There’s a lot of alcohol here,” says one of the two, pointing with his weapon at one of the two shops. “So what? I’ve got nothing against alcohol,” replies the other. “We’ll come back for shopping.” They run on, toward a hospital where victims of the attacks are being treated. Half an hour later, shootings are reported from there. (via)

I don’t think I’ve watched this much CNN since September 11 as I have in the past few days. I was so shocked and eager for information because of the terrorist attacks in Mumbai, which were carried out so coldly, ruthlessly, and without any mercy by people who, according to eyewitness reports, were almost still children and who more or less deliberately selected their victims according to skin color and origin. Such acts are simply incomprehensible to me, and I can put myself into many people’s heads, but when innocent people have to suffer, all understanding just stops for me. Fucking terrorists.

.

I Am Happy:

Yes, you could say that at the moment I’m really happy. I now live in the most indebted neighborhood of the city and I’m happy. The people are genuine, nice, and I haven’t been beaten up at Leo yet. That makes me happy. Becca and I did really great work in my new apartment (well, maybe she even a bit more than I did), and even if my nice neighbor upstairs likes to loudly reenact World War III on his Xbox from midnight onward, I am happy. Bathtub – I’m just saying happy.

At school and at work everything is going perfectly. I’m a great class representative, I’ll soon even be teaching PHP, HTML, and CSS at school, and I create stylish designs for even more stylish projects. All of that makes me very happy. I have an incredibly sweet girlfriend who even outdoes me with bold remarks (and that’s saying something) – that makes me happy. My Gülcan, McDonald’s Monopoly, Little Britain, snowstorms… all things that make me happy. Now all I need is a couch…

.

The Selby:

Todd Selby takes great photos of crazy people and artists (now think about it) and showcases them on his website The Selby. Looks absolutely awesome; some of them really live and work in a truly crazy environment. No wonder that Mark Hunter featured him right away. Favorite site of the day, I’d say.

.

Marci’s Music Mix of the Month:

December is just around the corner with its Christmas trees, snow globes, and the smell of cookies. And to absolutely not prepare you for that at all, I’ve put together a guaranteed Wham!-free playlist for you, one you can happily show off to your friends and whose contents you should immediately purchase. This time featuring familiar names like Ladyhawke, Lykke Li, and The Ting Tings, but also newcomers like Mandi Perkins, The Submarines, and The Script. And you can find it all in Marci's Music Mix of the Month.

.

Perpetrator and Victim:

When I get off the train and let Gülcan ride alone to Hermannplatz, I keep thinking about the past and don’t understand why everything turned out the way it did. My stomach begins to cramp in pain and I think about all the faces of days gone by, wanting to know what they are doing now, how they might be feeling at this very moment. Is it true that they lose the right to speak when no one can hear them? I lack the strength to search for places where nothing painful has ever happened. The street lies wet and dark before me, the paths of the depressing figures dressed in black crossing mine.

I cannot accept the fact that she is no longer in this world. Is she in the closet, is she in the mirror, is she beside the pillow, is she out there somewhere—where is she? I wanted to sleep with her now and felt shabby for the thought. Closeness was important to me at that moment. The ghosts of the past would not let me go and plunged me into surging grief. When it pours in this city, the silence moves closer.

I felt dizzy. I had to pause for a moment and held on to a traffic light. Just a short break, not long. I saw all their faces before me. How they were steering into a distant and unknown future, crying among the ruins of their shattered emotional worlds begging for redemption, or smiling down at me from the moment of inner conflict. I took a deep breath and tried to smile. In this cruel year I am perpetrator and victim; I feel inferior and therefore cannot end this strange journey now. If I make it out of this, the reason for my salvation will not be fear, but disgust.

.

The Stories of an Old Man:

I am a young person, helpless like a child, upright but unlucky. When I walk through the deserted streets of Berlin at night, it becomes clear to me that nothing more is coming. For so many years I have known her, so many women I have had, yet each time it was only her; every year was different with her. Even when I hadn’t heard from her in a long time, I knew we were together; I got to know her anew every year. With her I truly find everything I need, and yet I keep wanting to separate from her. I have failed, and so there is nothing left for me but to write.

My world is like a broken compass. I seem to walk through magnetic fields, always searching and yet without a goal. And once I arrive, the needle points me back the way I came. I am a very cowardly person and from time to time I have to withdraw from all familiar people to go alone to a place I do not know, before I return again. Because of that, I always feel that life is exciting and just waiting to be discovered. It is a complete immersion and it seems as if you can find an answer to everything that way. With every departure I feel especially genuine; with every return, as if I have lost something.

I wrote about love, heartbreak, joy, and sex. About the decay of the individual, the hope of the masses, and the power of seeing and experiencing events that make you special in this world full of arrogance and indifference. Now I sit here, waiting for my train and wondering whether I have now written everything there was to write about. Countless taboos have been broken, so many lives lived. I am 24 years old and my thoughts are those of an old man concluding his existence. I need something new.

.

I’m Off Then:

No, seriously, in a double sense. First of all, I spent the first night in my new apartment today. Without furniture (WITHOUT A BED!) a real pleasure, since it probably won’t arrive until Monday. Olé. Still, it was a breathtaking feeling to stand alone in the new place for the first time. I kept pacing up and down and had tears of happiness in my eyes. Mone can probably sing a song about that. By the way, thanks go to Thomi and Sven, who, as selflessly as one can be, drove my stuff from A to B. And that in the middle of the night. Thanks guys, there’ll be porter until we puke. Still, I had to get up again at 5 a.m. today, back to the old place, clean like crazy, do the handover, and then off to work.

Secondly, next week I’m starting my well-deserved vacation, during which I will do everything possible in my new dwelling. Becca is helping me paint and set things up, Cedric on Monday with carrying the furniture upstairs (and he’s even postponing a dentist appointment for that, thanks for that!), and the rest will show up once the Grandpa-Stuck-It-In-Me-themed party kicks off. After all, that’s a kind of helping too. But since Congstar has—who knows—three to six weeks delivery time, I’ll be without internet for a few days anyway. Unless I hack into some idiot’s Wi-Fi network.

And so, dear lovers, I wish you a frightfully beautiful Halloween (we’ll probably celebrate at Knaack, if anyone cares), lots of delicious tooth-melting sweets, and if you’re not in the mood for a party, then please watch either “Nightmare Before Christmas,” “Corpse Bride,” or “Sweeney Todd” for me. That would be great. Or all three in a row. That’s the most fun anyway. Happy Halloween. You’re allowed to miss me.

.

I’m Into Little Redheaded Girls:

Ever since one of my exes, I’ve had a weird little kink when it comes to girls with red hair. I mean real red hair, not those dyed fakes. And freckles. And very pale skin. And those very special dimples around the eyes. I just can’t resist. Totally hot. And that’s why my FFFFOUND feed is currently full of Gillo Filippa. 19, Swedish, super cute. I’m a fan.

.

I’m Marrying Sailor Moon:

Finally the time has come. I’ve been waiting for this for quite a while. A lunatic Taichi Takashita from Japan wants to use a petition to make it possible for people to marry manga characters. Now I’m racking my pretty little brain over which lucky lady I should drag to the altar. It’s about time, after all—I’m almost 25. So at the top of my list are, of course, Sailor Moon, that hot babe, then the chick from Plastic Little and… um… of course: Nami from One Piece. As you can see, I’m the ultimate nerd again today. Or do you have a better choice? No? There you go.

.

Happy Birthday Hannah:

Hey my favorite muse, I hereby wish you all the very best for your birthday!! And because I’m creatively crappy right now, I’ll just copy the text I threw at you on Studi: Let yourself be celebrated, throw a huge huge party, cover yourself in gifts and enjoy the days at home, mayhem and hullabaloo, love ya, your Marci! And to celebrate the day, I’d also like to once again point out Hannah’s awesome collected works and hereby encourage you all to congratulate her into the ground with a few heartfelt words!

.

Paris Is Burning:

I actually wanted to happily write now that Ladyhawke is playing together with the unbelievably awesome Black Kids on Tuesday at the Lido, and that I would more or less have had to drag Becca along, but then I read on her site that she doesn’t feel like it is devastated. Too bad. Seriously. At least The Ting Tings have a new video and the Blood Red Shoes will be playing again soon in the big B. That’s at least a small consolation.

.

Stressistressstress:

I’m not stressed, how do you even get that idea? Just because in a few days I’m finally moving into my new apartment, half my family is coming up from Bavaria with my furniture, and the (far too long) anticipation is slowly but surely turning into massive annoyance that I just want to get over with as quickly as possible? Nonsense. God, you have no idea how happy I’ll be once I’ve finally got it all behind me, enjoy a week of well-deserved nude vacation, stuff myself with sushi with Becca and watch “High School Musical 3” at the cinema. I couldn’t care less if any of that is embarrassingly lame. By now you should know me. Which team? Wildcats!

So this week basically consists only of working, tidying up, doing laundry, sorting things out, cleaning, packing, unpacking, packing again, eating something every now and then and watching The Simpsons. Whooho. I still don’t know how I’m going to paint my kitchen, though. But what I’m most looking forward to in my apartment: In third place: finally taking baths again. In second place: making pizza – completely without a microwave. And unbeaten in first place: walking a meter straight ahead without crashing into a wall. That’s going to be fun, I’m telling you. Now all that’s missing is lots of liquids for the housewarming party.

.

MTV Is Dead:

Well MTV, I guess that’s it. As DWDL reports, MTV Germany is doing so badly that they’re cutting everything that in any way distinguished the channel from Jamba TV. MTV News with the great Markus Kavka, Masters, Urban, Rockzone… all gone. And from now on TRL only exists in energy-saving mode. I’ve complained often enough about VIVA ZWEI, music videos, Date My Mom crap, etc. MTV is dead – there’s nothing more to say. Such bullshit. I wonder how our Vegas will take it?

.

MiChi – PROMiSE:

Fresh Japanese-English singer MiChi, born in 1985 and known in Tokyo’s underground scene for years. Her single “PROMiSE” (including a cover version of Avril Lavigne’s “Sk8er Boy”) was released brand new yesterday in the land of the rising sun. And even though these two lines are hardly a milestone of German lyrics and I barely understand a word MiChi is singing, it’s still an awesome song.

.

Shitty Night:

Oh man, people. Seriously now. Last night was really awful. I couldn’t sleep, my stomach kept turning the whole time, and when I finally did fall into some well-earned slumber, I dreamed that I was spending a week on vacation at Ikea with some buddies, had neither money nor clothes with me and actually didn’t even feel like being there. And we were constantly on some highways, really annoying. What do you do when you absolutely can’t get any sleep? I want to be prepared in case the nightmare shows up again tonight. And this morning I would have loved to put my dear alarm clock in the microwave. 8 more days.

.

Pushing Daisies:

Okay, the new series on ProSieben seems quite funny and really has charm. It reminds me of a mix between “Big Fish” and “Amélie,” and the title “Pushing Daisies” is probably a play on words between “daisies” and “to be pushing up the daisies,” if I understood that correctly. Let’s just hope they don’t cancel it again right away, like ProSieben likes to do. Just like that. Whenever they feel like it.

.

I Am Dofus:

Finding a good online role-playing game on the Mac, when you’re annoyed with “World of Warcraft,” is probably harder than watching “Skins” in peace on a packed S-Bahn. Still, today I set out on the arduous journey to find what seems impossible to find. And lo and behold: I landed on a site and immediately fell in love. With “Dofus.” Stupid name, beautiful art style, cute story. And basically free, on top of that. What more could you want?

So I chose my warrior Sinami from twelve races and now I’m running around, defeating monsters in Final Fantasy style and completing quests non-stop. It’s really quite cute overall, available for all three systems and—as I said—free in the basic version. Give it a try and then tell me which realm you’re on. Haha, already the first Dofus insider here…

.

How Should I Paint My New Apartment:

I’m torn, overwhelmed by so much inspiration and yet still not sure how I should paint the walls in my new apartment. I’ve already looked for beautiful walls here and here and even here, but somehow the real thing just wasn’t there. And that’s why you now have the splendid task of sharing your influences with me. Show me pictures, write ideas, play Tine Wittler. How, what, and why the hell should I paint and maybe even furnish my new apartment? Colors, photos, creativity—throw everything that comes to mind into the comments so I can finally gain some clarity. Go!

.

Green Electricity:

The weekend was relaxed, exciting, chill, and adventurous all at once—the perfect mix between workdays. On Friday evening, my favorite project manager Na-Young invited me to Chi Chu in Kreuzberg because I designed their new menu. So the two of us, Thomi and Basti, sat in the cute little restaurant, admired the awesome picture by Ohyun Kwon in the background and drank mild Nep Moi. The food was super delicious and the owners totally nice and quirky—I can really only recommend that anyone nearby go and check it out.

After that we went with our intern Susen to see “Wall-E.” We were 20 minutes late because of acute traffic jams in downtown Berlin, but ooohhh, it was sooo cute and funny and sad and just everything. Totally something to fall in love with. And the fact that Susen wasn’t exactly the sharpest tool in the shed was proven afterward in probably the most fucked-up neighborhood courtyard I’ve ever been to: Rosie’s. But the music was super awesome and the girls were authentic and sweet, not like those typical overdressed Kosmos Cindys.

Otherwise, my move is getting closer with every passing day (12 more nights of sleep), and I’ve taken care of some other major obligations. Ordered phone and internet from Congstar, I’ll apply for the mail forwarding order on Monday, and I’ll order green electricity from LichtBlick as soon as Lisa texts me the meter number from the fuse box. Na-Young recommended the last one to me; on Ciao there were only good reviews (in contrast to Vattenfall), and a certain song did the rest. Now I just finally need to get around to figuring out how I want to furnish and paint my new apartment—but I’ve got enough time for that today. If I don’t fall asleep again.

[audio:oekostrom.mp3]

.

Let Yourself Be Fertilized:

Marten isn’t just looking for a willing blogger, but also for good advertisements on the side. And whether good or not, at least Müllermilch wants to express quite directly what some guys can only slur out after at least four vodka energy drinks: Feel like fucking? Or in modern advertising German: Let yourself be fertilized! Advertising slogan of the year, I’d say—against childlessness in Germany and prudish Amir-style behavior in Europe. By the way, the open-minded company with the big heart for reproduction now also has a chai drink. Has anyone tried it yet? I’ll have to do that right away.

.

Blog Action Day 2008:

Blogs can change the world. We’ve seen that quite a few times in recent years. The crisis in Burma, the election campaign in the USA, the Russians’ war. Today is Blog Action Day 2008, when bloggers and the rest of the world are meant to discuss an important issue and come up with ideas, impulses, and perhaps even solutions. This time’s topic: poverty. Join in.

.

Where You Can Find the Most Beautiful Clothes:

There are fashion blogs like grains of sand by the sea, but good and truly awesome fashion communities are rather few and far between, especially ones that really kick ass. Completely (completely completely completely completely) different is LOOKBOOK.nu, where not only the cutest girls on the web hang out (for example Erika, Filippa or Lisa), but also guys who present really great clothes alongside some pretty messed-up mixtures, complete with descriptions and everything that goes with them, such as the styles of Timothy, Pedro or Andrew. Well, now you just need enough spare cash to actually buy all those beautiful things…

.

Give the New Ones a Warm Welcome:

Alright, Apple finally updated its portable Macs today, and the result is exactly what the birds and amateur detectives had been chirping from the rooftops for days and sometimes even weeks: glass trackpad, LED backlighting, NVidia graphics card. And apparently Apple really loves its iMac look, a not entirely insignificant point that by no means all disciples buyers share.

Discussions are already starting in forums, chats, and blogs: The technology? Not bad. The glass trackpad? It will have to prove itself. The display? A point of contention. The design? The spectrum ranges from “Jonathan Ive is a god!” to “I’m taking my old MacBook off eBay again!” Whether I’ll buy one of the new MacBooks, seize the opportunity and get the previous model instead, or let this generation pass me by without a trace remains to be seen. All devices are being shipped starting today.

.

I’m Expecting Greatness:

If you’re working on a video game in collaboration with the venerable Studio Ghibli (I’m just saying “Princess Mononoke,” “Spirited Away,” or “Howl’s Moving Castle” – all absolute masterpieces), then I expect (after “Zelda,” of course) the best, most beautiful, and most amazing thing of all time.

Short story: “Ni No Kuni: The Another World” will be released in 2009 for the Nintendo DS and is about a small 13-year-old boy who kills his mother, meets a fairy, and travels through a mystical book into another world. Uh, yeah. In any case, I’m excited. You can already watch the trailer here.

.

MGMT – The Youth:

In the new music video for “The Youth” by MGMT, four ultra-stylish kiddies appear who must have had their surprise chocolate eggs stolen, judging by how grim they look. But in return they’re probably the best-dressed child actors of all time, and MTV should seriously introduce a new award in their honor. The video was made by the gifted Eric Wareheim, so watch it now and sing along nicely. It’s a really beautiful wind-down song at the end of a boozy private party. Just a tip.

.

Just a Little Bit of Summer Feeling:

Here in Berlin the sun is currently cheerfully driving away nasty Uncle Autumn and almost making us forget that Grim Reaper Winter is practically already standing at the door again. And what is the epitome of summer feeling? Of course: hot surfer girls in skin-tight bikinis throwing themselves into the cold water. So let your soul dangle for a few seconds and don’t forget: in 20 days I’m moving! Yay. On Halloween. That’s only 480 hours from now.. Olé.. or something.

.

Let There Be MacBook:

Ok, Apple has officially confirmed it: new MacBooks will be released on October 14! Oooh, with a discount and a free iPod and made of aluminum and with looooots of power and super beautiful and fast and macbooky and just generally awesome! Come on, be as excited as I am. Whoosh!

.

What Do You Mean Spring?! What a Load of Crap:

Oh come on, people. It’s only just started again. And now? We’re all standing abandoned on a mountain, surrounded by stupid candles, waiting for the guy to come back. You can wait a long time for that, sweetie. Spring, said the nice man from the off. Two thousand nine. I’ll go make some coffee, this could take a while.

.

If There Were a Cell Phone in Every Movie..:

There are movies where you sit there and think: For crying out loud, just call someone already, then you could save yourselves an hour of pointless story! Like in the last Batman movie, for example. As a tribute to everyone whose toenails curl up yet again when a screenwriter apparently has absolutely no interest in modern cordless phones, the jokers over at College Humor have released this gem.

.

Utada Hikaru – Dareka No Negai Ga Kanau Koro:

I’ve lost something important because of small things. The cold ring showed its glimmer to me. The door to you vanished without a sound. But still, I want you to stay, and I always did. To wish for one’s own happiness is not selfish, right? I am learning to become kinder. As the small earth turns, I want to hold you once more, as gently as I can. Utada Hikaru – gifted Japanese singer.

.

Harry and the Potters:

Hehe, I’m such a Freaky Friday, seriously. After about 7 billion other people on this planet, yesterday I read the first chapters of “Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone” aaaand I have to say, the writing style might not exactly reach the heights of great world literature like Mian Mian and Haruki Murakami, but it’s really fun to follow the little nerd on his adventures. And since I’m on a little UK trip (once again) anyway, it’s twice the fun, of course. Hermione and Weasley forever.

.

I Didn’t Eat for Three Days So I Could Be Lovely:

I still have a headache from yesterday, lying in bed and watching the first season of Skins on my iPod. Cassie is my favorite character. The anorexic, permanently stoned pseudo-model, played by the enchanting Hannah Murray, has such a magical way about her that you can’t help but fall for her. So you sit there through the whole episode with a smile on your face as she floats through life like she’s wandering through an enchanted forest, and you just keep hoping she won’t fall. And that she finally eats something.

.

Hannah Is Going on TV:

Hannah fans, pay attention. If you just can’t get enough of our former columnist, you should tune in to the TV channel VOX on Tuesday, October 7, 2008 at 3:00 p.m. On the docu-soap "Mitbewohner gesucht" you can be almost live as she looks for a new roommate for her beautiful apartment in Munich and maybe even finds one. So turn on the TV and stay tuned.

Update: Okay, you heard it, folks. The episode with Hannah has been postponed to November 11, which just happens to be the exact same day our film airs on Sat.1.

.

Collective Crying:

Hey you sweetie, how’s it going up there? Partying it up nicely with Elvis and Tupac? Or are they too tame for you? “Toy Story 2” was on TV yesterday. I didn’t have anything better to do, so I watched it. And then that song came on—the one you cried so sweetly to. So I got all teary-eyed too. You probably would’ve laughed your head off if you’d seen that. Man. It’s kind of strange sometimes. There are moments when I could hug the whole world because I’m so happy. And then you’re not there and I can’t share those moments with you. Which would be important. For me. For you. Otherwise I’m doing pretty well. I’m moving soon and I recently bought “Cooking Guide” for the DS—it’s really fun and super easy. But you probably already know all that. So I’m going to go grocery shopping now and let you listen to this song. But don’t you dare make it start raining right away. Take care, sweetie, and try to write me a letter when your new boss isn’t looking. Bye.

[audio:whenshelovedme.mp3]

.

The Indescribable Urge to Kick in the TV:

“Marcel definitely watched Sat.1 today.” Well dear Chrissy, almost right. But actually I went out to dinner with friends yesterday. Spaghetti. And on TV they were showing “Popstars.” Yes, THAT “Popstars.” The only good thing this trash TV at its peak has ever produced were Mandy and Anne. But it was still kind of fun. Because when you’re sitting there with other people, mouths full, verbally tearing apart these talentless, constantly crying unattractive girls, it’s not only totally hilarious, but also a direct ride into the crumbling, barely German-speaking, asocial depths of German television. Totally awesome. At least I insisted on switching to Sat.1 during the commercial breaks. Nora raises the level back to the swamp’s surface within milliseconds. Oh Nora…

.

Marci’s Music Mix of the Week:

So, autumn has us fully in its cold, uncomfortable grip and that’s why today, just for you, there’s the Autumn Mix of the Week with such grand grandiosities as Robyn, Jack's Mannequin, my band of the moment Spangle call Lilli line, and a special version of a Disney classic that I find absolutely hilarious. So listen to the wonderfully wondrous sounds and never forget that you can also buy the songs. Ta-da. I mean, if GEMA doesn’t really love me, then who does, I ask you?

.

Two Things I Hate About You:

There are two things that are currently harder to find in Berlin than a sober soul at Oktoberfest. Or a CSU voter. First, my favorite perfume “Create” by Puma, which, according to a super nice saleswoman at Douglas, is no longer being produced. Which sucks. Because I use “Create,” love it, hell, I am it! I mean, my natural scent has already adapted to this brew and now it’s not being produced anymore?! In some drugstore I grabbed a family pack. With free shower gel, of course.

And even one level worse is trying to find the stupid adult edition of the first “Harry Potter” volume. You have no idea in how many Hugendubels and Thalias I used that exact phrase today. Didn’t help at all. So I just ordered it from Amazon. After all, I want to finish all seven volumes before in December "The Tales of Beedle the Bard" is released. Do you think I can manage that? Oh yeah, and apparently a Harry Potter anime is supposed to hit television in 2012. Drawn by Akira Toriyama—you know, the “Dragon Ball” guy. Awesome, right? Ah, I’m so deliciously nerdy today.

.

Viva Bavaria:

I’ve barely been away from sunny Bavaria for a year and everything down there is already going completely downhill. The CSU is going to pieces, FC Bayern isn’t looking too great either at the moment, and my family doesn’t even celebrate important birthdays together anymore. Let’s put it bluntly: Bavaria is falling apart—because of me. Because I just had to move to those “damn Prussians, the idiots.” And anyone who shows up here as a native Bavarian knows the stupid jokes. Build a wall around Bavaria… FC Bayern at the World Cup… ten minutes to the main station…

But don’t despair helplessly, my little blue-and-white ones left behind, there is hope. Because someday I’ll surely be drawn back. The mountains, the meadows, the girls. Who could possibly resist? But after Berlin, London is next for now. I decided that recently. After all, my mother once lived there too, so it’s in my blood. So hang in there a little longer down there and just take comfort in the fact that at least the Munich town hall is pictured on the Berlin phone book. Bavaria rulez.

.

Pimp My Level:

While we were learning all sorts of exciting things about gradation curves and histograms in vocational school today, clever as I am, I pimped up my team in Final Fantasy at the same time. Fully automatic, of course. You just had to run left and right now and then, but my charming assistant Gülcan took care of that for me. So wish me luck in the battle against the four archfiends of hell or whatever they’re called, and tomorrow we’re also writing a test. Inflation and deflation. Cute, right?

.

Burn Down The City:

My head is pounding. Totally. Can’t write long, complex sentences. Imagine caveman language. Or a long stream of Twitter babble. Murakami-stanni. Were at Sladdi’s. Partying. Watched The Mole there. Couldn’t get over it anymore. Especially Mandy not. What else happened? I finished Majo off at billiards. And Marco at mobile Tetris. Anne spilled her deepest secrets during spin the bottle (hey, we’re such kids), Sladdi was horrified, Tomi laughed (all evening), Tom not so much (but he had something from McDonald’s), Mandy then did again.

You can tell my linguistic skills are totally coming back. Also, Tomi and I made a deal to speak in mole language all Monday at vocational school. De Monde. Man. Ladies and gentlemen, today we are lowering the bar for you! That’s why I’m now going to eat waffles and my cheeseburger (or the other way around, I’d say online voting). When I took a little nap earlier, two big urges arose in me: first, to use the cold season to read Harry Potter in book form (well, you can tell, I’m an absolute trendsetter..) and second, to burn down a city. And I think I’ll stick to exactly that order.

.

Fack the Cant in October:

Fack in October: Autumn has begun. Experiencing life only through others. CoverFlow. Seeing only black. Mushy melons. The new album by Jenny Lewis – why?! Looking stupid. Really tweeting every piece of crap on Twitter. Withholding tax. Not finding Amanda Palmer hot. Putting up with every bit of nonsense. Stuffing too many milk slices into yourself at once. And not even drinking milk with it. Not having a landline. Greten. GEZ advertising.

Cant in October: Lana – also a Berliner, also broke-stanni, also moving in 34 days. Hannah Montana is finally back. Only four days of vocational school this month. The new Diesel XXX ad. “In This City” by Iglu & Hartly. Mentally furnishing your new apartment already. Finally new MacBooks. Eating more fish. The little brat. The debut album by Ladyhawke. A gym converted into an apartment. Cooking course for Nintendo DS. New episodes of “South Park” and “Simpsons.” Salary raise. Water.

.

Muxtape Is Dead, Long Live Muxtape:

The battle is over and the music industry has done it again: The idea of Muxtape is dead. Justin has to rethink things and has announced the relaunch of the Muxtape service as the death of user-oriented mixtapes. The online service, which is currently in a new beta stage, will from now on focus only on bands. Such bullshit, really. Muxtape was a great idea with charm, brilliantly implemented and more than user-friendly. It hurts my heart that such magnificent flashes of genius get trampled to death by a few money-hungry pseudo-monarchs. But that’s life, right? Only the tough make it to the garden. But don’t be sad, because at least on AMY&PINK you can still enjoy the Muxtape. Just don’t tell GEMA…

.

Marten Is Back:

Well holy cow, is it autumn again already? Could be, because Marten’s summer break has come to an end and now the little neon floodlight fanatic is back after a long absence. And anyone who wants to know what the Rostock native is experiencing in his new nest Berlin Aachen should, how could it be otherwise, stop by his blog and at the same time send him a greeting telling him to finally get those photos developed. He knows what I mean.

.

Stitches:

Ha, how awesome. Through Genius I rediscovered a pretty awesome song from last year in my iTunes. “Stitches” by the band whose name I still can’t pronounce: The Dykeenies. I always think of a cocktail, no idea why. Anyway, that really brings back memories, because the peak of that song must have been about exactly a year ago, if my old memory isn’t deceiving me. Whatever: first up now is “Grey’s Anatomy.” Come on, everyone in front of the TV.

.

TokyoPunk Is Back:

No, it’s not. And that’s exactly the problem. Because of my restart last year and the murder of TokyoPunk, I’m missing a whole half year. From January to June 2007, which I would now really like to have back. Do I have a backup somewhere? Hahaha, do I look like I do? No, seriously? Do I look like that? Exactly. So if anyone still has their feed reader full of my former posts, had every entry tattooed on their forehead, or at some point illegally cracked my database and copied out the posts… I want them back! You’ll even get a surprise in return. An apple. Or this half jar of Nutella that’s sitting on the table. Really.

.

A Selection of the Coolest People Who Use My Designs:

The model Gods Girls made famous, Jessie-Lynne. The Pink Mafia Blog from Canada. The Chinese FHM model Eunice Lim. The American photographer Michael Palacios. The Spanish MTV. The Californian journalist P. Kim Bui. The Indian rock band Sonic Flair. The Japanese photo blog Tokkaido. The American musician Miss Jack Davey. The American photographer Melissa Joy. The gay blog GayestEver (and now could someone please explain to me what that’s actually about). The totally funny candy blog Sweets.sg, presented by Nadia and Jayden. The Austrian Suicide Girls model Miss Chai. The Japanese author Koichi. The running Andy Guilder. The Italian photographer Alessandro Mazziotti. And of course our Jan.

.

Le fabuleux destin de Christophe Kutner:

Truly beautiful photos of even more beautiful people are taken by the Frenchman Christophe Kutner, who for years—alongside personal projects—has also photographed well-known figures such as Milla Jovovich, Diane Kruger, and the fantastic Charlotte Gainsbourg. My favorite is “Book 2” from his portfolio, which, in breathtaking black-and-white aesthetics, shows a slice of life in Brazil. Enchanting.

.

A Marcel in Rostock:

Well, when Marten calls for his farewell gathering, I can’t very well be absent. So last night I spontaneously hopped on a train to Rostock to get thoroughly drunk with him and his cheerful crowd across northern drinking culture, get hustled at foosball, and stuff myself with cake and Rostock döner early Saturday morning. It was truly brilliant—thanks for the great party and the profound conversations about ticket inspectors, drowned high school graduates, and the question of whether Berlin design agencies really are the elite of the country.

Photos will follow as soon as Marten has had the pictures from his analog (!) camera developed. And because I spent countless hours on the train and happened to run into the old drinking buddy Kai, I’ll take it easy tonight and watch the trashy “Camp Rock” on ProSieben (in memory of funny “High School Musical” times). Hehe, I’m such a fool.

.

Look Like An iPod Day:

Actually, I just wanted to fulfill Anne’s wish by holding my cute new iPod nano up to the camera and at the same time drawing attention to the Look Like A Pirate Day of my namesake. “Don’t you have to be dressed as a pirate for that?” Well, let’s put it this way: something in this picture is modern-day piracy. A little wave to the GEMA. (The AMY&PINK legal department would like the last sentence stricken from the record and notes that this was just a really bad joke. Universal, of course, received its money for this incredibly great Fall Out Boy song.) Oh, and by the way: how about a “Look Like A Zombie” Day? Ketchup, please!

.

I Have a New iPod Nano!! (Marci’s Music Mix of the Week):

Since my white headphones finally went to meet their maker today, I paid a spontaneous visit to the Gravis shop at Ernst-Reuter-Platz and picked up—here it comes—a BLUE iPod Nano. And wow: it’s fantastic! And what belongs on a new iPod? That’s right: super awesome music. For example from Royal Treatment Plant, Ida Maria, Fall Out Boy, and the Dresden Dolls frontwoman Amanda Palmer. Click here for the Muxtape.

.

I’ve Got Pixel Critters on My Head, I’m a Döner..:

So, I’m reasonably healthy again, keeping myself afloat with cough drops and slices of melon, and sitting cheerfully at the agency doing really important things. FBI, CIA, CSI and all that, you know. I’m almost through with my little game now (that went really fast), and I’ve realized one thing: I’m addicted to those disgusting microwave cheeseburgers, Cini Minis, and Müller chocolate milk. Like, seriously addicted. That has to stop. I need alternative addictions. Anyone got an idea? I mean a really good one?

.

Swiss Orgy:

Oh come on, that title totally lured you in. “Orgy, where? And why in Switzerland? Aren’t they kind of slow..” Matthieu Bessudo created this perverse masterpiece and was at the same time the fabulous highlight of my illustration safari. But now I’m completely exhausted and would like not to be bothered by any more, no matter how awesome, illustrations for the next few weeks. Or as I used to say: hentai break. Gracias.

.

Illustrations That I Like:

Because Hannah is currently looking for a muse in the form of illustrations for a homework assignment, I’m rummaging through the web for beautiful digital art and have just found a few really good personal favorites that I’d like to preserve here and now for eternity: I like Jérôme Mireault, then also Nicc Balce, Tritz, this one by Julia Davis, which totally reminded me of something, just like this one by Jenny Clements, and the images by Yuke. So now you all have to go look at them too and think they’re absolutely wonderful.

.

I’m Sick:

Yes, the rumors are true. I’ve been sick since yesterday. Flu, cold, cough—the full program. Summer has barely just ended and it’s already starting. Great. So I’m lying in bed all day, being nice and well-behaved, living off cough syrup, Cini Minis, and chocolate milk, and playing my way through the world of “Final Fantasy IV.” Now wish me a speedy recovery so I don’t have to spend another day in this boring hell. Well, actually it’s not that bad—so where’s the next bucket of ice…

.

Attack of Killer Uschi:

Yeah yeah, this thing here I could watch all the way through. Nobody knows why, nobody knows why, but somehow she reminds me of the 50-Foot Woman. Join in and watch. There’s beer and chips too. Delicious.

.

Dear Christ Child..:

Since I am (as is known nationwide) an insatiable asshole, since there are already gingerbread cookies and Christmas stollen at Aldi again, and since it could start snowing any minute anyway, I’d like to take this moment to be the first – the very very first – to hurl my wish list toward the South Pole, just to make sure I get everything I want in order to be even more happy-meal-ish.

So what do we have.. first of all I want "Final Fantasy IV" (yeah yeah, we already had that recently, but I’m going to buy it today – really now. I swear, dude), then a new digital camera that goes beyond my 2MB piece of junk (preferably this one here, because Becca has a similar one and it’s supposed to be totally great and ready for snapshots and it makes you look way prettier and everything..), then of course a Wii because of the fitness stuff (hehe, blah blah, actually just because of "Super Smash Bros. Brawl," "Zelda" and "The Crazy Farm" (to all idiots: one of those was a joke)) and one of the new iPods (please somebody make the color decision for me, I’m really bad at that..).

But those are really just bonus thingies, because what I truly (truly, like REALLY) want is 1. to finally move into my new apartment (and of course throw a really awesome party) and – here it comes – one of the new MacBooks (which are supposed to come out soon and we all know they’re super awesome and way better than anything that has ever existed). And since I’m a Berlin student, I can even get them super cheaply financed. I’m happy. Alright boys, let’s do this.

.

Home Sweet Home:

Ah, today is such a nice trashy Sunday. I’m watching funny Disney cartoons on TV, spooning Nutella straight from the jar into myself, and while the whole world is playing "Spore," I’ve once again installed "Sims 2," built myself a cute little family, and drown anyone who gets too close to my daughter Nami in the pool without witnesses. It’s fun. Stop by sometime.

.

Collect Something:

Okay, you have to understand. Vocational school week, getting up at 6 a.m. every day, almost falling asleep in the shower.. that takes energy. So tonight I’m at home, drinking lots of multivitamin juice and watching funny monsters as they go out collecting humans. And someone told me that "My Name Is Earl" has been canceled, which I think sucks, because that would have saved my evening. Boo.

.

He Is Beautiful:

My iPod nano has unfortunately already seen its best days, not to mention the white headphones. Today Apple introduced its new models and I was already afraid they might combine the nano and the touch into one device. That would have been the worst-case scenario for my in-the-pocket-click-forward tradition. But Apple thought of me and is releasing the coolest iPod of all time once again for very little money. Slim again and in nine great colors. Wow! Want. To. Have.

.

Bye, It Was Nice with You:

Since tomorrow morning at 9:30 a.m., as we all know, the world is going to end or at least we’ll be sucked into the world of Narnia or Pokémon, I’d like to take this opportunity to thank all those who have made my life possible so far. My parents, my family, my friends, my producer, the creator and of course you little blog spirits who sometimes known, sometimes unknown leave comments, point out mistakes, praise me, hate me.. Thank you. Don’t forget to have a Knoppers ready tomorrow morning and we’ll see each other in the next life as Pikachu. Adios.

.

We’re Going to the Brothel in Barcelona:

It’s pouring rain. My Diesel jeans have already bled half of their beautiful dark blue onto my white Adidas sneakers and I stagger home half-dazed from the Westend along Sophie-Charlotten-Straße. I can barely remember the evening on the Schöneweide party boat. That we hustled the others at foosball. That some idiot spilled his collected works of vodka orange all over my T-shirt. And that I somehow managed to get hold of two döner kebabs late at night. With garlic sauce. Olé. But I must have somehow missed the brothel in Barcelona. Photos.

.

Happy Birthday, Wherever You May Be Now:

I know, darling, your birthday isn’t actually until Thursday. But I can’t take it anymore right now, I don’t even want to think about that day. You’re simply missing here. With us. We miss you. I would do who-knows-what to experience just one more night soaked in red wine and sad music, full of poetry, the warmth of your breath and the certainty that there is someone with whom you can simply be yourself.

When I open my eyes again and stare at the ceiling, small wisps of steam are floating around up there. I can’t remember whether it’s my sweat or the hot bathwater running down my forehead. The nasty thoughts are still lingering a bit. Finally he comes in. Quietly he closes the door from the inside and climbs into the tub with me. “Marci, do you think my breasts are too small?” He smiles, pours us some champagne and then embraces me. My thoughts are driven away again. The battle is won. He kisses my neck. I feel good.

Again and again I read through the old texts, click my way through your playlist and think about all the beautiful days we were no longer able to experience together because… yes, why actually. This senselessness still hurts. You were wonderful… you are wonderful. Oh Mona, all my words are lost anyway in the infinity of being and I wish for only one thing: that you hear them, know how much we love you, and put on your everything-will-be-okay smile. Because then I smile back – and believe you.

[audio:everybodybutme.mp3]

.

Final Fantasy IV:

Oh how typical this is. Yesterday I was still whining and today I read that yesterday Final Fantasy IV was released for the Nintendo DS in Germany. And especially because Sari recently got me all excited about it again, I’m now going to head out and get it. And you won’t see me again until I’ve beaten [insert typical arch-villain here] into the ground. Olé.

.

Marcel Makes a Wish:

Oh man, I really want a truly awesome role-playing game for my Nintendo DS again, but every time I wander through the shelves at MediaMarkt, Saturn and GameStop, I either find all the old stuff (no, I’m not buying Zelda yet again just because there’s nothing better) or new things that don’t interest me at all. I hope that “Tales Of Hearts” is released here very soon so that I can finally immerse myself in a really beautiful, atmospheric RPG again. Come on, Nintendo, you’re such a sweetheart, let me relive the old days and release this game. Here and now. Nice game, good game.

.

Partying on the Company’s Dime:

Autumn may already be in full swing, but yesterday evening at aperto they celebrated summer one more time with a gigantic Hawaiian barbecue party. Great music, lots to drink and even more to eat turned the otherwise so respectable people into exuberant kindergarten kids who played table tennis, sprayed each other with water pistols and poured even more high-proof alcohol into anything non-alcoholic. There are photos here, it was definitely awesome. And soon the Christmas party is coming up again, yippee!

.

Good Friends Can’t Be Separated..:

My two favorite lunatics Jake and Amir have been given a brand-new layout that comes in a typical college look. Definitely check out some of their videos, it’s worth it. The two of them are hilarious.

.

Chrome:

These are Chrome. They were an American rock band led by Helios Creed (guitar) and Damon Edge (drums and synthesizer) and can be described as pioneers of electronic rock. They are damn well not a browser, they do not come from the sick minds of data-hungry Googles, and you don’t have to pay tribute to them with a stupid comic. A browser from a search engine. Where is that supposed to lead us..

.

Breaking It Up:

If you're going abroad I can't help you. If you're crossing the street I won't be there. If you give it a minute it's wrong. If you give it a minute it's gone. If we're just waiting a second too long. Darling I'll leave and you won't come along. So give me the reason to stay. Give me the reason to wait. You know I don't look to get caught. 'Cause darling we're here but my true love is not.

.

Running Robot Runs and Runs..:

I found it on the Mecha Fetus Visual Blog. It’s totally awesome. The robot runs. And runs. And runs. Nobody knows why, nobody knows where to, and nobody knows why monsters want to block his way. Is our little robot good, is he evil? It’s so philosophical. Wow.

.

Listen at the Tree:

As already announced, Tomi and I were at the Internashional Phiunkaustalung (original quote from two Asian fellow earthlings) on Sunday. Even though we took our first break after just two minutes, over the course of the IFA we were able to listen to disturbed Sony Rollys (I want one!) in an ice forest where the trees damn well didn’t make any sounds, photograph flashy show cars with pretty girls, and try our luck at loads of contests (chance of winning around 0%). But the coolest thing of all was this funny touch wall at Telekom; I could have played with that all day.

In any case, the trade fair was once again very inspiring this year, full of cute blonde things (who weren’t the slightest bit interested in the gawking male visitors, as usual) and I really could have just packed up the largest LCD television in the world right away. And there was free cola, too. Hehe. Photos.

.

Julia Likes Me:

Haha, check it out: I’m a favorite link on jetzt.de. “The young web designer Marcel Winatschek writes on www.amypink.com about what he likes and what he doesn’t, ‘hugs people, hates people, startles people, throws peach-flavored donuts at emos in a nearby coffee shop or does other cheerful, wholesome things.’ The only question that remains unanswered: Who are Amy and Pink?” Cute, right? So I promise: tomorrow I’ll buy a Süddeutsche again. Really. Seriously. Even if shafty hates me and calls me Michael while doing so. But now seriously: who actually are Amy and Pink?

.

Outside Is Berlin and It’s Pissing Down:

Blah blah blah, it really doesn’t matter what’s written here. I just wanted to post a picture of Nora. It was about time again. You know, I’m a fan and all. Nora Winatschek, right. Berlin is currently sinking like Atlantis once did. And despite this impending catastrophe, I just bought “Keinohrhasen” at MediaMarkt. Spontaneously. For 8.90 euros. Hello? 8.90 euros! Exactly. To go with the movie: soggy fries and American fries from McD’s and sausages from the fridge. Evening saved. Despite the end of the world.

.

Fack the Cant in September:

Fack in September: Mona’s birthday without Mona, the end of summer, school starting, role-playing poverty for the DS, pants that are too tight, constantly having flyers shoved into your hand, the zombie state of Trashchic, spilling apple spritzer all over the desk, manga avatars, the distance between Berlin and Bavaria, empty bottles.

Cant in September: Mischa Barton’s return, kidrobot, new MacBooks and iPods, eating fresh fish, copying awesome street trends from Scrapture, the summer sound of The Script, “Keinohrhasen” with Nora Tschirner on DVD, “Be The One” by The Ting Tings, Oktoberfest, having reached the next level, the beautiful photos by Mark Chang, aperto’s summer party, Cooler Mag, the sexy pictures by Kara Z. Kerstena.

.

When the Consumer Electronics Show Rings Twice:

Because Siemens is such a nice company, I got an invitation from them to the IFA and the day after tomorrow I’m going there with the internationally renowned manager of Van da Hodn GmbH, Tomi. So if anyone wants an autograph from me, would like to supply us with liters of free test products, or just wants to say hello: Sunday at the IFA. Buy Siemens washing machines!

.

Basement Kid:

Due to an absolutely top-secret project, I’m spending my days in the technicians’ basement and therefore have absolutely, completely no contact with the outside world anymore. What’s going on out there? Have the aliens landed yet? Is Jana Ina really pregnant and has Sido started crying already? Questions upon questions… are you even still alive? What are you all up to?!

.

Fuck Manga Avatars:

Since these ugly, annoying pseudo-manga avatars have been getting a bit out of hand lately, here’s something really slick from the big-eyed comic department. Tavish has some really beautiful images in stock; there’s more from him here as well. Wow.

.

Like in Another World:

When I stepped off the train and set foot on the ground of Buchloe, Berlin suddenly seemed blown away, as if Charlottenburg, parties, work, school had never existed—as if I had never left. But I had prepared myself mentally, because last time it was exactly the same. It was like being in another world here. Since Christmas I hadn’t set foot in my old hometown. It was already late. As I looked down the deserted Bahnhofstrasse, I felt how time had passed here and yet stood still. I made my way home.

House party at André’s, watching Batman at the cinema, going shopping in Munich with Ana and being spoiled by Grandma with Bavarian roast pork—I made the most of the extended weekend, somehow didn’t want to leave at all and yet knew from the very first second why I had turned my back on Buchloe. Maybe someday I would return, but the time wasn’t ripe yet, my journey not over.

Somehow I felt relieved when I saw the TV tower again after an eleven-hour journey. Piles of magazines, my iPod and “Apples” by Richard Milward had kept me from running through the compartment screaming with boredom. I often reread the beautiful card my aunt had given me. That she congratulated me on completing my first year of training. That they were all proud of me. And that I should stick with it, even when tough times come. Maybe that’s why I felt a little lonely and abandoned when I arrived. I packed my backpack and walked down the street to the student dorm. Not much longer and I would move out. Finally. My pants vibrated—Ana had texted me. I smiled. Photos.

.

Cutting on the Dancefloor: Electremo:

Our beloved Muxtape is currently a bit mortal, and already a new word is hopping through the local music scene and spreading like a phantom: Electremo—a mix of electro and (here it comes) emo. Pioneers of this young direction include Metro Station, Play Radio Play and Plushgun. Cute bands, then, that we’ll probably be hearing more often from now on in the dark corners at Alex and the crawling corner at Knaack.

[audio:truetome.mp3]

.

Spineless Follower:

Alright, you little pests, you’ve won. “Marci, are you on Studi?” “No.” “Marci, are you on Studi?” “No.” “Marci, are you on Studi?” “Nooo.” And don’t even start about meeting great people who are only on Studi and looking at Hannah’s photos and blah blah blah. So I hereby solemnly announce that I’ve crawled back on my knees into the Studi cunt. Olé. Are you happy now? And don’t you dare not add me as a friend, poke me into the ground and write enlightening texts about principles, spinelessness and following the herd on my wall. Go on, hop hop! And in the meantime you can tell me which groups are currently trendy and would suit me. Let’s just call my Studi abstinence a “temporary summer break.” Okay? Thanks.

.

The End of the Night:

World War III had broken out in my head. When I reluctantly opened my dirty, sticky eyes and turned to the side, I had Lena's bare ass in my face. And sitting on it, purring, was her stupid three-legged cat. There was hammering, I heard bombs, explosions everywhere in my head and Chinese fireworks of the highest order. The sunlight refracted into millions of colors. I felt sick. Empty vodka and beer bottles were scattered all over the room. I groaned, almost grunted, and tried to sit up, which involuntarily caused me to almost fall off the damn bed. I just managed to catch myself with one bare buttock on the nightstand, which in turn knocked the green glass alarm clock off balance. That was the end of it. I could literally watch it fall to the floor in slow motion and shatter into a thousand pieces with a loud clatter on the laminate floor. My internal drug residue made this flight, which seemed to last for hours, shine with colorful shapes, smells, and melodies, and it seemed as if the alarm clock had winked at me just before it hit and whispered quietly, “Everything will be fine, Marcel.” The noise woke the cat, who hissed at me with the nastiest sound in the world. I spat in her face and got up. What kind of idiot buys a glass alarm clock? Stupid cow. “Dude, don't make such a fucking racket.” I turned to the side and saw Peter lying on the red, filthy couch, where many misfortunes had already taken place. His clothes were scattered everywhere, and he made no attempt to cover up his disgusting morning wood, which he held firmly in my line of sight. I could have easily hoisted his stupid American flag on it. The general in my skull dropped his pants and saluted. “Get dressed, you pig, I'm going to puke,” I yelled at Peter and staggered into the bathroom. Peter. “Like the guy from Heidi, only with an I instead of an E. Very American style.” You idiot. Peter with an I was imported to Berlin a few years ago on a garbage truck straight from California. He was a typical, disgusting, slimy, blond, tanned beach boy with a shell necklace and a swordfish tattoo, who earned his gym and Asitoaster visits as a lifeguard and surf instructor. Totally weird. But he had a small dick, like this. I rubbed my poor little eyes and realized that I had released half of my infantry next to the toilet. I paused for a moment, blamed the ongoing bombing raids in the higher realms for it, and trudged into the kitchen to make myself some cornflakes. “Oh man, you wankers, have I cheated on Stefan again with you two antisocial jerks?” I heard a croaking raven voice behind me. The sound hurt; this fairy-like choice of words could only have come from Lena. She studies something, is her mother-in-law's favorite, and is the mother of two adorable, disabled kittens (Eva and Göbbels), the first of which was only good at falling over and the other too fat to sit up. Göbbels lay in her yellow corner the whole time, looking like a baked football and yelping only when someone threw a sneaker at her to test if she was still alive. “Yeah, so what, your husband's a complete idiot too.” She took her mirror and the only twenty-dollar bill in the house and did a line, while I was overjoyed with my cinnamon-covered cornflakes. I could have hugged the world, they were so delicious. Those aromatically balanced, sweet little things. Every bite was a pleasure. Only the milk was bad and had lumps in it. It's not a bug, it's a feature. “So what, he's rich and has money.” She grimaced and looked at me intently. The Cini Minis stuck in my throat, so piercing was her gaze. And with a powerful atomic explosion, she sneezed all the expensive coke across the kitchen table. "Are you crazy?! I'm allergic to cinnamon, you asshole! Don't come near me with that stuff!“ She was beside herself, threw the mirror at me, and went to masturbate with the cat. Today it was the turn of the one with the walking disability. She slammed the door behind her. ”Ugh, damn it, what does it look like in here?!" Silence. Shortly afterwards, you could hear Lena moaning and Eva whining almost pitifully. I grabbed my clothes, saluted Peter's little face and then stormed out of Lena's pink drug den. God, was I glad to be out of that madhouse. The sun was shining right in my face, and at the end of the street I could see the TV tower, which inevitably reminded me of Peter's morning surprise eggs. I put on my overpriced designer sunglasses and strolled down the avenue lined with lush green trees. It was almost 10 a.m., and I was going to be late for work again. “Taxi!”

.

Chill Out, I Swear:

The much too short weekend, during which so many tipsy, crazy sentences were uttered that you could fill an entire unlimited student group list with them, I spent with my future landlady Lisa and her somewhat nutty people in Wedding and the surrounding area. We had a delicious, fluffy brunch together, with Svenja and Meike I trilled sad love songs from “Corpse Bride,” and nicely drunk, we played silly little note games in the middle of the night in Conny’s new apartment. At the 2BE Club I even ran into Rubi-Rubi-Ruben (who is probably the only person in the world who walks around a hip-hop club at 5 a.m. wearing sunglasses).

On top of that, I saved a bum’s life, finally started writing a book (by popular request, it should be published around the year 2025 if I keep up my current pace), and cannot be held accountable by any state in the world if anyone in my vicinity misuses the already overstrained word “creative” and I therefore unfortunately have to shove them off a high-rise building. Thanks, that was the Sunday sermon. Nice blanket, by the way. I’m off to bed.

.

Rockie Nolan:

By now you can probably imagine my taste in the female sex. And she hits it exactly. Rockie Nolan (what an awesome name). Atmospheric, sweet pictures, great ideas, sexy freckles. More from the little one from Georgia, who—like me—is into Rilo Kiley, Mates of State and Tilly and the Wall, can be found here, here and, yes, even here.

.

One Year in Berlin:

August 2007 was a pivotal time for many of us. Hannah set off for Munich, Becca dared a new beginning in Augsburg, and I—yes, I—escaped the heartbreak, the hopelessness and the standstill and moved to Berlin. It’s been almost a year since I turned my back on my idyllic Bavaria and set off into the big wide world with all my belongings. Alone. Far away. It was the right decision.

At first seen more as a trial run that I could have escaped at any time by pressing an abort button, week by week I settled more into this vibrant city. And life just went on. Just like that. With Tomi, I suddenly had a buddy at my side who was just as crazy as he was loyal; Jenny and I rushed through a super-beautiful but doomed relationship, and in Mona I had found a kindred spirit who was suddenly torn away from me and the world. I’ve met amazing people, friends, colleagues. People who inspire me, who let me share in their experiences, who know what they want, who are lost, searching, arriving, getting stuck. Simply living.

And the future moves forward relentlessly. After an unprecedented series of ups and downs, the second year of our apprenticeship will soon begin, I’ll finally be moving into a real place of my own, and I can feel a recurring cycle setting in. The second round begins shortly, and it was the right decision not to turn around on the very first day. A small, messed-up Bavarian in Berlin – part two. Stay tuned.

[audio:hoppipolla.mp3]

.

I Want What That Lesbian Has:

I just watched a Japanese lesbian film (no, not a porno—except maybe a little at the end) and one of them (the cooler one) had such an insanely awesome apartment interior—I want that too, just a bit more eccentric. Bright, creative and sexy. And she also had a lamp that made shimmering stars glow all over the room. Sounds totally gay now, but it actually looked really awesome. Does anyone know where I can get something like that? Well? Come on, spill it, you anonymous Ikea fans—I’m looking for ideas after all.

.

Skins:

Already a cult hit in the Queen’s country thanks to its style, music and profound characters, the British version of “The O.C.” called “Skins” will start airing on BBC America on August 17. That increases the chance that it might soon be broadcast in Germany as well and gives us time to briefly focus on this outstanding series.

This slice of television revolves around various teenagers living in Bristol who spice up their existence with—what else—parties, sex and rock ’n’ roll, while also having to deal with love, parents and all that stuff. Each episode begins with the name of the selected main character who is the focus of that episode, without excluding the other characters. Gradually, you gain deep insight into the souls of the boys and girls.

Skins” – one of the few good British series? Even the Hollywood-spoiled Americans have been crazy about it since last year and have been making YouTube glow. And until the first season appears in Germany, feel free to do the same. For example here.

.

I’m Moving to Wedding:

Wedding, the final frontier. Tomi is scared of it, Anna lives there, Frédéric is waiting for it. It’s not in, it’s not out, it lies exactly between my workplace and vocational school—and anyone who hasn’t read the headline yet will find out now: I’m moving there! Yes, me! From autumn on I’ll have a nice, small, cozy old-building apartment right in the heart of Berlin, currently inhabited by a cute blonde Hello Kitty fan complete with aquarium. Goodbye beloved Charlottenburg, adios Wilmersdorfer, take care Sonjalein. Well, not yet—but soon. Ah, you know what I mean. I’m happy, be happy for me!

.

I SELL MY DESIGN / ICH VERKAUFE MEIN DESIGN:

ENGLISH: Let’s make it quick: I need money. So I’m selling this great official AMY & PINK design + service to one of you. Just send me an email at marcel@amypink.com with the amount of money you would offer. Try your luck—PayPal users will be preferred.

GERMAN: Okay, let’s keep it short: Daddy needs money. So I’m hereby selling the official excellent AMY & PINK design + service to one of you. Just send me an email at marcel@amypink.com including a sum that will knock my socks off and it’s yours. Try your luck. PayPal users will be preferred (it’s simply faster).

.

I Want These Shoes, Seriously:

I saw them with Hannah at the Adidas Originals Store at Hackescher Markt: the neon-stylish, absolutely awesome... Superstar I from the NBA Highlights Collection! SUPERSTAR I IN NEON! NEON! So send me money, go steal them for me, or if you happen to work at Adidas and want to do me a huge favor, grab them from the stockroom and just send them to me. You’ll get a piece of candy too, promise. Cool, thanks!!

.

Copycat, Big Time:

Hey, don’t ask me why, what for, and definitely not what the reason is. But yes, the rumors are true: I’m on Twitter now too. That dump where basically no one except Schäuble and Stasi 2.0 really knows what the point is of posting anything there. But if from now on you want to read detailed logs about when I went to the bathroom, which instant soup I just wolfed down, and who I’m making out with, then just click here and if you love me very much, you can follow me right away. Or whatever. Stupid word.

.

Shitten McNuggets and a Spacy to Go, Please:

My former columnist, fellow school inmate and fashion victim Hannah was in tornado-stricken sunny, hot Berlin for a long weekend, and together we hit the movies (“Narnia 2” and “Sex And The City” – both not exactly amazing), hopelessly overcrowded shopping malls and deliciously drool-soaked suburban trains at night, while she more or less successfully tried to stick her little Zimtstern stickers onto a guy walls.

And my new Ampelmännchen fan and I learned many new, wonderful things. That it can be incredibly funny to order a Spezi at a Japanese restaurant. That popcorn tastes much better the next day. And that even fashion designers can fall for a somewhat schizophrenic pair of skinny jeans. It was really super nice with you, little Hannah, and next time I’ll come visit you in Bavaria and bring your mom cake as promised. And think of me next time you order a Spacy somewhere. There are lots of photos here.

.

Couples Are Stupid Anyway:

“Aren’t couples in love all completely brainless? They fiddle with each other’s hair, call each other ‘sweetie,’ argue about anal sex. Yes, no. No, sweetie, that hurts. No, sweetie, I’ll be very careful. And then Brigitte never climaxes and Hans always too fast. You have to get the pill prescribed, buy it, and then you forget to take it anyway. Then you need the morning-after pill and you’re totally wiped out and might even miss the ZDF Hit Parade? Risk? No. You’re single, darling.” NeonBlond writes about the advantages of being single. Totally convincing and funny. Makes you feel much better right away.

.

Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince Trailer:

Matching the new Disney flick, which by the way features a Black woman in the leading role for the very first time ever, the trailer for the new Potter film “Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince,” which hits cinemas in the fall, was released today. Ooooh, that one looks pretty dark. I’m curious, man.

.

Girls, You Have to Be Strong Now:

Yes, I know it, you know it, everyone knows it: you love all those Disney animated films. Provided you’ve got a pussy. Well okay, I liked a few of them too. Aladdin, for example. Or The Lion King. I admit it. And that’s why today I get to play Santa Claus for you (and a little bit for myself) and show you this: The Princess and the Frog. The first Disney animated film in five years. Yes, you may scream now. Properly, like Tokio Hotel style. Come on, all together: WAHHHHHHHH...!

.

Currently the Most Embarrassing Site on the Net:

Just when you think Microsoft couldn’t possibly get any more embarrassing, they go and top themselves. With the Mojave Experiment, they had to disguise Windows Vista under a different interface so that a few clueless people off the street would actually like it. I only hope Apple responds to this nonsense with a funny commercial.

.

Anna Wrote Me a Letter to the Editor:

Uiuiui, now the letters to the editor I so eagerly wished for are just pouring in. That’s why I’ve prettied up the corresponding headline a bit. After all, they deserve a beautiful stage. Next on the list is my little rocker girl Anna from Svantespeak.com, whom I even brought to tears—but read for yourselves:

"Hey Marcel, I don’t even remember how long I’ve had you in my feed reader. A long time in any case. You were the first! And you still are. Right at the top. Your blog has taken me much further in my life. I read about situations you mastered, and which I was on the verge of failing. And with your help, your sentences that drilled into my brain, I managed to get through many a situation.

I suffered with you when something bad happened to you. I cried when I had to read about Mona’s death. I cried bitterly. I laughed when you felt like laughing. This probably comes across like a sappy letter to the editor. Maybe it is. I personally don’t really care right now! I just wanted to tell you that for me you’re number 1. Keep it up, my boy (: And live your life the way you think is right. Because that way, you’re doing it right! With kind regards, Anna."

I’m at a loss for words. Or are you too? That’s beautiful, that’s great. Thank you, Anna, for your wonderful letter. And once again, sorry for making you cry. Making little girls cry, man, I’m an asshole ;) But you’ve forgiven me, after all. So as a thank you, everyone go visit and comment on her snazzy site and let’s see if there’s anyone else who wants to send me a nice letter to the editor: marcel@amypink.com is the well-known address. Come on, I want to be properly torn apart for once. But only maybe.

.

Ick Love New York, Ya Know:

My esteemed trainer Tim brought me a completely unknown T-shirt from his “U, S and A” vacation. Half of Berlin is already wearing it (Na-Young, verbatim: “That’s exactly the joke about it..”) and maybe that’s precisely why, as of today, I belong to one of the most exclusive clubs in the city. And no, it doesn’t say “I Love Na-Young,” although whether I love New York or not is another matter entirely. I’ll have to think about that first.

.

Hannah Is Coming:

Starting Thursday, Berlin will be one small, temporary attraction richer, because our little Hannah will be visiting me for an extended weekend. What are we going to do? Well, definitely go shopping, partying, and eat sushi. Be happy for me and, in the meantime, listen to your (and maybe also my) current favorite song. Let’s just hope the Lufthansa strike doesn’t throw a wrench into our plans.

.

I’m Rich, Bitch:

Ok, so if we believe this magic program, AMY & PINK is currently worth a stately 96,166.18 dollars. Yay, damn, I’m freaking rich. Uh… well… at least theoretically. Alright, I won’t be like that: I hereby sell my blog for… let’s say… 70,000 dollars. Come on, a bargain. You’d still make a huge profit. Hehe. And what is your hard-earned blog worth? Who’s breaking the hundred-thousand mark?

.

Letter to the Editor of the Day 2:

After our Picasso Flo, Andi from UNDERFUCKED! has now written me a letter to the editor as well. Nice, right? Let’s take a look right away. "Hi Marcel, you asked for it! I’ve been reading your blog for quite some time and I’m thrilled to see how you’re developing as an author and media designer. The decisive reason why I read your blog is that whenever something is on my mind, I check your blog and you’ve already written about it. Just like you, I’m a media designer, and just like you, an agency once became aware of me through private projects. In many of the things you write, I find myself again.

I can only tell you… keep doing exactly what you’re doing! Don’t stop and live your life exactly the way you want to. There is so much people like us have to fight against. Against the idiocy and the decay of our cultural existence! For every free spirit and for everyone who speaks their mind. Best regards."

That’s crazy, right? Letters to the editor are great. Seriously. And if anyone’s thinking that Andi only wrote this to get his domain mentioned here, you couldn’t be more wrong. He would neeeever do that.

It’s worth taking a look, by the way—especially this post really moved me—something like that has happened to me twice as well. In any case, thank you for your electronic letter, and if anyone else wants to do something nice for me and themselves, just click on marcel@amypink.com and start typing away wildly.

.

The Empty Rebellion:

I’ve finally become clear about why there’s such an emptiness inside me. Why I resist, push back against even the most beautiful things in this world. Why I rebel against school, work, and love, even though they all seem to be meant for my well-being. Why I can’t be happy. Something is missing. I’m missing a reason to fight.

Oppression, injustice, senseless rules. International history almost admonishingly shows us countless moments in which people found reasons to fight, to stand up. For themselves, for others. Against the state, against authority, against the assholes. That welded people together. For many, this fight was the very reason to exist. And a free ticket into the history books. Only those who resist the rules of others won’t be forgotten.

And what about today? There are enough hot spots to sink our teeth into. Be it consumer mania. Globalization. What about animal cruelty? Topics like Scientology, surveillance, or neo-social nationalism. All over the world, all over our country, there are injustices that should force us to act. But no one does. The common enemy is missing.

I’m sitting in the middle of Berlin. In the city that is practically synonymous with the fight for justice. But I feel nothing. Before I came here, I still hoped to breathe in that unique scent of revolution, of emotional greatness, of rebellion. But I can’t find it. Where has it gone?

That’s what I’m missing. That spark. That reason to rebel. I am free. We are all free. Freedom. We are so damn free that we’ve started fighting against ourselves. As the only way out of this emptiness. We cut ourselves, we throw up, we drink. We hurt ourselves to compensate for the fact that there’s nothing left in this world worth fighting for.

No wonder that, in our delusional state, we’d rather demand the old boy back on the Kinder Chocolate wrapper than show the state the middle finger for its runaway surveillance plans. That we’d rather bravely fight undead in Azeroth than make plans for how we could do something about the exploitation of the Third World. Or that we prefer to search for happiness in alcohol and drugs instead of facing the real problems of life. I’m disappointed in myself, in you, in everyone who sits around doing nothing and looking away.

But we can’t help it, you can’t help it. The opium of the people is more powerful and more beloved than ever. The state, the media, the big corporations. The real dangers and problems are cleverly disguised so that the will to change anything doesn’t even arise anymore. It’s all shit and it doesn’t matter anyway. What can we possibly change, right? And you can’t trust a single soul anymore either. PETA slaughters animals themselves, donation organizations are all frauds anyway, and everyone who approaches you on the street either wants to drag you into a cult or get money for booze.

I feel an emptiness inside me. The unfulfilled truth of an empty rebellion. And I’m afraid of being trapped in the endless search for a legitimate opponent. Of fighting countless pseudo-wars against unimportant or even well-meaning topics and people. Yes, at some point even hurting myself and the people I love because of it. Let’s not let it get that far. Let’s raise our fat asses, turn off RTL, put down the BILD newspaper, and rebel against the injustices of the world. Because only when voices rise will something change. And who knows, dear friends, maybe the next great oppression is not so far away. But when that time comes, I ask one thing of you: we must be ready.

.

Reader Letter of the Day:

I love reader letters. I really do. Flo seemed to have sensed that as if by magic and sent me the following lines: “Ahoy ahoy, I just stumbled across your weblog (no, I’m not female and I don’t want sex and stuff… okay, let’s forget the latter anyway, because if I were female, I’d probably have a….. Wait a second? What am I even talking about.) Fact is: Your weblog is absolutely awesome. I’ve seen quite a few webloggggs, but I really like yours a lot.

Unfortunately, I can only express my admiration here, since I’m not a rich, wealthy guy who can / wants to hire you for his company. So then: stylish stuff! Greetings from Mosbach in Baden… or whatever is going on here.” Super, right? The folks over at Blond Mag would probably also be happy about such nice words right now… Anyone who wants to praise me to the skies or properly chew me out can pour their heart out here: marcel@amypink.com. Have fun.

.

Marci’s Music Mix of the Week:

So, what do we have today, you snazzy people. On this beautiful Friday there are the best, most beautiful, yes the most superlative pieces of music that are currently playing up and down in my little world for your awesome weekend. This week, for example, featuring the enchanting Lykke Li (also a recommendation from our dear Hannah), The National with the gruffest baritone voice ever and also the Black Kids, for whom I can’t think of a description right now. Everything. Here. For free. On my official Muxtape.

.

Pixar’s Presto:

Oh man, isn’t that little bunny cute? “Presto” plays before the new Pixar movie “Wall-E” and is about a magician and his cheeky rabbit. Watch it, laugh, find it adorable.

.

The New Facebook:

My favorite social network, Facebook, has also decided—after the redesigns of MySpace and Last.fm—that it’s time for a new interface. And as always: some love it, others hate it. If you have a profile on Facebook, you can simply click here and your page will shine in its new glory. What do you think about it?

.

Hillary The Mammal:

My “favorite good-looking-on-photos person” of the day on this rainy Tuesday is clearly Hillary Raindeer from Portland, USA. That’s what awesome pictures should look like. She also has a MySpace page, which remains hidden from me because I’ve turned my back on that dump. So: look at the beautiful photos and bring a little sunshine into the day.

.

The Bad People Are Stealing My Toys:

When I close the buzzing door behind me and suddenly find myself in the courtyard, I feel like I’m standing in the middle of a crack house. The walls are scribbled all over with pseudo-autonomous slogans and shapes, heaps of bicycles and strollers are leaning against the house wall, the mailboxes are painted every which way. In one word: Prenzl’berg.

Arriving in the dirty back building, I actually want to file this apartment viewing under “Anywhere, but definitely not here!” but before I turn around, a young mother opens the door, along with her small, cute snot-nosed kid. “Hi, come on in.” I smile in confusion and, of course, politely and without objection comply. And I’m really amazed. Wow. Why are the most beautiful apartments always in the ugliest and most fucked-up buildings? A few students, couples, and student couples are already there too, moving leisurely and inspecting everything carefully through the large old building apartment.

The little girl sometimes shrieks, sometimes sings while defending her children’s room. “Don’t you dare take my things!” she warns every intruder with an evil look. Whether I’ll stick to that, I don’t know yet, but one thing I do know: I want this apartment. But that might simply be because I’m really tired and would have liked to throw myself into the big bed right away together with the mother. But that’s not something you do.

I thank her for the guided tour with commentary and gladly accept the offer to call her again on Tuesday. When I walk back into the courtyard, it doesn’t seem so bad anymore. On the contrary. It has gained a certain charm. So, Prenzl’berg it is.

.

Pride and Fried Potatoes:

When I open the door for the pizza delivery guy, he first looks at me strangely and then says: “A classical music fan, huh?” Confused, I nod, take the pizza and place it next to the plate with the burnt fried potatoes, which were the inedible reason for ordering something from the Italian place. Classical. The only thing classical in here was the old tableware and the “Pride and Prejudice” film adaptation with the enchanting Keira Knightley playing in the background.

A really beautiful movie that I seem to be a bit stuck on at the moment. At least when it comes to the language and the carefully chosen wording. That’s when you realize how butchered today’s German language actually is, how sad the whole thing really is. Poetry in word and writing choice is important. I’m not talking about that embarrassing, boring, cheap, annoying school and pulp novel poetry, but about thoughtful, powerful, honest words that arise for the sole purpose of moving people and hearts, guiding them, yes, enchanting them. I would at least like to preserve a part of that.

And now I’d better go to bed (see, I said “go to bed”!), before the drugs apparently giving me this grammatical high start to wear off. Who knows what was really on that Pizza Speciale.. Oh yes, and the soundtrack of the movie was really awesome too. Oh dear, they’re already wearing off..

.

My Muxtape:

It’s all just stolen, wuuuhuu wuuuhuu.. Music is something wonderful, maybe the most wonderful thing of all. The lyrics, the melodies, the instruments, all of it invites you to dream, to reflect—close your eyes and off you go into your dream world. Your own soundtrack is the most important one of your life, always up to date, always one song gone and another added. The official AMY & PINK Muxtape. It gets updated whenever I feel like it.

.

The Blonde Downfall:

Vice, NEON and Blond. Favorite magazines. Simple as that. But with the last one, the lights apparently are going out right now, shortly after the relaunch, shortly after the price reduction. The editorial team apparently can’t be bothered anymore, the readers are rebelling and those responsible are too cowardly to comment on it publicly. Has the eternal battle NEON vs. Blond finally been decided? It’s sad, really sad.

.

East Girl:

Hectically I rummage through my trouser pockets, my wallet, and my backpack. I must have some change somewhere. After all, I’m incredibly hungry. For a döner. At my favorite döner stand. With herb and garlic sauce. I don’t care if I stink. No one has to smell me today anyway. Not even the blonde thing walking toward me up ahead on the street. As we pass each other, I look deeply into her eyes. I always have to think of my colleague Kathi, who has an eye fetish. She’s into eyes. But that’s not why I do it. I’m interested in the reaction of the person opposite me. Does she look away, down, does she hold the gaze? My blonde fellow human looks down at the last moment. I look at her nose. And my brain throws out a term: East girl.

That has become one of my hobbies in Berlin. Because what does someone do here who is 1) a guy and 2) not gay? Exactly: check out pretty girls. I study interesting people very closely with my gaze. I punish all the others with royal disregard—or simply haven’t seen them. East girls. They usually have a small, slightly upturned snub nose, with enlarged pores and freckles. Girls from the West, on the other hand, have noses that run parallel to the ground, long, with sharp nostrils. Unless they tilt them up toward the sky to make it clear that they are not from the East.

Can someone who has moved here recognize that so easily, even generalize right away? Am I thereby rekindling the East/West conflict? Is that already racist? Ana had an even more pronounced East nose; she came from Kazakhstan. I try to develop my theory further, already see myself almost on “Wetten, dass…?”, but then my brain waves me off with a groan and lets my hand slip into the secret inner pocket of my wallet. I find 2.50 euros. Wow, exact change. “One to go, please!” The girl next to me is also waiting for her order, looking at the döner man so ignorantly and condescendingly that my brain simply can’t help itself: West girl.

.

Guardian Angel:

The soothing sunshine has turned into gently pattering rain. Clouds darken the sky and I have to think of you. Of all the things we still planned to do in this world. We wanted to watch the fat panda at the movies, we wanted to make London unsafe, we wanted to fall asleep in each other’s arms so many more times, drunk on too much red wine. And now? I let the song play that we once listened to the whole night through because we were too lazy to get up. Where are you now, I ask myself. Are you okay? Are you laughing? Are you crying? Are you now a crazy ghost haunting some castle? After all, you were always a little tormenting spirit. You always kept everyone on their toes, and I miss that now...

Is there any chance for me to ever see you again? Sometimes I would most like to scream at you… how you could dare to croak before me. The thought gives me a headache. I screamed, I cried, I accepted it, I threw up – I’ve been through everything, and still this emptiness you left behind refuses to fill even a tiny bit. But I know, no matter where you may be now, since then you have been my guardian angel. And that lets me hope again and smile. You stupid cow, why did you have to die...

[audio:angel.mp3]

.

My Wilmersdorfer:

Still a little turned on by Ms. Roche’s intimate shaving fantasies, I leave the Charlottenburg S-Bahn station and turn right toward Wilmersdorfer Straße. The sun is shining on the back of my neck. In my head, a few thoughts from school are still lingering. For example, that with the one stupid bottle of Lipton iced tea I drank there today, I covered 120% of my daily sugar intake. That I still have to create a signature list. One that’s supposed to get us English instead of P.E. Because I’m the class representative. And that I liked class much more than usual today, which was probably because a few of the troublemakers around me weren’t there. Maybe I should sit in the front next semester.

A couple of tiny emo girls are sitting in front of Media Markt and grin stupidly at me. That pulls me out of my thoughts. I grin stupidly back and just as I’m almost past them, the blonde one shouts, “Look, he’s got a pierciiiiiing!” I can even hear that despite the iPod headphones in my ears. “Helllloooo, piiieeerccciiiing!!” she screams loudly. I raise my right arm and form the rock ’n’ roll sign with it. They laugh, I grin. And almost run into a bus.

After buying a new Moleskine and the current issue of Blond at Hugendubel, I’m drawn to Lidl. I walk down the cold-looking steps; a small child is blocking the turnstile. I haven’t been here in a long time. Because Kaiser's is much closer to me. Lazy pig that I am. I want to get to the drinks; a Swedish peroxide-blonde family stands in my way and waddles through the aisles. I trail behind them. I had actually planned to get mineral water. Because I’ve already got so much sugar in me. I’d been trembling the whole time. Whenever that happens, I’m afraid of getting the same illness as Michael J. Fox. Or that boxer. I decide on the apple spritzer from Punica anyway. At least it’s deposit-free.

I’m standing at the checkout and just as I’m about to pay for my apple spritzer and the microwave currywurst, the young cashier calls the Black security guard over. He whispers something in his ear and the man of order dashes off, but comes right back. “Which one do you mean?” “The little blond one,” and he points—nice and inconspicuously—at the Swedish peroxide family. As I pack my things into my backpack, I consider whether I should wait briefly for the little boy’s screams when the 200-kilo man pounces on him. I’d rather leave.

Back on the surface, suddenly a fat policewoman is standing in front of me, having put a pair of diving goggles on a guy and pressed two full beer steins into his hands. While doing so, she’s giving him a dressing-down. I can’t make out the exact wording, but I notice a conspicuously hidden camera mounted on the post in front of me. Seems to be something like Comedy Street in XXL. Cool, now I’m on TV. Should I stop and pick my nose? Nah, I keep walking. The emo girls come toward me grinning, and the blonde one winks at me. A happy smile spreads across my lips and a small thought takes hold inside me: I like my neighborhood. It’s nice here…

.

Feelings of Home:

The gentle breeze drifting across the Wannsee lets my wet hair fall into my face. Lost in deep thoughts about shaving asses, pearl trunks, and puddles of sperm, I put "Wetlands" aside and look ahead to Cedric, who skillfully lets the sailboat glide across the sun-drenched lake, and to the two Rebeccas—one of whom is visiting me from Bavaria for the weekend to distract me a little from my gloomy mood. Also skillfully.

We discovered the "real and dirty Berlin" in Warschauer Straße, devoured grease-dripping chicken döner at Alex in the middle of the night, and listened to the new album by The Subways, which really rocks. "Strawberry Blonde" is probably my favorite from it, by the way. Remember that when you give it a listen.

Unfortunately, the few days went by far too quickly as always, but we really accomplished a lot. Broke the Starbucks curse, found the new Nylon, and philosophized about how the Apple flair is fading more with every year. Especially now that even the Newspaper of Evil uses Macs. Time for something new. A revolution. But for now, I’ll just say thank you, little Becca, for a great weekend. See you soon in Bavaria. Photos.

.

Time to Get Up:

I just couldn’t stand it anymore. After lying in bed for days, my iPod being a collection point for the deadest songs ever and me feeding myself on the strangest things my fridge had to offer, it’s time now. Yes, I wanted to take more time relaunching AMY & PINK and many will probably say that it’s too early, that I’m not grieving enough, that I should sit in a dark corner for months first. But no, that’s not how it works, people.

I’m full of strength, full of drive, always with her sweet voice in the back of my mind. She accompanies me. And that’s beautiful. I’d especially like to thank the people who supported me no matter what and even sent me very personal messages. I’m sorry that I was only able to answer some of them, but they did me a lot of good, broadened my horizon, and helped me get back on my feet. Thank you very much for that.

Now it’s about looking toward the future. The third semester will start soon and with it the second year of training. There are many things I can still work on. Whether it’s myself, my diligence, my passion, my fire. Whether at school or at the agency. Life offers so much if you just look at it from the right perspective.

And so AMY & PINK appears in a mix of new shine and proven old elements. Not everything is perfect yet and here and there some tinkering still needs to be done, but I simply couldn’t and didn’t want to wait any longer. It’s a shame that you can’t experience this anymore. But I’ll do my best to make you proud.

.

Why Do So Many Trees Have to Stand in the Forest?:

Okay, you don’t need to worry anymore. Time to breathe a sigh of relief. Because yes, I’m still alive, didn’t come home soaked, and nothing happened to my phone or my iPod either. And that although little Sonja and I rowed around today in a tiny nutshell on the Neuer See. We searched for turtles, dodged nasty death-ducks (or ran them over, no idea), and asked ourselves the unsolvable question of why so many trees actually have to stand in the forest. Almost at StudiVZ group level. Photos.

.

I Live To Let You Shine:

On an overheated summer night and after an excessive amount of Hungarian red wine, Mona and I came up with the glorious idea of writing obituaries for each other, which we would publish in the anyway impossible case that one of us croaks before the other. So we each equipped ourselves with a piece of paper and a pen, sat down in the two most remote corners of her room, and started scribbling away. I only wrote crap. Read for yourselves.

So Mona, you’re sitting on your beanbag, grinning at me and laughing totally stupidly while surely writing downright nasty things about me. But I can do that too, just you wait. When you croak, I can finally write the truth about you. That you’re too dumb to fill your iPod by yourself, for example. Or that you always call your dad whenever even a completely normal ladybug is crawling around somewhere. And we mustn’t forget that you regularly burn something whenever we try to cook something delicious. Well? How about that?

But when I think about you not being there anymore someday, with me, it sends shivers down my spine. We saved each other, pulled each other back into life. You’re looking more serious now too—can you feel what I’m feeling? It scares me to think that I might never be able to hug you from behind again, hear your ridiculous laugh when I try to be funny, or not be able to fall asleep because you think you have to sing in the bathroom. No, little Mona, we will never die. Because we are immortal.

While the keyboard is drowning under my shitty tears, I’m publishing this text that will never do you justice. And I will never forgive myself for not having been with you in your final moments, darling. We will always remain like this: young and free and beautiful. I miss you. My best friend died tonight in a car accident.

[audio:mona.mp3]

.

Death And All His Friends:

There it is again. This feeling of helplessness, incomprehension, and loneliness that we thought we had conquered so well. I’m sitting on our bench in the park, listening to the “Finding Nemo” soundtrack. She loved that movie. No one could root for that stupid clownfish the way she did. And now she’s gone. Forever.

I watch the wind blowing through the treetops and can’t understand how people who come to mean so much to me in such a short time can be catapulted out of my life in a matter of seconds. She still had so much planned; we still had so much planned. Together. Theories, thoughts, conversations that will now remain unfinished forever, even though they were meant to change the world…

Since yesterday, I’ve been carrying an infinite pain inside me, but the strange thing is that despite everything, it’s full of energy, hope, and joy for life. As if Mona, with her death, passed on to me the life energy she carried within herself and for which I always admired her. I now hear her voice in every decision I make, feel her nature in every movement I make, and can still taste her sweet skin in my memories. And no one will ever be able to take away what we experienced together.

I will never, ever forget you, my little Mona. Through your death, Berlin—no, the whole damn world—has become poorer by the coolest little thinker of all. I will carry all the wonderful qualities you taught me during our nightly adventures with me, let you and everything you stood for live on forever. You gave me new courage. And I already miss you. Wherever you may be now, I hope you can change just as much there as you did in my world. Goodbye, little columnist.

[audio:nemo.mp3]

.

Cutest Lip Dub Ever:

Oh man, isn’t that absolutely adorable? This kept me grinning the whole time at the agency today—definitely the cutest lip dub of all time. So sweet.

.

Autographs Later:

So this whole film-shoot thing over the weekend was really damn exhausting (you wouldn’t think so, right?), but it was still a huge blast. And two days of hardcore shooting for something around five minutes in the film is totally worth it. The working title, by the way, was “Letters to an Angel” and it’s supposed to air on October 9 on Sat.1. You’d better not miss it. Photos.

.

I’m Lying in the Bathtub:

Mona’s Column: I’m lying in the bathtub and see my feet with the red nail polish blurred at the bottom. Until recently it was black. But one day I was in a good mood. So I painted them red. Slowly I lean back. I hear the soap bubbles around my head popping softly. From the stereo, the muffled sounds of the new Coldplay album drift through the room. I like “Lovers In Japan” best. A few small candles are scattered around the room. Some of them smell like vanilla. I feel good.

Lately, nasty thoughts attack me when I close my eyes. Of murder and manslaughter. Of illness and ruin. Of hatred and fear. And of meaninglessness. Is that because of my age? Am I just in that shitty phase after puberty when you think about life and death? And about why you’re walking around on this strange world? I pause and let them linger for a moment.

When I open my eyes again and stare at the ceiling, little wisps of steam float there. I no longer know whether it’s my sweat or the hot bathwater running down my forehead. The nasty thoughts still linger a bit. Finally, he comes in. Quietly he closes the door from the inside and climbs into the tub with me. “Marci, do you think my breasts are too small?” He smiles, pours us some champagne, and then hugs me. My thoughts are driven away again. The battle is won. He kisses me on the neck. I feel good.

.

The Day We Became Famous:

A film is currently being shot in our agency for the cultural funding channel Sat.1, and (man, are we lucky) we’re allowed to appear as extras. For that, we had to half-strip on the street because there were too many ultra-cool slogans on our clothes, and so we were given top-designed (ahem..) replacements by the somewhat crazy but super nice costume lady, run back and forth across the second floor all day and flip through magazines (just like on any normal workday), and watch funny YouTube videos with Caroline Beil (who is actually really nice). And the cutest film assistant of all time sat at my Mac and laughed her head off at Photo Booth.

The movie will air sometime in October, so definitely watch it. And please pay attention to the fact that in one of the first scenes I throw an entire newspaper across the room. By accident, of course. At least the food was good. It continues today. Yay.

.

The “New” MySpace:

For years, I’ve skillfully made fun of the MySpace joint. How ugly it is, how poorly the designs can be changed, how much subterranean conception lies within the entire web presence. Now they’ve redone it and… now I find it boring.

As of today, MySpace appears in a pretty tidy style and now looks like a completely normal, boring local community. “Live your life with MySpace.” How boring. So there it goes, the era of chaotic, confusing, and anything-but-intuitive MySpace. And what am I supposed to complain about now?! Certainly not about this boring thing anymore…

.

Legalize LA:

Since I’ve just successfully avoided going to see the “Sex And The City” movie with Kathi, I thought: Why not write something again, I’ve got time right now. So here I am, sitting, munching on a few sausages and, for once, having absolutely no topic I could write about.

I could tell you that I’m going to become famous this weekend because we’re appearing as extras in a film. I could tell you what my “Legalize LA” T-shirt is all about (everyone keeps asking me if I’m a junkie and what exactly I want to legalize..) or I could write that I’m currently a bit addicted to Jappy (took long enough, right Tomilein? I’m making that damn ranking rise faster than you can spell Schland!). But I won’t. Not because it’s absolutely none of your business. Nope, I just don’t feel like it right now. Go fly your kite… Take care!

.

Baltic Sea:

When the TV tower appears on the horizon, I am happy to be home again despite everything. We speed past the Brandenburg Gate and the Victory Column, Revolverheld's “Mit dir chill'n” is playing in the CD player as usual, and I close my eyes. I think about the awesome week at the Baltic Sea, the nights spent drinking, my ears still ringing from playing Singstar at full volume, my head aching from tequila drinking contests, and I will never forget the images of the hairy tourist trains on the nudist beach. On Saturday afternoon, we arrive in what is probably the most deserted backwater in the entire northern hemisphere. The sun is burning our skin, the sea is sending its waves to greet us, and we have an entire house to party and burn down. The PlayStation is plugged in (“I gotta go through the Moooonsuuuuuun”), the speakers are turned up (“If only it were summer...”), and food and happy-making substances are distributed in the kitchen and on the terrace. Norman and Jini brought their cute little fighter Ewa along for the ride, without whom we would never have had so much fun (“Ewa hiiiiiiiierheeeeeeer!”). She's totally the Baltic Sea mascot, the little thing. We loudly commented on the two Germany games (the awesome one and the crappy one), grilled delicious discount meat, roasted ourselves on the beach, perfected our seagull clapping, let the miracle product Gasag save us from the most dangerous situations time and time again, were part of a dream couple on the rise (well, Anne, tough luck: Slady and Tom—nothing beats that), killed mutant monster spiders, used windows for more than just looking out of them, and played a Mario Kart knockoff (in which I always beat Tomi, of course) when the wind was howling outside. Seven days of partying naturally takes its toll. After the theme nights and Anna's victory cry out the open window, I slowly started to feel a damn cold coming on, which peaked on Friday. So I made myself comfortable, watched MTV Zockertag (hey, I love the guys from GameOne, did I ever tell you that I almost worked with them if it hadn't been for the Berlin thing? Yeah, there you go! Showing off mode off again...) and I watched lots of music videos (which is special because I don't have MTV or VIVA at home). I noticed the following things: I like this Mandy from Monrose, the little Uschi from Aloha From Hell is also quite chic, if she weren't so young, and the new one from Sido isn't bad either. Even though I still have Anna's chorus singing in my ears today when the children's choir croaks around. Now I'm sitting here at home, missing the hot sandy beach, the big bed, and the cheerful voices and faces that were around me for a whole week, shouting (“Hey, look at yourself!”), cracking stupid jokes (“I'm your mother, you son of a bitch!”, "Is there any milk left? If not, please put it back in the fridge!“), inventing new words (”Lolomat,“ ”moon protection factor") and hitting each other, kissing, messing around, laughing their heads off or just staring at each other stupidly. And where did Gayman go anyway?! That was a really awesome vacation, guys. Anyone who didn't want to come along or bailed at the last minute (because they were afraid it would ruin their relationship, they had to feed their cat, they had to water their stupid plants, or because they didn't like the group dynamic) has only themselves to blame. I'm looking forward to next year! And don't forget: “Lol” is not a word.

.

Summer (Not) In The City:

Man, it’s hot as hell. Good thing we’re heading off to the Baltic Sea on Saturday. Sun, sweating, boozing. And on top of that the European Championship—uh, hello, what could possibly be better? And we’re going to kick the Poles’ asses anyway—sorry Meggi ;)

There are rumors going around that we might even have a notebook with an internet connection there, but who really knows. So don’t be surprised if nothing happens here next week. Well, a week off from the internet would probably do me some good anyway. Otherwise, think of me next week when you’re sitting at work, at school, or on campus—sweating, of course—and you can picture little Marci lying on the beach with a cold bottle of Beck’s, staring stupidly at the girls—though that’s probably as far as it’ll go, I’m Catholic after all :D

Too bad we’re going to miss the European Championship party at the agency, I really would’ve liked to be there. Well, you can’t have everything, right. So, I’m off to Kaiser’s real quick to grab another round of chilled drinks and then watch this Topmodel finale—you in, Mandylein? I’ll probably switch it off after five minutes anyway (I already know it), but you can at least give it a try. Later.

.

Media Designer:

I’m getting a bit worked up right now about the fact that at our vocational school we learn way too much gray, pointless, drawn-out theory—where in many areas just a small excerpt would be enough to give us what we actually want to pursue this profession, this calling, for: to be creative, to design, to test our artistic limits. We should be prepared much more for modern art, for the here and now, and for the future.

A subject that combines these qualities surely wouldn’t be too much to ask alongside truly important subjects like communication, civics, and sports theory, would it? Tomi, Jenny, and Tobi agree with me, but they’ve probably come to terms with it. Not me. I want to live up to my calling. And alongside presentation charts, the muscular structure of the human body, and the organization of a works council, I hereby propose the subject “Creative Inspiration and Art.”

Knowing my luck, it’ll probably be approved nicely a year after I graduate—but whatever. What am I class representative for if I can’t even complain about a stupid curriculum. Exactly. And then I finally want to see more videos like this one by Eduardo Morais. Come on. And now I’d better go to bed before I get even more delusional… Too much Mezzo Mix doesn’t agree with me.

.

Take Care:

The city was different than it had been just an hour ago. It still smelled of freshly cut flowers and sweet ice cream, but the heat of the merciless sun had given way to a pleasant yet unsettling coolness brought on by the large black clouds that now hung low in the sky. Sina and I hurried past the cafés lining the street. Their employees were already bringing chairs, tables, and umbrellas to safety, as if they sensed the battle that would take place in the sky in a few minutes. I felt the first drop fall on my skin and pulled Sina by the hand to move faster. A group of small children jumped past us and sought shelter under the canopy of a hair salon. The tops of the huge trees next to the sidewalks danced back and forth, and the bags and brochures lying on the ground seemed to join in. Just as she opened the door to her apartment building, it exploded above us and we both jumped up the stairs laughing. Her elderly neighbor from upstairs hurried past us and called out, “Damn, kids, I have to bring in the laundry, the laundry!” Grinning, we entered Sina's apartment. She was a student and lived alone in a large apartment in an old building. Not long ago, she lived here with her older brother, who died of an overdose a year ago. He was certainly a nice person from whom one could learn a lot. But Sina never liked to talk about him. Only a small photo on a metal shelf in the living room reminded her of his existence. I took off my wet sneakers and went out onto the balcony. The many houses lay unrecognizable in pitch darkness before me. Only a flash here and there illuminated everything briefly from time to time. The damp air hit me. It was a relief, as it hadn't rained for two weeks. The calm before the storm. It was the first thunderstorm of this new summer. A beautiful summer so far. Inside, Sina lay on her oversized designer bed, a gift from her parents for graduating high school. She would have preferred a car. She had thrown her wet clothes on the floor next to her. I lay down beside her, hugged her from behind, and closed my eyes. She smelled good. “Will you forget me?” I heard her soft but clear voice ask. “Oh, nonsense...” was all I could say, and I pressed my head into her neck. “When is your flight?” “Tomorrow morning, just after six.” “Can I come with you?” “I'd be happy if you did.” I hadn't known Sina for long. She was cute, blonde, and had beautiful legs. But I was going to leave her, and she knew it. Recently, we had all celebrated here; it was the party of my life. But now the apartment was deserted. Sina lay naked next to me on the bed. The last time we had sex wasn't so good. I just had other things on my mind. Couldn't concentrate. There wasn't much in the fridge. I took out a carton of orange juice and sat down on the couch in the living room. Euronews was showing the world weather. Berlin: 28°C. “This is Euronews. With the news on the hour.” I switched to DSF. The alarm clock next to me rang and I looked at it in bewilderment. I didn't need it at all. I was awake all night. Sina came in sleepily and cuddled up to the door frame. “Aren't you going to get dressed?” She looked at me blankly and went into the bathroom. I got up and opened the balcony door. It was already light outside and the air smelled seductively of fresh bread rolls. She lived above a Turkish supermarket. “Damn, kids, I have to bring in the laundry, the laundry!” “Do you want to have children?” I took a bite of my hamburger and took my time answering. “Two.” “Yes, me too.” She looked down at her garden salad again. Should a first date start with a question like that? I had fallen a little bit in love with her the moment I saw her sitting there in front of me. Sina had a beautiful, slender face, and her blonde highlights, which seemed to sparkle in all the colors of the sun, fell in front of her eyes from time to time. She smiled often and readily. “A boy and a girl.” I just nodded in agreement and took a sip of my Coke. We ended up in bed on the first night. When Sina drove me to the airport, she didn't smile once. I was silent. “Take care.” That was all I could say. So I turned around. And left.

.

Fack the Cant in June:

Fack in June: Being afraid of embarrassing yourself. Over-sugared food. World of Warcraft. Riding the subway. Blood on your T-shirt. Mediaspree. KIK jokes. Chuck Norris jokes. Jokes, like that. Jimy Blue: Boy, please just give it up. Dying of thirst but not having any drinks in the fridge. Being inside when the sun is shining outside. Season finale of "Two And A Half Men." Light blue bleaching powder.

Cant in June: The lips of Sash. Finally really freaking out again. Finally getting a tattoo. Cola kisses Orange. Chicken McNuggets from the fridge. Why is the Rum Gone? Watering the plants. Fascination. All you can eat. Big Buck Bunny. The name Sakura. Cool drinks. Karen Abad loves Dinosaurs. Being sweet. Just not giving a shit. Riding the S-Bahn. Mariko Takahashi's Fitness Video. Lying down in a meadow and thinking back to the past summers. Sopho. Ocean-blue sky. Ice cream. This photo. Slacker Sundays. Hannah Montana (as always).

.

Have a Great Day:

Because Lisa Bund has her birthday today (that was good, right?), I just wanted to wish you a really nice, sunny day. Here. From the capital. To you. The Führer has the floor.

.

Gisela Ahoy:

Ahoy, ahoy! Yesterday, in the most beautiful Berlin weather, our lovely unit was out on the Spree with the little nutshell Gisela, the cutest captain, and the greatest buffet in the world. Yes, exactly: We get paid for this. Even our favorite yapper and (almost) mascot Bonnie seemed to enjoy it. Even though Jessi practically took the poor boat apart, Simone almost fell into the water ("Legs in!!"), and everyone thought we were ridiculous tourists anyway. More funny pictures of the snazzy Gisela are available here.

Today it somehow felt like saying goodbye. After four wonderful weeks properly immersed in working life and an evening presentation followed by a beer, it’s back to vocational school next week, and then on Saturday off to a well-deserved vacation at the Baltic Sea. I’m happy, you’re happy, and anyway: Everyone’s happy.

.

Ge-ext:

Eleven photographers look back in VICE at their past relationships and what became of them. And since Mona and I are little silly copycats… well… now we’re copying it too. With three of our most recent relationships each. For clarification: The girls were mine, the boys were hers. Unless you have strange fantasies, in which case forget that note again. Read it, see yourself in it, and do the same as we did. Draw a conclusion, finally close the chapter on your past, and write a post or comment about it. If you dare.

This is Rebecca. We were together for over two years and broke up because we didn’t win the battle against time. When I think back on the relationship, things like the bike path to Jengen, our sweet Koko, and the deserted island with the monkey butler come to mind. Today we get along better than ever, and every now and then we meet up in the other’s hometown.

This is Lukas. We were together for a year and a half and broke up because we fell in love with other people. When I think back on the relationship, things like Ms. Pac-Man, cold wax strips, and the trip to Holland come to mind. We no longer have any contact, but sometimes I wonder what he’s up to.

This is Anastasia. We were best friends, then tried being a couple, and broke up because we argued the entire time. When I think back on the relationship, things like the Türkheim train station, organic fruit, and nights with Muse come to mind. Today we write to each other now and then; the distance between us doesn’t allow for more.

This is Stefan. We were together for half a year and broke up because we both got bored. When I think back on the relationship, things like the burst pipe, the blind aunt with the walking stick, and the nights by the lake come to mind. Today we get along quite well and meet up for coffee every now and then.

This is Jennifer. We were together for less than half a year and broke up because we were too similar. When I think back on the relationship, things like McDonald’s, red hair, and fat cats come to mind. Today we get along a bit better again and write to each other from time to time.

This is Tom. We were together for over a year and broke up because he’s a gigantic asshole. When I think back on the relationship, things like riding motorcycles, sex on the beach, and his stupid blonde slut come to mind. Today I no longer know him, and that’s really for the best.

.

The Thirty Absolutely Greatest Heartbreak Songs of All Time:

Mona had an idea during her Hamburg weekend, and when she has an idea, looks at you with her big round eyes, and you don’t go along with that idea, then you’re basically screwed with her for the next few weeks anyway. So here we go: Because apparently so many people here are having love troubles right now (even though it’s summer and it’s hot and everything...), we (the Dr. Sommer team) have now picked out thirty of the absolutely most beautiful, most depressing, and most suicide-inducing songs to sweeten your pain while you lie in bed crying your eyes out (I know it too, so no shame).

Breathe Me - Sia / Only Hope - Mandy Moore / A Thousand Miles - Vanessa Carlton / Samson - Regina Spektor / I'll Try - Jonatha Brooke / Confessions Of A Broken Heart (Daughter To Father) - Lindsay Lohan / Try - Nelly Furtado / Phenomenally Whatever - Farin Urlaub / Your Ex-Lover Is Dead - Stars / Yesterday - The Beatles / Nicest Thing - Kate Nash / Keine Angst - Wirtz / Set The Fire To The Third Bar - Snow Patrol / Franklin - Paramore / In Another Life - The Veronicas / Love Is Dead - Brett Anderson / My Immortal - Evanescence / The Kill - The Dresden Dolls / Lips of an Angel - Hinder / Never Is A Promise - Fiona Apple / Fin Song 8 - Gregory And The Hawk / Last Night I Nearly Died - Duke Special / I'll Kill Her - Soko / Hurt - Johnny Cash / Keep Breathing - Ingrid Michaelson / 9 Crimes - Damien Rice / Too Little Too Late - Jojo / The Dumbing Down Of Love - Frou Frou / Blue Light - Bloc Party / Wenn du lachst - Juli.

And so that none of you climbs onto the next rooftop, jumps off backwards, or signs up for “Farmer Wants a Wife” right away: Hey You - Beatsteaks. There, we saved you, right? Good. And because Mona is curiosity in person, she (of course) now wants to know from you: What are your absolute heartbreak crash-and-burn songs?

.

The Killer In Me Is The Killer In You:

After an unbelievably stressful week, last night in fast-forward hookah style. Maria was celebrating her 21st B-day at Knaack, so first grabbing some fish and cucumber salad at Tomi’s parents’ place, then mentally generating a neighborhood-wide power outage, off into the car, picking up Sven and his cherry beer, heading to Mandy’s, harassing her two guinea pigs Paul and Paula, hop hop, going emo-hunting with Rieke, wondering why none of them are at Knaack tonight, blaming it on the lousy 80s music, stuffing 5-euro bills into Maria’s cleavage, I want to go back to Westerland, philosophizing with two law students about proper German pronunciation, then at 4 a.m. trudging home, quickly scoring a Big Mac and fries at McDonald’s, and at home watching my favorite movie Soloalbum. During which I fell asleep. But why is there straw lying here?

.

Munich Governs Berlin:

Ah, the story is just too good: “Berlin (dpa) – Munich governs Berlin for a year – though only on Berlin’s phone books. According to a report by the Tagesspiegel, the wrong city hall is printed on their covers. In the background it is not Berlin’s Red City Hall, but Munich’s city hall at Marienplatz. The responsible TVG publishing house spoke of a regrettable mistake. Two image files were unfortunately mixed up. The next regular reprint won’t happen until a year from now.” Oh, and by the way, pick-up line of the day: “Hey, don’t we know each other from somewhere?” – “Maybe from the basement in Amstetten!”

.

The American Bitches Stole All The Food:

Because our dearly beloved little Nora (the hot minx) is having her birthday soon, Sonja and I watched everything YouTube had to offer about her last night. And we stumbled upon such magnificent gems as the Halloween Special, Ulmen and Nora at the youth hostel, the lonely Christmas Eve, and the Christina Aguilera parody, which I don’t want to keep from you. Watch it, laugh, and love it – that’s an order. From me. His name is Paul.

.

The Groupmaster 3000:

Alright, now without the crap: Even though it’s actually a total dump, I can still rightfully claim that I belong to the absolute coolest, most beautiful and best StudiVZ groups in the world. No one can hold a candle to me. You? Yeah, right. And don’t you dare not read them from start to finish—after all, there’s a great story behind every single one of them.

"Basically everything" is not a music taste. Yeah, I know, you want me... get in line! Don’t laugh, I’ll fuck you too! "Lost in Translation" admirer. A 4 is a pass, a pass is good, good is a 2 and 2 is almost a 1. EVERYONE exaggerates when they talk about how drunk I was. Everyone’s a slut except Mom. Anime, sushi and onsen ... one day I’ll move to Japan! Instead of studying, I always do some crap on the internet. Berlin dorm Suarezstraße. Falling down drunk doesn’t hurt. If you break my heart, I’ll break your legs! Charlottenburg – Berlin’s No. 1 district. Fat kids are harder to kidnap. The Pirates of Monkey Island. The Simpsons.

You match my bed so well color-wise.. Stupid fucks well, smart fucks better!!!! Seriously?! – no, that’s irony, you idiot! No matter what drugs do to you, I can manage that with my tongue. Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas. Praise be to the Magic Conch Shell! (Club Spongebob). Grey’s Anatomy watcher. Look at yourself before you talk to me!! Look how shitty is that??? Oh.... it’s yours... sorry. Hi, I’m drunk – and what’s your name? Today lasts until tomorrow because yesterday also lasted until today ... "Hmm... yeahhh... ahhhh, exactly... oh! No, I didn’t understand." I ♥ my iPod! I’m creative, I can walk around however I want. I’m not arrogant, I just don’t talk to everyone! I always accidentally break off those back clips on pens. I like showering naked. I think I’m kind of hot.... I poke your mom.

I look at the clock and then don’t know what time it is. I’ve had sex with more than just one StudiVZ member... ;-) I click through profiles to steal people’s groups. I laugh at my own jokes. I read the shampoo bottle in the shower. I walk around while brushing my teeth! I type 2+8 into a calculator. I don’t remember anything... but it was AWESOME! I get aggressive when I’m hungry!!! I want all the T-shirts from the video D.A.N.C.E. by Justice! I don’t want anything from you, I’m just being nice!!!! I-press-the-remote-harder-when-the-batteries-are-dead.

Jacqueline, stop yelling “slut” after Grandma all the time! Japan lover – The Land of the Rising Sun. Johnny Depp movie admirer. Young man with prospects seeks young woman with money! Could you please stand somewhere else and look shitty there? King of Queens – Doug and Carrie, Doug and Carrie, Arthur Arthur. Kneel down – I got my “seahorse” swimming badge in Bavaria. Couldn’t stand you, wanna be my StudiVZ friend? Ruckus and hullabaloo – yippie yippie yeah!!! Let me think for a second... NO! People who have to spell their last name over and over again. Better embarrassing than boring. Mila is twelve years old and lives in faraway Japan.... I’m bored, I’m tired, I’m cold, I’m hungry! Tomorrow I’ll start studying, seriously!! No joke! There are always only weird people sitting next to me. Nora Tschirner fan club. Psst... I’m not even a student. I’d rather risk dropping everything than walk twice!!! Roll the carpet back up – I’m not coming after all! Shitty party... if I find my pants I’ll go....... Shy – and no one believes us!

Sex is only dirty when it’s done right. You have been selected for the Battle Royale program! Stop animal testing! Use hip-hoppers instead! Tekkonkinkreet Thomi imitates Slady and makes himself a group too!!! And you’re using your face as contraception? Virginity Is For Losers. Why isn’t there an “Undo Edit” in real life? Why is there so much month left at the end of the money??? What’s missing in life is the right background music. Like in a movie. What?! – What do you mean, no or what?! Because we are web designers – We save the internet. If I get what I want, I’m not complicated! If I were drunk, I’d react totally differently! If I were you, I’d rather be me. If I do what I want, at least one person is happy! If my child later... oh whatever, it’s going to a home anyway! When I’m bored, I join pointless groups. Anyone who still has money on the 3rd of the month is stingy. Anyone lazier than me is dead! Who actually is this LAN and why does he throw so many parties?

Whoever kidnaps me will return me by tomorrow at the latest! Whoever studies too much has too little talent. How was your weekend? – Bright, dark, bright, dark, Monday! We’re not at “Make a Wish” but at “That’s how it is.” We only drink beer on days that end with a “y.” And Wednesdays. Where nobody knows me, nothing is embarrassing!! Show me your face and I’ll tell you your level of education. Say to the taxi driver: “Anywhere, I’m needed everywhere!!” You read all the groups... admit it, you’re into me!

.

Little Kids With Their Toy:

Yes, I know, we’re little, idiotic kids who can get excited about the tiniest bit of crap like frogs at Christmas. But one thing has to be said in our defense: we don’t have anything else. So just lean back and grin stupidly as Tomi nearly laughs himself into a coma over absolutely nothing. Don’t forget to breathe, boy. Breathe!

.

Mona:

Hooray, rejoice, because with the sweet, crazy Mona we’ve got a columnist on board again. She has now successfully survived 18 years, is an overly proud native of Charlottenburg, and loves everything that has big eyes, a bushy tail, and smells like strawberries. With that, this chaotic ray of sunshine follows in the footsteps of such enchanting writers as Ana, Hannah, and Jenny, who have already proven time and again how wonderful it can be to let female alternative voices speak on AMY & PINK. So we’re already looking forward to her first contribution, and anyone who wants to know more about her can simply click here.

.

Loss of Taste:

I have several theories as to why my sense of taste has been slacking off for a while. Because I badly burned my tongue recently. Harmless reason. Because I sometimes smoke funny things. A bit more serious. Because I recently snacked on a packet of pure spaghetti flavor enhancer, which almost burned away my tongue’s mucous membrane. Yeah, that could be the reason.

Theoretically, I could actually be really happy now. Because I could lick all kinds of disgusting things without feeling sick. I can’t taste anything anyway. I also don’t crave fattening killer kebabs anymore. I can’t taste anything anyway. And instead of cola, there’s nice water now. I can’t taste anything anyway. Yeah, life could actually be pretty nice like this. Except that kisses, oral games, and my strawberry yogurt now taste like cardboard too. Oh well, nothing is ever good enough for me… stupid world. Where’s the nearest tongue doctor?

.

Autographs Later:

World domination is getting closer and closer. The nice Matt found four of my designs so super awesome that he immediately featured them on his site Best WordPress Themes. “I love your themes, so keep up the excellent work.” Thanks, Mike, that’s very nice of you!

.

Virginityisforlosers:

For an internal project I’m currently looking for awesome T-shirt slogans and this one is my favorite of the day. Just because. No idea why, but as far as I’m concerned it should immediately become a StudiVZ group (and now it already is one — that’s how fast it goes). Extramarital sexual intercourse ftw.

.

My Twin Sister:

Because Ines and I were just philosophizing so nicely about the Knaack and emo girls, something suddenly came back to me this very moment. This past weekend I saw the pure female incarnation walking around there. Of myself! No kidding! She was wearing the same black Adidas shoes, the same pants, a similar snap belt, and even one of those green New Yorker Classic shirts. She moved like me, she laughed as stupidly as I do, and she even picked her nose like me! Okay, she was blonde and she could sing reasonably well — that’s probably less me — but otherwise..! I was too cowardly to talk to her, because I was afraid the universe would collapse. But I promise you: if she’s at Knaack again this weekend, I’ll step up to her, give her warm greetings from Mom, and if the lights of the world suddenly go out, you’ll know who to thank. Look forward to it!

.

A Whole New World:

Ok, a small token of appreciation to the employees at Disney who are still steadily visiting my XING profile. Thanks, folks — autographs with personal dedications will come later, but could at least one of you please tell me what you want from me? Should I adopt Mickey Mouse? Find Nemo one more time? Or did you perhaps hear that on Monday evening I very clearly saw Minnie Mouse committing indecency with an elephant in a tree? Please tell me!!

.

Heat:

Yesterday began with a damn heat wave here in Berlin. So Anna, Sladdy, Tomi, Agnes, Anne, Philipp and yours truly ducked off to an outdoor pool in Wedding, then sat in front of the TV with a McDonald’s Survivor Pack and chilled out the evening with a few delicious chocolate muffins in Mauerpark. And everything that happened after that, I’ll reveal to the public sometime in my autobiography, because let’s put it this way: Fear And Loathing in Las Vegas was a joke compared to it.

.

Marble, Stone and Iron Break:

How many Amy Winehouse lookalikes, cute emo girls, and guys who look exactly like Peter from “Family Guy” you see breathing around at night is best observed at the fun karaoke evening at Knaack. After Sabse, Tomi, Anne and I had paid a hospital visit to the slightly under-the-weather Sladdi, we headed off to the crooners’ club. And despite really lousy performances by girls with wobbly overbites or guys who sang into their neighbors instead of into the microphone, each of us had a different reason to stay: Sabse because of insights into her male past, little Tomi because of one of those Amy-Winehouse-hairstyle collectors, and me because of her blonde friend Thai noodles with sausage. Mmm, they were delicious (until they made me sick as a dog).

.

What I Learned Last Night:

That it’s the most normal thing in the world to have a Beck’s in your hand on the train in the evening — everyone does it anyway. That I find it terribly interesting when the whole crew at the agency stands in front of a Mac and very demonstratively looks somewhere else when someone enters their password. That I’m into girls with foreign accents. That we can all get excited like little children at the agency over Photo Booth. That I want to move to Warschauer Straße. That my ex-girlfriends visit me in my dreams in ghostly alternation. That I need new iPod headphones. That the Apple contest is a huge scam. That you know I’m no good. That we’re going to the Hurricane Festival. That people from Disney are constantly visiting my XING profile right now — did I do something to them? That drunk Chinese people have the funniest language ever. That I’m currently only listening to bands from A to D. That despite a huge portion of nachos with cheese and chicken, I’m still hungry. That there are more super-funny Photo Booth pictures here.

.

Pixie Is Looking for German Translators:

Scott from the English design forge Toggle asked me to look around the German-speaking blogosphere for creators who want to make a big name for themselves in the virtual world with an alternative, free blogging system. Pixie is the name of this marvel of technology, and soon it would also like to speak German. So: volunteers step forward and best contact Scott directly to apply as a passionate translator. You could become the next Olaf A. Schmitz!

.

Fan Mail from England:

Oh how sweet, I received mail from England with the little message “Thanks for the Stilbruch Theme! Scott & Gemma.” Along with it came a CD with very secret content. That makes me happy, so I say: Thank you very much, Scott & Gemma and cheers to the UK!

.

Lego Universe:

As a little kid I was an absolute Lego freak. For hours, days—yes, years—I sat with buddies in a room reserved just for that, creating worlds full of unimaginably fantastic buildings and characters while listening to the “Lion King” soundtrack. At some point we sold all that stuff on eBay and that was the end of Marcel the Builder.

But now here’s the thing: Lego Universe, an online role-playing game that is supposed to eventually contain all bricks ever released, where little Marci can experience adventures, build things, and be a veeeery big boy. Well then, forget “World of Warcraft” (you can’t build anything there) and heeellooo Lego Universe. Coming to stores soon. 2009. God, I’m so cooool.

.

Like God in France or Something:

We have a new caterer at aperto and, well, what can I say: whoa. Most people stood there completely baffled by the huge selection—too… much… choice. Bagels, fruit, mini mozzarella… everything your heart desires. So it was actually good that I recently bought a rickety used bike and set off at 8 a.m. today because I thought I’d need at least an hour to get to the agency. Yeah right: I was there at 8:30, like lightning down the Straße des 17. Juni and straight through the Brandenburg Gate—and at the agency the lights weren’t even on yet.

.

Little Mermaid:

After Disney got mocked at least once in every recent Simpsons episode, I’m going to break a lance for the slave corporation with my personal lip dub of the day. Hehe, that’s how I imagine the real Ariel. I mean me in real life now. Cute. Right? Yes. But of course the song takes center stage. Good thing nothing happened to the iPod. And if you can’t get enough of Ariel, you should check this out. I did and now I think I’ve become a little, um, crazier. But it’s still pretty funny. Ah, I’d better stop now.

.

Melody Fetishist:

I’m currently in the process of seriously cleaning out my music collection. With nearly 7,000 of course toooootally leeeeegally acquired tracks, both my iTunes is slowly crashing—and so am I. I spend most of my S-Bahn rides clicking the next button on my iPod; it’s already starting to squeak. There’s so much crap on there, it’s just not okay. And I’ve noticed one thing: 70% of indie tracks all sound the same! Guys squeeze some pseudo-English into the mic, pluck a little on the guitar, and think they’re the new Killers.

What nonsense—I need melodies, people! And great lyrics that sweep me away! And recognizability! Man, I need recognizability! Is the indie wave slowly getting on my nerves? Yeah, could be. Not every idiot needs to grab a guitar and stumble onto a stage.

Bye Fiery Furnaces, adios Golden Smog and bye-bye Jack Penate, OUT YOU GO! Chop-chop onto my external hard drive, where I’ll maybe pick you up again in ten years. I’m only keeping my absolute favorite tracks now—the ones with melodies. I’ll load those onto my iPod and skip through sunny Berlin squeaking with joy. Yes, that’s exactly how it’s going to happen. And no other way, damn it!

.

Luigi Goes Wild:

Oh man, I’m about to wet myself. I used to play “Super Mario World” to excess back in the day, but I haven’t seen anything this awesome in a long time. He’s totally going wild and even perfectly to the beat of the music—so damn cool. Only at the end… well, Luigi remains the little, younger loser brother of Mario that he’s always been. Tough luck.

.

Charlottenburg WordPress Theme:

The summer is just around the corner, beads of sweat are running down your sun-tanned skin and your energy pulses with every ray of sunshine that touches your soul. You want to talk about your trip to the lake, show off photos from your vacation in Italy and present the latest gimmicks surrounding the hot season. You want to be part of this unique experience; this will be the summer of your life. And now you can.

Absolutely poppy, strong in appearance and outstandingly original: that’s the Charlottenburg WordPress theme dedicated to sweet Sonja, the coolest magazine design for your WordPress blog! Make summer an experience, give the latest commenters individual photos and leave nothing undone. Sailor Moon is dead! Download here.

.

Wardrobe:

I’m standing in front of my wardrobe and don’t really know what to wear. The rebellious outfit? The sporty look? The serious suit? Or just my favorite jeans and a black T-shirt? I combine all these different character traits within me, but people only see the one I put on. Clothes make the man.

So I change my blog design every week and snatch the title from Jeriko as the blogger who changes his layout more often than his underwear. Not because I want to annoy you—no: because I simply don’t know how I want to present myself. Rebellious? Serious? Just beautiful, without rough edges? Everything has its pros and cons.

Now I’ve read The Zen of Blogging once again, refocused on the essentials and picked out the layout again in which I’ve invested the most real work so far and that gives me everything I need: a beautiful original environment, space for what matters and—something Becca criticized about my last designs—finally simple open space again. Things can change that quickly.

I’m now going to tinker live a bit with my new, old favorite theme and hope that I’ve finally found some peace and can focus on what really matters: blogging, presenting my work and having chosen a beautiful home on the web for myself.

.

Joy Stick Heroes:

Yes, I’m up way too early, but that also has something good about it: “Joy Stick Heroes” is on TV right now—back in the day it was the absolute Bible movie for us. A few teenagers set off for California and want only one thing: to play video games and win a huge tournament. Basically it was just one big Nintendo commercial, but hello? Nintendo! Please tattoo that right next to my Apple logo.

PS: What, the little red-haired girl is now with Rilo Kiley? You never stop learning..

.

Fack the Cant in May:

Fack in May: Letting your nicest photos get ruined. Locking people in the basement. Eating too little fresh fruit. Hay fever. Giving up. The Klabautermann. Damn slow ICQ transfers. Being in a bad mood despite the awesome weather. World hunger. That Grey’s Anatomy is already over again. Wanting to be a Nazi. Ballerina flats. Realizing the trade totally backfired. Never having drunk Bionade. 4 Minutes – it’ll get on your nerves faster than you’d like. Waking up drenched in sweat at night. Chips with beer flavor. That the Baltic Sea trip is still so far away.

Cant in May: Sunshine. Lykke Li’s megaphone fetish. Finally having money in the account again. Cherry blossom festival. The coolest cat video in the world. That our Hannah is featured in the current Freundin. Even more sunshine. 15 new articles. The “Friends” marathon on Sat.1 Comedy. Being able to lick. Yogurette. Making peace with your past. That saripari finally did it. Outdoor sex again at last. The blonde in front of the window. Labello Milk & Honey. The good-weather scent. Drinking lots of water. Fermentation. Spaghetti with chocolate sauce. You.

.

Shock of the Day:

Oh man, Super RTL, don’t scare me like that. I seriously thought for a second you had canceled “Hannah Montana”… Phew… take a deep breath, Marcel. It was just a bad dream. Thank God…

.

My Own Worst Enemy:

The song is really cool, the girl looks gorgeous, and I’m totally into these lip dub videos. They somehow always save my day, I don’t even know why. But the next video will be something really sunny, I’ve already prepared something… ;)

.

Agency Fun 3:

And what do we learn from that? Never steal the mustard from the agency fridge. First, you break gourmet hearts, and second, you trigger a wave of uncontrolled Post-it love stories. Nope nope, it only causes trouble…

.

One World Domination, Please:

Well then you rebels, nerds, Bild readers, pseudo-Nazis and capital city rockers: Time to clench your asses! Because AMY & PINK is about to enter the German Blog Charts. Top 100, baby! Shit, delusions of grandeur have taken hold of me, muahaha! Okay, admittedly, I both slept my way there and cheated. But 1) I don’t give a shit and 2) I’ll just remind you of Apple’s elbow tactics. I have to believe in something, after all.

I don’t even need to mention that this “success” only happened because of you little freaks. Where do you think we are? You read silently while masturbating or you shout your opinion loudly into the comments, you love AMY & PINK, you hate AMY & PINK and you link to AMY & PINK. And now the time has come to finally make something of it. So what does little brain-amputated Marcelli naturally think right away? Exactly: “I want to become King of the Bloggers!”

About time, if I look at all those whining, suing each other and Google-in-love fools up there. So move aside with your Mazda, it’s time for a new top (although I’d hate to push Mr. Basic off the throne, he seems to be the only reasonable A-blogger). Trust Pink, forget stains, and I’ll think of you when I’m a blog star. Until then, feel free to read this mini bible, it really opened my eyes.

.

Beknaackt:

To put this weekend of mine into words, I’ll just share three quotes that have touched me deeply over the last few days:

“I fucked, I cheated, lied my way through life. I went out a lot and was often drunk, shot my brains out. I was lost, damned and torn apart, felt empty and shitty. Didn’t eat for days and measured time in grams.” (Daniel Wirtz)

“You fought for me and when I think about how long it’s been, it makes me dizzy. But let’s assume it hadn’t been quite so hard to get close to me, would we still have made it? So much comes to mind, but that has nothing to do with it. This city is becoming too small for me, because it shines, and you are everywhere.” (Clueso)

“WHAT WHAT IN THE BUTT, I SAY WHAT WHAT IN THE BUTT…. YOU WANNA DO IT IN MY BUTT, IN THE BUTT, YOU WANNA DO IT IN MY BUTT, IN THE BUTT!!” (Butters)

.

Two Favorite Songs:

After partying all night today with Anna and Philipp (he’s already experienced some crazy stuff, unbelievable), which you absolutely can’t tell by looking at me, I’m bursting with energy until I suddenly collapse at some point… I currently have two favorite songs on my iPod. Because of the damn depressing weather, there’s the lament by Kate Nash with “The Nicest Thing” (she’s so cute) and my new favorite band might just become The Last Shadow Puppets with “The Age Of The Understatement”. Both absolute killer tracks! First cry, then freak out.

.

There Is No Internet:

As a little pseudo-geek, I of course laughed my head off. In the current “South Park” episode, the Internet is gone one fine morning – and everyone completely freaks out. Geeky!

.

Every Wednesday Again:

Every Wednesday the same thing: the girls and I sit glued to the TV, desperately wanting to know what happens next on “Grey’s Anatomy,” and stuff tons of cookies into ourselves. Thanks, ProSieben. We love you.

.

It Is Beautiful…:

I, as the world’s biggest girly beer Beck’s Green Lemon lover, am currently utterly delighted by: “Beck’s Ice.” It’s new, it tastes like lime and mint and it… is… transparent! Transparent beer! Inject it straight into my veins, thank you!

.

Screw Other People’s Rules:

I just read a feature in the current Wired Magazine about how Apple managed, through elbow tactics, to kick everyone else’s ass. And what do we learn from that? Screw other people’s rules, do your own thing, and at some point you’ll triumph – even if it looks bleak at first. Be Apple!

.

Face for the Radio:

After the hot milk with honey and even the warm good-night shower failed miserably, the Scottish band “The View” has gotten me through quite a few sleepless nights lately. Predestined for switching off your thoughts.

.

Happy Birthday, Hermione:

Yay, my favorite witch Emma Watson, who is currently really sinking into the London rock-drug swamp, which makes her incredibly likable to me, is celebrating her (finally) eighteenth birthday today. So I’ll say: Happy Birthday, and I’m looking forward to the new Harry Potter installment (yes, I like the movies, don’t annoy me).

PS: Emma of course didn’t miss the chance to thank me here in a video for my birthday wishes. No problem, you’re welcome.

.

The World Ends With You:

Since I’ve neglected my emo-DS a bit over the past few months (neglected is putting it nicely – I strictly ignored it, practically cast it out), I decided on Sunday that it’s finally time for a new game to speed up the long S-Bahn rides a little.

After turning Media Markt, internet forums, and Amazon.de upside down looking for a good game (and not finding one), I was almost at the point of buying (and now everyone pay attention!) Anno 1701 DS (because I always enjoyed building cities and tormenting little inhabitants). Until I saw that “The World Ends With You” is being released this week.

And even though lately I’ve been nurturing a slight aversion to Square Enix (because the new “Mana” spin-offs disappointed me and “Final Fantasy” is currently getting a bit on my nerves), I’ll be the first to buy it, because they’re finally daring to try something new. It’s about music, graffiti, Tokyo, fear, and style combined with everything that makes a typical Square RPG. So I’m happy as a clam.

.

Stop Laughing So Stupidly!:

I’m not a big fan of those overly hilarious fun sites on the net, but when I do start laughing at one, then for a good half hour. Failblog just cost me and my colleagues quite a bit of valuable lifetime. And the ones who didn’t laugh along, we simply annoyed. Man, that’s some awesome shit.

.

Ōkami:

I really envy all Wii owners out there for this insanely awesome game: “Ōkami” by the Japanese Clover Studios. Beautiful music, enchanting atmosphere, and (for me as a web designer, of course very important) a superbly designed website. Buy it and appreciate it!

.

Education Pt. 2:

Since I’m currently hanging out with lots of people from graduating classes, this pseudo-school video by The Metros fits perfectly with the current mood of new beginnings.

.

Who The Fuck Are You? Hannah Montana!:

Lately we’ve constantly been hanging out with Anna and her seemingly countless people who may well have made it their chronic life goal to turn every night into day. As temporary pseudo-outdoor types, the shitty Berlin weather isn’t really cooperating (I know, in Bavaria the sun is shooting out of your butts everywhere right now), but there’s plenty to experience indoors too. Whether at a school party at the Kulturbrauerei, where officially everyone was from a Catholic high school, but hehe, firstly most of them looked like they had just made it to the next round with Heidi Klum, and secondly it’s true what they say about that kind of school: the Catholic ones are the worst!

Or at a Simpsons evening in Anna’s weird loft bed, where because of the constant lack of slats every wrong turn could have been the last. At least there was diet soda and the new M from McDonald’s, which, by the way, tastes just like all the special burgers from my favorite fast-food chain. I’ve noticed, no matter how late at night we stumble into a McDonald’s, there are always friendly people sitting there and I immediately feel at home. Now that’s something nice, right?

Now I’m going to hop over to Kaiser’s, get some cake and a Müller milk, and binge one ProSieben series after another before heading out again tonight. I wish you a nice rest of the weekend, make the best of it.

.

Manhunt on the Net:

In the USA, 16-year-old Victoria Lindsay was lured into a house under the pretense of a reconciliation by eight teenagers and beaten up there. This was, of course, filmed and published on YouTube. Now the platform is being attacked by youth protection groups and politicians. Meanwhile, a veritable manhunt has begun online against the predominantly female underage criminals; FOX News published their photos, names, and addresses. Comments like “They should be hanged” and “They should be killed like animals” can be read from peers on various platforms.

It is astonishing and shocking how quickly such young people can ruin their entire future through the internet, especially when American media hype the matter up to such an extent and fuel a veritable witch hunt.

.

Bruises on My Ass:

When I think about the past few days, I somehow experienced a lot and nothing at all. This mental numbness began on Saturday morning when I woke up at a deserted S-Bahn station near Potsdam. By the way, you can see that moment in an upcoming episode of “The Dumbest Drunks in the World” on “Upps – The Super Blooper Show,” the way it laid me out when I tried to get up. I vaguely remembered herbal schnapps, Jimi Blue, and strange figures in Oranienburger.

Otherwise, I finally watched the Futurama movie, loaded some great new music onto my iPod, and bought Mian Mian’s “Candy,” even though I had already read the book in German (and certain parallels show up in her books anyway). But I had wanted to do that for a long time.

Today shopping with Sonja (which is equivalent to: looking for purple clothes and discussing problem areas) and killed a chocolate cake at Kaiser’s; tomorrow it’s back to dead boring super exciting vocational school, and so this week also trickles along leisurely. Then I hope you get to experience an equally extraordinarily extraordinary week; I definitely wish that for you.

.

Amy & Pink Weblog Awards Winners:

It has happened, the die has been cast. From a multitude of truly beautiful blogs that dared to participate in this year’s Official Amy & Pink Weblog Awards, the high-caliber jury selected the winners in the seven even more high-caliber categories. Deciding your fame, your fall or rise, yes, perhaps even your future this year were: the Mac god Ad, our blog dad Günni, Mona, who with a fresh, virginal взгляд sees blogs quite differently than we do, and of course the (still) uncrowned king of web designers: me. As competent as you can possibly imagine. And here they are, the winners.

Man Of The Year Award

1. Martonos
2. Uarrr.org
3. Hayungs

Girl Of The Year Award

1. Dreiundfuenfzig.net
2. Mondgras
3. Uarrrr.org

Big Mouth Award

1. Welcome To Reality
2. Magdeblog
3. Blogsurdum

Sex Sells Award

1. Ladolcewieda
2. Jessman5
3. Seelenvögel

Best Unique Design Design Award

1. Uarrr.org
2. Ladolcewieda
3. Momworx

Sweet 'N' Cute Award

1. Mondgras
2. Hoizge.de
3. Her-life

Newcomer Award

1. xFUCKERx
2. Motzen mit Matze
3. Scarecrowd.net

Congratulations to all the winners! You truly deserve it; may your blogs be flooded with fame, honor, visitors, and great comments. Check out these blogs!

And to all those who didn’t achieve a noteworthy place: don’t worry about it. See every failure as a chance to grow from it, to pour in even more passion, to create an even more beautiful design. And please rebel against the dominance of Ariel-white themes; there are (as you can see above) already enough of them. Become the counter-trend: Black Power!

.

I’m Looking for an Apartment in Berlin:

Since it’s really starting to get too cramped in my tiny student pad and even the janitor couldn’t stop laughing because of the price-performance ratio, I’m once again relying on the power of the internet and shouting the following request loudly out into the world. It worked once before, after all.

24-year-old quiet and likable media designer without family or pets urgently seeks a beautiful, renovated old building apartment (1–2 rooms, maximum 500 euros warm rent) in the districts of Mitte, Prenzlauer Berg, Friedrichshain, or Charlottenburg, Berlin. Preferably with a bathtub and fitted kitchen, but I’m willing to compromise.

Please send all offers to marcel@amypink.com, you won’t regret it! And to everyone who just happens not to be landlords or notorious apartment-viewing freaks: if you happen to hear in the newspaper, on the web, or through friends about a beautiful apartment and think, “Wow, that would be perfect for our little Marci,” then please let me know. Because the walls in here are getting closer and closer…

.

Fitna:

I just watched the Islam-critical film Fitna by the Dutchman Geert Wilders, released yesterday, which apparently even Wikipedia is terribly afraid of. That terrorism is a huge threat to us and that there are many truly unhinged people out there who wholeheartedly believe in the wrong cause (and killing people IS a wrong cause) is something we don’t really want to acknowledge, even though the news is full of it every day.

But painting all Muslims with the same brush is certainly not the right way either. When will people finally be able to live together in peace and quiet? But that wish is probably naïve and childish after all. Watch the 15-minute film and form your own opinion. After all, there will supposedly be a bloodbath because of this film. At least that’s what some politicians believed.

.

Spots That Inspire Me:

Even though I haven’t been a particularly big fan of the Sony PlayStation series since the PSone (although it’s still better than the wiXbox from the Death Star), this is one of those little commercials that make me dream and fuel my creativity. So let yourselves be enchanted as well.

.

Angel:

I was freezing cold as I sat on the train home. The internal heat from the alcohol I had consumed the night before had given way to an empty cold hours ago. The heating was turned up to the highest setting. Through the dirty window, I could only make out the outlines of the trees and villages passing by. Here and there, in isolated spots, there was snow that the approaching spring had not yet melted away. The only other person in my compartment was an old man who was staring thoughtfully at the hat he was holding in his hands. I closed my eyes and held my fingers to my nose. They still smelled of Vanessa. I hadn't been long at this boring farmers' party, which was being celebrated in some construction trailer on the edge of some backwater. My buddy Eniz and two girls from his class had dragged me there. It was cold and wet; it had been raining heavily shortly before. I could hear muffled rock music, but every now and then Britney Spears or some other crap would come on. Almost all of the drunk figures stumbling around in the darkness around the illuminated construction trailer and bawling were male. And that includes some of the fat farm girls who were no less attached to their vodka bottles. Some were already lying on the ground, so drunk were they, even though it was only just after 11 p.m. I looked up and saw the moon, partially obscured by the dark passing clouds. I hardly knew any of the people here who were so cheerful. I looked at Eniz, who had already grabbed one of the many bottles and was cheerfully shouting at the farmers in a terrible language. Kathi and Sani, the two girls I had come here with, were sitting with some other women on tree trunks stacked on top of each other. Julia, a prostitute by profession, with whom I had spent many a lonely hour fucking, was also there. However, several months had passed since the last time, and we hadn't really paid any attention to each other since then. It was shortly after midnight. I had had an hour to pour alcohol down my throat, which I did copiously, but somehow the party still didn't get going. Until she showed up. I don't remember exactly when I first saw her sexy ass swaying, but I'll never forget her stunning face. I knew her from somewhere. Her hair was blonde, not slutty blonde, but still very light. It wasn't elaborately styled or artificially highlighted, and it was precisely this naturalness, this beautiful naturalness, that seemed to define her entire image. I could easily spend hours, even days, describing Vanessa. I was leaning against the dirty construction trailer, emptying the last sip of a Smirnoff bottle, when her gaze met mine and she immediately headed toward me. “Got a cigarette for a lonely blonde woman?” she asked before she had even reached me. Up close, I could see her clothes for the first time, which I would probably rip off her pretty quickly later. She was wearing a white top and a skirt that was a little too short for the season. I glanced briefly at Julia. Unlike her, Vanessa didn't look cheap in this outfit, but radiated a sensual elegance. I was thrilled. “Sorry, non-smoker,” I replied curtly. And that wasn't just a really good tactic, no, it was also the truth. “Too bad, too bad. Can you offer me something else?” I pointed to the empty bottle in my hand. "If you had come over to me a minute earlier, I could have shared this delicious Smirnoff Ice with you. Oh well, tough luck.“ She pouted slightly and pulled a bottle of beer from behind her back. ”Oh honey, I'm all set." She smiled at me, turned around, and walked back to her friends, not forgetting to skillfully show off her sexy ass. What a departure. Half an hour later, we fell onto her bed covered with a pink sheet, kissing passionately. Her lips tasted of disgustingly sugary strawberry lip gloss, and she had a sweet little tongue that kept trying to wrestle with mine. Vanessa pulled her head away and whispered in my ear, “We have to be quiet, or we'll wake my parents up.” I just nodded stupidly and dully and wanted to continue sucking on her lips, but she gently pushed my head away, got out of bed, and disappeared out the door with a sweet smile. “I have to go to the bathroom real quick.” Great, but not now! I let myself fall back onto her soft pillows and looked around. Her parents didn't seem to be poor. Yes, they were practically rich. Vanessa lived in a huge, luxurious house and had a huge, bright room, which was covered in places with posters of boy bands and the Olsen twins. There were some stuffed animals on her bed and next to them a pink pajama set with little white bunnies on it. God, was she old enough to fuck yet? Vanessa came back, closed the door behind her, and immediately threw her arms around me again. Her breath smelled of mint. “How old are you, if I may ask?” came out of my mouth, even though I had to fight the urge to grab her jiggly breasts. “Seventeen, why?” And I was supposed to believe her?! Well, my brain had been shut down for hours anyway, so what could I do? So I slid my hand onto her breasts and then under her top. I played with her stiff nipples for a few minutes, and she moaned like she was in a porn movie. The moon cast a blue, illuminating streak through the large windows of her room, bathing her sweet face in an elfin glow. My gaze fell on her nightstand, where there was a photo of her and an older man. They were laughing happily, and her father was hugging his little girl, who was wearing only a black bikini. Sweet. But now his one and only was desperately trying to undo my belt, which she couldn't manage at all. I rolled my eyes, sighed deeply, and threw her onto the bed. Sometimes I felt like the guy in “Scrubs.” After two minutes, she lay completely naked in front of me. Vanessa was a blonde angel, wearing only her white socks. I started at the top and worked my way down with my dry mouth. Past her flat stomach to her baldness. I took a deep breath and pressed my head between her legs. Like a deep-sea diver. Or a sewer worker? I had to think of the clever stories in cheap porn movies. Vanessa's pussy actually tasted pretty good; it reminded me a little of that Ed von Schleck from the outdoor pool kiosk. After a truly outstanding half hour, it was over. I was done. And the large dark red stain on her pink sheet confirmed my earlier premonition. Her blue fabric poodle had also gotten something on it. I felt my guilty conscience creeping up on me. But that was swept away by my racing thoughts in the next moment anyway. I looked at my latest conquest. She looked exhausted and was panting, but tried to smile. She kissed me briefly on my now rough lips, got up, and limped out of the room. I heard the bathroom door slam loudly. What was that about her parents again? I also got up, looked around the room, and tried to find a photo of her that I could take with me. After all, everyone had their bad habits. I would have liked to take the one on her desk, because she looked really sexy and forbidden in that bikini, but its absence would be more than noticeable, and besides, I didn't want to constantly have her father in front of my eyes, whose little darling I had just robbed of her childhood. There were some colored pencils and a Harry Potter book on her desk. I picked it up and leafed through it. According to her bookmark, she was on page 136. Or 137. Maybe I should read one of them too, I thought to myself. I put the novel back and picked up her pocket calendar. It was beautifully decorated with figures cut out of magazines and male celebrities, and on each page was something she had done that day. On the last page was a small envelope with “Photos” written on it in purple marker. I opened it and pulled out a small bundle of photos of girls. Probably her friends. Some of them were quite pretty, and I considered taking a few of them with me, but my gaze fell on a picture of Vanessa standing in her room, flashing a dazzling smile at the camera. Wow, I had to have that one. If only because of the Pussycat Dolls in the background. I put it in my wallet, which I took out of my pants lying on the floor, and carefully put the photos back in the calendar. Just as I was putting it back on the table, Vanessa came back. She had put on a different thong and sat down on the bed. “What time is it?” I asked her, to stop her from asking why on earth I was rummaging through her private things. “A little after two,” she replied curtly. Was she angry? She really couldn't complain; there were worse guys for a first time. Really. As if she had heard my thoughts, she smiled again shortly afterwards. I didn't know if it was real or just fake, but I didn't really care anymore. I had done my job here and just wanted to go home. I mentally gave myself a slap on the head. But it didn't help anymore. “I'm going to go now,” I murmured to her as I tried to pull my pants back on. I was never this clumsy before sex. It was better that way. “Okay,” she said, and I would have been annoyed by her rather curt reply if she hadn't given me an incredible goodnight kiss. Then she lay down in her bed, pulled the covers over herself, and closed her bright blue eyes. One of her breasts was half exposed. I should have taken her again right then and there. Instead, I put on my jacket and left the house. After spending half an hour trying to find the damn construction trailer again, hoping that the merry band would still be there, I was disappointed to find that unfortunately no one was left. Neither Eniz, nor Kathi, nor Sani. Even the drunks, who a few hours ago looked like they would never go anywhere again, had somehow been cleared away. So the price for the much-needed togetherness was now to wait at the train station for over three hours. In the freezing cold. I wish I had stayed with Vanessa. “Young man, your ticket, please.” I opened my eyes and saw a small, stocky conductor standing next to me, peering tiredly out from under her blue cap. “I'm sorry, I lost my return ticket and couldn't afford a new one.” Her eyes opened a little and I couldn't quite tell if she was doing that because she was happy to have found a victim for her 40 euro lecture or because I was so nice. Luckily for me, it was the latter. When I got home, I took the photo of Vanessa out of my wallet, opened my desk drawer, and rummaged around for a small box containing photos of all the girls I had ever been involved with. Some were black and white, others were printed from the computer. And now the little blonde angel was there too. I looked at my collection, satisfied that my taste wasn't so bad after all, and then fell onto my bed. Finally. Now I could die happy.

.

Everything Used to Be Better:

It’s all going downhill with this world. You can already tell just from the fact that everything used to be better. The sun was brighter, the sky was bluer, and the lemonade from Lidl tasted much better. Back then it even came in cans. The summers were hotter and more exciting, the kisses and the fumbling at night in the municipal swimming pool more forbidden, and the TV program… yes, that was real television back then. When the entire Pokémon-obsessed gang would sprawl in front of the TV all afternoon after school with chips and cola, bingeing one Japanese cartoon series after another, and then outside little ghetto kids would chase through the streets in Son Goku style.

And the video games, oh my God, the video games were simply magnificent. Never again has anything moved me the way sitting in front of the Nintendo 64 did, playing “Super Smash Bros.” or “Mario Kart 64” with four people, or riding with Link through the beautiful plains in “Ocarina of Time,” while the whole clique sat behind you and was simply happy just to be allowed to watch Link fish. FISH!!

Yes, no doubt about it: the longer you live, the more you’re already dying. You know everything and everyone, nothing surprises you anymore. You’ve touched enough tits and pussies for the next 50 years; when given the choice between orgasm or cake, the sweet pastry wins; you already know everything there is to know, and what you don’t know isn’t worth knowing anyway. And no matter what you go through, you’ve already experienced something worse.

Is that the curse of a generation of children who always had a different surrogate family at their side in every sitcom, who experience fucking, death, and advertising daily through the internet, and for whom, since birth, everything has been nothing but one endlessly repeating cycle—whether fashion, music, or feelings—that only ends when you finally lie in a coffin? Yes, definitely. We are probably the coolest and most numb generation of all time, and now we get to live with that.

.

Soon You’ll Be Famous:

I’m very happy that so many, including high-quality, websites have signed up for the Official Amy & Pink Weblog Awards 08 to be torn apart or—better yet—highly praised by a jury that is partly sophisticated, partly completely insane. Those who haven’t dared yet still have a few days to nominate themselves here. Go for it!

.

Marching for Peace or Something Like That:

While Mona and I were wandering around the Zoo area yesterday in this insanely awesome weather, we ended up in some kind of demonstration about peace, the withdrawal of troops from Afghanistan, and the celebration of conscientious objectors who are sitting in jail because of it. The poor guys. We danced, wrapped PACE flags around ourselves, and shouted for a better world. Loudly.

Since I couldn’t be at home with my family for holy Easter, I spent the evening with Sonja instead, ate delicious vodka strawberries, got to watch ARD teletext on what felt like a 500-inch flat-screen TV (I’m getting one of those too, even if it’s the last thing I ever buy), and talked with Sonja’s sister, her Finnish fiancé, and her grandparents about wedding invitations, Bruce Darnell, and lots of cellulite.

And sorry that I’m not writing that much here at the moment. I’m currently part of a great project that may never see the light of day, but just being part of such a sexual revolution and gaining experience is reward enough. If you’re lucky, you might still get to experience it ;).

.

The Future Is Unwritten:

It will revolutionize your thinking, your actions, and your feelings, show you fresh worlds, ways of life, and positions, and turn you into a new, more passionate and more conscious person. Satoshi Noro. The new label from AMY & PINK. Coming soon.

.

One Week Later:

The week with Becca flew by while we smoked up the stamp card at Meyerbeer, got to celebrate the “the ’80s-are-back” party of the year with Thomas, and plundered the sushi buffet at Sakura 2 after a shopping marathon. It was super beautiful with you, and at Pentecost we’re heading off together to the most pseudo-punk metropolis in the world: London’s calling!

.

We Love WP Loves Me:

"Great site. I'm a big fan of Europe. I enjoyed the nice clean design you have as well as the content. You seem like a very inspiring, personable writer and designer. Nice to meet you. Nate."

Thank you very much, Nate. Nice to meet you too. We Love WP.

.

Blackout:

I think I had the raunchiest sex of my life last night. But I was too drunk to remember it. Shitty combination. Congratulations.

.

Forty-Two:

My old Bavarian friend Becca has been visiting since Friday and we properly celebrated the weekend with shopping, partying, the wave, the most delicious chai tea ever, vodka grapefruit, cowboy hats, jogging, stuffing ourselves with potato salad, great weather, bad weather, Resident Evil, more shopping and sleeping. Today is Monday, March 17, 2008, my (almost well-deserved) vacation begins, and now it all starts over again.

.

Let’s Stay Friends!:

"He stands awkwardly in the stairwell, a bag full of the last of his things. A goodbye kiss that slips somewhere between mouth and cheek. And then, sheepishly, the sentence: »Let’s stay friends.« The words echo longer than his footsteps on the stairs, they slam louder than the door that snaps shut behind him, and more brutally than the plate that shatters against her. Let’s stay friends. Freshly wounded, the sentence is a scandal, it is humiliating. Friendship? Why friendship? We loved each other through the Kama Sutra and came up with names for our children. You know every millimeter of my body, and I opened my soul to you. You were the most important thing in my life! And now? Play mini golf? As if nothing ever happened?

As if friendship could be a compromise between love and nothing at all. As if one simply hadn’t been worth love, that nonplusultra. But that is precisely the logic of our relationships. We have the very highest expectations since the desire for romantic love has become the generally accepted ideal and has replaced economic constraints. We no longer have to marry someone to be financially secure and morally respectable.

And because we have maximum freedom in choosing our partners, we also want the maximum. Passion and intimacy, perfect sex and total understanding, freedom and exclusivity, everyday life and adventure. Forever. Every time.

»Let’s stay friends.« The sentence is also honest and sincere. What else are you supposed to say when you’ve torn out the heart of someone you care about very much? When you don’t want to lose them completely along with the love that has slipped away from you? Isn’t it rather absurd to cut off contact with someone you once wanted to spend your life with?"

Let’s Stay Friends! A NEON article for everyone who wants to learn how to navigate the fine line between broken love and the chance for a great friendship.

.

Vimeo Redesign:

My secret favorite video site Vimeo has undergone a redesign. Unnecessary, because I already thought the old design was insanely awesome, but what the guys and girls have put online now also looks pretty cute and stylish.

.

Zoological Garden:

"Sina’s real name is something else, like all the teenagers here who want to be called something different—if they speak at all. Maybe because their parents are looking for them, maybe more likely the police. ‘Missing persons reports are rare here,’ says Ingo Tuchel, a street worker for 15 years. Sina has brown hair, a middle parting, chapped lips, a short black jacket with a fur hood. The syringes disappear into a pouch hanging around her neck that looks like the kind mothers try to force on you for school trips. She is small, fragile, white. She speaks clearly and politely, even laughs now and then when Jan teases her about talking too much. She seems lucid and simply like a much-too-thin teenager, if it weren’t for those eyes that people often think are a junkie cliché: deep dark hollows, a sallow, dull expressionlessness and pupils as small as pinheads. She says she is 19. She looks younger.

By now Sina spends 50 euros a day. Where does the money come from? ‘Begging’ and ‘pulling shit.’ Later a boy will say that he has seen Sina around Kurfürstenstraße quite often. That’s where the girls’ strip is. At 9:34 p.m. a train leaves Zoo Station for Paris. Sina isn’t so good with times. Only the internal clock matters and it’s always there, reminding her that the next hit has to come. Four years ago her wristwatch was the first thing she traded for heroin."

Zoo Station – Eternal Terminus. Every day I am at Zoologischer Garten and the dark side of Berlin lies only a few meters away from me. A touchingly beautiful report by the Tagesspiegel about the misery and the legacy of Christiane F.

.

Gary Is Back:

Over half a year has passed since that rascal Gary, our personal trend scout, last sent a sign of life. He had set off for Tokyo, to the land of oranges and Pikachus, and we hadn’t heard a word from him. Until today. Because yes, it’s true: Gary lives! As so often before, he had to go underground due to an intrusive woman, but now he’s back and will (hopefully again) keep us up to date every week on what’s going on in the world. You’ve got to know these things, after all.

On his incredible journeys through time and space, he not only had to deal on his iPod with winter-depressive heartache soul, lousy pseudo-gothic-whatever, and a (admittedly talented) Amy Winehouse copycat, no, he also rediscovered a hieroglyphic, jumpy music troupe from the last millennium: S Club 7. Now he doesn’t pop any pills without blasting “S Club Party” or “Don’t Stop Moving” first.

After that, the nice Mr. Gary is so blown away that he either creates terrible things with Photoshop or goes off to beat up small rock bands. And that’s exactly why he’s already on a plane to Queenland, from where he’ll once again bombard us next week with the most important of the unimportant things. Look forward to it! Or not. Our foreign correspondent signs off, as always, with the phrase of all phrases: “Thanks for the honey, bitchy bunny.”

.

Sunny:

I’m such a sucker for good weather. While on cold, wet, gloomy days I chase after my depressive, dark thoughts, on days when the sun warms me with its hot rays I completely freak out, feel like conquering the world and the blue sky along with it (even faster than usual), and end up loving every creature on this dirty planet anyway. Let’s hope the weather stays like this until Becca arrives here Friday evening, and starting tomorrow we’ll begin with early morning jogging in the park, right Sonjalein? ;)

.

I’m Done:

Just in time for The Simpsons, I’m finished. All four seasons of “O.C., California” back to back are now over; they’ve once again opened my eyes to life, and at the moment when Ryan drives past Marissa I always (ALWAYS) get teary-eyed. Goodbye, you Fab Four. See you again when my next existential crisis hits. And with my self-destructive streak, that can happen pretty quickly.

.

Urban Bums:

There he sits in front of us in his dark suit and slicked-back hair. Just as we’re about to walk past the crumbling entrance of the building, we hear his barely understandable voice. With slow and deliberate words he tells us he hasn’t eaten in days, waving his hands around in slow motion. We run through our standard routine. We’re poor students, we’re sorry, we’re not exactly well off ourselves. We could have said that with a clear conscience if we hadn’t just been on our way to McDonald’s. What a spectacle. As we walk on, we hear him still complaining that no one has money, everyone just walks by.

Standing at the counter, guilt hits us. I look Mona in the eyes; she looks back as if she knows exactly what I’m about to say. I count the coins in my hand. “And two more cheeseburgers,” I say to the blonde cashier. We really felt like we were doing something good. With stupid cheeseburgers. But when we return to the entrance of the building, he’s already gone. We stand there for minutes. We felt sorry.

.

Gambled Away:

I gambled everything away, squandered it, threw the money out the window. Unable to stop, I kept betting more and more, let myself get carried away, fell victim to gambling addiction, was neither master of my heart nor my mind. Always with my eyes on the little white ball spinning in circles, laughing, only to stop at the wrong moment. I came with everything and left with nothing; I had lost it all. That’s how quickly ten euros can disappear.

Yesterday we got all dressed up and went to the casino at Potsdamer Platz, with suit, shirt and all the trimmings, and threw ourselves into the games of chance. At times we were pretty overwhelmed by the speed, brazenness, and zombie-like manner in which some figures there tossed their entire fortunes over the fence. While I anxiously guarded my 2-euro chip lying on “black,” the old guy next to me placed a stack of 100-euro notes beside my tiny chip. We both lost. Not a sound, not a whimper; he left as suddenly as he had come.

I much preferred the little vodka round at Sabse’s place, where we whiled away the night playing spin the bottle, drinking mustard beer, and talking about gay neighbors. And when, in the early morning hours, we sped along the country roads in the car, loudly singing “California, here we come,” and I saw the red lights in the sky, I leaned back relaxed and almost felt at home.

.

Gates vs. Jobs:

Hahaha, so awesome. What more is there to say: either you get it or you don’t. Awesome shit. Found at Günni.

.

iSmoke:

Hehe, I just saw this while I was out and about. Someone was especially creative there. Well, I’ll still stick with my Gauloises, but I think it’s funny.

.

I Am Legend – Alternative Ending:

Because of the BVG strike, today at the S-Bahn station on Friedrichstraße I felt like I was in the movie "I Am Legend" with Will Smith. What felt like thousands of people crammed tightly together, being pushed in orderly lines in the right direction by the police, by security forces, surely even by the military. But everything will be fine, because even Will Smith survived. At least in the alternative ending of the film, which you can watch at Slashfilm.

.

I Am a Big Sailor Moon Fan:

Ever since I was a small child, I’ve been a big fan of Sailor Moon. Now I also know why. To be seen at Mangamania in Frankfurt.

.

The Official Amy & Pink Weblog Awards 08:

While my personal lawyer Sonja and I roamed the streets last night armed with a bottle of Ouzo and several cheeseburgers, and one could slowly sense that the capital would disappear under a sticky white mass in just a few hours, quite a few modern-day thoughts shot through my head. Nothing on the internet is created with as much personality, creativity, and passion as weblogs. They change our here and now, fight against injustice, and let us take part in the lives of formerly unknown friends. Love, sex, and searching for parking spaces – everything may and will be blogged about. AMY & PINK has long been at the navel of the web in ever-changing forms, has seen many good bloggers come and go, and recognizes the changing signs. And that’s why it’s time to properly honor the rebels of the future.

Join in and apply in the following categories for the blogs of the year: Man of the Year Award, Girl of the Year Award, Big Mouth Award, Sex Sells Award, Best Unique Design Award, Sweet 'n' Cute Award, and the Young Talent Promotion Award.

You can participate very easily by publishing a post about this competition on your blog by March 31, 2008, describing why you of all people want to win in at least one of the categories listed above, and sending a trackback in return.

Both German- and English-language blogs may participate. For the Young Talent Promotion Award, only blogs that are at most six months old are allowed. The award ceremony will take place on Sunday, April 6, 2008. Fame, honor, and jealous fellow bloggers await you. Let the games begin!

.

Berlin in a State of Emergency:

Starting Monday, my beloved capital will be in chaos. Everything that has a few wheels attached to it will be on strike. That means: no subway, no S-Bahn, no tram, no buses—nothing will be willing to take me anywhere. Whether and how we’re supposed to get to the agency is still written in the stars. Maybe working from home is even on the horizon. Hehe. I somehow find it totally funny, just a shame that Becca is arriving right during the strike to spend her vacation with me. Ah, it’ll work out. Berlin in a state of emergency, I’m (somehow halfway) ready.

.

Pudding Nut Cake with Ouzo:

Yesterday Sonja dragged me to a private-indie-something-birthday-party in a mysterious kindergarten, where we first stocked up on gin and tonic, flatbread, and a funny wobbly chocolate nut cake. The music constantly fluctuated between indie alternative (my milieu) and house/dance/electro (Sonja’s corner), the guest list was long, and we skillfully played bartender in preparation for our planned side career in catering.

With a stolen borrowed bottle of Ouzo, we then staggered to my favorite nacho supplier and ate ourselves back down from our alcohol level alongside the drunk captain’s club and the Spanish mafia, before dancing through the freezing rain back to my place. It was really super fun, despite a terrorist chocolate-stain attack on Sonja’s expensive Lacoste shirt. Or maybe precisely because of it.

.

Smoothies:

Oh man, I love smoothies. So much yummy fruit in one small bottle. The best ones, by the way, are from McCafé. Just wanted to say that.

.

Final Distance:

I want to see you, but an invisible wave pushes us. Again, just a little more distance. You, who gets hurt with a single word, taught me what loneliness is. I wanna be with you now. One day, even the distance, I'll be able to embrace. We should stay together. After all, I need to be with you.

.

My Personal Crusade:

The sky above Alex is gray, the heavy dark clouds seem to scrape against the TV tower – the perfect weather to carry out my personal crusade here. For over a month now, Jenny and I have no longer been a couple. She is now happily together with her new boyfriend, while I have to fight my way through sleepless nights, agonizing orgies of thoughts, and false hope that seems to mock me with laughter and scorn. I am not an addict. I’m not addicted to drugs, not to hashish, not to cigarettes, not to video games, not even to alcohol. I already saw addiction as a weakness when I was a small child. But if I seem to be addicted to one thing, then it’s to girls who have left me. I don’t like losing people who mean a lot to me. I simply can’t deal with something like that.

What my Türkheim was with Ana is the Alexa shopping center with Jenny. I can still see us today, laughing and holding each other as we walk through the big gates, looking at DVDs, at games, at rings. A dark aura seems to surround the building as I stand in front of it in the rain. When I enter it, my iPod gives up the ghost. I am inside. For over a month I hadn’t been to this place, had avoided making a pilgrimage here. The painful memories were simply too strong. But now it has to finally end, I told myself. Said my reason. Yes, even my battered heart said so.

One month was enough to mourn her, to miss our seemingly perfect relationship. It was time to accept. To accept that I had lost her, that she didn’t want me back, that she was now happy with someone else. And if I managed that with Ana, then it shouldn’t be such a big deal with Jenny. So I made my way to every store that reminded me of her.

I bought myself a new book at Thalia, browsed for games for my Nintendo DS at Media Markt, which I hadn’t touched since our breakup, bought the fourth season of The O.C. because I had just finished the third, and finally went to eat at McDonald’s. Sounds stupidly ridiculous, but it helped enormously to take away the dark magic from all of this, which had already hurt me whenever I merely thought about it. It is sad to have to forget a person who once meant so much to you. But that is probably the challenge in it.

.

Close Your Eyes:

I let myself sink into her arms and take a deep drag. “Blindblindblind” by A Silver Mt. Zion has been playing for what feels like three years now. “Close your eyes,” she says to me, and I do. Immediately, thoughts shoot through my head. School, money, love, problems, worries, sorrow. I see the blue evening sky over Berlin, the stars, suddenly everything smells like shower gel.

When I open my eyes again, it’s slowly getting light outside. That’s probably not a solution to escaping my problems either, I think to myself, get dressed, and leave.

.

Sudden Hearing Loss and Busted Knees:

Because Thomas didn’t finish his cereal yesterday, the weather was shit and the wind lashed against my face. With a storm hairstyle cranked up to 10, I arrived at the White Trash and first ordered myself a cooling Beck’s. I had stumbled here all alone after everyone canceled due to tiredness and not feeling like it. Return beer, collect deposit, order a new one — the procedure repeated itself several times until finally the Blood Red Shoes took the stage.

Together with a young girl who looked like Ron Weasley from “Harry Potter,” I jumped around in rhythm in front of the stage. We were so far up front that Laura-Mary’s sweaty chest almost hit my face, which surely wouldn’t have annoyed me as much as the roaring crowd constantly pushing from behind just to snap a photo of the singer. Unfortunately, the only thing separating the stage from the enraged mob were my knees. But the band was magnificent, I love the two of them.

When we left the club, I was limping and could hear nothing but a ringing in my ears that’s still bothering me now as I hammer these lines into the keyboard. Maybe it wouldn’t be such a good idea to go to the Knaack with a few people today. Ah, screw it — that’s what earplugs are for.

.

Sweeney Todd:

Yesterday we went to see Tim Burton’s new film “Sweeney Todd.” And honestly, I’m at a loss for words. After “Nightmare Before Christmas” and “Corpse Bride,” I expected a lot. But this… Well, I liked it! The singing, the bloodbath, the little constantly drunk, trilling boy… But I think 90 percent of the average cinema crowd didn’t. Some even got up early and quietly slipped out. But hehe, that was exactly the awesome part. If you’re into Johnny Depp, bloodthirsty horror musicals, and the typical dark Tim Burton style, this is exactly right for you. Everyone else should just go see “P.S. I Love You” again ;).

.

Half a Year:

I get off the subway, instinctively turn to the right, and slowly walk along the tracks. I’ve been living in Berlin for half a year now. Following the call from Ella was probably the biggest step in my life so far. Everything here is so different and yet so the same. That’s confusing. Even today. New job, new school, new friends, new girls — a lot has happened in the last six months. But at the moment, I wouldn’t want to be anywhere else but here. In Berlin.

And the future is treating me well. Spring is slowly approaching. I’m looking forward to being able to go jogging in the evenings soon without getting frostbite on my ass. The training to become the best web designer in the world is progressing at breakneck speed. TV stations, electronics companies, automobile corporations… (almost) none can manage without me anymore. Soon I’ll do like Kathi and move into a new apartment (just get out of this student dorm thing), and until then I’m looking forward to my sweet visitor from back home. And as a great wise man once said: Standing still is death. So get the champagne bottles out of the cupboard — let’s toast to the future.

.

When the Traffic Light Goes on Strike…:

The traffic light at my intersection was out this morning. But instead of drivers, bike gangsters, and little old ladies with crutches thinking, “Oh, the traffic light is broken, maybe I should approach this with caution…,” they only think, “Shit, better get across before it turns red again!” That means pure, unfiltered mortal danger. Because of course I thought the same thing. Hey, after all, I was in a hurry…

.

Lisa Takes Drugs:

The coolest three-stories-in-one-Simpsons-episode episode ever. Bart plays with the Sex Pistols, Lisa and Nelson take drugs until the doctor comes — and anyway: death, love, and chocolate. And garbage. Awesome! It’s the last of the three stories; the other two suck.

.

Never Again:

I will never again read a NEON article on the subway about how private porn films on the internet are ruining the hardcore industry. It only causes trouble. Prudish people.

.

Blond Redesign:

My favorite magazine (of course next to the divine NEON) has finally gone through with its redesign, now comes in my favorite color, and costs an unbelievable one euro for the relaunch. Buy it and feel good. Blond.

.

Amy Now Has Three Columns:

While Mona shoved some fries from Kosmos into the microwave this morning after our visit there, I stuffed myself with cheap Lidl spaghetti to calm my stomach and let the third season of O.C. play in the background. My head was pounding and I couldn’t shake that Amy Winehouse feeling. And that exact feeling—a special mix of indifference, numbness, arrogance, and pseudo-drug haze—was probably what prompted me to give AMY & PINK another column. You pigs.

As you can see, I’m once again on my trashiness trip. Trash is simply much more interesting than classy; but that might also just be because I need it at the moment to find myself again. As always, it’s probably the mix that does it—the fine line between classy and trashy design. I hope you like it, and I’m going to grab my cereal now and throw myself in front of The Simpsons. Enjoy the rest of your weekend!

.

Cheese Nachos:

Yummy, yummy nachos with cheese and an incredibly sweet Sex on the Beach for half price.

.

Aperto Is Looking for You!:

Aperto is one of the oldest and largest internet agencies in Berlin. And now you have the unique opportunity to become part of it. We are looking for new, motivated employees in almost all areas who stand out through creativity, initiative, and team spirit. Are you one of the best in the fields of creation, project management, administration, or technology? Then don’t miss your chance and apply now! Please mention AMY & PINK as your reference when applying.

.

Care Package:

Becca sent me a sweet care package with everything that makes a little Marcel’s heart beat faster. Real Mozart balls, Simpsons figures, and a SpongeBob semolina pudding! The things that exist. “A good friend is always there for you, no matter how long and difficult the road.” Thank you, sweetie, I love you too.

.

Spring:

I’m a person to whom many things simply don’t matter. Who hops through life childishly, naively, and sometimes without emotion. But if there’s one thing I absolutely cannot handle, it’s heartbreak. I know the rules I should follow, and the voices of my helping souls constantly scream through my head. Forget her. Distract yourself. Go party. She’s not worth it. She didn’t deserve you. Find someone new. Life goes on. There are plenty of other beautiful daughters out there. I know all that. But I miss her. The space next to me is so empty. And I don’t know what to do.

Spring has reached Berlin. The sun is shining and I stroll through the nearby park. In my ears, Kelly Clarkson and The Veronicas are screaming one love ballad after another. The thoughts are killing me. I bought a new phone a long time ago, and yet my right hand still tightly clutches my old one. I’ve been carrying it around with me for two weeks just because of her. Waiting for a vibration. Waiting for her to get in touch. At home I barely take my eyes off my Mac, always hoping she might have written me a message on StudiVZ. I’ve hit rock bottom. And I don’t know what to do.

Everything seems so meaningless without her. I hate Berlin; she was Berlin to me. After the breakup I just wanted to go home. Becca quickly talked me out of it, and I know myself that it would be downright ridiculous to give up this opportunity here because of a girl. But while people often smile at heartbreak, for me it’s the only deadly thing that exists. And I don’t know what to do.

.

Your Ex-Lover Is Dead!:

Gently I am awakened by a soft female voice. “Sophie-Charlotte-Platz,” she whispers into my ear. Composed, I step off the subway. It’s a mystery to me how I got here. I’ve been single again for a week now. And Thomas, Hannah, and Kathi all agree: when it comes to heartbreak, only lots of alcohol helps. Definitely. So at Thomas’ birthday party I sipped on everything that looked even remotely liquid, made out at Kosmos with some blonde girl who was at least just as tipsy as I was, and ended the evening with a joyfully soggy puking session in my bathroom. That’s how a good night has to end, and you know what? It really did help!

But it wasn’t only my girlfriend who dumped me—no, my bulky Siemens phone also finally gave up the ghost after more than five years and an estimated four survived relationships. But that suited me just fine, because what helps super well against heartbreak—aside from a wild drinking binge? Exactly: shopping! So off to the nearest T-Punkt I trust and picked up the super affordable yet really great LG Shine. I love it. And I’ve noticed that I apparently have a thing for companies with a pink corporate identity.

So let’s sum up what works best against that nasty Mr. Heartbreak: Let go! says Ana. Then drink your frustration away, go shopping, have a cute hairdresser give you a new haircut, and follow your natural hunting instinct. Tadaa, and you should be over the worst of it. And besides, the mix of breakup and alcohol has one decisive advantage: there’s no better diet, because with a grumbling stomach and a pounding head you automatically keep your hands off anything with more calories than water or an orange.

.

Final Fantasy XII: Revenant Wings:

A beautiful website has been put online by Square Enix for the Nintendo DS game “Final Fantasy XII: Revenant Wings,” which will be released in mid-February. Accompanied by typical role-playing music, the page offers lots of information, a German trailer, downloads, and even an RSS feed.

So I’m curious to see whether the game will convince me as an old Final Fantasy fan, even though I never played FF-XII and some critical voices have already complained about the rather negative game flow in the US version. We’ll see.

.

Textback WordPress Theme:

The cold season is the perfect time to present to you the long-awaited Textback WordPress Theme, which convinces with its grace, brightness, and a touch of new beginnings. So it’s exactly the right design for anyone who loves winter and everything it stands for. For gentle sounds, icy creativity, and sharp art.

You can download the theme here. Have fun with it—but beware: this WordPress design is only for real hardcore code freaks, because the tricky navigation alone is quite something. If you need help, just write your problem in the comments. But one thing I can tell anyone who tries Textback: it’s worth it.

.

Helvetica:

This week at the agency we watched a film that one of our fellow trainees brought in, about probably the most popular typeface of the modern world. From the history of Helvetica, to old men who find it sexy, to the overkill of the font and the young creatives who were for absolutely everything—just not for it.

A truly worthwhile piece of film for everyone who deals in any way with design and typography. You can buy it, for example, here and you can find the trailer here. So what do you think about Helvetica?

.

Internet Explorer 8:

The Internet Explorer has always been a horror for every web designer who, despite adhering to international standards, regularly has to watch his works being butchered and torn apart by the horror browser. And all of that just because Microsoft wanted to make its own rules with IE 5.5. Now they can calmly spoon up that mess themselves and with their plans they’re shaking up the browser world.

Of course, Microsoft’s developers don’t want to admit on their blog that they simply messed things up in the past. They prefer to defend their decisions with the claim that back then hardly anyone stuck to web standards and that they now have big plans for IE8: if a web designer wants his pages to be displayed standards-compliant in Internet Explorer 8, then he should please hide a small meta hint in the source code. And just like magic—the page will—hopefully—be displayed correctly.

Why not simply design IE8 so that it adheres to international web standards right away? IE developer Chris Wilson defends the plans with a problem they can blame on themselves. In the past, many web designers faced the decision: Should I make my page standards-compliant and no one can see it, or do I follow the impossible rules of Internet Explorer, screw the standards, and be satisfied that at least it displays the page reasonably well? For the sake of market share?

In other words: there are so many botched sites that only Internet Explorer can display correctly that—if Microsoft were to stick to web standards now—they wouldn’t be displayed at all anymore. So they’d rather leave it as it is. What jokers. Let’s see whether they finally acknowledge their mistake in the next decade. But maybe they don’t even want to.

.

I Would Never Sleep with a Windows User:

Here’s to the crazy ones. The misfits. The rebels. The troublemakers. The round pegs in the square holes. The ones who see things differently. They’re not fond of rules. And they have no respect for the status quo. You can quote them, disagree with them, glorify or vilify them. But the only thing you can’t do is ignore them. Because they change things. They push the human race forward. And while some may see them as the crazy ones, We see genius. Because the people who are crazy enough to think they can change the world, Are the ones who do. Happy Birthday, Apple Macintosh.

.

I’m Sorry:

Baby, I’m sorry that sometimes I’m such a stubborn idiot who isn’t quite up to handling the female psyche and who thereby endangers our relationship. When I feel treated unfairly, I often strike back with triple the force without thinking about the consequences. I know that arguments and jealousy, to a certain extent, are part of a good love. Even the current NEON says so. But in the long run, that’s not good for us.

The adventures in this colorful, exciting city—I wouldn’t want to experience them with anyone but you. Your amazing red hair, your sexy dark eyes, your cynically witty nature. That’s what I’m into. It makes me proud to be your boyfriend. And as an old Chinese proverb says: Behind every great man stands a strong woman. Darling, I love you.

.

Can You Read Me?:

Since my themes seem to be quite popular overseas as well, I’ve decided to make AMY & PINK bilingual. That means that from now on, you can choose in the top right corner whether you want to view the site in German or English. If that’s not an insanely awesome service, then I don’t know what is.

Most of the static pages have already been translated. The links need a general overhaul anyway (hehe, start trembling before my tidying mania), and the blog will become bilingual starting with this post. I don’t think I feel like translating every single post retroactively.

I also have big plans for the somewhat boring sidebar, but I still need to give that some thought. Well then, I’ll get back to translating the remaining pages into English, and you may welcome the world with great jubilation: Hello world!

.

Mac Users Are the Cooler People:

Well, sorry, but that’s just how it is. A study has now even proven it, as FoxBusiness reports. Mindset Media writes there that particularly open-minded people are 60% more likely to be buyers of an Apple Mac. They are also said to be more liberal, less modest, and more confident in their superiority than other segments of the population.

The study refers to this attitude as “Openness 5,” describing people who seek new experiences and consider imagination as well as intellectual curiosity to be an important part of a good life. Hehe, that’s exactly the kind of thing Apple fans around the world love to hear. Although, if we’re honest, we’ve always known that anyway.

.

The Ten Most Promising Nintendo DS Titles of 2008:

[Sorry this entry is just available in German.]

In my opinion, there are too few games on the Nintendo DS to be able to die happy. SquareEnix is currently ruining the "Mana" series one release after another, I don’t need brain training, and I never wanted to be a lawyer, surgeon, or professional angler either. So I’m eagerly waiting for the killer games of 2008 to sweeten my endlessly long subway rides again.

Here I’ve put together a list of the ten most promising titles of this year. If you own a DS: check them out! Tales of Innocence, Final Fantasy XII Revenant Wings, Teenage Zombies, Rune Factory: A Fantasy Harvest Moon, Dragon Quest IX, Mizuiro Blood, Final Fantasy IV, Ninja Town, Dragon Tamer Sound Spirit and last but not least Space Invaders Extreme (for the nostalgia bonus). By the way, one of these videos really turns me on. Guess which one.

.

C’est tr(é)sash chic:

Awesome name, awesome people, awesome design. Sally and Janni together are the blog of the season and are into drawing Super Marios, cruising around in their own car, and eating in the school cafeteria. So I’m curious to see whether Trashchic will become the newest member of our little circle. I really hope so.

.

Dieter Rams:

Art and design are diverse. Some people throw buckets of paint against a wall and call it design. Others let dogs starve at an exhibition and call it art. And then there are those who pee their name into the snow and have it photographed. That can be art too. But there is one man who summed up my view of art and design in ten principles that will hopefully continue to guide me in the right direction.

Good design is innovative. / Good design makes a product understandable. / Good design is aesthetic. / Good design makes a product useful. / Good design is unobtrusive. / Good design is honest. / Good design is durable. / Good design is consistent down to the last detail. / Good design is environmentally friendly. / Good design is as little design as possible. Dieter Rams.

.

The Madness:

Expensive as hell, but fucking awesome. If I should ever be showered with money by chance, this would without a doubt be the first thing I’d buy with it. The MacBook Air. What a fantastic fucking thing. Wow.

"Extremely thin, extremely mobile and incomparable – that’s the MacBook Air. Developing such a thin notebook requires breaking new ground, using various wireless technologies, and implementing a groundbreaking design. The MacBook Air sets a new standard for mobile computing."

.

Late Bloomer:

For weeks I resisted watching "Rabbit Without Ears." Because of Til Schweiger. I had convinced myself that I didn’t like him. But since Jenny and I preferred it today over "Alvin and the Chipmunks" or "August Rush," it was time: ruthless gossip reporter meets eco-obsessed kindergarten teacher. And it was worth it.

I rarely laughed so much at a German film as I did at this one. It’s obvious that I love Nora Tschirner, that hot babe, anyway, but even Tilli seemed quite likable to me. And to my girlfriend’s horror, little Nora even got completely naked = doubly worth it. If I had known that earlier, I would have gladly shelled out 7 euros for the movie much sooner.

.

Previously on O.C.:

I’m totally broke. So what could be nicer than watching old episodes of your favorite series on a Saturday evening. And I wouldn’t have thought that the second season of "O.C., California," which Jenny gave me for my birthday, could capture my heart all over again like this. Right after the opening credits I was suddenly transported back in time. It was the same feeling as back then when we came back sweaty from the gravel pit on Wednesday evenings, grabbed some chips and cold Beck’s Green Lemon and then watched the dramas around Ryan, Marissa, and Seth.

Ryan and Seth have just returned to Newport, Marissa’s downward spiral is only just beginning, and new villains are already waiting in the wings. And it’s awesome how I know every song playing in the background perfectly. Because I had every single one of them in my heart and on my iPod forever. Maybe I should load the soundtracks onto it again. Definitely better than what I’ve got on there right now. And now I have to get back to the TV. It’s starting again.

.

I Am Wow:

I find horror films boring to funny. It amuses me when stupid, sexy teenagers are trapped in the house of a mass murderer or when they are chased in their dreams by a psychopath. Something like that is simply just funny. If there’s one thing I have fear respect for, then it’s films about the human apocalypse combined with viruses and vampire zombies.

Jenny and I went to see “I Am Legend” yesterday with the totally super awesome Will Smith and his dog. And while she could hardly look anymore because of all the bloodthirsty zombies and explosions, I just got annoyed by dumb assholes who kept making noise in the lower corner. The killer virus should have struck them instead of the poor selected damned who had to watch the bridges to freedom being blown up. Is something like that going to happen to us someday?

.

Fuck You, Google:

Yes, I am against scheming, power-obsessed corporations, yes, I am against Google, yes I know there are no alternatives. Yahoo! is at least just as scheming, Live Search is an arm of evil and Lycos has long been dead. So day after day I sit in front of my Mac and throw my most secret data down the throat of the company with the funny colorful letters. But now there may be a glimmer of light on the horizon.

Wikia Search is officially launching soon and can already be viewed in an early alpha version. And I have to say: I’m thrilled! The search is fast, pleasantly designed and very clear. The Wikipedia search engine will also be open, which means: The search algorithms will not be kept secret, as is the case with other major search engines today. Openness, baby. I’m looking forward to the day when nobody even knows what the word “to google” means anymore.

.

Cloverfield:

One of my loyal readers, Adis, put me on the trail of a very interesting phenomenon, the beginning of which already caused a sensation last year with an attention-grabbing video in which a lively New York party is interrupted by a catastrophe that is only hinted at. Since then, all kinds of curious information about this event have spread across the web. A viral campaign took its course and shows in an exciting way how the internet hides information, secrets, even entire treasures that need to be found.

People went searching for the background of the disturbing clip and thereby—without realizing it—became part of a marketing gag. On one website, surfers found photos of the party, a Japanese beverage brand turned out to be advertising and even a blog written in Nepali was actually just PR. But for what?

For the film “Cloverfield,” which will be released in cinemas here at the end of the month and comes from Lost creator J. J. Abrams, who got the idea for the movie in Japan when he was strolling through local toy stores with his son. Without all this effort, “Cloverfield” would probably have been just a normal disaster monster film or, even worse, a Godzilla knock-off. But this way, millions of people are eagerly awaiting the film’s release to finally find out what, how and why something really happened (or will happen) at that party and in New York on January 18, 2008. Let’s be surprised.

.

What’s with the Pink?:

“So many good things come in pink: pussies, titties, cocks, candy and ice cream. You can't fuck with this much pink. And there is a very specific shade of fluorescent pink that I love. It's impossible to reproduce in any magazine or photograph.” Buff Monster in IdN Magazine.

.

I Am a Farmer:

As a child I was a huge gaming beast. I played everything that came into my hands. Alone at home, in my bedroom at friends’ places, with strange brats in the supermarket. I was happy. When I roamed through Hyrule as Link, when Mario gobbled up strange mushrooms, when Ash dragged that yellow Pikachu thing around. The happiest thing for me was to know and understand that I grew up in that great time when electronics were misused to trick our brains and made us believe we were mastering adventures, accomplishing the greatest things, being the first human ever to find that damn ruby diadem.

But at some point the fun was over. Video games stopped being fun for me. What was wrong with me? No opponent could surprise me anymore, no puzzle could delight me, no story could enchant me. I grew up. It was terrible. And unbelievable. Had time ultimately stolen my imagination? As a child, that was what I feared most. Nintendo and I said goodbye after that realization. It was a sad farewell.

Shortly after I moved to Berlin and met my girlfriend, I bought a Nintendo DS. At first just to shorten the long subway rides, I gradually noticed that a certain magic was tickling me again. Hesitantly at first, but then more and more and with full force. Now I’m a brave warrior again, a rescuer of princesses and, since my birthday yesterday, even a farmer. Harvesting cucumbers and having to find a girlfriend. Just like in real (TV) life. Thank you, Nintendo. You gave me a part of my imagination back. Really nice of you.

.

A Fan Letter:

“Hey Mar Ci. On a night when I can’t sleep and try to get my thoughts under control in the form of texts, I’m lying in bed surfing through the vastness of the internet while the boss himself (Bob Marley) quietly accompanies me in the background. Back to the beginnings. Back to one of the first sites I got to know in my blogging career. Tokyopunk. Now AmyPink. It has always awakened a certain magic in me. Sometimes it was gone again. When I gradually understood this ‘magic,’ how this and that works. But you manage to awaken it again and again.

Recently it was FackingCants where I was simply overwhelmed. Today it was the text under one of the themes and the Chikatetsu theme that brought this magic back out in me. I just want to say thank you for that :) They are always really beautiful moments and they inspire you :) Above all, the fact that there is a story behind all your themes—I will take that to heart because there is something good about it :)

I wish you a nice day. I’ll slowly go to bed now. I hope we’ll hear and see more again on Hoizge.de.”

.

Night Without Tomorrow:

We ran through the streets overcrowded with figures holding champagne bottles and firecrackers in their hands and dodged everything that flew suspiciously fast beneath our legs. I squeezed Jenny’s hand tighter and tighter, rotating colors exploded in the sky and suddenly I stopped abruptly. Another police barrier. The furious mob cursed at the men and women in green, throwing loudly cracking fireworks. Far behind the army of blue lights you could see the Brandenburg Gate and the RTL II logos. There had to be another way. We pushed our way out of the roaring crowd and ran into a side street. The colorful Ferris wheel circled above us in a misanthropic way.

While we dodged drunken little kids who, without changing their expression, threw firecrackers at people, I had to think about the feeling from this afternoon, what Berlin had given me today. The popular uprising at Lidl, the constant explosions that must have reminded veterans of the Russian invasion in 1945, and Jenny’s frightened fat cats that flinched at every bang. It didn’t just feel like the last night of the year, but the last one ever. That’s how people behaved in the subway trains and on the streets. There was a dangerous mood in the air. I quickly bought overpriced beer from an illegal street vendor. Behind us you could hear loud sirens—Berlin had declared a state of emergency. We ran into the next police barrier. There was no getting through—the Brandenburg Gate was overcrowded and closed off.

So we experienced the turn of the year at a Christmas market at Potsdamer Platz. And while rockets exploded above us and little rascals tried to set the glowing DB logo and the Will Smith poster on fire, resounding sing-along schlager songs rang out behind us and old drunken couples lay in each other’s arms. It was a beautiful place to ring in the new year. Jenny and I played “Mario Party” on the way home and when we woke up the next morning with a hangover, her first words were: “Are the stores open today, actually? Oh right, today’s Christmas..” In that sense: I hope you all had a wonderful New Year’s Eve and a little tip on the side: Make the best of this year.

.

Two Thousand Eight:

After a few mental detours, I’ve rediscovered what inspires me most in life and makes me dream. Besides my girlfriend, I’m completely devoted to two things: web design and Japan. It was time to meaningfully combine those two elements.

And what better moment than the start of a new year—one that, of course, will be cooler, more beautiful, and more successful than anything ever before. Sure. And for me to realize that, it took an old Japanese man in an Asian bookstore ripping me off first.

So welcome to another year with the likable president supreme ruler Buschi, sex as far as the eye can see, and new stories about me, my rediscovered love for Japan, and that yellow creature living at the bottom of the sea with a pink starfish as his friend. I like him.

Oh, and a slimy compliment at the end of the year to my namesake, who’s doing really great things on his blog. Respect. Had to be said.

.

Must Run in the Family:

That’s what happens when you want to copy everything your big sister does. Silly little brat. But I think it’s funny.

.

Today Everything Changes:

“Keep going and don’t despair when a few old veterans leave. Now it’s the youth’s turn…” If only Christoph knew how right he was when he said that.

Because now it’s our turn. Today the world changes. Be there.

.

Another One Has Left:

Now our Nasendackel has been hit as well. Alongside Ad and Nicki, Christoph’s blog was one of the most important ones in our small universe. And now it’s slowly starting to get cold and lonely here.

The ones who remain, the ones who held out, now walk alone into an unpredictable future. Take care, Christoph. And let’s see if maybe soon new hopeful blogs will join our brave little troop. Do you know any?

.

Schinesisch:

Be honest: do you say Kinese or SHinese? SHinese? Who says SHinese? SHemistry? Jenny says SHinese. When we went out for SHinese food. To the SHinese place.

I still love her. We stuffed ourselves with sweet-and-sour pork and sukiyaki, made piggish jokes, and lost track of time. The Chinese staff kept smiling. Always. That’s nice. And this is now available for download too. That’s nice as well. Today everything is nice.

.

The Pierces:

The awesome sisters are playing tonight at the Roter Salon in Berlin. I can’t be there because I have an important exam tomorrow morning, but if you’re unemployed, a late riser, or free tomorrow—go and enjoy!

--> .

Underground Railway:

Jenny and I wandered through the capital’s trendy districts. Because I want to move there. Because the apartments are still (relatively) cheap. We had an expensive dinner, watched two tourists armed with a camera phone photographing a homeless guy with extremely cool clothes, and I wanted to buy dried salted fish. But I forgot. Idiot.

--> .

Bye, Old Friend:

“You are ‘porno in beautiful.’ Porno is something you have to master, and where I see the eyes of a woman, you see the pure, god-given ‘structure’ of that estrogen-driven ‘other’ world. Respect…” That’s what Nicki once said about me.

Now he is gone. I sat on a hill in a green meadow. At first it was dark. Then I witnessed a darkly radiant star breaking toward the sky, lighting up the horizon, and after a while disappearing again. Now we sit here together. In the dark. Alone. Waiting for you to appear one more time. Take care, old friend.

--> .

Pasta with Maggi:

While Berlin briefly disappeared under a blanket of white snow, Jenny and I indulged in the laziest weekend ever. We watched DVDs, had sex, and ate. A lot. Cake. Pasta with Maggi. Potato gratin. Muesli. Golden Puffs. Turkish flatbread. Ham. And even more pasta.

If I explode now, remember me as a rebellious hero with long curly hair. Thank you.

.

Blasphemy:

Mac OS X is probably the most beautiful, intuitive, and coolest operating system in the world. On Friday, I wanted freedom. I chose Fedora. Free as in freedom. I felt independent—until it hated my graphics card, my Wi-Fi didn’t work, and the installation failed.

So here I am again. Back in paradise. But the urge remains. One day I might buy an external hard drive and attempt the escape once more. When Steve turns his back on me. From Apple. You know—the ones with the iPhone.

.

How to Destroy Google:

What’s worse than a company that wants money? A company that already has enough—too much—and too much power. Google knows where we are, what we do, what we write, what we like. Information is power, and Google sits in the best possible position to expand and misuse it.

So how do you fight that? By feeding it contradictions. True lies and false truths. Nonsense details and exaggerated myths. Sign up with misspelled names, upload photos of your grandfather instead of yourself, communicate in fantasy languages, create multiple accounts. If you ever want to destroy Google, lie to it. Over and over again. Until it collapses under the weight of its own data.

.

Off to the Future:

Jenny’s column: Sometimes I’d love to travel into the future. To bridge over bad times, to see whether I’ll dare to sign that lease, or to find out if I’ve truly found the right one. But I’d have to be able to come back. Which would probably be the difficult part.

I don’t want to exist twice. I want to skip time and still remain one single self—keeping my memories while jumping ahead. Will that ever be possible? Or would we die trying? Could we freeze ourselves and wake up 1,000 years from now? And who would choose that? The adventurous? The depressed? The sick, hoping for a cure? Maybe even criminals trying to escape punishment. But that would strip the magic from it all.

Maybe it’s better if seeing the future remains a dream. We humans have already turned so many fantasies into reality. What if one day there’s nothing left to dream about? I recently pulled The Time Traveler’s Wife off my shelf again and wondered how it would feel to love someone who disappears unpredictably. Maybe time travel is one fantasy that should stay untouchable.

.

Gustav Saves the World:

While my girlfriend cruises around in Final Fantasy III, I’ve fallen for The Legend of Zelda: Phantom Hourglass. So I run around with Link Gustav across two screens, scare off enemies, bushes, and chickens, and grin like crazy whenever Jenny nearly has a heart attack watching me rush through a temple with fewer than three hearts left. That’s when you feel a seriously abnormal dose of Zelda nostalgia in your heart. Go, Gustav! Go, Gustav!

.

Sometimes Life Isn’t So Shitty After All:

There are moments, days, weeks in life when everything is gray, dark, and without perspective. When you feel alone, rejected, misunderstood. Useless. And then there are moments like today, like yesterday, like the past week—when everything just fits. When life doesn’t piss you off at all.

I’m living in an exciting, constantly pulsing city, have a job that fulfills me, finally earn my own money, and have a smart, sexy, sweet girlfriend who’s just as crazy as I am. Even if we know that dark clouds will appear again sooner or later, we should cherish these adrenaline-charged highs and draw everything we can from them. And today I finally found that amazing muesli at Lidl that our catering company sometimes delivers to the agency and that I’m obsessed with. Beautiful life. You can stay like this for a while.

.

Happy Birthday, Hannah:

With a column about the female multitasking function, 19-year-old Hannah Maria Paffen wrote her way into the hearts of TOKYOPUNK readers. She has grown since then, now studies fashion in Munich—the city of the MTV Europe Music Awards—takes part in photo shoots, and will appear at her first fashion show next month.

Today the charming blonde celebrates her 20th birthday, and to mark the occasion there’s a collected volume of all the columns she ever wrote available as a PDF download. I wish you all the love in the world, warm greetings to the sunny south, and I hope you properly shake up the Bavarian capital. Hannah Maria Paffen, ladies and gentlemen.

--> .

Walk On:

--> .

Great Inventions (1):

Ordering pizza online. Jenny and I did that today. We didn’t have that back home—we actually had to walk to the pizzeria next door. But they also didn’t have bizarre flavors like fish stick pizza or, especially for Christmas: “Pizza with hearty roast gravy, cheese, delicious potato slices, sweet red cabbage, tender beef steak and extra cheese.” Yes, cheese twice! Call a Pizza. Delicious.

.

It’s Me:

This thing honestly saved our workday today. And be honest—you’d love to get tagged again, wouldn’t you? So Hoizge, Marten, Nicki, and Sari, you’re up. Go here and take a look in the virtual mirror.

.

Ruby Gloom:

I haven’t seen this many ridiculously sweet gothic characters bouncing around in a cartoon series in a long time. The bat with the speech impediment who’s afraid of flying, the cool Siamese twins who love munching chips with dip, or that purple creature constantly dragging itself around half-dead, delivering monotone remarks. Add the awesome theme song and suddenly all gothic parents rejoice like it’s dog food day—finally a proper TV education far away from Teletubbies, Bob the Builder, and Dora with her monkey. The bright side of the dark side. Ruby Gloom, every Sunday morning on Super RTL.

.

Current Thoughts (1):

This is exactly how I want to furnish my future apartment (old building, Mitte, Prenzlauer Berg, Friedrichshain—whatever). Exactly like this:

Even though I leave the house at different times, a different subway arrives every four minutes, and I get into a different carriage each morning, I still see the same familiar faces. Like the two-meter-tall woman in the light blue jacket who always reminds me of the giant from Big Fish, the stocky businessman memorizing terms from small flashcards, or the model-faced girl with the iPod who uses the dark window reflection to finish her makeup. I sit down, put on music, and immediately feel at home.

It’s been a long time since I ran because of a girl. Across my neighborhood, all the way to the Esso gas station. Past the Wilmersdorfer Arcaden, the mean-looking gangsters, and the Turkish woman who stared at me as if I were about to use her as a launch ramp. I arrive, I kiss her, I’m a little out of breath. But I’m good. I should run more often. Not just for a girl.

.

A Waking Dream (2):

There’s a knock and I open the door. She’s standing there, smiling at me. I love that sight, that moment. I’ve spent hours getting my tiny apartment in order. So little space, so much to tidy up. She steps inside, takes off her shoes, begins to look around. The photos, the desk, the shelf. Watching her movements is addictive.

We lie on the bed. She’s put the pink Patrick I once received as a farewell gift on the floor, facing the wall. The movie fades into the background. I only want to feel her breath on my neck, her hands on my back, her voice in my ear.

You could see her fighting herself. She was taken. No kisses—just no kisses. I explored her carefully. That charged nearness and retreat. The way her inner fortress slowly fell. I wanted her—not just for one night. I wanted to be with her, and somehow contain the wildfire we had just ignited.

.

A Waking Dream (1):

Jenny’s column: “Oh nooo, what is this?!” He laughs. Patrick sits there grinning stupidly. Patrick, this little starfish, is supposed to say wonderful things in addition to flashing that charming smile, he proudly tells me. I question his sanity and assume he must be tipsy. But no—he means it. Even sober. He likes that pink thing. From his ex, he says. Great. And I’m lying right next to it.

Photos everywhere. For a guy, everything is surprisingly lovingly arranged. I’m impressed. After a while, it doesn’t even feel that cramped. “What do we do now?” A little laughter, a little shy avoidance of each other’s eyes, and soon we’re back out on the street heading to the video store. Choosing a movie turns into a complicated birth. In the end, we take one I’ve already seen. I don’t tell him. Otherwise it might have ended with a porn—there was nothing else left.

We lie there. The air is thick, charged. The first touch. Not unpleasant. Familiar. He lies there. I lie there. And that look. What will I allow? What not? A kiss on the neck, a tight embrace, a smile. A look. That look follows me. Still. Always. No kisses. Just desire.

.

Okay, It’s Getting Serious:

It’s official. Leopard will be released on October 26, 2007, at exactly 6:00 p.m. You’re excited, I’m excited, everyone’s excited. Finally. As a longtime Windows tinkerer, I needed something new to explore. And Microsoft always offered plenty—reinstalling Windows XP every six months brought a certain satisfaction. But Mac OS X was different. You installed it and it was perfect. Forever. You could shake it and rattle it all you wanted.

But now everything’s about to change. A fresh design, incredibly cool new features, and a serious workflow boost. I’m looking forward to the new little cat. Come here, you sweet thing. It’s about time.

.

Sara Turns Pink:

Here, take a cue from Sara—at least she’s still having fun blogging. And together, someday, we’ll rule the blogosphere. Muahaha-blabla-cough-cough…

.

Rhythm and Fruits:

[Embedded video from Vimeo: “Rhythm and Fruits.”]

.

The Limits of Rebellion:

Her bed was soft and it smelled nice in here. Beside us, stacks of Disney DVDs stood neatly lined up, and from the ceiling hung a small wind chime that didn’t move a millimeter. We couldn’t make out—the photo of her boyfriend on the wardrobe stopped us. So instead we read a sex book aloud to each other, laughed our gluteus maximus off at terms like “Goofy’s tail parade” or “anal safari,” and masked the shock we were still feeling from this morning, when we were separated.

The class reshuffle was unpredictable, unfair, and completely unnecessary. I campaigned so hard to get Jenny back into my class that even the teachers were on my side, the new students thought I was class representative, and in the end I got my way. But she had to decline the secret offer. Only she would have been allowed to return, not her best friend. I understood that. And gave up.

Since then, we see each other every break. Our hugs are sometimes gentle, sometimes stormy. It’s fun to feel like a lovestruck teenager. After all, the most childish feelings are often the ones that make me happiest. My thoughts are interrupted by her laughter—I love it.

.

House of Cards:

I don't wanna be your friend, I just wanna be your lover, No matter how it ends, No matter how it starts. Forget about your house of cards, And I'll do mine, Forget about your house of cards, And I'll do mine. Fall off the table, And get swept under, Denial, denial. The infrastructure will collapse, From carpet spikes, Throw your keys in the bowl, Kiss your husband 'good night'.

Forget about your house of cards, And I'll do mine, Forget about your house of cards, And I'll do mine. Fall off the table, And get swept under, Denial, denial, Denial, denial, Your ears are burning, Denial, denial, Your ears should be burning, Denial, denial.

.

Lalala:

A lot has happened during my digital absence. Here. And in the world out there. The blogger killer virus is making the rounds, my little Ira is lying in a hospital 850 kilometers away from me, and I’ve coded like a maniac to finally give AMY & PINK a new look. I’ve already reached the point where I wanted to throw everything—including my favorite browser—straight into the trash.

At first I just wanted a new background color, then that turned into a new header. After that I heard about the great new CSS3 Grid Layout and immediately wanted to implement it on my site. Of course that required a whole new design. Nice and minimal, in a Times New Roman style. On the first day it looked awesome; on the second day I found it boring. Besides, CSS3 isn’t even officially out yet.

I deactivated the boring design and created an absolute masterpiece. Sat on it night after night to make it compatible with Safari, Firefox, and Opera. Beautiful. And valid. Then came the decisive moment in every web designer’s life: Would the Internet Explorer god be merciful? Checked. Shut down the Mac. Released a sacrificial lamb. Sent Microsoft a letter bomb. Went to sleep. Heard sirens.

And now we’re here. I know it doesn’t look like there’s a long road between “text background” and “stylistic break,” but you have no idea… So celebrate the new AMY & PINK with me and don’t forget to update the feed. Berlin, baby.

.

Peace for Burma:

“Dear All, I sadly announce that the Burmese military junta has cut off the internet connection throughout the country. I therefore will not be able to upload pictures of the brutality by the Burmese military junta. I will try my best to continue posting any images I receive through other means. We probably need to lobby the Chinese government or the UN envoy to Burma to ask the junta to switch the Internet back on. Please!”

“To all folk, it is really bad in Yangon. Please, can someone do something for our country? Right now it looks like a war zone. I even heard shooting over the phone—over 50 shots just now. But people are not giving up protesting, and more and more are coming out into the streets. They even used tear gas in a primary school.” — Ko Htike

.

Girl:

[Embedded video from Vimeo: “Girl.”]

.

March 2007:

They only called me Toki. I kept forgetting my real name more and more. But I didn’t care. Nintendo’s snoring made me sad. All night long. I got up to get a glass of water. The moon lit the room in a dim blue glow.

The water in this dump was fine. At least that. In the past six months I’d lived in many places: in the basement of a tire factory, in a friend’s childhood bedroom, in the half-finished villa of an aspiring J-pop starlet. But here it was okay. From here you had a great view of Tokyo Tower. I often looked at it. From many different points in the city. And it always filled me with warmth and comfort. It chased away the dark thoughts.

“Toki, everything okay?” Yumi looked at me. She was lying on the couch watching American soap operas. She did that every night. Sleep meant nothing to her, she said. So rarely that I believed her. I nodded and looked at her long, pretty legs resting on the table. Her right breast spilled slightly out of her nightgown. “Stop staring at my hot legs like that or you’ll start thinking about Ana again.” She winked at me and turned her gaze back to the screen just as the commercials ended. I took a sip of water.

Sometimes Yumi and I had sex. But it wasn’t anything special. She slept with Nintendo too when I was at work. He sometimes tried to impress me with that. But I knew she liked it better with me. In the end, I didn’t care. I’ve had heartbreak ever since I’ve been here. It’s as if that unbearable feeling has eaten its way into my insides. Slowly I accepted it. I was once happy. Her name was Ana. It’s hard to forget someone named Ana. Those three letters appear everywhere. In all kinds of variations. And whenever they catch you, you’re back at zero. Every time. She was my best friend. I was cold.

I put on the Little Foods T-shirt Nintendo wore at work. It was pink and made me look ridiculously gay. But no one cared today. Not even Yumi’s cat, who brushed past me toward her empty food bowl without a glance. Her persistent squeaking quickly made it clear it was empty. I had to go shopping. A few yen bills lay on the table.

Outside, some schoolgirls smiled at me—probably because of the shirt. Summer had reached its peak. I turned into the side street and greeted the old owner of the Mini Store 24/7. “Fünfzwanzigsieben!” he would shout every time I entered and laugh at his own German skills. I smiled as if amazed every time and strolled through the aisles. The money was just enough for a full bag. We were almost always broke. The rent for the dump was high. I worked in a small club as a jack-of-all-trades, Nintendo sold fast food, and no one really knew how Yumi made her money. Though sometimes we had an idea.

When I came home, Nintendo was sitting in front of the iBook playing World of Warcraft. He had once been the biggest Super Mario fan alive; the company’s logo was still tattooed on his calf. Until he discovered online role-playing games and gradually sold his entire collection to fund his new hobby. He still owned an old gray Game Boy. But only Yumi played it occasionally.

“Where’s Yumi?” I called as I entered and dropped the bag on the couch. “Gone,” he muttered, already speaking jargon into his headset again. As I said, I had heartbreak. But I had it even before I came here. I thought I could escape it. Here. But you can’t run from something so deeply rooted inside you. Everything we’ve been through has only strengthened our friendship. She once gave me that little blue booklet for my birthday. It was like a treasure to me.

I poured some food into the cat’s bowl and she immediately devoured the wet chunks. Tokyo was different from what I had imagined. I thought it would be colorful, thrilling, breathtaking. In reality, it was colorful, thrilling, breathtaking. But different. An endless melancholy followed me—while dancing in arcades, while fooling around with bleached, overstyled Lolitas, while having breakfast with Yumi’s cat as my table companion.

Sometimes the pounding thought crept in that I was missing something in Germany. Usually late at night or on weekends. When I wondered what she was experiencing right now, which disgusting guys were allowed to lust over her body, and to whom she gave her sweet sighs that night. The tears had long since dried up. But that bottomless numbness remained.

.

Jenny:

Okay, I admit it: this time I didn’t really search for long. I knew who the new one should be. And of course I got her. Taking over from the wonderful Hannah Maria Paffen is certainly no easy task. But when one door closes, another opens somewhere. And now you can decide: either you kick me for that stupid phrase, or you welcome our new columnist: Jennifer S.

Jenny has that sexy Berlin bluntness and the hottest accent you can imagine. Apart from Russian or Brazilian, maybe. Of course she isn’t aware of it. She’s probably so likable to me because the same kind of schizophrenia seems to simmer inside her as it does in me. On the one hand, the small shy girl trapped in her sweet world of dreams and thoughts; on the other, you can always sense an uncontrolled, not-yet-fully-released fire in her presence—something you instinctively treat with caution. Except me, of course. I’m stupid. So I convinced the redhead to pour some of her most curious feelings onto digital paper every Wednesday from now on. And don’t be too hard on her—she’s new here. And she bites.

.

When You Leave:

There are only a few things in this world that truly move me. And when I look back over the past years and think about when I had tears in my eyes, it was usually during moments in “O.C., California.” When Marissa overdosed in Tijuana. When it was New Year’s Eve and Ryan ran through the door at the very last second. Or when the Cohens’ home lay in ruins. Just now.

I projected my entire life into this TV series. Once a week, for one hour, my world stood still. No matter whether school was going badly, I was eaten up by heartbreak, or bored to death: as soon as Phantom Planet sang their annoying yet dearly loved theme song, everything was okay. There was Marissa, who looked confusingly like my ex-girlfriend. Sandy, whom I would have wished for more than anything as a father. Summer, who kept surprising me with her direct and carefree nature. And Seth and Ryan, who embodied something like my two selves. The universe was simply in order when this series flickered across the screen.

I’m taking a lot with me from those four years. Especially from Sandy. That you have to fight for the ones you love. That you shouldn’t hesitate long if you want to change the world. That sometimes it’s incredibly useful to stand wisely above things. And how important charisma is. Next Sunday, the final episode of “O.C., California” airs on ProSieben.

.

Fack the Cant in October:

Fack in October: Girls throwing up. It has its moments, but: nooo. / Those horrible ballerinas. When will women realize these “shoes” give them ugly flat feet? / Group sex. People, it’s autumn, so forget sexual boundary experiments for half a year and be romantic instead. / That the Windows hotline costs 85.68 euros. Per call. Although I don’t really care—I hate Microsoft anyway. / Britney Spears. Girl, just go home and leave me alone. You’re just embarrassing now. Seriously. / Letting a rhinoceros sell you cheap sugary water. / Vanessa Hudgens’ nude photos. My God, people. They’re just breasts and an unshaven crotch. Get a grip. / Being afraid of YouTube. / Worse than stupid, ugly Nazis are smart, attractive Nazis. / Using perfectionism as an excuse for failure. / Having no clue and still making money from it. Well, kind of like me. / Google. One day those colorful letters will control our brains. Or maybe they already do? / Tattooing pigs. WTF? / Using sexual buzzwords in blogs just to attract more visitors. / Caring whether Bill came out or not. Who cares?

Cant in October: The 2nd generation iPod Nano. Come on, we all think it’s prettier. / The album “In Our Bedroom After The War” by Stars. Wow. / Finally seeing Pixar’s “Ratatouille.” / Reading the new book “Panda Sex” by Mian Mian. Somewhere. Somehow. Whatever. / Looking at cute childhood photos of people you care about. / The beautifully inspiring photos by Emma Cooper. / The graphic program Pixelmator. It won’t stand a chance against Photoshop, but it looks great. / Buying a T-shirt from Mondonation. There’s something behind it. / Looking forward to the t.A.T.u. movie and already listening to their old records. / The online exhibition NOTCOT. Crazy. / The strange works of Ronald Kurniawan. / The start screen of “My Little Dead Dick.” / Ai Otsuka’s new album “LOVE PiECE,” released September 26. / Apple’s long-awaited new operating system “Leopard” coming in October. / Jenny.

.

Partymonsters:

The bouncer (dressed entirely in white) glares at us. With a facial expression that warmly says, “Get lost, kids, before I kick you to the next subway station.” “We’re from Aperto,” I almost whimper at him. Manly, of course. Bang—keyword delivered. His Russian-Orthodox mouth corners instantly lift upward. Very kindly, he invites us in on the red carpet. I grin at him.

Inside the Bangaluu everything is white. The curtains are white. The armchairs are white. The staff are white. Well, most of them anyway. Private event. A party celebrating the ZDF media library that our company successfully launched. Chill club tracks float through the air everywhere. Drinks are constantly being offered, and on some tables there’s a delicious buffet. I have no idea what I’m actually eating. Giant fish swim across the walls.

Arabella keeps sending me off to get her champagne. Or dessert. Or meatballs. But I’m a gentleman, after all. The senior staff give speeches. It’s a great feeling to be part of something so important. It makes you feel important, too. Somehow. My hip boss talks about her yoga classes, Thomas about school, and I talk about our meeting with Scholz & Friends on Wednesday. It’s a very nice evening. Somehow surreal, but nice.

We take the subway home. Arabella looks at me sadly. Because her internship is ending soon and we won’t see each other anymore. We should hang out sometime, she says. I agree. “Add me on ICQ!” I shout as I jump out of the carriage. I see her nod once more, then she rides off. That was a week ago. She hasn’t contacted me since.

.

The Design in Our Heads:

“When we were kids, we all went playing with our friends, watched similar TV programs and wanted to be police officers or firemen. We grew up, and our friends became lawyers or math teachers. So, we don’t exactly know the moment we became interested in design. It was a very long path that began with comics, maybe. We could say that the Internet was an important tool in the process of becoming what we are and of caring about what we care about now. Based on our own feelings towards design and media.” — Germán Olava.

.

The Psychology of the Dot:

The dot appears restless, passive in this image. This line here breaks the frame, becomes softer, but can hardly hold itself together. It and the dot intertwine, become one, become none. Implode on a DIN A3 sheet, glow briefly one last time, disappear forever on the white surface. This is the kind of thing we learn in vocational school. We design, we must consider how, where, and why this or that is placed here or there, we are meant to be aware of the effect, and we also look deeply into the technology of the machines that have made themselves available to support us in expressing our creativity. What lies behind every color, how the same stylistic devices can affect people in completely different ways, and which clients are better to retain. That’s what we learn. And sports.

My fellow dot analysts all seem very likable. School is fun, and we do quite a lot of crazy things—I wouldn’t have expected that. Some of those bouncing around there have already grown close to my heart after a short time. Like Thomas. Or little Jenny, for example. Which is no surprise when someone shows me something like that. I like people like that.

For the next three weeks it’s back to the agency, and on Monday we even have to give a short presentation about ourselves. In front of the entire unit. But whether I or my colleagues should be more afraid of that remains to be seen. It looks really uncomfortable outside, but I still need to go grocery shopping. Wish me luck.

.

Your Chance for Berlin:

The coolest magazine in the world (VICE) is looking for a new online editor. The ideal candidate has solid knowledge of the internet, the national and international blog scene, and IPTV. Editorial work experience is required. A comprehensive understanding of youth culture is essential. HTML skills are a prerequisite, as is familiarity with the ethos of VICE as a brand and company.

VICE is a highly driven company and is looking for someone with a strong degree of initiative and motivation who can work successfully in a small team. The office is located in Berlin. Starting date: immediately. Interested applicants should send a short cover letter and résumé to benjamin (at) viceland.de.

.

The Streets We Walked:

These are the streets we walked, the memories we're leaning on. These are the images I've saved. These are the girls I should've left alone, I'd been better off. This is where I am today. You're such a snob, but if you get through to me, then I won't have to walk alone. This is the t-shirt I've been carrying for all these years. It's got your picture on the front. This is the pride I take in wearing it and sharing it. With everyone who needs to know. You're such a slob, but you're such a super girl. Now it's time to carry on. You're such a slob, but you're such a super girl. Here's a heart that you'd want. Those whom the gods love grow young.

.

School:

I step off the S-Bahn almost in a panic, the beat of a t.A.T.u. remix pounding in my ears. (I’m telling you guys: they’ll be totally back soon. At least in my head.) I glance at the big station clock. Just before nine. Damn it, I have no idea where this damn Ernst Litfass School is supposed to be. Thomas had already called me impatiently, asking where I was. “If I don’t make it in time, tell them I’ll be a bit late!” I start running.

But where to?! Left, right, down the stairs, over the bridge? The steady rhythm carries my racing thoughts. Is there anything around here that looks like a school? There are kids over there. No, too young. I ask a gas station attendant—he just stares at me blankly and shrugs. Finally, an older woman at a snack stand takes pity on me: “Here, boy, just walk through my shop.” I run past currywurst and Fanta and then I see it: a huge brown-orange building. I storm into the cafeteria; it’s already ten past nine. Inside it’s like a madhouse—no one gives a damn that I’m late. I start filling out some forms and realize it wouldn’t have made much difference if I’d shown up at ten anyway.

Our class consists entirely of media designers. That’s kind of eerie. Cute girls, show-offs, hip-hop kids, average types, that smell… suddenly I feel transported back to a not-so-distant past. Many of them remind me of old acquaintances, friends, classmates. I like it. Thomas is tired and in a bad mood. I can only hope he won’t be like that tonight at the ZDF party. And if he is, I’ll just make sure he drinks properly. By the way, next Wednesday the two of us have been invited to Scholz & Friends for a meeting. I’m curious to see how that goes.

.

My New Life:

My first week of work is now over. The initial excitement has settled down a bit, but I still can’t quite grasp my new life here. It feels as if I could walk to the airport at any moment and fly back home. To my friends, to my family. Whenever I feel like it. “Don’t forget where you come from. Eniz.”

However, I hadn’t imagined the beginning here to be so easy. Suddenly I find myself at concerts, at the movies, or at exhibitions. It’s fun. It’s really fun. And sometimes I even have the feeling that I truly belong here. All sorts of crazy things are happening that you suddenly become part of. Today there was a huge flea market on my street, yesterday I went to the Illustrative with some people from work, and afterwards Cedric, Rebecca, and I watched “The Bourne Supremacy.” Even though I had never seen the first parts. I still liked it. Although after the movie I had the strange urge to delete this blog and change my identity so THEY could never find me. “Laura, you’re hot stuff!” (Insider).

On Monday vocational school starts, and we haven’t heard too many good things about it so far. But we’ll just let it surprise us. I’m looking forward to finally getting this whole BAB application thing behind me, (hopefully) receiving money, and then moving into my own decent, beautiful old-style apartment. It’s about time. I want to take a bath again. Or I’ll move in with Nora Tschirner once we’re engaged. We’ll see. Oh, and yesterday I designed my first banner that will actually appear online. So if you ever see a “Vertrauter Feind” teaser on the AXN television channel’s website—that was made by me. Cool, right?

.

I Love It:

Warning: this is going to be the ultimate bragging post. I’ve been working at Aperto for three days now, and I can only say one thing: I love it. I honestly don’t know whether anyone from the agency is reading this and thinking, “Oh man, what a suck-up,” but it’s true. When I think about how just a few months ago I was keeping myself afloat washing dishes and delivering pizza, and now I get to work at one of the country’s leading web design agencies, I personally see that as a serious level-up.

My fellow trainee Thomas, a really great guy, and I were warmly welcomed from the very first moment. We’ve been enjoying the perks of delicious (daily and free) breakfast, and we sit next to each other at two G4 Power Macs that will soon be replaced by two brand-new iMacs (people, I told you—this would be a bragging post like the world has never seen!). The two of us sit in the creative department and—together with the young intern Arabella—are being guided through meetings, workshops, and presentations. Next Monday vocational school starts, and in the evening we’re all invited to a ZDF party because Aperto created the broadcaster’s new media library.

So yes, we really like it here and could basically cheer all day. We’re even getting our own business cards soon—damn, that makes me feel important. But of course we know, and we’re often told, that it can happen very quickly that we’re pulled into real projects and have to face the stress of agency life head-on. I’m definitely curious to see what’s coming our way. We’re ready!

.

Someday I’ll Be in PAGE:

Starting tomorrow, I’ll be working in the creative industry. Me. For money. In plain terms: other people will pay me to create beautiful things. Isn’t that amazing? I’ll be doing the same kind of work as Matt. And Ella. Or somehow like the sweet Amanda, although I have no idea what she actually does at Connected Ventures. Does she even really work there?

What Spex is for the hipsters and pop crowd, PAGE is for me (and maybe for a few others, too). Eight euros for concentrated news from the creative scene. And someday… somewhere, somehow… my name will appear in it. Maybe even a photo of me. Well, maybe not. The name is enough. And underneath it will say that I’ve just received the Grimme Online Award, successfully democratized MySpace, and led Apple to the throne of market leadership. Although no one really wants the Grimme Online Award anymore, MySpace doesn’t interest me, and if Apple ever became market leader, it would instantly turn evil.

So it would also be fine if they reported on how beautifully I designed the new website for The Killers, how I made the internet a better place, and how I just moved into a villa in L.A. with my newly engaged fiancée Keira Knightley. Yes, I’d be quite satisfied with that. So, Gabi, you can go ahead and draft a rough version of the article; the details will follow. On behalf of Jenny and myself, I can confidently say: the two of us are about to shake up the kingdom of media designers. Anyone need to use the bathroom first?

.

In Search of the Holy Intel Booth:

Yes, the three of us went to the IFA today. Cedric, his girlfriend Rebecca, and yours truly. Besides lots of pretty booth babes, idiots constantly trying to shove flyers into our hands, and Asian businessmen who floated smiling through the aisles and dismissed anything that came closer than two meters with a clear hand gesture, we got to see the latest technological innovations up close. Digital picture frames. 3D televisions. And even the iPhone.

There was plenty going on in terms of gaming as well. I beat our little Crediclein twice (= 100%) at Wii boxing and tennis. What a triumph! Incredible. We also watched a few matches of the German StarCraft and Warcraft 3 finals at the WCG, which were broadcast on Game TV. Still, I prefer the online reporters at GIGA. These guys were just too nerdy and not funny enough for me. Come on, people—this kind of thing needs humor.

Other than that, the IFA was really awesome. Lots of strange characters walking around; I think I saw Mola Adebisi, that conceited jerk, talking on the phone. I almost won a notebook, too. At the Intel booth. Almost. But Rebecca was even closer. At least in her mind.

.

Push It:

Sara has big boobs that “bounce boobily” and she thinks I’m an asshole. So you’d better buy her this T-shirt.

.

The iPod City:

Since yesterday, I’m officially a resident of Berlin. To achieve that status, I had to hang around at city hall long enough—surrounded by some of the strangest characters you can imagine. But they roam freely outside as well. I like it here more and more each day. I don’t understand what some people have against life in a big city. I just have to step outside and I can buy a magazine at Hugendubel, “Create” by Puma at Karstadt, and microwave food at Lidl. Okay, technically I could buy magazines, perfume, and food back home too. But here it’s just a notch cooler.

I also found out that just two stations away there’s the largest Gravis store in the entire city. I always had to travel to Munich to see any Mac other than my little mini. By the way, I’ve noticed a fundamental difference between Munich and Berlin: here, all the trendy people wear their iPod headphones with the cables outside their clothes; in the Bavarian capital you could only ever see the white earbuds. Of course I let myself be influenced and now wear mine the same way. I’ll just have to accept that I get caught on something every now and then.

.

A Lesbian Adventure (2):

"The O.C." — my absolute favorite series — is ending soon in Germany as well, and of course I’m asking myself: what comes next? But since my fascination with girls who love girls was reignited after my Tegan and Sara concert, the answer in that regard might be the American television series "South of Nowhere."

With sharp cuts and rocking music, the show primarily tells the story of young Spencer, who moves with her Christian family from Ohio to Los Angeles and soon befriends the lesbian outsider Ashley. Not everyone at the new school likes that, and so the two of them — along with Spencer’s brothers — soon find themselves battling spiteful cheerleaders, jealous basketball players, and shady gang members.

The MTV subsidiary channel The N manages to present the series in a much more realistic way than "The O.C." and it probably falls somewhere between "Laguna Beach" and the film "Thirteen." In a lifelike manner, the half-hour show tackles themes such as racism, homosexuality, and teenage pregnancy, constantly stays in motion, and surprises viewers with great twists, with each of the three seasons following a particular theme.

I’ve now watched a few episodes of the first season and am especially taken with the lead actress Gabrielle Christian, which is probably because she absolutely reminds me of a young Amanda Bynes. One can only hope that MTV or ProSieben will eventually get the idea to bring this great series to Germany. "South of Nowhere" certainly deserves it, especially since in the U.S. its authenticity has succeeded in bringing together many young homosexual and heterosexual viewers, helping to reduce prejudice and hatred toward same-sex love a little more. And that’s a good thing, in my opinion.

.

I Still Like You:

Yeah okay, I still like Julia Hummer, even though she’s taking part in that embarrassing GEZ campaign. But watch it, sweetheart — that won’t last forever, so next time please do something worthwhile again. Thank you.

.

What I Need Every Day:

Wrigley’s from Rossmann. Coffee supplies from Lidl. Pieces of fruit from Karstadt. And you?

.

For Everyone Who Isn't a Drunken Loser:

"Berlin is the best place in the world to waste your life. The city is one long, happy, drunken parade of immigrants, lazy bastards, and dogs that endlessly shit wherever they please. The only people here who wear suits are homeless men, and even they mean it ironically. It’s the only city in Germany where you’re allowed to be lazy — more precisely, Germans come here specifically to be lazy, or, as they call it here, to ‘study.’"

This is probably the most fucked-up, awesome, and remarkable Berlin guide I’ve ever seen. And it’s completely free. You can download it here. Right now. And don’t forget to read it. Ines wanted to blog about it too ;).

.

The Downfall of the Tattooed Breasts:

The internet basically consists of two major components: information and porn. When you're horny, you briefly surf over to the dark side, satisfy yourself at TinyEve, and then head straight back to Yigg. For a long time, my undivided love belonged to a website that not only connected these different worlds, but also garnished them with free thought, alternative music, and a breathtaking lifestyle: SuicideGirls. In this community, some of the coolest people in the world hang out. But slowly, the name seems to be becoming a self-fulfilling prophecy.

The community, founded in 2001 in the U.S. by Missy and others, quickly became a cult website among bad girls, rockers, and free thinkers. SuicideGirls was and is the epitome of sex, art, body culture, and alternative ideas. Those with full access would quickly find themselves among well-known photographers, sexy nude models, and the coolest figures of the indie scene. Unfortunately, the site itself soon had a serious problem on board: it became too well-known, too mainstream, too commercial. With its own radio programs, television appearances, and books, that couldn’t end well.

It apparently began with the lawsuit against former SG photographer Philip Warner of Lithium Picnic. He was ordered to pay $100,000 because he became a thorn in Missy’s side after gaining recognition and also (legally) working for the competition. After he photographed the SG model Apnea for her own site, SuicideGirls intervened and wrongfully sued the photographer. He had to shut down his site, sell his equipment, and now survives on donations and commissions from supporters.

Now the stories about the once so dirty-glittering site are piling up. A former SG photographer complains about unfair contracts she was forced to sign, photos are simply sold to hardcore sites, and as early as 2003 a model claimed that the makers of SuicideGirls repeatedly pressured her to take off her clothes.

But counter-movements are not far away, even though Missy wants to sue anything that stands in the site's way. If SuicideGirls taught its former admirers anything, it’s that you only reach your goal by breaking rules and standing against the crowd. So there are calls for boycotts, awareness campaigns, and alternatives.

It’s a shame it had to come to this. But in one thing both Goliath and David agree: most SG models are wonderful, interesting, and intelligent people, and the community itself cannot be blamed for the flaws of those at the top. Unfortunately, I will now see my former favorite site with different eyes, and I hope that from the ashes a phoenix will rise that kicks even more ass than SuicideGirls ever could. So to speak, life after suicide.

.

Holiday Greetings From Ibiza:

Hang up the chick habit, hang it up, daddy, or you'll be alone in a quick. Hang up the chick habit, hang it up, daddy, or you'll never get another fix. I'm telling you it's not a trick, pay attention, don't be thick, or you're liable to get licked. You're gonna see the reason why, when they're spitting in your eye, they'll be spitting in your eye. Thank you, sweetie, for these hot greetings. Be happy—you’re in Spain.

.

Back in Your Head:

Becca went home again in the afternoon, and I had such a headache that on the subway I thought my ears were going to explode. Maybe I really should see a doctor. Well, I will if the aspirin wears off. It was a lovely week with her, and now that she’s gone, it’s eerily quiet in here again—almost ghostly. But we experienced all sorts of things. We went to the “Lesbennest,” met Cedric’s adorable and by no means shy girlfriend, and marveled at the craziest foods I’ve ever seen at KaDeWe. It was nice that you were here.

.

A Lesbian Adventure:

My ex-girlfriend is in town. Becca. And what do you do as a burned-out couple whose sparks haven’t quite stopped flying yet? Of course: you take a trip to the unofficial lesbian convention of the weekend — the Tegan and Sara concert at the Columbia Club.

Even before the concert started, we had made the subway ride faster and the faces prettier with Lambrusco and a strange Beck’s Green Lemon variation. I only vaguely remember the smoke-free gig (as requested by the artists): disgusting beer in large cups, figures where you could play “guess the gender,” tightly embraced little girls, döner kebabs, guitars, lipstick, Tegan, Sara, the sweetest “thank you” in the world, red lights…

I have to thank my head the next day for missing Marten and Nicki, whose meeting I had really been looking forward to. I’m sorry about that. But Berlin will be standing a little longer, and next time it’ll be even better — I promise.

.

Tarantino and the City:

Basically, we all know that Quentin Tarantino is a horny, overrated asshole who’s into pretty feet, unattractive women, and torn-apart bodies. But it works. His films are cult before anyone has even seen them. The same goes for Death Proof. If it hadn’t been his film, I probably would have asked for my money back. At its core, it was just average girls talking about sex for two hours. And about canyons. And about Red Bull. Sugar-free.

But of course, in the end, it was more than that. There were sweaty asses, fast cars, and amusing editing and continuity mistakes. The music was great, the style was great, the cheerleader girl was great. That was about it. I’m eagerly waiting for Kill Bill Vol. 3. And preferably before 2015. Thanks, asshole.

.

Whores, Cheesecake and Bushido:

So here I am. In my new life. Outside, the sun is shining, little kids are trying to imitate cats meowing, and Tom Cruise is shooting a movie downtown. It was Thursday morning when we arrived, and the moment I unlocked the door to my mini-apartment, I actually wanted to turn around and go straight back home. But with every hour I spend here, I realize one thing: Berlin is better than Buchloe. In almost every way.

I live right in the middle of Charlottenburg. Subway station, pedestrian zone, cheap Greek restaurant — everything just a few steps away. My dorm room is small, if not tiny. The internet usually limps along at two bars, this damn DVB-T just doesn’t work (no matter what anyone says), and you can hear every cough in the stairwell. But I like it here.

Last night I was out with Cedric and a pretty funny Pia. They showed me the insiders’ side of the city. I was in a club with Bushido and walked right through a crowd of pretty whores. I couldn’t stop being amazed. My personal highlight was warm cheesecake with whipped cream and strawberry syrup in a 60s-style restaurant at 3 a.m. Even though my two tour guides exposed it as typical stoner food and told me horror stories about biting literature and satanic cat sacrifices. The craziest part, though, was stumbling through empty subway stations at half past four in the morning while the strangest figures approached me. I left my iPod safely in my pocket during that walk.

I definitely feel very comfortable here. There’s something to discover on every corner, strange people and cute girls everywhere, and I already know my way around the subway system pretty well. Today I’ll take it easy again, and on Monday I still need to buy a few things. Salt, pepper, and a cool poster. Oh, and as an official citizen of Berlin, I should probably register myself. Wouldn’t be a bad idea, right? And if I miss The O.C. tonight because of this DVB-T crap, that would absolutely not be okay.

.

The Last Day in My Old Life:

In the past few weeks, nothing — consciously or unconsciously — had I suppressed more than the fact that I would soon be gone from here. Until yesterday. When I opened my eyes, it wasn’t even 8 a.m., and suddenly I felt a breath of the future in my mind. “We all know and believe in you. Don’t forget us. You are and will always be our brother. Eniz.” I stared almost traumatically at the boxes on the floor into which I had stuffed my life.

The sun blinded my eyes; I could only see the outline of Ana’s lips. She probably wouldn’t fully realize for a few weeks that I was really gone. She would have cried on the train ride home. She had given me a small Patrick Star who says, at the push of a button, “You are my very best friend.” The constant lapping of the lake echoed in my ears as I hugged her soaking-wet body one last time and kissed her on the cheek.

“I read your blog — and almost cried. Your thoughts are beautiful. Lisa.” It was already three in the morning when Becca and Eniz were sitting on the floor in front of me. We had already put the Skip-Bo cards aside. They had stayed with me until my departure for Berlin and were the last people I hugged in Buchloe. I got into the car and was too tired to panic. “It’s raining here. Buchloe is sad that you’re leaving now. Becca.”

.

A Farewell Letter:

Becca. Over the past few years, you were the person I could rely on the most, even though you were fighting your own inner battles. I love you, and it was an honor to rebel with you against the barriers narrow-minded people tried to put in our way. I’m looking forward to this new chapter in our lives, even though I’ll miss lying in bed with you and watching the world drift by outside. But we’ll stay loyal to each other anyway. We’ll cook together, complain to each other on the phone, and do sexy things over webcam. And when the time comes, we’ll finally settle down on our own little island in the South Seas. Just you and me. And the monkey butler.

Ana. It was always a tearing struggle for me to let you go on one hand, because I was so hopelessly in love with you, and at the same time not to lose you as what we once were: best friends. When I look back on the past year—from summer at the gravel pit and those unbelievably beautiful nights with you to this summer, when I simply couldn’t take it anymore—I can say I messed up almost everything. But now I finally understand why. Because you were the first person in my life with whom I was truly myself. I despaired of your sweet, childlike naivety, your self-destructive turns in life, and your passion for the little things—and in the end I failed. You once compared love to fire: you shouldn’t get too close or you’ll burn, and yet you’re always drawn to it. That’s exactly how I feel about you. Like a stupid little moth crashing into a lamp over and over until it perishes. That’s one of the reasons I have to leave. I admire you. No one haunts my foolish head like you and your ideas. I always wanted to tell you how much you changed my life, inspired me, and truly meant to me. But I couldn’t. And when I did manage to squeeze something out, it sounded like a pathetic pile of sentimental crap. I fought constantly to be someone special to you. You’re an extraordinary person, and you know it. Maybe you know it too well. I wish you all the happiness in the world—whether you enter a convent next week, live on nothing but snow, or try to conquer the sky. You’ll manage. Even without me.

Buchloe. I have a love-hate relationship with many things—especially with you, my small hometown. Of course I’ll miss you. I know you like the back of my hand: the Alpenstraße hill where Ali once fell so hard he could have kissed his own feet, the playground where Eniz and I spent years of our lives, the new housing area in the west I hurried through just to sleep with a blonde with big boobs, the gravel pit cliffs we jumped from in summer, the Fritz where our broken clique partied endlessly, and the long Bahnhofstraße I trudged down at dawn after playing “Phantasy Star Online” all night.

The rest of you—I’ll miss you, you bunch of lunatics. Because you liked me even though I’m crazy. Even though one moment I wanted to hug you all and the next throw you out the door. Even though I ignored my phone for days when I felt miserable. Or because you hated me—because I strut down the street like a fag, because you’re dating one of my ex-girlfriends who still secretly wants me, or because I called you a fat rum ball and meant it. Like it or not, I owe you too for who I am today.

Thursday at 3 a.m., I’m leaving. Most of my things are already packed. I’m not taking much—the dorm room in Berlin is furnished. For days I’ve wanted to write a list of everything I’ll need to buy. And I really need everything—from a toilet brush to a salt shaker to new pens. It’ll be fun. I’ll have a microwave for the first time in my life. We never had one here. Crazy, right? So, capital city—get ready. It’s about time I got out of here. Even my aunt says so. And tell me what else I’ll need for my new place, so I don’t forget anything.

.

Summernight WordPress Theme:

I hated it, loved it, and buried it deep in digital nirvana. But before it rots there, I’m throwing it to the crowd: the Summernight WordPress theme by Tokyopunk. I’m warning you—you really need to know your way around WordPress to handle this design monster I completely messed up. The theme is raw and unfinished, and there are no PSD files. Perfect for experienced tinkerers. To get it running you’ll need several plugins: PageBar, Readers_Post, and Get Custom Field Values. Good luck.

.

A Night with Le Gary (2):

He suddenly reappeared out of nowhere with a more than questionable excuse for his absence. Le Gary was kidnapped—by two Brazilian law students. For almost two weeks he was held captive, forced to listen to Paula’s and Sara’s relationship problems, nacho recipes, and gossip about the latest episode of “Malhação.” He could have puked. But he’s a gentleman, kept quiet, and finally escaped one disco night inside a transvestite’s handbag.

Despite his enormous handicap in the clutches of two sexy twenty-somethings, did he bring back exclusive news from Rio? Of course. He’s Le Gary. He’s particularly hot about the new iMac, which he already saw at Steve Jobs’ barbecue over a week ago. Naturally, he pocketed the sleek new keyboard—but it got lost on the way. Or maybe he traded it for coke—who knows.

He also recommends checking out fashion eccentrics in Berlin and an open-source film project called “Intellectual Porn” about love, friendship, and other profound crap. Design magazines predict trends that come and go—but you shouldn’t trust predictions blindly. Follow your own ideas. As inspiration, though, it’s nice.

Le Gary is off again, flying to Tokyo today. Let’s hope he doesn’t get captured by domineering girls and misused as a massage device. He signs off with his trademark line: “Thanks for the honey, bitchy bunny.” Or maybe he means “money.” Who knows.

.

Against the Wall:

She’s not my type. That’s how I would begin a book about the girl who takes my breath away, fuels my imagination, and drives my libido to the edge of madness. I could write a novel about Ana, thousands of poems, millions of words, all straight from my heart. But every letter would be a waste. Pure self-deception. She doesn’t love me. And although I know that—maybe because I know that—I want to spend every second near her. Idiot that I am.

We were allies, secret lovers, a couple—many things. I lied to myself when I thought I was over her. For exactly one week we were inseparable again. We traveled through Bavaria, fought our way through “Monkey Island 4,” lay wrapped around each other in front of the TV. Just like before. Unfortunately.

I’m stupid for getting involved again. For never being able to stay angry at her. For having my heart torn open by every story about guys she’s hooked up with. She doesn’t even know how much she can hurt me. She’s the only one who truly can. And she does. Not on purpose—but that would make it easier.

Love can be beautiful. This was self-destruction. I’m going to Berlin, leaving behind failed and unreturned feelings. I wanted to be at peace with everything before leaving. Well, that didn’t work out. I’ll never write a book about her. I don’t want to waste another pseudo-poetic word on a state I didn’t even fight against. I’d like to end with a triumphant sentence about screwing around or getting drunk with friends—but none of that would make me happy. I’m an old romantic. When I want to be. But who cares. She’s not my type anyway.

.

Magical Reading Trip:

While Gary failed to fulfill his duties and apparently vanished in Rio, Ana and I went on an inspiring reading trip through Munich. Okay, we mostly just sat around at Hugendubel bookstore—but close enough. While she immersed herself in books on nutrition and psychology, I stocked up on everything various genres had to offer.

The only book I actually bought was by former advertising genius Paul Arden: “It’s Not How Good You Are, It’s How Good You Want to Be.” The title sounds like a typical self-help cliché, and I felt slightly embarrassed standing at the checkout with it. But the man is brilliant. He didn’t tell me much that was new—just things you should never forget in the creative industry. “To be original, seek inspiration in unusual sources.” “Change your tools; it might free your thinking.” And my favorite: “Anyone who claims to be right isn’t right. They’re stuck in the past, stubborn, boring, and complacent.” Also: “If you never make a mistake, you probably don’t make much at all.” Love it.

Other books disappointed me—especially one about Berlin that turned out to be full of whining letters. Another about popular Berlin myths amused me slightly, though I lacked the background knowledge. On day two, I browsed books about looming economic crises, aging ’68ers, and advertising analysis. I’ll read about ruthless manipulation next time. Or maybe I’ll dare the erotica section next to the café. Who knows. One final insight from Arden: “If you can’t solve a problem, it’s because you’re playing by the rules.”

.

Make My New Zoo:

The Make My Day Festival finally brought some action to our quiet region. It wasn’t exactly a massive festival, but I was there—so it was cool. There was plenty of food, eco-clothing stalls, water pipes, two open-air stages, campfires, and wristbands at the entrance. The sunset on Friday was amazing.

On stage stood “My New Zoo,” wearing horse and giraffe masks, spraying their band name onto a white bedsheet. Strange—but cool. When they started playing, I was surprised. They played “Mr Officer,” “Sometimes,” and “Aida,” and the small crowd danced. They describe their sound as Keith Richards beating Paul McCartney to the rhythm of “Roxanne” while the Kinks watch. New, stylish, and sympathetic—definite star potential.

The rest of the festival was less exciting. Fools Garden played, and everyone rushed the stage for “Lemon Tree.” Fireworks followed—almost romantic. For a moment I wished I had a boyfriend to hold me while watching. Maybe someday.

.

Friday and Saturday:

The urge to stay home last weekend turned into the opposite this Friday: I had to get out. Otherwise there would have been casualties. I ended up at a random birthday party in some village. Everything was technically fine—decent music, cute high-school girls, free alcohol—but depression crept into my drunken laughter. Fear of Berlin. Not fear of death itself, but fear of no longer being able to participate. Of losing interaction. Once I’m gone from here, everything changes.

I hate having too much time to think. That’s when ghosts of past Christmases sneak into my consciousness and make me miss things I thought I’d long overcome. Only the Simpsons movie and a sweet postcard from Nicki managed to lift my spirits. Sundays are always the most vulnerable days for my bittersweet suffering.

.

From Russia with Love:

While cleaning out my apartment, I stumbled upon the first t.A.T.u. album and had to import it into iTunes immediately. The memories flooded back from the very first track. You can argue about the band itself, but “200 Km/H in the Wrong Lane” played nonstop in my old Discman five years ago—probably thanks to my Kazakh ex-girlfriend and my circle of friends back then.

I supported Julia and Lena when they flopped at Eurovision. I imported the DVD just for a few behind-the-scenes clips and was ecstatic when I first heard about the second album, “Dangerous and Moving.” t.A.T.u. were my absolute favorite band and still have a place in my heart—cluttered though it may be with indie rock and alternative. And yes, I even had the same “Fuck War” T-shirt back then. God, I was proud of that.

.

Gary’s Friend Ate My Dashboard:

Freddi wants to see my Dashboard. Great idea, I think. But shortly after I opened it and saw all those beautiful, ultra-secret, and interesting widgets, it suddenly happened: Larry, one of Gary’s permanently drunk buddies who are constantly hanging around my place, grabbed the Dashboard icon and took a hearty bite out of it before I could take a screenshot of this wonderful and resource-saving program. Gone were amazing widgets like my pet Flappie, the daily Buddhist wisdom, and the little tips to help me eat healthier. (And those three really were my favorites!)

For me, Dashboard is comparable to Linux—twice a year I suddenly get incredibly excited about it, and all its advantages rush into my head. Seeing the weather with one click (instead of just looking out the window), the great animated clock (instead of slightly turning my head to the upper right), and a nice blue Wikipedia widget (instead of ruthlessly using Google and adding “wiki” at the end). I use the cute new features for at most a day, and then I realize I never press F12 anymore, my Mac mini G4 keeps getting slower, and every Flash page takes its toll. Then it’s time again: goodbye Dashboard, thanks for disabling.

You can probably tell I’m not the biggest fan of these pop-up helpers. But there are surely people for whom Dashboard, alongside Spotlight, was THE reason to switch to Tiger. Not for me. But who knows—maybe the people I’m tossing this baton to can still convince me to revive Flappie.

.

Berlin Is Getting Closer:

I’ve finally found a place to stay in Berlin. For the first few months, I’ll be living in my own apartment in the student residence of the Fördererkreis Junge Politik e.V. on Suarezstraße in Charlottenburg. Bathroom, kitchen, and even free wireless internet—all included. That means I can finally start looking for my own renovated old-building apartment in the eastern part of the city and won’t have to keep sending poor Cedric around (thanks again for that, by the way!).

In mid-August, I’m heading off to the capital. And if any student, trainee, or Australian intern happens to be living in that residence from autumn onward and is reading this—please get in touch with me. That way I’ll have someone to bounce around with right from the start.

Moving in there fulfills a small dream of mine, because I’ve always believed that the atmosphere in a student residence must be unique—provided the right people are there. And now I don’t even have to be a student to experience it. Insane. And if I don’t like it there after all, I can still move to East Berlin. That’s the plan.

.

A Night with Le Gary (1):

Our nightlife correspondent Le Gary was roaming the underground of New York this weekend and, nursing a massive hangover today, is dropping all the dirty and secret bombs he managed to tease out of DJs, night owls, and street swallows with great personal dedication.

In the new NEON, Dela Kienle writes about the eternal balancing act between life planning and just drifting along. Those who have opted for the latter can download the new track by VHS or BETA for free at lastnightsparty. Our little head chef is also serving up the finest tunes as of today. In his new online magazine Weggerockt, he takes the best indie bands to heart and invites everyone to rock along. Definitely check it out!

In the design section, the current issue of PAGE focuses on young creatives and provocatively asks: Where are the creative stars of tomorrow? Maybe here. These free PDF magazines, bursting with fresh ideas, unjustly lead such a shadowy existence. Pure inspiration!

And finally, the must-have of the music industry: the new track “Oh My God” by Mark Ronson and Lily Allen. Covers are usually crap, but this version of the Kaiser Chiefs track is good, fresh—and we love Miss Allen after all. Le Gary is flying to Rio de Janeiro today and signs off with the sentence of all sentences: “Thanks for the honey, bitchy bunny.”

.

Why I’m Really Going to Berlin:

Of course because of her here: “I would like to put on record that I got up at six o’clock this morning and I’m still dog-tired. So everything I say will be complete nonsense. Agreed? / I turn my city into a village. Sure, I can understand people who have their issues with the city, but those questions don’t arise for me. I’m only just discovering Berlin anyway. I lived in Pankow for 22 years, have now moved to Friedrichshain, and am wandering properly through Berlin-Mitte for the first time.”

“If these days someone is lazy enough to form their musical taste solely through music television channels, I still have no sympathy whatsoever.”

“Sometimes I try to look as melancholic and withdrawn as possible in public. But that works exactly until someone talks to me. / I absolutely love staying at home, even though many people wouldn’t expect that because I’m so talkative. But I enjoy being antisocial. No problem. In those phases I don’t answer phone calls and postpone all my appointments. / Whenever I say that I rarely go out, a terrible party phase is sure to follow. Everything I present as a given usually turns into the opposite for me.”

And just like that, I’ve found a soulmate in the big, bad capital.

.

It’s in Your Hands:

I have always been a fan of the gray, boxy device that brought light and music into my dreary life. But in recent years, one thing has become increasingly clear: German television is going down the drain. And I know exactly when it started. When VIVA Zwei was canceled. That’s right, you swine. And back then you weren’t even under MTV’s thumb yet. Your own fault. The collapse of the music channel landscape can be summed up in one sentence: MTV buys VIVA, MTV airs nothing but ringtone ads, MTV fires Sarah Kuttner. But that’s old news, because now the madness of TV is spreading to the big networks as well.

Watching TV makes you stupid. More and more so. The good programs suffer, the news becomes secondary. If we don’t change something soon, we’ll end up drowning in a bland mess of courtroom shows, call-in programs, and the Jamba! Top 1000. That’s why we finally need a voice to show you the way. So listen carefully. I’m going to tell you exactly what you’re allowed to watch — AND WHAT YOU’RE NOT.

Never (again) watch the following shows, or a drunken moose will strike you while you’re taking a dump: Among Us. Good Times, Bad Times. My Baby. My Garden. Judge Alexander Hold. Judge Barbara Salesch. K 11 – Detectives in Action. The Oliver Geissen Show. The Criminal Court. Britt. The Family Court. Prosecutor Posch Investigates. 7th Heaven. Changing Rooms – A Duo for Four Walls. Call In – Play! Smart & Rich. The Hour of the Winners. Sonnenklar TV. Tarot Today. Sport Clips. Money Express. MTV Band Trip. Hollywood Quiz. Girlfriends. Love, Inc. My Family. Everything That Counts. The Ten Greatest Whatever. RTL Shop. Vera. Two with Kallwass. Niedrig and Kuhnt – Detectives Investigate. Lenßen & Partner. Veronica. Big Brother. Verliebt in Berlin. Little House on the Prairie. 3rd Rock from the Sun. Dawson’s Creek. The Confession. AVENZIO – Beautiful Living! Andromeda. Super Kickers 2006. Charmed. Night-Loft. The Bill Cosby Show. Buffy the Vampire Slayer. kabel eins Film Quiz. voll total. T.V. Kaiser. Master Quiz. Fun Night. Viper. Wife Swap. The Super Housewife. Congratulations! – Vera Makes Dreams Come True. Team Galaxy. Yu-Gi-Oh! Pokito TV. My Neighborhood. The Fate of My Life. RTL II News. Stargate. Punk’d. Graduation Class. Friends – Life Goes On. Shibuya. Zoey 101. Anything But Sex. Tour de France. MusikantenDampfer. Upps – The Super Bloopers Show. Mensch Markus. Flavor of Love. Inspector Rex. Oliver’s Twist. X-Factor: The Uncanny. Extreme Activity. Surface. Primeval. MyVideo Show. Clipfish TV. Deal or No Deal. beFour: The Star Diary. Typical Girls! Typical Boys! 7 Days – 7 Heads. Comedy TOTAL. Parental Control. Ego Trip’s White Rapper Show. Popstars.

And as for entire channels, please delete 9live, QVC, and anything that shows more boobs than brains. Thank you. What you are allowed to watch can be found in my “Favorites.” Or just throw the thing out the window, go outside in this great weather, and scare some kindergarten kids with the quiz questions you’ve been learning all day from “Shit Level 9.”

.

Day at the Lake:

Since the weather was so beautiful everywhere yesterday, I dragged the freshly-turned-adult Irina to the gravel pit lake, sipped homemade banana milkshake with her, and kept losing at a Russian card game called Durak. Exhausted from all the walking around, we treated ourselves in the evening to a “Unhappily Ever After” marathon on TV.

God, and today it’s scorching hot again. That’s pretty awesome. I’m going to roast myself under this sunshade out on the rooftop terrace like a fireball and only go inside briefly so I don’t miss The O.C.. And what are you doing on this hellishly hot day?

.

Smoke in My Head:

Dear diary. Yesterday I went to the hookah lounge in Landsberg with my friends. It’s a shisha bar, cool right? They played really great music and we filled our heads with loads of shisha clouds. It tasted like apple. And mint. And lots more. The The showed me all kinds of techniques. She’s really tall and can do amazing things with her mouth. Rings, ships in the fog, or pretending to be Popeye. Lisa and Fex were really into it too. The music, I mean.

Then Silvi showed up. She was totally stuck-up and kept whispering in my ear about who she thought was gay and ugly. That was pretty mean. But she had nicely drawn-on boobs. I liked that. And then Kathi came. She just kept laughing loudly and constantly bragged about being in the newspaper. I forgot why. Pretty stupid.

After that we wanted to go to the “SonderBar.” I think that name is very clever. But some of us didn’t get in because they’re under 18. That sucked. I ran into Andi from my old class. He’s lost a lot of weight and immediately wanted Silvi’s number. No idea why. Then we walked through Landsberg. It was already dark. Creepy, right? Kathi and Silvi jumped over my “penises” and were completely exhausted afterwards. Understandable. It was a really nice evening.

André, you missed out. I’m done writing like a little schoolgirl now. I’ll take off my sailor costume too. It’s starting to itch. Must be the lice Silvi brought from her boarding school. So if you’re ever in Landsberg am Lech, definitely check out the hookah lounge. Chill music, cute (Protestant) girls, and really good tobacco. And say hi to The from me — she seems to hang around there quite often.

.

Imagination Is Good Too:

The last 24 hours in fast forward. I pack my suitcase and take with me: a bottle of Bacardi. A crate of Guschtl beer. A plate of Kaiserschmarrn. Kathi. The chick in the white bikini. André’s apartment in Landsberg. The red-light district. Four seasons of The O.C. on DVD. Boom bang. Quick quick. The water in the swimming pool. The super-duper push-up bra. The communist. The lush palm tree. The blue light at the bar. A hot-pink vibrator. 20 party pizzas.

The night was rough. I was wired on an unholy mixture of a liter of Nescafé Xpress and fruity, fresh, green-orange alcohol. Drove across the city with a madman in a porno polo shirt. Because of an UNO card game. Blasted the Black Eyed Peas at full volume. Sent Ira a birthday greeting via SMS. Accidentally congratulated her yesterday already. My calendar screwed me over. The few minutes I spent curled up asleep on the couch, I dreamed of a secret underground vault whose exit led straight onto the Rock im Park festival grounds. Everything was in Harry Potter style. Even the Italians. Kathi is really cute. Imagination is good too. But I had sex with an Anna. In my dream. Even though she has a boyfriend. I don’t care. They’re just thoughts. Have fun in California, André. That was a successful farewell.

Now I’ve come home from work and I can still feel the seductively twitching energy of that disgusting-smelling caramel macchiato in my veins. I could drop dead on the spot. But I don’t want to miss “Camp Lazlo.” I love that monkey. And Clam. The dwarf rhino. Such crap. Funny. Happy 18th birthday, my sweet little bitch. Time for you to grow up. Just kidding.

.

I Need an Apartment in Berlin:

Since I’ll soon be starting my apprenticeship as a media designer in Berlin, I urgently need an apartment there. Quickly. A one-room flat, an apartment in a student residence, a nice shared flat that wants to take me in—whatever. My new home should be nice, cost no more than 400 euros including utilities, and be in or near Berlin-Mitte. Ideally in Prenzlauer Berg or Friedrichshain. But not in Wedding.

If anyone finds or knows anything, just get in touch. I’d be very grateful. I just don’t want to share a flat with that guy from the classified ad I linked to. Thanks.

.

Band Festival:

Words don’t always tell the truth. Diet cola doesn’t make us slimmer, readers don’t clean our doorways, and band festivals aren’t necessarily festivals. Or with bands. Or even good. Yesterday we were in the little monastery town of St. Ottilien, where a few crazy eighth graders grabbed some guitars and a microphone, hammered the same “Fuck you all” noise song into a barn (!) all evening long, and probably gave the twelve-year-olds with their yellow wristbands the best night of their young lives.

We spent half the evening sitting at the “dangerous curve,” admiring the cool monks who dared to wear their hoods casually thrown back, and watched the little kids—limited to a maximum of two beers per person—act as if they had just emptied a vodka pipeline. The only good band of the night was Blurrd Minds with their charismatic singer Kareem Weth, who at least saved the honor of music at the end. Photos from this rival event to Live Earth are available online.

.

I’m Getting Old:

It’s always a strange feeling when you realize you’re getting older. It’s not a steady, continuous process. No. It comes in bursts. It happens through interpersonal situations. Through words you use. Through gestures that express you. Through feelings that suddenly arise. It sucks.

Silvi celebrated her 17th birthday privately at a friend’s place. Rihanna’s “Umbrella” blared constantly from the speakers, one dad tried to force his hot sausages on everyone, the girls present were cute—but too young. I watched my buddy, who was exactly that age. He reminded me of myself. The way I used to be. Charming, arrogant, always a bit too pushy. But his routine worked. Just like mine did. Back then.

That’s when I realized I’m too old for this. For these girls, these parties, this whole thing. And that realization was sad, but also liberating. Because I loved those girls, those parties, that whole thing. And they loved me. A few years ago it was all much easier. I’d walk into a party, see a blonde, and know something would happen between us. It was one of the few things I could rely on. Today it doesn’t work like that anymore. Maybe I’m missing the thrill I used to have. I don’t know. I just know it doesn’t work anymore.

Maybe I’m simply satisfied. My sleeping-around phase is over. It’s time for something steady, something real, something worth building. And those 17-year-old teenagers just aren’t ready for that. Thank God. Emotionally, I feel like more and more things are closing within me and lifting themselves to a new level. I think this is the best time in my life to start something new. Berlin is perfect for that. Thanks, by the way, for all the birthday wishes—it really means a lot to me. And as I write these lines, I realize they might be wrong. That you should have your fun. And that maybe a true relationship can grow out of that fun. Confusing.

.

Acceptance:

It’s Friday, exactly one week after my trip to Berlin. Half asleep, I hear the phone ringing. I had wanted to catch up on a bit more sleep for Silvi’s party tonight. Slowly, I press the blinking red button. Hello…? It was my grandma. She wanted to know how I’m doing. Whether she should come by to do the dishes. Whether I had cleaned up. Fine, no thanks, nope. Hung up. Drifted back to sleep.

The next ringtone frenzy came just a few minutes later. Grandma? No. This time it was Berlin. In person. I was wide awake immediately. To keep it short: I got the job! Yes, I’m moving to Berlin, yes, I’m becoming a professional web designer, yes, awesome. Aperto. That’s where I’ll begin my apprenticeship in September. I especially want to thank Ella and Tim, who took such good care of me. Thank you for giving me the chance to make my dream come true. It sounds so damn cheesy, but it’s true. And if anyone wants to see what things are like at Aperto, you can check it out online.

So that’s probably it for me and my little hometown of Buchloe. I’m happy to leave. Nothing is keeping me here anymore. For many people, a new and different life will begin in September. Becks is in the middle of a new relationship and, instead of Freiburg, will now be exploring the vast world of psychology in Augsburg. Mentally. Ana and my other girls will feel the full force of their final year before graduation. But they’ll manage. I’m sure of it. Even if my little Nastja had tears in her eyes. And Hannah will do everything she can to stage the best fashion show of the modern age with me in Berlin someday. I’m looking forward to it.

I’m not worried about the others I’ll be leaving behind either. My mom has her people here, the family, and her job. And I’ll come visit from time to time. Mille is rocking the martial arts schools of the nation and cuddling his way through Eastern Europe with Annette. Eniz will earn his first million before I do. With sports betting. He has a cross-generational system. And Ali is probably the last person I need to worry about. He’s a smart guy who gets out of any tricky situation as a winner with his charm and brains. And if not, at least he learns from it.

But I’m still here. And I probably haven’t even fully realized yet that I won’t be able to curse Buchloe anymore because I live here. Soon I’ll probably even miss it. But that’s life. And now we’re going to set Silvi’s party on fire. In a positive sense, of course. And I’ll probably only realize that I’m leaving this place when I’m drunk, lying on some couch. Crying. Or laughing. We’ll see.

.

Silvi:

Well, my little, camera-shy Silvi darling. It’s getting there slowly. Not much longer and you’ll make it into the clubs of this republic without a fake ID. But until then, we’ll gladly continue being your big chaperones, almost breaking our legs playing drunken “freeze” with you and entertaining you at relaxed campfires.

All the best for your 17th birthday from André, Baumi, Fex, Lisa, Kevin, The, Raphi, Juli, me, and surely many more! We’re looking forward to your party — we’re going to give the word “getting wasted” a whole new meaning. Until then, have fun at boarding school and don’t twist too many male classmates around your finger.

.

Ines is Back:

One of the most talented young pseudo web designers has decided, after two years away from blogging, to let us take part in her life again. Ines was already doing naughty things with WordPress while we were still strutting around clueless with our Geocities homepage.

And anyone who has already graduated from high school at 17, is a fan of The Libertines and the Power Rangers, and likes taking the German railway to alternative gigs can only write interesting things.

So give her a warm and well-commented comeback — she deserves it and truly has what it takes. Klammerauf.org.

.

I Love Plastiscines:

[Image of Plastiscines]

© Virgin

[Audio: Plastiscines.mp3]

.

Berlin and Me:

It was Friday morning. The stewardess looked cute in her yellow Tui Fly uniform. But you could tell she really didn’t feel like demonstrating the acrobatic safety instructions. “Good morning. This is your captain speaking. We’re pleased to welcome you on our flight to Tegel. The weather in Tegel is quite nice. We’ll be departing shortly for Tegel. I wish you a pleasant stay in… Berlin.” Then the annoyed flight attendant began: “Good day, my pffft is pffft, we welcome you on this Tui-pfffft flight to pfffft. Our travel time will be approximately pfffft. Please note that you must keep your pfffft closed during pfffft.”

The guy diagonally next to me kept taking photos of the inside of the cockpit whenever he thought no one was looking. That actually scared me a little. And just when I thought I was probably the coolest person on this plane full of retirees and little kids, the Prince of Darkness himself boarded. A very special kind of military emo. Tough luck. During takeoff I listened to “Stolen” by Dashboard Confessional. Niiiice.

A large German web design studio had invited me, in response to my job posting, to visit them. And Berlin is big. Huge, to be precise. The bus drivers are unfriendly, the streets long, and the residents either artists, hip-hoppers, or lowlifes — every second one of them walking around with a copy of BILD in hand. A foreign little person apparently felt like messing with me and sent me in exactly the wrong direction when I asked for the nearest subway station. Or maybe it was just my typical weakness of consistently getting lost in big cities. But hey: I’d never been here before and Berlin is big. Huge, to be precise.

The studio was located in a backyard on Chausseestraße, the “Silicon Valley” of Germany, if you believe Wikipedia. A large open factory hall formed the heart of the company, where employees designed on Macs, hurried up and down open metal staircases, and chatted casually with one another. The sun was shining. I loved it here. This must have been how Lisa Simpson felt the first time she set foot on a university campus. The interview went quite well — I think. I’ll know more by the end of next week. Let’s see what happens.

I spent the rest of the day strolling through half of East Berlin. Alexanderplatz, the Wall, Checkpoint Charlie. But I simply couldn’t find the Brandenburg Gate. And the well-meant advice of locals wasn’t very helpful either: “Brandenburg Gate? No idea, but I think you gotta head west.” Yeah, thanks. I could only tell whether I was in East or West Berlin by the colorful little figures on the pedestrian lights. Since I walked through the city all day, I now know it pretty well — especially the culinary side. There are entire stretches that seem to belong to just one nation. One street full of kebab shops, the next exclusively Thai cuisine. Turn the corner and you’re suddenly in the middle of a ghetto — right when you’re thirsty and your bottle of Lift is completely empty.

As a souvenir, I originally wanted to take a Berlin newspaper home. Instead, I signed up for a BZ trial subscription right in the middle of Alexanderplatz. I couldn’t help it — the girl had blonde hair, sunburn on her cleavage, and a sexy Berlin accent. I couldn’t say no. Of course, I canceled it by email the very next morning. Coward. Sorry, Franzi. But good luck with your training to become a professional chatterbox. Or whatever.

My iPod died shortly before the return flight. Damn it. The new stewardess had apparently just had some fun with the captain, judging by her grin — even during the safety instructions. And the captain sounded very cheerful too, cracking jokes nonstop (in German and English) and landing with such a thud that he was probably still thinking about Miss Cheshire Cat. The passengers found it funny.

Conclusion: Berlin is awesome, Berlin vibrates, Berlin is lonely when you’re alone. But that’s probably because it’s a fundamental mistake to try to see so much in a single day. The capital wants to be discovered step by step. Maybe soon, Berlin. Maybe soon.

.

: Time Travel:

Sometimes I kind of miss my former alter ego. The single-column design, the colorful popping around, the party feeling. But then I came across Marijan’s site and somehow felt transported back to a few weeks ago. A stylish blog, with Apple topics, packed with loads of sexy girls. And that’s when I realized: there’s no going back—after all, a successor has already fought his way to the top of the crowd.

So please support the guy a little with more comments; he reminds me so much of myself. And as Roy once said: “Fresh blog design, cheeky texts and frivolous links. Mixing adjectives possible. My tip: surf over before Tokyopunk grows up.” And anyone who missed that hint can now catch up at Life & Me. Chop chop.

And I’ll stick with AMY & PINK—after all, I’m grown up now. Or something like that.

.

Computer Hate:

Torture is not in my nature. Not even when it comes to technical devices. At least not intentionally. My iPod, my phone, my remote control—they know that they enjoy a tough but fair life with me. And now Mr. Monkey wants me to torture the holiest of my digital devices to the brink of a heart attack. My small, sweet Mac mini. Open all programs until they burst and take a photo of this eternal oppression. Will we manage?

Yes, we can do it. I was surprised myself that my G4 handled this unusual task without much complaint. Whose Mac shall I grant the most exciting moments of its life now? Lea, Michi, and Michael. Make your life-support machines steam.

.

Films:

Kanni is interested in my taste in films. No wonder—I like his favorite movie as well. Movies in the order in which I would take them with me to a deserted island (with a TV including a built-in DVD player).

Lost in Translation. Pirates of the Caribbean. Battle Royale. Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas. Thirteen. Cruel Intentions. Amélie. City of God. Soloalbum. Spirited Away.

Nicki, Hoizge, Marten—show me yours. Ten pieces. Don’t forget.

.

Job Offer:

German. I make websites. I can’t really do anything else. And now you can have me. Because I need a job. An apprenticeship, an internship, anything. Anywhere. On this planet. You can see what I have to offer right here. I create beautiful, stylish, sometimes poppy, valid websites and blogs. I love Photoshop, Dreamweaver, Fireworks — all those Adobe products — and I feel at home on both Mac and Windows. Okay, more on the Mac. But who really gets to choose these days? HTML, PHP, CSS… throw me any code and I’ll turn it into something beautiful. Use me.

I was always terrible at school. I preferred sitting at my computer all day crafting design masterpieces. And that’s exactly why you want me in the end. I speak English fluently and I’m a master of the German language. Which is obviously so difficult. But please don’t confront me with capitalist accounting.

It should be something in the media design field. If you choose me, you know what you’re getting: a cosmopolitan, somewhat alternative and visionary guy who doesn’t care where he ends up. Munich, Berlin, Melbourne. Just adopt me and I’ll create gorgeous, awesome websites for you: marcel@amypink.com. Marcel is now available at a kiosk of your choice. You can find product samples here.

English. I make websites. Can’t do anything else. And now you can buy me. Because I need a job. An apprenticeship place, an internship, anything. Anywhere. On this planet. You can see right here what I’m able to offer. I create beautiful, stylish, sometimes jazzy, valid websites and blogs. I love Photoshop, Dreamweaver, Fireworks — just all those Adobe products — and I feel at home on both Mac and Windows. Okay, more on the Mac. But who can really choose nowadays? HTML, PHP, CSS… throw any code at me and I’ll make something nice out of it. Just for you. Use me.

I used to suck at school. I preferred sitting at my computer coding masterpieces of design. That’s why you want me in the end. I speak English fluently and I’m a master of the German language. But don’t bug me with capitalist business administration.

.

Bahnhof (Train Station):

The air outside was just as stuffy as it had been on the train. Slowly I stepped off and twisted my face into a grimace as the sun’s rays shot into my eyes. A few older, unpleasant people stared at me as if I had just accidentally revealed my true form, straight from hell. Their stupid, tiny, incredibly ugly dachshund barked at me. I barked back. At least as ugly.

It had been over two months since I had last been at this godforsaken station in the middle of nowhere—since I had decided to break off contact with my best friend. The stupid bitch. The one I had fallen in love with. The longer I heard nothing from her, the better I felt. But slowly I began to miss her.

Ana hadn’t changed much. Her blonde hair was a little shorter, but she hadn’t lost weight—good. Or so I’d heard. She walked her bike next to me. The damn sun burned into my upper arms. We got along as if we had only just been lying half-naked in bed together yesterday.

From many girls with whom I’ve shared a story, I keep photos—relationships, one-night stands, spontaneous and naïve making out. They remind me of who I was in those moments. For days I avoided looking at Ana’s pictures, even though they hung right in front of my nose. They mocked me. I didn’t take them down—not out of cowardice or laziness, but because the images in my head occupied me more. Eventually my mind began inserting static, like a television losing signal, whenever certain thoughts approached.

On a rainy afternoon I took the photos off the wall. Then came Rock im Park, and Ana became more of a nagging thought than a real person. And she remained that way when we bought multivitamin juice at Lidl, watched “40 Days and 40 Nights” without background music, and sat by the shimmering creek in the heat.

Even when she told me she had slept with another guy, my blood didn’t boil. Ana was no longer the one who made me melancholic and depressed. She was mostly what she had been last summer: a good friend, my good friend. I still haven’t put her photos back up. Just in case someone forgets to press the static button at the wrong moment.

.

: Fresh Starter:

Suicide can actually be fun. I’d been toying with the idea of wiping myself out for quite a while. Still, the final step came surprisingly spontaneously. Even for me. Completely without the influence of drugs, alcohol, or horniness, I erased TOKYOPUNK. Some may miss it. I will miss it. Once it was free. I could write what I wanted, how I wanted, and why I wanted. But TOKYOPUNK grew over my head. Became too big. For the wrong reasons. At some point it was only about the fancy design. About more and more comments. About ever higher visitor numbers. It was disgusting. That’s why it had to die.

I stare at my tanned, long fingers. They jump back and forth across the white keyboard, trying to trap my tangled thoughts in sentences. The bloggers among you will think I’m completely crazy for giving up the nice Technorati rank, the guarantee of top Google spots, and the heaps of backlinks. But I don’t give a damn about any of that. And many of you, whose hearts haven’t yet been torn apart by meaningless feed statistics, will know exactly why I did it. Why I committed this murder. It was a relief. The clouds look beautiful today. So thick, so full of contrast. Welcome. To AMY & PINK.

Restart. Shit, I’m an old restarter. I get bored so quickly. With playing, with fucking, with writing. Is it just me? I envy you. Somehow. But not really. I love the honest bloggers among you. You know what really matters. Let’s not let ourselves be distracted. A sip of this cheap apple spritzer will regenerate me. At least a little.

AMY & PINK stands for me. As a schizophrenic being that wants to dive as deep as possible into life, yet at the same time wants nothing to do with it. It’s fun to strip things of their meaning. The prudish behavior. The seriousness. And I was very surprised how many of you are actually interested in this insidious murder. Thank you. For that. Now you can love me on Technorati too. For the right reasons. Welcome.

.

Ana in Wonderland:

Hannah’s column: I don’t know if you can call what you’re about to read a column. Probably not. But the topic has occupied me for at least a year, and so many impressions have built up that everything just has to come out.

“My name, or what so-called doctors call me, is Anorexia. My full name is Anorexia Nervosa, but you can call me Ana.” The text describes how eating disorders manipulate thoughts, isolate people from friends and family, and promise control and perfection while causing deep harm.

After a class presentation about anorexia, I researched the subject online. Alongside serious medical information, I found hidden forums where sufferers encourage each other, share tips on suppressing hunger, hiding weight loss, and pushing themselves further. It shocked me.

I tried to engage in one of those forums, asking why they would do this to themselves and others. I was met only with resistance. It wasn’t possible to have a normal conversation. The internet offers unimaginable possibilities—not only music and films, but also instructions on how to harm yourself.

Anorexia is not a fashion trend but a serious illness. Many affected girls and women have experienced difficult circumstances that outsiders can hardly imagine. I hope families and friends recognize the signs early and that those affected accept help.

.

The Masturbated Elephant:

Hannah’s column: Lately I keep encountering porn. Many might think that’s cool—but it isn’t. It’s starting to annoy me.

It began with a short student film about “porn customers” in video stores, humorously portraying three types: the insecure one, the sneaky one, and the shameless businessman. It was funny and clever.

Then there was a strange bus encounter, where passengers were apparently watching a pornographic film during the ride. Even mainstream TV doesn’t seem safe from suggestive titles—like a documentary called “The Masturbated Elephant – Species Protection at Any Price,” which turned out to be about artificial insemination in elephants.

I find the increasing explicitness in media questionable. If such content is in demand, perhaps it should remain on encrypted channels so everyone can choose what they want to see without confronting others unexpectedly.

.

Read More, Boy!:

Nicole wants to know what magazines I have lying around. I love magazines—especially as bathroom reading.

I buy two types: Apple/tech and lifestyle. I used to read Mac magazines like MacUp, Macwelt, and Maclife, but now I mostly get news from blogs. I still buy PAGE and Computer Arts for inspiration.

I also enjoy modern lifestyle magazines like NEON, blond, IQ Style, and Muteen—great stories, music tips, and things to shake your head at. One of them I barely understand. Guess which.

Despite Web 2.0, magazines aren’t dead. I’m certainly not taking my computer into the bathtub to read urban life stories and risk electrocution.

.

Rio WordPress Theme:

As is common with WordPress blogs after a redesign—and because I received several requests—I’m making my old design “Rio” available as a free WordPress theme. It’s subtle with bright pink accents, has no sidebar, and is based on the XV theme.

If you want to use Gravatars, download the Gravatars2 plugin. I welcome feedback and questions. Have fun with it!

.

Choose a Vista:

I love these commercials and still don’t understand why Apple doesn’t broadcast them here. They’d be the talk of the town. More clips are available on Apple’s website.

.

Film Expert:

I correctly recognized the movie “Eurotrip” on another blog and, as a prize, received this challenge. The film shown caused controversy in the U.S., was boycotted and censored, and remains relatively unknown in Germany—though its unofficial predecessor shaped a generation.

.

Advertising Poster:

There are days when the whole world seems upside down. A debate erupted about blogs selling links and whether private blogs should run ads. I say: generalizations are nonsense.

I dislike intrusive banners and irrelevant ads as much as anyone. But why should only commercial blogs be allowed to advertise? Some people rely on small earnings from their sites to cover costs.

Advertising can be tasteful and meaningful if done thoughtfully—well-designed banners with relevant tips instead of annoying clutter. Perhaps you’ll soon see such ads here. No one gets rich from them, but is that really so terrible?

.

Show Me Your Bar, You Sau!:

We’re delighted that you’ve chosen a Mac. To celebrate properly, here’s a little meme where poor Windows users will really miss out. Courtesy of Ad: the Menu Bar Meme.

And when I look at the other menu bars out there, I realize again what a minimalist pig I am. So, starting from the left: Azureus (of course only for Linux distros ;)), Adium, iScrobbler, Bluetooth, AirPort, Volume, Date, and Spotlight. Not very much, right?

So if you’ve got a Mac and feel like it, go ahead and post your endless bar. Well, Hoizge, looks like you’ll have to wait for the next meme ;).

.

I Am a Pirate:

I love it! I love Johnny Depp! I love Keira Knightley! I… well, Orlando Bloom kind of passes me by. But I love Pirates of the Caribbean! It’s my personal Star Wars and The Lord of the Rings rolled into one. THIS is MY trilogy!

André, Lisa, Becca and I just came back from the premiere of Pirates of the Caribbean – At World’s End and I’m about to explode from excitement. Boom, bang – a kiss here, ten dead there, and Jack’s big grin over there. Sure, the film has a few slow parts and the constantly shifting alliances and storylines really strain some viewers’ brain cells. But it’s worth it. Totally worth it. If only for Johnny Depp. And of course the unbelievably sweet Keira Knightley.

So folks: go see this amazing film! But definitely watch the first two parts beforehand, otherwise many things won’t make sense. The dog, the heart, the ship… Write to me what you thought of it and definitely stay until after the credits. You won’t regret it ;)

.

Multitasking:

The new word of superlatives. Hardly any other word is more trendy right now. It’s everywhere. Newspapers say women are better at multitasking because their brain hemispheres are so closely connected that impulses are transmitted extremely quickly and the entire brain is activated while thinking. Women can supposedly talk, listen, make sure the food doesn’t boil over, and follow a movie at the same time. Even in the new Deichmann commercial the nice blonde girl next door doesn’t just want me to buy the new Pussycat Dolls collection, she also claims women are the better all-rounders. That’s not true.

No matter what study proves what, I’m definitely not one of those miracle women, and as we all know, exceptions prove the rule. When baking, I can’t even manage to measure sugar and flour correctly if the phone rings and the oven beeps to tell me it’s reached the right temperature. My friends, whom I wanted to surprise for their birthdays, can sing a song about that. Even while writing this text, my TV is muted because I can’t concentrate when two prostitutes are arguing on a talk show about who slept with whom first.

The best rumor about women and multitasking is about driving. Haven’t you heard that women are better drivers, even though they supposedly can’t park? In my opinion, men on average drive better than women. No question. Any woman who claims otherwise is lying. I don’t think I’m a bad driver, but when it comes to parking I despair. A good example is my friend: she drives into a roundabout without looking and often misjudges the distance and speed of oncoming cars when overtaking. So much for multitasking.

I want to clarify that women are not generally bad drivers. That’s not true. Most women just drive too little and therefore behave more cautiously in traffic. Wouldn’t it be better if everyone simply admitted their weaknesses instead of chasing some ideal image of men and women? Then we wouldn’t have to prove ourselves every day and stereotyping would finally be a thing of the past. I’m fighting for a world where women are allowed to be bad drivers, men can bake, and terrible talk shows are canceled. Tschaaaaggga, we can do it! Yours, Hannah.

.

Hannah In Da House:

Today is a beautiful day. The sun is shining, I’m off work, and my campaign—which was completely ignored by the commenting world—has actually borne fruit. TOKYOPUNK now has its own columnist. Cool, right?

Since you already get enough insight into the world of a somewhat brain-fried guy through my textual assaults, I figured my better half should definitely belong to the opposite sex. For balance. And from now on, the lovely Hannah, who was born in Geilenkirchen (!), will delight us once a week with her take on everyday life.

So throw criticism, praise, and marriage proposals at her—but don’t be too harsh, she just wants to play ;). You can find the column here or via the brand-new navigation item at the top. Guess which one it is.

.

How Hard It Is to Change the World:

It all started today when I clicked on an innocent post in the Macuser forum. Topic: alternatives to iTunes. Amid the usual troll discussion I stumbled across Songbird, which I had heard about before. Being the way I am, I instantly fell in love with these little gothic birds. After downloading the software, it happened again: I wanted to change the world.

I’m constantly fighting an inner battle. I hate big corporations, but I love Apple. And that really sucks. Today the anti-side was particularly strong. It lusted for open source, Linux, the death of globalization. So I canceled my Firefox download and grabbed Ubuntu for my computer, which had no idea what was coming. Something had to change—here and now.

But just before forcing my Mac OS X to shut down for the last time, I looked at the neatly arranged tabs in Safari, the little red number in Mail, and the transparent display in Adium. And I asked myself: do you really want to give all this up? No, because it’s the best system in the world—yes, because that system is evil and Apple’s only goal is to make more money. No, because I’m creative and every great creative uses a Mac—yes, because that’s just another stereotype I don’t want to support.

I wanted Linux not because it’s better or because I love typing commands for hours until Wi-Fi works. I wanted it because it’s freer. But is it really? Isn’t Linux only alive because global corporations saved it? Aren’t there money-hungry pigs behind Linux distributions too? And the rebel voice inside me grew smaller and smaller… which made me sad.

I know that after World War III some Neo will craft the operating system of the future from a discarded Knoppix live CD. It will be called “HEAVEN OS” and named after his lost daughter. But until then, I’ll probably stick with my beloved Mac OS X—even if it’s greedy too. At least I’ve deactivated the iTunes Store. Out of principle. Since I couldn’t end my inner struggle, I at least became a member of Attac today. They’re not entirely sure what they want either, but somehow that’s endearing. It reminds me of myself.

.

Gold in Your Mouth:

Note: This is a paid entry arranged by trigami.

To pass the time until Starcraft 2 (OMG!!!), I like to roam through the Ghostlands in World of Warcraft with my blood elf Rei and casually beat up the occasional zombie. Obviously I don’t need to buy gold for that. But there are gamers who regularly buy pixel goods. Curse or blessing?

The biggest gold seller online is probably GameGoods. The site looks tidy and offers instant gold purchase buttons. 100 units cost about €2.50, which can be a big help for beginners. Delivery is in-game. Quick and easy—that’s the promise. Despite knowing that buying gold is technically forbidden, the site appears so professional that you almost forget.

So is buying gold okay? My answer: sort of. If you invest a few euros now and then to progress in your favorite game, fine—it’s your hard-earned money. But don’t overdo it. If you spend more per month on gold than on your subscription, you’ve either misunderstood the game or lost touch with reality. WoW is about working your way up from a level 1 newbie to a respected hero. Outside money tilts the balance and is unfair to players who invest time and patience instead. A little foreign gold isn’t the end of the world. Too much is. Now I’m curious about your opinions.

.

Family Celebration:

I just got back from our family celebration and I’m drunk and stoned. Now that’s what I call a success. While my aunt kept filling me up with sparkling wine, Radler, and multivitamin juice, my little cousin and I enjoyed the finest apple tobacco in a shisha, played Skip-Bo, and listened to Blur. That’s how family parties should be.

Meanwhile, while I was getting completely wasted, another heated debate broke out in the blogosphere. This time it was about RSS feeds. I don’t have a strong opinion on the topic. RSS and Atom are just functions that make it easier to read blog posts. If a video doesn’t work, it’s hardly the author’s fault but rather RSS or Atom. Calm down—eventually there will be standards that support everything, from QuickTime podcasts to entries you can actually touch. You just have to be patient ;)

.

On Sunday the Sun Shines:

My weekend was actually pretty boring. On Friday Becca and I started our 1,000-piece Pirates of the Caribbean 2 puzzle while watching South Park and Late Knights. Even though the TV program was pretty sexist, she bravely endured it—respect! ;)

Since nobody had time yesterday, I spent Saturday watching ProSieben and surfing the web. I messed around on MySpace so much my butt fell asleep. I’m also working on a new site, but I have no idea what it should be about. I’ve got a great design but no content. There has to be something that doesn’t exist yet. It’s like writing a song and having the melody but no lyrics.

Did you notice the tag-game craze seems to have died down? Anyway, enjoy this sunny Sunday and stay at your computers. I’m going to a barbecue now, but I’ll be back—and you’d better all be at your blogging stations ;). At least I discovered that Aydee is a vegetarian too. Awesome, right?

.

Tokyopunk Is Looking for the Super Columnist:

I’m looking for you: a cheeky girl 18+ who isn’t shy and can write captivating texts. Can you imagine delighting our readers once a week with a short story from your life? Maybe you’d also like to use this chance to make your own blog better known? Then become my personal columnist!

To add another irresistible feature to my site, I’m looking for a sympathetic female who dares to share a weekly story from her everyday life. Write about your dumb ex, the last fancy vodka party, or the guy who gave you a crooked piercing. Your stories should fit Tokyopunk and stand on their own.

If you’re interested, just send a test entry and a meaningful photo of yourself to marcel@tokyopunk.com. You wouldn’t be the first columnist on Tokyopunk—Ana and Miriam have already written great texts in earlier versions. Just give it a try and good luck!

.

Everything New in May:

I had the day off yesterday and since I had nothing else to do, I declared Wednesday my personal “Everything New” day. In plain terms: I finally shaved again, cleaned everything up, and took care of my computer. It had become incredibly sluggish. So I deleted all files and reinstalled Mac OS X. For the first time ever, I didn’t make any backups. And it felt great.

Apple and I are close again. Even though I now have a Logitech optical mouse that can actually scroll. Since reinstalling everything, my Mac mini runs as fast as on day one. I installed some beautiful new programs, use only Safari as my browser, and discovered a brilliant piece of software called Growl.

Now I’ll set up iTunes again—it’s completely empty at the moment. All songs deleted. I just couldn’t listen to them anymore. I need new stuff. A fresh start is fun…

.

Mighty Mouse Sucks:

I’m a huge Apple fan. I love this cult and my Mac. But what Cupertino was thinking with that damned “Mighty Mouse” is beyond me. Whoever is responsible for that abomination of a mouse should be ashamed—or give me back my 50 euros.

I’ve never had so much trouble with a mouse. The scroll ball stopped working after a few months, I got a replacement, and after a few weeks it broke again. None of the cleaning tricks worked—from Apple’s official method to tape to risky surgery.

Today I finally opened it. The legendary ring tore immediately, one side button broke, and I can’t close it properly anymore. So away with it. It hurts my heart, because throwing away Apple hardware feels like betrayal. But anyone who sells a mouse that can’t be cleaned or opened shouldn’t be surprised if even die-hard fans get furious.

Thanks, Apple, for this beautiful-looking but utterly useless piece of hardware. My next mouse will be from Logitech again. I’ll only buy an Apple mouse when it actually works.

.

Mood Music:

I love music. iTunes, iPod, and Würfelzucker are in constant rotation for me. And what’s hard to change on music TV, I maintain at home: shuffle mode. “Life is random.”

But listening this way has its downsides. When you’re heartbroken, you don’t want Paris Hilton singing “Stars Are Blind.” If you’re in the mood to party, Travis can ruin everything. That’s when something like “Surrender” by Billy Talent would be more appropriate.

On Gunni’s site I discovered a program that solves this problem: Moody. After training it a bit, it offers a color palette sorted by mood. Like magic, Moody then plays exactly the right songs in iTunes—either to sink deeper into self-pity or to blast hardcore hip-hop at your neighbors. How did I survive without this thing?!

.

Jesus Has the Code:

Okay, admittedly this story is already a few days old and I had noticed it in passing, but it was only after I read this report on Spiegel Online that I realized the scale of this internet battle — and everyone should keep it in mind. For the strength and power that we bloggers already have nowadays.

It’s about a code — the code — to crack HD DVDs. A blogger posted the string of numbers online and ignited a Web 2.0 war that was fought out on Digg. The whole thing has calmed down by now, but you should still read the report. Really exciting stuff. I’m curious to see what else is coming our way.

.

When the Sun Goes Down:

Even though it doesn’t exactly look like it outside at the moment: summer is coming. And if you believe a certain big German tabloid rag, it’s going to be hot — Sahara hot! In plain language that means awesome afternoons at the gravel pit lake, lukewarm evenings at barbecues, and hot parties that turn night into day. This summer will be beautiful.

And I’m dedicating my new design, version “Summernight,” to exactly those sweaty party nights. Darker, but playfully colorful tones, big-mouth photos, and a few new features — and the new Tokyopunk is done! Pizzas, bananas, and instant noodles had to sacrifice themselves for evenings on end until I was finally mostly satisfied with the result.

So with the completion of this new version, nothing stands in the way of summer. No matter how hot it gets. Throw yourselves into the chaos, find new friends, and drink yourselves silly! After all, you should make the most of legal drugs. Party on, Wayne!

.

Tokyopunk Podcast #0:

Since I might want to follow Christoph’s example and start my own video podcast, this is just a test to see whether I can even manage the technical side of things. Stay tuned to see whether anything will follow after #0.

Update: Well then, since QuickTime apparently sparked a few discussions and I don’t want to give up the search for the perfect way to publish potential video podcasts, I’m trying again with Flash and a test video from Pepsi. What do you think of this solution, purely from a technical standpoint?

.

Who Am I?:

Imagine you run a blog. You tinker night after night on a decent design, hammer out posts on the keyboard that would make the German literature professor next door weak at the knees, and register with every mediocre blog search service in the world. Then you look at the whole thing again and think: Damn, this just has to be a success! Number one in the blog charts, here I come!

The problem: only you show up — no one else. Because despite Nobel Prize-worthy posts and respectable visitor stats, not a single soul wants to write in your comments. And you built such a lovely home for opinions. With an edit function, favatar display, and cute little smileys. So what do you do? Exactly: you log in under a different name and finally get the discussion going. Dishonorable? Who cares, no one will notice.

What do you think of people who post comments on their own website under a pseudonym? Would you notice? Do you even do it yourself and think it’s fine and decent? Or are you of the opinion that, despite the small chance of it ever coming out, the good vibes of the blog would be gone? Who knows — maybe I’m personally writing under a different name. Or maybe not. But if I am, remember the old game: Who am I?

.

Bagger Pit Tunes:

It’s so damn hot outside. And I just created a short sentence with three sharp S’s in German. Someone should try to top that. Anyway, back to the topic. What could be better than chilling with your crew at the gravel pit lake, secretly photographing the girls with your 2-megapixel phone camera, and cranking your iPod up to the max?

What, you only have U2 and Akon on the MP3 player of your choice? Then let me be your personal savior from painful music. I’ve created my very first iMix. Just click it and feel good.

.

The Fear of Red-Haired People:

May Eve, riots, destruction of property. We actually wanted to be part of it again, but the better we plan something, the more everything turns out differently. We’re just spontaneous types. Instead of our party caravan through Landsberg am Lech, it turned into a small drinking, shisha, and South Park gathering within my four walls.

MTV pretty much saved our evening. We learned a lot. That red-haired people have no soul, that you shouldn’t throw ninja stars at little blond boys, and above all that you shouldn’t sneak naked across a stage — no matter how much you imagine you’re invisible.

I also finally tried those instant noodles — they’re really very tasty. Highly recommended. I hope you all survived the night well, but I assume so. After all, only the toughest of the tough hang out on my blog. In that spirit: have a sunny holiday, everyone.

.

Yesterday It Was Cold, Cold, Cold:

While a few ambitious bloggers were seriously boosting my visitor statistics yesterday, I was lying around lazily and uselessly in the blazing sun, listening to the enchanting sounds of CSS on my iPod (“Music Is My Hot, Hot Sex” is absolutely insane — I love this band) and nearly freezing my favorite squishies off in the ice-cold water.

In the evening we went to a somewhat overpriced Mexican restaurant where I stuffed myself with far too many fried noodles with vegetables and salad. But somehow the place had a total vacation vibe, and the waitress was cute.

Tonight is Walpurgis Night, you crazy people. What’s going on where you are? I hope you let the poor old grandmas sleep so they don’t have to guard their garden gnomes until dawn. And if you live in Berlin: just survive ;).

.

When a Tokyo Punk Turns Red:

So guys, what was going on with you today? I’m sitting comfortably at the gravel pit lake, tanning my belly and watching topless creatures (unfortunately mostly fat men), and suddenly you go and found the Tokyopunk fan club. Two highly respected blogs dedicated their headlines to me today of all people: Nasendackel and MyNicki.

I’m being showered with praise: “Worth seeing,” “Something fresh in today’s uniform blog mash,” and Nicki says she “likes the simple yet very elegant style, the way he writes his posts, and the look of the blog.” Hello? Did I get a shock in the ice-cold water and now I’m dreaming on the intensive care unit?

Well, one thing does bother me a little—Christoph seriously takes issue with the “FHM-tits look” of my blog. Maybe I really should download that Christian WordPress theme and become a bit more pious and mature? It might be worth considering ;).

In any case, a huge thank you to both of you for this free and very surprising promo. You probably just didn’t have anything better to blog about, right? Thanks as well to my diligent commenters who often steer my topics in completely different directions—usually in a pretty funny way. I’m going to stick my head in cold water now to wash the redness out of my face. But one question remains: Am I going to be on TV now?!

.

Yesterday Was Hot, Hot, Hot:

Yesterday at André’s place it was the usual retro campfire evening, including vodka (unfortunately not Absolut), shisha, and a late-night visit to two cemeteries. Just a few small impressions—I don’t have much time, I’m heading to the gravel pit lake with the crazies now. I stole the idea from Hoizge ;). Just kidding. And I could really use a shave again.

Have a nice Sunday, everyone.

.

Aydee, I Like You:

I’m famous now. And I’m already reaching lots of people out there. Even some from other countries, as a considerable number of hits from Babel Fish tells me. And now I’d like to test out my newfound popularity.

I’ve developed a bit of a crush on a model from Abby Winters, an Australian website that picks completely normal girls off the street and photographs them completely naked. The site is actually very likable because it’s so far removed from the usual sleazy porn-whatever pages.

Her name is Aydee. I know that she was born on March 27, is 19 years old, comes from Melbourne, and studies law. I love gathering information about random people via Google.

And now here’s the catch: I want to manage somehow to get her attention. Lately I’ve been into slightly curvier girls, and her deep blue eyes are really stunning. I know you think I’m completely crazy, but I want to see if it works. So here’s my call:

Aydee, I saw you on Abby Winters and have now a little crush on you. You're really cute and I like your deep blue eyes. If you read this, please send me an email or post a comment. It would be so nice to hear from you. So, let’s see what happens. Who’s taking bets?

.

What’s Behind This Blog:

Chefkoch actually wants to know what software I use to create this blog. For someone like me, who loves giving insight into his little technical world, that’s of course a real pleasure. Maybe I can even help some small bloggers who don’t yet know how to turn all their ideas into a blog.

Under the hood (like so many others) runs the free Wordpress, version 2.1. To operate on the code, there’s no better program for me than Dreamweaver 8 by Adobe. It turns coding into art. It also handles file uploads without any problems. For pixel pushing I use Fireworks 8. I deliberately skipped Photoshop because it’s simply too bulky for me. Fireworks is more than enough for cutting and editing images.

To check the blog, I rely on three of the best browsers. For viewing and normal surfing, Safari stands faithfully by my side. I use Firefox for administration and Opera for final checks and to see how the site behaves when I’m not logged in. And of course iTunes is an important production supporter. Without good music, my creativity would go straight down the drain.

.

Mi Kim Chi:

Bloggers are usually nice people (excluding those with their twisted hate blogs). And anyone who knows me knows that I’m extremely nice. I don’t kill animals (except the ones that deserve it), I’m mostly polite, and now I’m even saving plants from certain death.

This morning Becca and I were at Norma. While she couldn’t decide whether and which cookies to take to the checkout, I strolled past Thai mushroom sauces, Polish car radios, and Greek pastries. I felt I would find something wonderful. And suddenly there it stood, surrounded by fruit and vegetables: organic basil. Green, tall, and strong. For only 99 cents. I simply had to adopt it.

But it’s not just plants that I make happy. About five years ago these instant noodles were all the rage here. Not just among poor students. I liked them too. So I bought a four-pack of “Mi Kim Chi” by Acecook for 99 cents. Of course “Vegetable Flavour.” Enjoy your meal!

.

The Ernie & Bert Principle:

I love reading young magazines like NEON, blond, or IQ Style. Informative and sometimes provocative, they tell stories from just around the corner. One past article has stayed with me: The Ernie & Bert Principle.

This theory says: In every interpersonal relationship, one is always Ernie—and the other Bert. Ernie dances blindly and laughing through life, looking neither left nor right, enjoying existence to the fullest without worrying about losses. Bert, on the other hand, cleans up like a housekeeper, has to think for the other, and constantly worries.

You don’t just see this in friendships; it’s common in romantic relationships too. While one lives in the moment, doesn’t mind flirting, and doesn’t really respect their partner’s feelings, the other constantly thinks about tomorrow, sits jealously at the bar, and has almost surrendered to subservience.

But even if you’re Bert: don’t worry. In every new relationship, the cards are reshuffled. With Becca I’m Ernie, with Ana I’m Bert. With Mille I’m Ernie, with Eniz Bert again. Both roles have advantages and disadvantages. But honestly—are you more Bert or Ernie?

.

China Hates Me:

Why? I prefer Chinese food, I happily show slant-eyed tourists the way to the nearest H&M, and I even once did a school presentation about internet control in their People’s Republic. So why do the duck eaters hate me?

On greatfirewallofchina.org you can test whether your website is accessible in China. For those who don’t get the joke: the Chinese government controls the internet in their country. They block porn sites, keep Google on a leash, and monitor chat rooms and online games. So if you can see my website, consider yourself lucky—because if it were up to them, a large part of humanity wouldn’t get to enjoy Tokyopunk. Maybe it’s because of a certain past post.

.

Blogger Nightmares:

I’m a full-blooded blogger, like many out there. Regularly writing posts about yourself, your canary, or the latest Photoshop tricks has become a real national sport—and not just in Germany. Blogging is simply fun. But there are moments when Web 2.0 and its untamed forces genuinely scare me.

For example, when I’m out with my iPod, I sometimes catch myself skipping an embarrassing song. Not because the person next to me on the train might look at me strangely if Britney Spears blares from my headphones, but because I’m afraid it might get scrobbled. Or when I follow a thought, I sometimes look for a “save draft” button so it doesn’t slip away.

Recently I even had a nightmare. I wanted to check my incoming links on Technorati and saw my name at the top of the “WTF?” list. Curious and surprised, I clicked it—only to discover in horror that my Flickr account had been hacked and nude photos of me and everyone I knew were floating around the web. My friends nearly killed me—then I woke up.

That just shows how Web 2.0 can really frighten me sometimes. Maybe it’s wrong to shift so much personal information online, because it could eventually turn against you. Maybe we should turn back now and delete all our accounts while we still can—before the net takes over the world.

Ah, nonsense. We’re just little exhibitionists who aren’t ashamed of stripping our souls bare. So go ahead and check my Last.fm page to see if you’ll ever find a Britney Spears song there. And don’t even try hacking my Flickr private photos. There aren’t any naughty ones anyway. I think… But are you a little Web 2.0 disturbed too?

.

What’s Passing By?:

Now that’s what I call a meme that Yannick tossed my way: no answering questions, no taking photos of something, no recording a duet with your cat (though someone might come up with that too). Just add your address to the end of the chain and pass it on. Sorry Jenny, you’ll have to deal with it ;) (she refused to play *g*). So, Sohiel, you’re second choice—really sorry about that.

[List of participants continued up to number 69, ending with Tokyopunk.]

.

Sash Theme:

I dedicate my first WordPress theme to my favorite girly, Sash. It has a standard two-column layout, comes in a stylish grunge look, and has absolutely no special features—except the ones you add yourself. Warning: this theme is not for beginners!

The current version still contains a few small bugs. For example, you should never let the sidebar become longer than the content, otherwise the gray dashed line won’t reach the footer. If anyone figures it out, feel free to post the solution in the comments. The only plugin required is PageBar. A PSD file of the header image is included. If you want to customize it, you’ll need the fonts Monotype Corsiva and Bill Hicks—or just use your own.

.

The Earth Fights Back:

Today marks Earth Day once again in over 150 countries—a day that should remind us how important it is to live in harmony with nature and the environment. Humans are often called the worst virus in the planet’s history. While other living beings manage to coexist with the Earth, we destroy and consume rainforests and species, slaughter one another, and now we’re even tampering with evolution.

But slowly we are improving. Organizations like PETA and Greenpeace are successfully fighting for a better understanding of the Earth. Even the most stubborn guy at the regulars’ table is discussing CO2 emissions, and even the grayest manager is beginning to realize that an economy dies when the environment collapses.

Even though there are many little brats around right now, I still hope that at least the next generation will live in a world where we’ve managed to live as harmoniously as possible with the blue planet. But a lot still needs to happen. A whole lot.

.

Annoying:

Friday evening—the world is wide open. I personally had three options: go to Melo with André, Lisa, and the others; attend some strange not-really-graduation party with Ana; or stay home and watch “The Silicon Valley Story” on Arte about the rivalry between Microsoft and Apple.

I had actually already decided—on Melo. I’d seen the film in English before, and going to a party with Ana has always been complicated. It usually ends with me having suicidal thoughts.

Ana wasn’t doing well yesterday. She felt really awful and asked me to go to that FOS party with her. Of course I gave in. A mistake. The party was in a small club in a nearby spa town. Tiny location, obnoxious bouncers, and people more arrogant than I’d ever experienced—even at the PM. Those blow-dried guys and overstyled girls were so proud to dance to hip-hop remixes in a room smaller than my apartment.

The people we were supposed to meet left before even paying admission, and alarm bells were ringing in my head. But I ignored them. Another mistake. So I trailed after Ana, jealous as usual. Like always.

The evening was a total blast—in the worst sense. I just wanted to go home. I said goodbye to her and to the guys who were clearly happy that I’d finally cleared the field, giving them free rein, and had to walk home because my ride—whose evening had gone just as badly—was already in bed. At least I had my iPod with me. It didn’t chase away the bad voices in my head either. Conclusion: next time I’ll listen to my inner reason—and I’m definitely not going to another party with Ana. I’m just saying: suicidal thoughts. Hopefully your evening was better.

.

When the World Doesn’t Stop Turning:

There are phases in life when it feels like nothing is moving forward. As if you were standing still, even sinking. The days pass, the sun rises and sets. Nothing has changed. Again and again. But when things do start moving forward, they happen one after another. When the earth keeps turning, when the calm before the storm is over.

This April brings changes. Beautiful ones for some, bad ones for others. Moments crash down on you and suddenly everything is different. They are about farewell, about new opportunities, about mistakes and yes, also about death. The mother of a very nice friend was buried today. She died of cancer over the weekend.

Saying goodbye is hard for us, and yet we encounter it so often in life. In many different ways. My until recently very good, but still dearly valued friend Becca has decided to move to Freiburg as soon as possible. She believes things will be better for her there. I believe so too.

And I’m sorry that I rarely showed you the love and affection you undoubtedly deserved. I was constantly busy with other things — things you can’t even remember afterward. I will miss you. Our spontaneous actions, our baked cheese evenings, and the walks along our route. But I’m sure this step is great for you and your future. I’m proud of you for having the courage and strength to change something. Apparently, I’ve had that strength too rarely.

But you can also learn something from sudden changes. That you should enjoy your life, that you should experience every moment, that you should simply change the things that bother and hold you back. It’s an old refrain — deep down everyone knows it. Waiting changes nothing for you. And then suddenly you realize how others are changing and developing while you’re still just sitting around. So get out there and change something! Change your life if it annoys you! And while I like giving advice without following it myself, this time is different. I’m going to grab my history study booklet now so I can finally make progress with this damn high school diploma. And what are you going to do?

.

Friendship Sex:

Don’t worry, I just wanted a sensational headline. It sounded better than “I’m Sick.” The weekend belonged entirely to Ana and me—we went shopping, to the hairdresser, for a walk, ate chocolate, watched “Superstar,” and yesterday went to André’s birthday party at the youth center in Landsberg. And I’m sick.

Although as unofficial advisor I had chosen some really great music (including Muse, The Killers, The Subways, Bloc Party, (+44), Sum 41, and The Strokes), the DJ played one 90s techno classic after another. Congratulations. Since I had to drive myself, I couldn’t drink either, but I tried to look as cool as possible with my bottle of mineral water.

Later at the hairdresser I read an article about friendship between men and women. It claimed that although such friendships are common, there is always a certain erotic tension—and if you act on it, the “relationship” can quickly be destroyed. What do you think? Can men and women really just be friends? And does sex destroy the basis of that friendship?

.

Durex Cleans Up the Harem:

Yesterday Ana and I were lounging arrogantly on her couch when a new Durex ad campaign started: “Her love gets hotter. With Durex Play Warming—the new uniquely warming lubricant.”

I sat there stunned while Ana opened her eyes and asked if they had really just shown that. We burst out laughing. I love it! Finally this stuff doesn’t have to hide in mail-order catalogs anymore. And it’s definitely better than those boring state anti-AIDS campaigns. Please, more of this!

.

The Apple Purrs:

Tomorrow the entire Apple sect looks to San Francisco again for Macworld and the legendary keynote by Steve Jobs. While other companies have to spend tons of money on advertising, Apple just needs a small banner to get the rumor mill boiling.

Apple disciples are hot—for a new Mac OS, for the iPhone, for iTV, for new iPods and Macs, and for the famous “One more thing.” As always, supposed leaked photos are circulating online. If you want to follow the treasure hunt, tune in tomorrow evening. Apple usually posts a video of the event a few hours later.

.

Angelacht:

Five years ago today VIVA PLUS went on air, and I already hated it. As a former VIVA Zwei fan, I didn’t want to accept that quality shows were replaced by what they called the “CNN of music television.”

After MTV’s takeover, the channel deteriorated into SMS voting shows, ringtone ads, and call-in quizzes. So it’s no great loss that VIVA PLUS will be replaced by Comedy Central—hopefully not too silly. For good music television, I recommend gotv or MTV at night.

.

O.C. and Over:

Bad pun aside, here’s the sad news for all “O.C., California” fans: FOX has officially canceled the show due to declining ratings.

I’ll miss my Newport Beach, but since Marissa died it was never the same anyway. Thank you, Fab Four—the evenings and nights with you were grand. California, here we come.

.

Painty Panties:

At some point it’s no longer enough to use a little alcohol to get girls to drop their clothes for five seconds, snap a photo, and then spread the pictures all over the internet. A somewhat new art form has now emerged from photographing naked beauties while painting them at the same time.

Fittingly, this trend is called “BubbleGirls.” Undress a girl, spray her with graffiti, and post a photo of it online. And the whole thing is hugely popular with both male and female audiences.

Two websites in particular stand out: Shriiimp, the primary community for this art form, and GraffiTILT, the private website of the artist Tilt. So what are you waiting for? Drag your girlfriend or sister out of bed and get to work with the spray cans!

.

The End of the Time-Out:

The fact that Ana dropped out of school caused quite a stir here—especially because of the question of how much one can bend the line between personal freedom and social pressure. Although I’m still battling a cough, cold, and headache, we both went to the BIZ in Memmingen yesterday so she could gather information about her future path.

While she flipped through career folders, watched videos about physiotherapists, and searched for information on the intranet, I also used much of the time to explore different career types. The rest I spent hacking the Google homepage—which, of course, I succeeded in doing. So if you ever find yourself stuck at the BIZ and absolutely need to google something, let me know.

Afterwards, together with two crazy girls (Ira and Daja), we went to Munich to get the most out of our expensive Bavaria ticket. While the two of them went shopping and stirred things up at McDonald’s, Ana and I sat in Hugendubel for almost three hours. She browsed nutrition and psychology books—including one about someone who supposedly lived for five years on nothing but sunlight—while I grabbed the latest issue of MacUp, the biography of Steve Jobs, and The Cult of Mac. I was especially fascinated by the chapter about the birth of the iPod.

Some of you might now wonder what’s next for my best friend and her future. First of all: with her, you never really know. But for now we’ve made a pact: if I stop slacking off with my distance-learning high school diploma and finally sit down and study properly, she’ll continue working toward her Abitur. That’s fair. And although I kept her awake last night with my constant coughing, she’s probably sitting in school right now—unless she’s changed her mind again. Because, as I said: with her, you never really know.

.

Change of Life Plan:

The sun is shining, the birds are chirping, and in Bavaria the holidays are over as of today. And what do you do as a normal student on such a beautiful morning? Of course: you quit school. My best friend deregistered from high school this morning. Twelfth grade, straight-A student, just before her final exams. Just like that. Is that crazy?

What drives people to leave an objectively successful path and disappear into the unknown bushes? Fear, curiosity, or the urge for new freedom? Maybe a mix of everything. But how should you react as someone close to her? Hammer down on her because “you just don’t do that” and because you’re sure she might regret it someday? Support the person you love because you believe she can handle this new challenge? Or just not take it too seriously, because quitting school is something everyone has secretly wanted to do at some point but didn’t dare to?

Now I’m sitting here. Sick, alone, and knowing that my best friend has just turned her whole life upside down. Strangely, it’s hard to process this unusual step. And somehow I can’t really feel happy about her newfound freedom. Is that jealousy? What do you think about outsmarting fate and completely redesigning your life from scratch? Would you do it? And are you a coward, condemned to a boring existence, if you don’t? Welcome to your new life!

.

Desperados as a Staple Food:

First of all, the most important thing: thank you, dear Telekom—I have internet again! And not the old lousy DSL 2000, no, 6000 with a phone flat rate. They can still do business with me. And apparently I’ve had it since Thursday, even though the employees were supposedly on strike.

But if you think I’m just sitting at home staring at my browser (which I actually planned to do…), you’re wrong. I went on a bike tour with Ana and her mother, had a depressed but chill campfire evening at André’s (please pronounce it with a French accent—it sounds funnier), and we went to the Melo to party hard. The music was much better than in “normal” clubs. Lots of Muse, Beatsteaks, and Queens of the Stone Age—exactly my thing. I found The Giotto especially cute; her spaced-out facial expression kept reminding me of Amanda Bynes. Totally Toggo.

I also finally decluttered my Mac completely. I had the bad habit of throwing everything I downloaded into some oddly named folder and shoving it somewhere on my hard drive. Without Spotlight, I would never have found certain things again. Useless programs, all (!) porn, and old setup files—everything banished into digital oblivion. I’ve now carefully sorted all my photos into iPhoto, where I can hopefully keep better track of them. And finally, I updated my Dashboard: old widgets out, new and cooler widgets in. That’s how iLife is fun.

Now for the bad news: after this chaotic weekend—during which I basically survived on Desperados, spinach potato wedges, and spelt burgers (with a ridiculous amount of ketchup)—I now have to pay the price. I’m sick. Really sick. So sick that I nearly suffocated last night because my nose was completely blocked. On this beautiful Sunday, I think I’ll take it easy and focus on the important things in life: television and the internet. Amen.

.

Confessions of a Paladin:

Why do you blog? To have a voice in this huge internet universe, to make my opinion clear, and to meet nice people. / Self-portrait: a 23-year-old Japan and Apple fan who feels younger than he is and hasn’t completely lost sight of the important things in life.

Why do your readers read your blog? Because they know that one day I’ll be the King of the Pirate Bloggers and they want to be part of a legend already today. / Which of your posts received too little attention unfairly? My story about the greatest imaginary weekend of all time—which unfortunately no one cared about.

Your current favorite blog? I don’t have one favorite blog. I enjoy reading many, and sometimes new ones get added. But some blogs I really like are the Japanese PingMag, Mac-Essentials, and the Daily Shit by Sash.

Which blog did you read last? Jenny’s, where I picked up this questionnaire. She admires me enormously, by the way, for playing a Blood Elf Paladin. / How many feeds are you subscribed to right now? Exactly… one. My own. And only because I wanted to see if it worked. I think RSS is practical, but I usually just open all the blogs I read at once and click through them.

Which four blogs are you passing this on to, and why? Of course to the old questionnaire fetishist Hoizge, because he now has a girlfriend. To Nicki, because his last entry was also a questionnaire. To Steffi, because she sometimes disappears for weeks without posting anything. And of course to Sohiel, because he’s finally (?) growing up. Have fun!

.

The Sea Is Calling:

Normally I don’t like watching these MTV shows. Some washed-up rapper pimping out cars past their expiration date, slimeballs meeting their future mothers-in-law, or some brat who reminds me of my ex-girlfriend detoxing feet with five clueless fools (“Todd likes riding his bike at 3 a.m. for no reason…”). None of that has ever really interested me. “The Real World” was much more appealing.

In America it’s already old news, but it aired here for the first time a few days ago: “8th & Ocean”—a docu-soap about ten aspiring models dealing with the pitfalls of “the toughest business in the world,” relationship problems, and pimples. Beautiful people and really good music, combined with an attractive presentation and pleasant ringtones—it has something. But maybe I only like the show because I kind of miss “The O.C., California.”

.

I Am a Blood Elf:

While images of crushed people, smashed Media Markt doors, and nighttime police operations multiply on the internet, I (unfortunately) didn’t notice any of that chaos. But I held the reason for it in my hands yesterday: “World of Warcraft – The Burning Crusade”!

Early Tuesday morning I dragged Eniz out of deep sleep, drove with him to Kaufbeuren, and bought the expansion from my trusted retailer. Since Eniz probably still wasn’t fully awake, he likely thought the whole trip was a dream.

At home I spent ages installing and downloading patches, just hoping to create my character before all the kids flooded the servers. I have to admit: the realm Echsenkessel was actually my last PvP choice, but it was the only one where my favorite character name was still available. I had expected queues, overcrowded starting zones, and tons of lag—but surprisingly, almost everything ran smoothly.

With my sexy Blood Elf Nami, I wandered through the beautifully designed starting area. The sunny, rich colors, the playful houses, and the funny hopping movements of the new race are really fun. Almost all the quests are varied and enjoyable, and the great capital city of Silvermoon is still somewhat deserted for now, but it will soon be full of life.

Since I neither had the money nor the desire for the Collector’s Edition—including a cute exclusive pet—I immediately bought a small dragonhawk hatchling with my hard-earned silver. It now bravely flies behind me. Fittingly, I also joined the guild “The Straw Hat Pirates.”

So, now that I’ve finished all the quests around Silvermoon, it’s off for little Nami into the dark south—where the trees are darker, the air is thick, and the animals are corrupted. Wish the little paladin lady lots of success on her adventures!

.

Goodbye, Lucky Number:

Yo yo yo, you out there, listen to what I have to say: Even though you can’t really tell physically—nor necessarily mentally—I am a proud 23 years old as of today! Is that healthy? Well, in any case, I want to thank all the little people who accompanied me through my lucky-number year and showed me that I am an absolutely schizophrenic person (don’t worry, only I understand the connection ;) ).

Due to the overwhelming demand to give me something, I’m posting the link to my Amazon wishlist here once again. Hurry up before the best things are gone ;). Alright then, I’ll get myself ready—time for breakfast and a family gathering at noon. Hooray...!

.

Am I Thaddaeus?:

You know—the eternally grumpy and ill-tempered squid. Yesterday, while delivering pizza, some strange parallels between the two of us crossed my mind. Lately I’ve been kind of in a bad mood—just like him! Since I’m trying to eat healthy at the moment, I’ve never eaten anything at my workplace either—just like him! And then there are moments when I just want to go home—just like him! But okay, on the other hand: who would actually want to be SpongeBob...

The last few days have actually been pretty quiet. I get up, make breakfast, study, watch One Piece, chat, go to work, fall into bed. Ta-da! Exciting, right? Okay, yesterday Ana and I went to McDonald’s at midnight—little specials like that make life worth living again.

By the way, tomorrow is a (more or less) grand event—I’m more than happy to refer you to my Amazon wishlist ;). So if anyone has too much money, feel free to gift me something. I’ll tell you why tomorrow at the latest.

.

Six Years After the End of the World:

Today is New Year’s Eve, the last breath of the departing year. 2006 was a time full of highs and lows. But we’re still alive. Most of us, anyway. And that’s something, at least. I had originally planned, inspired by Jeriko One, to review the year as well—collect old posts and list them in nicely crafted sentences. But I’ll skip it.

Why? 2006 was crap. Setbacks, depression, and personal ruptures shape my memory of this stupid year. So let’s throw it in the trash and instead look ahead with great expectation. What will 2007 bring us?

First of all, Ana and I went grocery shopping yesterday to change my diet. Since I’m eternally lazy and at best go for a walk with my iPod, I can only get rid of the little belly I’ve acquired over the past few years through healthier eating. So on January 16 I’ll be playing “World of Warcraft – The Burning Crusade” with a big salad, and if that gets too boring, the new Apple operating system Mac OS 10.5 Leopard will be released a few months later—after which Windows Vista can pack its bags again.

On top of that, I’m now earning some cash as an evening pizza delivery guy to finance my high school diploma, which I need to start paying more attention to. And somehow the city of Hamburg casts big shadows over me. Maybe my path will lead me there in the foreseeable future.

So, 2006, that’s it for you. You were a year of personal breakdowns, deep thoughts, and stagnation. But as always, you learn from your mistakes, and some friendships have grown stronger because of it. Farewell—and I wish all my dependent readers a rocking and green 2007.

.

What Was He Thinking?:

I never really cared much about this man. I laughed when he was regularly mocked on “South Park.” I heard stories of power and terror, of deceit and mysterious doubles. This morning, Saddam Hussein was hanged.

After Ana had slept over the night before last, after we had been together at Munich airport and I had barely found any sleep there, I spent most of last night awake as well—even though I had helped André and his father build a garage in the afternoon and delivered pizzas in the evening. So the television was my only escape.

I first saw the news on Euronews. A red ticker banner broadcast the news of the day to the world in various languages. And while, one by one, all the news channels around the globe interrupted their programs, N24 was still airing reports about car dealers and Paris Hilton.

Now the video of the execution has been released—of course without the actual moment of death itself. But that it apparently very much wants to be seen is clearly shown, for example, by Technorati: the video is already ranked eighth among the most searched terms of the moment. The keywords “Saddam” and “Saddam Hussein” occupy the top two spots.

But was this execution really necessary? Did it move humanity forward? What was he thinking before he took his final steps to the gallows, as masked figures spoke their last human words to him? Did he think about his crimes? About the people he had ordered killed? About his family, his country, the world whose eyes would see these images? If someone had asked him, he probably would not have told the truth.

Whether the execution was justified and whether the trial was conducted properly is something everyone must judge for themselves. I only know that from today on, I will watch certain “South Park” episodes with different eyes.

.

Living in America:

My lyrical presentation about Munich will probably not happen. Just this much: it was really awesome, the Hugendubel bookstore keeps getting cozier, and I spent way too long in a perfume shop. But that didn’t matter. Instead, I finally managed to translate my entire web home back into German and let the lyricism flow into it. What do you think? The links section probably needs some revision, but that may come next year.

I hope Christmas Eve went well for everyone. Once again this year, no one seems to have been crushed by a Christmas tree, eaten themselves to death on cookies, or awkwardly tried to combine a gifted refrigerator with a broken back.

Let’s hope James Brown is rocking heaven, that Stefan Raab doesn’t cry too much about it, and that this icy cold finally eases up. Hallelujah.

.

Merry Christmas:

I wish all of you out there a wonderful and peaceful Christmas. Have fun, tease your nieces and nephews, steal the last cookies from the plate, and maybe reconcile with people whose paths have somehow drifted away from yours.

Hopefully we’ll read each other again tomorrow. I’ll try to recount my and Ana’s trip to Munich in lyrical form. And don’t forget: there’s something about Christmas!

.

Come for Your Life:

Today is December 22nd and therefore World Orgasm Day! No joke! This soothing day in the middle of the stressful pre-Christmas season and just before the most Christian of all holidays is meant for everyone capable of climaxing. Especially people living in countries with nuclear weapons should really switch off, relax, and experience the deepest human feeling—so that perhaps they might see the world with different eyes again.

So grab your girlfriend, blow-up doll, stuffed animal, sheep, or simply Mrs. Hand and do what you’re ultimately on this earth for: climax for world peace!

More stimulating information can be found on the official website—and the awesome music there alone should be worth a small orgasm ;).

.

AmyPink – My Generation Songs 2006:

The year is racing toward its end. Since last New Year’s Eve we’ve experienced a lot, boasted endlessly about resolutions, lost old friends and gained new important people. For many, this year brought progress; for others, perhaps setbacks. But what has accompanied us through all the ups and downs and supported us throughout is and remains music.

I couldn’t imagine a life without music and my iPod. How many nights did I lie awake this year with thoughts racing through my head, underscored by the most diverse playlists—from kitschy J-pop classics to heart-wrenching ballads to emotionally intense punk screams. And here they are: my ten favorite songs of 2006, lovingly arranged and colorfully mixed.

And what were your favorite songs of this year?

.

Microsoft Is So Cool:

My favorite company isn’t having an easy time at the moment. First, Windows Vista chief developer Jim Allchin admits he would buy a Mac if he didn’t have to work at Microsoft; then they steal competitor icons and put them on their own website; and recently Bill Gates could hardly believe how many bloggers use a Mac.

To counter all these bad omens for the upcoming Vista release, Microsoft teamed up with HP to come up with something truly extraordinary: Mr. IT! Holy crap, that’s even cooler than the operating system flop MS Bob. This stylish gentleman with his hand stuck in his jacket walks through offices, flirts with blonde receptionists, and has lots of fun with the copier (I didn’t watch any further ;) ).

Oh Microsoft darling, how do you always manage this? I hate you so much and yet you keep making me laugh. You’re really something special. But anyone who can laugh about Mr. IT probably also thinks Clippy is awesome ;).

.

Marcel Winatschek Is Person of the Year:

The rumors are true: I was chosen by the American Time Magazine as Person of the Year 2006, which really comes as no big surprise. Well-known men like Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, Al Gore, and Condoleezza Rice may have blocked my path to eternal fame as rival candidates, but the people have spoken: they want me!

I thank an overdose of Red Bull Sugarfree, my Latin firecracker Ana, the little green man Horst in my head, Thunder Eater & Ankorman, the fashion fairy Becca, my producer, the South Korean broadcaster Arirang, and everyone who truly loves me and has always supported me.

So I now ascend into the realm of the unforgettable. And don’t be too sad if you didn’t become Person of the Year—you can’t help it. Maybe next year. You can read an exclusive interview of me with CNN here. I’ve already been immortalized and worshipped on Wikipedia as well.

PS: The Wikipedia page on this topic was restored after an angry “author” expressed his resentment about this year’s choice by deleting the entire entry.

PPS: Or maybe not :). It always depends on which server you happen to hit.

.

Latin Graffiti:

It’s been so hot, hot, hot the last few days—and now of all days, it’s raining on Sunday. Instead of voting on the seven new wonders of the world, people should vote on new names for the days of the week. Since Wednesday I’ve basically been with Ana nonstop. She gave me the cutest childhood photos of herself, and we played our new “favorite game” together.

On Friday I went shopping in Augsburg with the female part of my family. The car ride sounded more like a henhouse, which was somehow amusing again. On the way from the City Galerie to downtown I even spotted Latin graffiti—someone here would’ve liked that. I bought a pair of pants and a jacket and in the evening grabbed a sandwich at the USSR fast-food chain “Baguettski.” At first I wanted a “Super Olga,” but instead I got a huge tuna sandwich with a drink for €3.99. That student ID finally paid off.

Yesterday Becca stopped by for a bit, and in the evening I finally took the long-promised walk through Türkheim with Irina and had pizza with her. The place is called “Bains Pizza.” So if you live nearby: the pizza was heavily topped and really good—I can only recommend it. The rest of the evening belonged to me again, the sleepwalking zombie Ana, and a freak show on RTL. And today’s Sunday rainy day is dedicated to me, chemistry, and Charles Dickens’ Christmas story for English. Humbug!

.

A Window to the World:

Yes, another blog tag—like we’re at a dog park. This time from our professional chiller Hoizge. He’s demanding that I publicly present my desktop, which I consider a serious invasion of privacy ;). That would be like showing everyone a photo of my desk.

Well then, here it is. Big and uncensored. But this time there’s nothing particularly interesting to see. On the left Adium, in the middle Finder, top right iTunes, and at the bottom the Dock with my most important programs. The wallpaper is from Pixel Girl.

I gladly pass this tag on to Lea, Jenny, Nicki, and anyone else who feels like exhibiting themselves. And now it’s time again for hard-hitting research instead of chasing dog hobbies ;).

Oh, and since we’re on the subject of Apple and Macs, this video really puts you in a good mood.

.

For the Horde:

Yesterday the official trailer for the upcoming “World of Warcraft” expansion “The Burning Crusade” went online—and it’s breathtakingly awesome. After Blizzard recently treated its community to more and more realm outages and unstable battlegrounds—mostly after the last big patch “Before the Storm”—many people were reminded by this trailer why they actually play WoW.

I stopped playing more or less actively about half a year ago, but my buddies and I agree: storming a brand-new realm together as a Horde guild—insane! And those new Blood Elves are unbelievably sexy and graceful; you just have to go for it. Even if the new capital Silvermoon will probably be hopelessly overcrowded at first, the casual testers will fade away and make room for the real Blood Elf players.

If I can’t afford a Wii, then at least breathtaking and exciting adventures in Azeroth. That’s what you call a substitute addiction ;). I hope and believe that many former players will really feel the urge to dive back into life behind the screen with the expansion. And if you don’t care for the Horde at all, there are always the Draenei—those strange blue creatures… ;) See you on the battlefield at the end of January!

PS: You can now download the German version as well.

.

Stop the Spam:

A new email address is like a new life—or something like that, right? After playing “Montagsmaler” online with Ana until 1:30 a.m. yesterday, I finally cleaned up Apple Mail today and came up with the brilliant idea that it’s probably time for a new address. My old GMX address has accompanied me for about three years now and has collected massive amounts of spam.

From the usual Viagra offers to donation requests to friendly inquiries about how my psoriasis is doing, I’ve been receiving more and more junk lately. And people are getting more sophisticated, so neither the GMX spam filter nor my email software’s monitoring program can recognize the crap and keep it away from my already violated eyes.

The well-known address marcel@amypink.com will of course continue to work, but the internal one for friends and acquaintances will change. So if you want my new email address, please ask me via ICQ. I’ll stop using the old one in about a week.

PS: Tonight at 8:40 p.m. on Arte, as part of the theme evening “Generation Clueless,” there’s an interesting documentary titled “Google Shows Me, Therefore I Am,” about the impact of the new digital revolution that makes teenagers dependent on self-presentation through blogs, chats, and MySpace.

.

Show Me Your Desk:

I took the opportunity and caught a blog tag from Jenny. Today’s topic: Photograph your desk. So what beautiful things can you see on my exceptionally tidy workspace, which you can view in large format here?

On a stack there’s an issue of “Computer Arts Projects,” underneath a “PAGE” magazine and an issue of “blond.” Behind them my favorite chewing gum brand, Wrigley’s Extra Professional, my phone, and a tasty Beck’s Green Lemon. Clipped to the desk lamp—which always makes strange noises—is a postcard from “O.C., California,” and next to it, in a stylish black frame, a photo of Ana and me. In front of that sits my black iPod nano, and next to it my little cardboard friends Thunder Eater and Ankorman (some of you might still remember them ;) ). In the center stands my Xerox monitor, and to the right—my pride and joy: the sweet Mac mini. In front of it, beautifully in white—my keyboard and mouse.

With such a detailed explanation and links, I gladly pass this tag on to anyone who feels like participating.

PS: The page open in the browser is the blog “People (love) Machines” by Rayana.

.

If Only “If” Were Not a Word:

Oh my God, this weekend could have been a milestone of good vibes and exuberant bliss. Friday evening would have belonged only to Ana and me. On Saturday we would have gone on an awesome Christmas shopping tour to Munich, and in the evening there was supposed to be the F12aW class reunion party at Beer-Tent Tobi’s place. My hangover the next morning would have been cured by sweet cookies from Becca, and the fantastic weekend would have quietly faded out with a breathtaking blockbuster in the evening. Fantastic, right?

But reality is often grayer and snowier. Ana was too exhausted from studying on Friday and didn’t feel like going to Munich. I’m slowly realizing that I’m not her best friend—school is. Our little Tobi is too busy with his move—the party was canceled. Rebecca didn’t have time on Saturday because she had to kill poor ugly turkeys, and the evening TV program was below par.

So what did little Marcel actually experience? I went to the Christmas market in Bad Wörishofen with Sarah and Laura. There weren’t even any hot chestnuts, but plenty of Sarah’s ex-boyfriends. My little cousin annoyed me with her W800i and loads of MP3s. Bianca stopped by briefly. A bit of “Super Smash” banter with a few buddies, and I watched two documentaries—one about the end of the world and one about Berlin’s debt. And I saw snow, which became the personal highlight of my past few days.

What else happened? The “Burning Crusade” intro appeared on YouTube, rumors about the user interface of the new Mac OS 10.5 “Leopard” were stirred up, and Dieter Bohlen was robbed. You can decide for yourselves which of those three things was the most important. Have fun!

.

Strong Magnetic Waves:

I know, yesterday you were lying there in despair and starving in front of your computers, longing for this orange website to come back online. Despite protective spells and blessings from above (TOKYOPUNK is THE pilgrimage site of Christian web surfers, in case you didn’t know), my digital home was offline for hours yesterday. Why?!

Of course out of solidarity. With Nintendo. They had exactly the same problem yesterday. And since all the Wii freaks storm my site immediately after Nintendo’s, the ten emergency servers in the basement simply couldn’t handle it (all running on Windows Server 2003).

But seriously: Bad 1&1! You can’t just crash when there’s finally a chance that someone might randomly stumble across the site. To calm down from the shock, I treated myself to a Wii mousepad from the Nintendo Star Catalog—for an incredibly cheap 2000 stars! I haven’t redeemed any points in three years; if something really awesome comes out now and I don’t have enough stars left, I’ll be devastated.

.

Where to Buy?:

Today is the day: the new Nintendo Wii was released across Europe this morning. First of all, I have to admit that, due to chronic lack of money, I unfortunately can’t buy it (yet). But that won’t stop many of you from diving into this new digital pleasure as quickly as possible.

The starting point will probably be “Wii Sports,” which may not shine with graphics but certainly delivers fun—provided you buy at least a second Wii Remote right away. More opulent and personally more interesting to me is “The Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess,” which, like every major Zelda console game, has been postponed so many times that I didn’t think I’d ever live to see its release.

But the game my buddies and I are especially waiting for is “Super Smash Bros. Brawl,” the successor to the uber-cool N64 and GameCube titles. Beating up your friends with Mario, Link, and a sexy version of Samus Aran, with awesome music and Beck’s Green Lemon—what could possibly be better?

So I wish everyone jumping into Wii fun today lots of enjoyment and an awesome weekend. Maybe we’ll see each other soon in SSBB’s online battle mode. So PS3 and Xbox—go home, shoo!

PS: From now on, I’d like to see better German commercials—like those cute Japanese guys in the U.S. ad. They can scrap that whole “Better Living with Nintendo” campaign now.

.

The Truly Best WordPress Themes:

In my opinion, WordPress is the best solution for putting your thoughts, opinions, and ideas onto the World Wide Web (that’s why I use it). I’m often asked which WordPress themes I consider the most beautiful and coolest. And I’ve gone through them all.

That’s why I’d like to present my personal list of the 10 most stylish (and of course free) WordPress themes—there’s something for everyone. From plugin-heavy Web 2.0 giants to colorful feel-good designs to minimalist three-color layouts.

The list includes: “Sash Theme” by Marcel Winatschek, “Wonderwall” by Alvin Woon, “5ThirtyOne” by Derek Punsalan, “JsTheme” by Jay Kwong, “Simpla” by Phu Ly, “Freshy” by Julien De Luca, “Fluid Solution” by Kaushal Sheth, “Spreeksel” by Netlash, “XV” by Patrick Behrend, “Andharra” by Nofie Iman, and “Stripes” by Oakyoon Cha. Each theme has its own distinctive style—from grunge and Web 2.0 aesthetics to clean minimalism and bold pink statements—and most require at least some customization to truly shine.

If you had no idea what I’ve been talking about and feel inspired to start a blog yourself—now armed with the advantage of knowing these great themes—you can find more information at WordPress Germany.

.

Your Writing Future:

I know most of you are still little Windows zombies, staring daily at your green idyll, using the Start button to shut down and spending half the day on the ICQ client. But your world is about to experience a revolution.

Today I had the opportunity to test the new ICQ 6 Preview on our Windows PC and, as a spoiled Adium user, I have to say: you’re going to like it. The program is packed with Flash, bright green, and apparently designed for users who don’t necessarily have huge contact lists. Compared to version 5.1, it definitely looks much sleeker.

ICQ 6 will delight exactly those who use it: lovers of flashy colors and ad-filled software. At the moment it’s available as a kind of English closed beta, but be patient—soon you’ll be able to express yourselves with new emoticons and bold sounds.

Mac users can download the latest ICQ 3.4 version—now with a cool green flower. And apparently the ProSieben client is already outdated; the newest version comes from Sat.1 in bright pink.

.

Driving Home for Christmas:

After struggling with math and chemistry all morning, I now need a break and will spend some time wandering the depths of the internet.

Since Becca and I want to bake delicious cookies on Wednesday, she came over yesterday, brought some ingredients and checked out my baking options. To get into the right Christmas mood, I’ve gathered a whole bunch of Christmas songs. Among them are classics like “Driving Home for Christmas” by Chris Rea, “Christmas Time (Don’t Let The Bells End)” by The Darkness, and “Feliz Navidad” by José Feliciano. Becca insisted on “In der Weihnachtsbäckerei” by Rolf Zukowski, and I added a few “South Park” songs for good measure.

Let’s see if we can get into the X-Mas spirit despite the invisible snow. It won’t be long until the (consumer) holiday of the year is here.

.

Samson:

The first Advent weekend is behind us, thoughts about possible Christmas presents are growing stronger, and the days are noticeably colder despite the lack of snow. Mine was actually pretty calm.

On Friday I went shopping in Kaufbeuren with Becca. Instead of Christmas treats, we went for Leberkäse rolls and a sandwich. On Saturday we planned to go to the “Poppparty” at PM, but that didn’t work out, so André and Lisa came over and we played some GameCube and watched a few bad MTV series.

Yesterday I studied economics in the palace garden with Nastja—basket of goods, GDP, price bubbles. Later there was almost a little fight at her place, and in the evening I tried to help her with Latin, but I nearly fell asleep over those perverse poems.

Recently I had a really awful dream with “Samson” by Regina Spektor playing in the background. I found a video of a very talented girl covering the song, and together with that dream it almost brought tears to my eyes.

This week doesn’t look amazing weather-wise, but I’ve got plenty to do: study math, tidy up. That’s more than enough for an old guy like me.

.

The Plague Around the Corner:

December 1st isn’t only good for opening the first chocolate in your Advent calendar—it’s also World AIDS Day, as MTV constantly reminds us. One of the last remaining positive aspects of the former music channel.

I don’t think I know anyone who has AIDS, and thankfully no one who has died from it. But the danger is there. Always and everywhere. So when you’re at the next house party, think about the disease that can ruin your whole life. Use a condom—or better yet, stay faithful to your girlfriend at home.

If you want to do something against AIDS, you can inform yourself through UNICEF. AIDS is still incurable, so fight it—if you’re not fighting anything else already.

.

I Killed the “Island Monkeys”:

My English phase seems to be over again and, as always, you’ll have to deal with it. It bothered me that I increasingly didn’t feel like writing because I had to translate my thoughts into English first. To prevent that, my little online home will gradually be translated back into German. Get ready for my next phase—whatever that may be.

The last few days were pretty cool. Yesterday I hung out with my old buddy Eniz and his girlfriend. In honor of the past, we even went to Lidl twice. This morning Daja came over, at noon I raided the Chinese lunch buffet with my former classmate Julia, in the afternoon Ana and Daja visited, and in the evening Mille and I watched “Dragon Ball GT.” No time to study, but it did my soul good.

All old entries are back online. My break with the past wasn’t really a final cut, just a timeout. Unfortunately I couldn’t save the pictures, but I’ll try to replace them. The guestbook still has problems, and it doesn’t seem fully compatible with some browsers yet. And don’t you dare miss “According to Jim” tonight!

.

Fog Over the City:

It’s dark, the sun has taken leave and it’s getting colder. But who cares—I’m sitting at home, watching “According to Jim,” cramming math and eating pizza. God bless civilization. Becca is in Hamburg to party for a few days, Ana is studying and flirting via ICQ, and the universal depression seems to be decreasing.

I went for a walk today to think about my life, the people I know, and the changes of the last few months. On the way I discovered a new favorite song on my iPod, but it’s too personal—or distressing—to talk about.

I hate math, but it has to be done. I really hate it. But the beginning seems easy enough. So watch out, numbers!

.

Napoleon Is Undead:

Today was a typical Sunday. Quiet and slow. After I finished studying the life and achievements of Napoleon, I wandered with my sweet undead princess Sune through Undercity, chatted a bit on ICQ, and watched “School of Rock” on TV. A typical Sunday.

When I stayed overnight at my friend’s house and Irina’s eerie but sweet sounds kept waking me up, I thought about five things I want to do before I die: 1. invent a word, 2. sleep with Siamese twins, 3. have my own TV channel, 4. eat a piece of that 8,000-calorie burger, and 5. have a sweet daughter named Nami.

What’s your top five before you become a zombie like Napoleon? Think about it and post it in the comments. I’m going to sleep now. See you tomorrow.

.

The End of the French Revolution:

To complete my knowledge about the French Revolution, I watched “Marie Antoinette” with Ana. Since “Lost in Translation” by Sofia Coppola is my absolute favorite movie, I had high expectations. I tried hard to like it, but I couldn’t.

There was hardly any real story; the first half revolved around losing her virginity and it all felt repetitive, almost like “Groundhog Day.” Ana fell asleep after an hour. I held out bravely but was disappointed by the nonexistent ending. I don’t understand the mostly positive reviews. Only the music stood out in some scenes.

I slept well in Ana’s bed, though Irina’s strange but sweet sounds woke me up now and then. In the morning, Ana and I looked at childhood pictures of her—really cute—and she walked me to the train station. Now it’s Napoleon’s turn.

.

Welcome to Casino Royale:

I’ve never been a big James Bond fan. The idea of a British secret agent never really appealed to me. I ignored the MTV special and all the prejudice about the new Bond. But now I’m back from “James Bond – Casino Royale,” and I have to say: wow.

The name Daniel Craig meant nothing to me before, but now I apologize for my constant skepticism. Craig was charming, the story fast-paced and thrilling, and overall it was perfect entertainment for my eight euros. Definitely worth watching—even for non-Bond fans.

One question remains: why did they have to wreck that beautiful Aston Martin DBS? Such a fantastic car!

.

Taiyo Matsumoto’s “Tekkon Kinkreet”:

Movies based on comic books aren’t unusual anymore. In December, “Tekkon Kinkreet” premieres in Japan. The anime is based on Taiyo Matsumoto’s 1993 manga masterpiece published in “Weekly Big Comic Spirits” and produced by Studio 4°C.

The story follows the two orphans Black and White, who live in Treasure Town. Black is a dark punk rebel; White is innocent and dreamy. Together they rule the streets and clash with yakuza, religious fanatics, and thugs.

When the Kiddy Kastle corporation plans to tear down and rebuild Treasure Town, the two friends must fight back. Let’s hope this intense anime makes its way to Europe soon.

.

Juice and Chips:

My breakfast consisted of multivitamin juice and leftover cheese & onion chips from last weekend. The bag seemed to contain more hairs than a Saint Bernard. Delicious.

I didn’t get very far with my French Revolution studies yesterday. Every time I read about the separation of powers or John Locke, my mind drifted elsewhere—updating MySpace, watching another rerun of “Spin City,” or wondering why I didn’t keep the frog Ana and I caught months ago. But today is a new day.

I also joined 9rules, one of the biggest web design communities. If you run a website or want to connect with others in the field, you should check it out.

.

Keep on Learning, Baby:

Thanks for the positive feedback about relaunching the site. It’s great to have such loyal readers.

I finished an entire German workbook yesterday; today it’s French Revolution time. Preparing for my university entrance qualification has brought Ana and me closer. She’s a total study enthusiast and helps me with Spanish and math. I’m also learning to accept that Becca and I will only have a friendly relationship in the future, but we’re becoming more open with each other.

I visited Irina yesterday; she dragged me around Türkheim for an hour in the cold and dark, but rewarded me with spaghetti and sausages. Later, I helped Ana with Latin and installed Internet Explorer 7 for her. Now French history calls again.

.

Restart:

Yes, I did it. I restarted amypink. My website mirrors my life, and I’ve made a decisive cut. I’m getting older, my feelings have changed, and I need to adjust my way of living.

I’ve started studying for my university entrance qualification. I want to study web design and eventually live in California or Japan. I chose English and Spanish as foreign languages, which is also why TOKYOPUNK is now in English. Writing in English helps me learn, and it opens the door to a wider audience.

I know some of you may not want to read a blog in English, and I understand that. But Germany isn’t enough for me. I want to shout my strange ideas into the world—even if my English isn’t perfect yet. Welcome to the new amypink.

.

Out of My Village:

The weekend is over and I survived it unscathed. I briefly attended Flö’s birthday party, but it wasn’t really my thing, so I went roaming the city at night with Eniz and Ali instead. We visited the old playground where we spent some of the best years of our lives and talked about the good old days.

Today we played “Super Smash Bros. Melee” for hours, tried out new classes in “World of Warcraft,” and ate pizza. I hope this marks the end of a terrible week.

I’ve also revised some of my life philosophies. Instead of “Never give more than you get back,” I now believe: “Express your feelings, but never more than you truly feel.” And instead of “Happiness comes to those who smile,” I prefer: “Live your feelings with heart and soul.” You can’t always smile; sometimes you have to be angry or feel awful—but do it properly.

I’ve learned that you have to choose a path and stick with it. You can’t keep wavering forever. And you shouldn’t suppress your feelings, no matter the consequences. Stay true to yourself. With that Sunday message, I send you into a new week. Make the best of it.

.

Mandy and Bibi’s Youth Center Party:

Mandy and Bibi celebrated at the Irsingen youth center with everything that goes along with it. You can find the pictures here.

.

Wild Wild West:

This time I was a bit smarter and didn’t ride my bike to Türkheim in pitch darkness, but used public transportation instead. It cost me €3.50, but at least Irina picked me up. At her place we watched “According to Jim” (are they really starting all over again from the very beginning?!) and when Daja arrived, we watched “Wild Wild West” with Will Smith.

Later Ana came back a bit sick from her trip to Bonn. We talked for a while in her kitchen while she made herself some strange cinnamon milk with honey in the microwave. At 9 p.m. Bia picked me up so we could watch a DVD at my place, although we only managed half the movie. Let’s see what tonight brings, but at least the afternoon is saved thanks to my favorite channel, ProSieben.

.

The Proverbial Ceiling Falling on My Head:

The slowly passing week certainly wasn’t my most glorious one. The walls were closing in on me, Ana and I kept arguing more and more (there wasn’t much left of that breezy summer-holiday feeling), and the issue with my Abitur was still dragging on. My daily routine was a tragedy: I let the mornings slip by doing nothing, sat in front of ICQ all day, and in the evening I was tired from doing nothing. That couldn’t go on. Time to change something.

Yesterday I found new motivation and had a lot planned. First, I had to get out. Anything was better than sitting around at home. So after getting a few things done during the day, I wrapped up warmly and biked to Türkheim to see Ana (which is two villages away), even though the left earbud of my iPod is broken. At least that gave me a chance to sort things out with my best friend. It turned into a really cool evening. We went for a walk and shopping, I teased Irilein, we stuffed ourselves with healthy food, watched sitcoms and that knowledge show on Sat.1, and listened to Muse. It was such a relief to do something without the stale mood from last weekend. By the way, today she left for Bonn with her class.

Finally, I had to deal with the Abitur issue, so today I went to my favorite employment agency to get things moving. Let’s see how that develops. I definitely want to do it; the financing is just still a bit unclear. I wouldn’t mind paying for it with a small 400-euro job, but we’ll see.

That should be enough for now. Hopefully this weekend will be better than the last. See you.

.

Life – Brightness – Suffering:

Sweetie, I wish you all the very best for your 18th birthday and hope you achieve everything you set out to do in your life. Don’t be too hard on yourself and be proud of what you’ve accomplished so far. Be happy to have such a wonderful family and look to the future with confidence. And even when things aren’t rosy and your sky is covered with dark clouds, there are people who always think of you and stand by you in every situation — and I am one of them.

As Dōgen Eihei once said: “Everything is your life. Day and night, whatever you encounter is your life; therefore you should adapt your life to the situation that meets you in each moment. Use your life energy to shape the circumstances that come your way into unity with your life and to put things in their proper place.”

Pretty cool, right? All the best, yours Marcel.

.

Personal Instability:

Lately I’ve been going through intense mood swings that could rival the effects of any female period. One moment I love this whole blue-green world with everything that crawls and creeps on it, see everything more loosely, and want to gift the nations with my good mood. And just minutes later I feel betrayed and fooled by everyone around me, see no way out, and would rather throw everything away and emigrate to Canada. Then I click through iTunes like a maniac, listen to every Placebo song to excess, and demonstratively skip every Muse track.

This has been going on for months now. Sometimes it makes any kind of professional progress impossible. When things are going well privately, everything else feels easy. At the moment I’m simply missing some kind of support, as if I were weightless and every gust of wind could toss me somewhere else. I have two theories: either I watched too much “Will & Grace,” or I just need a girlfriend. Of course you don’t think about the positive aspects and the artistic nourishment that can grow from such personal defeats when you’re really deep in a crisis. For some feelings, I simply lack the rights.

.

Equal-Opportunity Groping While Unconscious:

We were at Julian’s birthday party yesterday, which was really fun until there was a small incident. You know how it is: you’re at a party (usually a private one), some girls lose track of how many vodka sodas they’ve had and eventually end up collapsed in a corner. Then there are those little despicable creatures who otherwise never get any action and throw themselves at the poor girls like horny blanks just to feel some physical closeness for once.

Today I had an argument with my best friend all day. She thinks that with certain jerks it wouldn’t bother her if they groped her while she was unconscious, which of course turned my world upside down, and I fired back with concepts like decency and honor.

She wouldn’t see my point and argued that guys wouldn’t mind either if some cute girl hit on them while they were completely wasted. I said that was something entirely different.

Long story short: what do you think is worse? If a guy gropes a drunk girl and she doesn’t notice, or if a girl does the same to a boy? Do you find both equally bad, or maybe for you that’s just part of a good party? Let me know in the comments so this can finally be settled once and for all!

.

Amy&Pink Auctions Burning Crusade Beta Key:

I waited over a week like a little child for my “World of Warcraft – The Burning Crusade” beta key. Now it’s here, and I won’t be using it because I need money for my upcoming distance-learning studies.

So if you want to take part in the current beta, which runs until at least January 2007, you can support my plan by bidding on my beta key here on eBay. Good luck and have fun trying out the Blood Elves and exploring Outland!

.

A Kazakh and an Unspoken Name:

Jagshamesh! After we had Chinese food and then went shopping in Kaufbeuren with Meggi, André and I went to the movies yesterday. Of course, we watched “Borat.” After finally fighting our way into the nearly empty theater 9—next door the latest dwarf adventure was playing, including Otto, who was busy signing autographs—we were finally able to accompany the curious Kazakh Borat and his producer Azamat on their exciting journey.

The movie was really awesome. I had imagined it might be even a bit better, but when the two of them wrestled completely naked on their hotel bed, the whole theater roared with laughter—except for two elderly people who had either chosen the wrong movie or were hoping for a Kazakh documentary. In any case, those two didn’t laugh once. I was actually surprised that no one left the theater early.

And now I’m sick. No sooner has winter spread its cold curtain over Germany than I come down with a nasty cold. So it’s lots of hot milk with honey and tea for me. My “World of Warcraft – Burning Crusade” beta key finally arrived after Blizzard apparently had problems sending out the emails (oO), but I’ll probably have to wait a few more months. The key will most likely end up on eBay—I need money to finance my high school diploma.

This morning I watched the new O.C. episode. It was awful. Without her. Her name wasn’t mentioned once, and all the memories of her were thrown into a dumpster by Ryan. That was really sad. O.C. just isn’t the same without my Marissa. And that stupid silly girl Taylor has taken her place in the O.C. opening credits—simply terrible.

Anyway, there’s a party at Julian’s tonight, but I’m sick, so we’ll see if I’m fit enough and in the mood to go. And now I’m hungry. And the new “South Park” episode is still waiting to be watched. Jenqui!

.

Times Are Changing:

Throw “Phantom Planet” into your CD player, because today is the big day for all American “The O.C.” fans. After my favorite character Marissa Cooper died at the end of the third season—an inglorious yet still moving series death (or maybe not…?), which even brought tears to my eyes—the first episode of the fourth season premieres tonight on FOX. A few hours later it will probably already be circulating through all the file-sharing networks of the world.

Almost nothing is as viewers expected. Marissa’s death has changed everyone deeply and turned the plans of her friends and family upside down. FOX recently released a very long trailer that basically reveals all the new developments. You can watch it here. Well then, see you all soon in Newport Beach—until then! God, I love this show!

.

What’s Today? Why, Christmas Day — It’s Christmas Day!:

Come on, take my—and your—favorite Christmas movie off the shelf: “The Muppet Christmas Carol”! Because yes, it snowed! “Until the snow returns!”—you know that’s my saying. When the first snow fell last year, we had just come back from our Prague study trip. It’s already been that long.

So only 51 days until Christmas! Have you already bought all your presents? And don’t forget: snow is only nice when you don’t have to wait at the bus stop at 6 a.m. With that in mind: enjoy the white gold!

.

Catching Up on My Abitur:

At the moment I feel a bit lost. Both personally and in terms of my future. I have no real perspective for my life. I quit my internship at the retirement home again; it’s getting harder and harder to scare the elderly. So today I sat there thinking about what I should do next.

André and Ana are both doing their Abitur. And after the Abitur comes university. And university is something good. At least better than sitting at home unemployed. So I typed “catching up on Abitur” into Google without any commitment and clicked on the first ad. The website of ILS popped up. Completing the Abitur via distance learning. Would that be something for me?

The last chance to maybe give my life a deeper meaning? Achieving academic results without business administration? With people who might be able to teach me French better than a certain someone? And with an André who might finally stop writing in my comments how great it is that I have nothing to do and instead help me with a second foreign language?

It would cost me 117 euros per month. Level 3. For 30 months. With an unemployment discount. I wonder if my favorite employment agency would contribute anything. Or whether I should finally get off my lazy ass and work—at least knowing what I’m working toward.

Yes, I want that. On Ciao.de there were mostly positive reviews about ILS. So I ordered a free study handbook with more information. Has anyone had experience with ILS? Are they good? Is it worth it? I hope so. But at least now I have a small sense of perspective again. That’s important.

.

Blue, Blue, Blue It Blooms:

As you hopefully know, I occasionally post my current desktop whenever I feel like it. It’s my right, after all—I basement child stare at it half the day. I can’t keep that from you. And I’ve noticed that it’s best and most pleasant for me when I use a blue background. It’s incredibly calming.

If you want to see it in large size, just click the link. Try blue as well—it’s much better. You can find the awesome wallpaper on DeviantArt.

.

Cum on a Clit Is Punk as Fuck:

Your punky couldn’t sleep all night. While old sitcom classics played on Kabel 1 in the background, I spent hours chasing the images of one man: Clayton James Cubitt, whom I hereby warmly welcome into the ranks of my favorite photographers. He’s so fuckin’ alternative that he’s practically one of those typical crazy sex-fashion photographers again.

“She was 18, I was 29. It would be hotter if I were 30. Let’s say I was 30.” That’s how one of his one-night-stand shooting diary entries begins on his blog at Nerve (you have to be a member there to read it). He likes to experiment with different techniques and photographs breasts, trees, or his friends and family, giving intimate insights into his private life—and that’s what truly makes a photographer interesting.

.

The Long Odyssey to the Club:

It was 7:30 p.m. when I woke up. I had two and a half hours to organize everything. As usual, it was all on me. So I turned on my phone and ICQ and called André about ten times—of course he didn’t answer. On ICQ, Irina and Ana were already begging for information while I preheated the oven for a mushroom pizza. A PM club night was waiting for us.

After failing to reach Lisa and getting nowhere with Irina’s calls, I jumped in the shower. The phone rang constantly. Plans changed every few minutes. Who would pick up whom? Was there enough space in the car? Meanwhile, my pizza was almost burning and I was running around the apartment in my boxers.

Half past ten Lisa picked me up. No CD player in her car. My usual face cream was empty, so I tried another one, which started peeling off my face. I quickly washed it off at André’s place and used good old Nivea instead.

Finally, with a beer in one hand and a broken seatbelt in the other, we arrived. After half an hour of searching for parking, we met the others. Was all the effort worth it? Yes and no. I’ve had better PM nights, but it was still fun. I met an old classmate, joked around with Bianca, and finally got to know the crazy Daja better—without her it probably wouldn’t have been as funny.

All in all, not an outstanding but a pretty nice evening with small highlights—one I might not have experienced if Blizzard had finally sent me my beta key. Well, Blizz, notice anything?

.

Former Music Channel Loves Lightning:

I like music and I like websites. That MTV hardly deserves the “M” anymore has been clear for years. But the direction they’re currently taking online is almost criminal.

I used to enjoy checking the American charts on MTV.com, especially TRL or MTV2. Even back then the site was stuffed—but what went online a few weeks ago really takes the cake.

An oversized flash monster with automatic ads, buttons that take forever to load, and pages you’ll probably never see—even if they exist at all. Why does Viacom do this? I might understand if broadband coverage in the U.S. were the reason, but even the Polish MTV site is no lightweight. MTV always has to be hipper, flashier, bigger—but there are enough examples in international web design showing that less is sometimes more. Think it over, so I can finally check the American charts again.

.

The End of the Leberkäse Roll:

For three weeks I was part of a cute little program run by DEKRA that aimed to get us into internships. There were supposed to be about 15 participants; eight started—only four of us remained. Andi, a passionate gamer who preferred spending his time marrying crazy girls in the Antenne Bayern chat; Sven, who raced us up and down the B12 in his death trap car, often misjudging overtaking opportunities; Alex, a farmer straight out of a picture book; and me—a pretty good quartet.

I’ll miss our course instructor Mrs. Mayer, who somehow managed to get us through the course, Vinzenz Murr with his questionable meals garnished by strange surprises in the ham noodles and leberkäse rolls (with mustard, please), and the V-Markt that supplied us with iced tea and Viennese sausages.

But I learned a lot during that time. How to execute commands in the Antenne Bayern chat, that the computers refused the two-euro demo version of World of Warcraft, and how to gather a lot of MySpace friends in a very short time. Oh, and of course the job application stuff. Starting next Monday, I’m off to another internship. This time I get to scare elderly people in a retirement home again. Should be fun.

.

I Was Chosen:

Well, the news that "World of Warcraft – Burning Crusade" will now only be released in 2007 honestly annoyed me somehow, although of course I understand why Blizzard did it. But you know what? As of today, I don’t give a damn anymore, because I just received a divine message: I’m a beta tester!

InWow.de – one of the leading German-speaking WoW communities – makes it possible and grants little TOKYOPUNK access to the hottest shit of the year (besides the Wii, of course *g*). In a few days it starts, and then I’ll be setting off on new adventures with my awesome Blood Elf warrior! So awesome, Ali’s eyes are going to pop. Now I just have to come up with a hot name for the lady. Better do that now before I end up staring at the login screen for an hour again... All power to the Horde!

.

The Master Behind the Master:

For your own safety and that of the environment, the following video should only be watched with a few good buddies and a crate of Beck’s Green Lemon!

People have problems, and it’s often hard for them to deal with them. But that’s what Marci is for: I help André with girl issues, Ana with butterflies in her stomach, and Kathi with future ex-boyfriends. I’m always happy to stand by my fellow humans with advice and support. I always have a life-enhancing saying ready. But that wisdom doesn’t just come out of thin air. Some of you may have wondered where I get all my knowledge from. And today is the day I reveal this final secret.

My master is… Assi-Toni. Yes, you heard right. Watch this YouTube video and you’ll be blessed with wisdom. Have fun.

Quote of the month: “No matter how you do it, as a man, no matter how you do it, it’s wrong, and that’s why more and more women in our generation are disappointed, because they’re fucked-up bitches.” That about says it all ;)

.

Nothing Going On in My Pants:

There are times when I could easily post ten entries a day here, and then there are weeks when I just have nothing to say because I somehow feel dead inside. And I’m really past the age of publishing end-of-the-world depression ramblings.

Alright, what’s new? I’ve had a new piercing for over two weeks now—a ring in my lip. I’m also sitting around in some kind of vocational preparation course and still have no idea what career path I ultimately want to take. My years of defiance against this society and its exploitative structure are still noticeable. Maybe the job I want hasn’t even been invented yet—who knows? Maybe I should really do something social, or something in media design—I have no idea. And this indecisiveness about earning money doesn’t really help me move forward.

So far I’ve always somehow drifted into something, but this time my invisible hand of fate is taking its time guiding me again. Or maybe it never stopped—very anti-religious here.

Alright, folks, I’m going to watch the rest of Mittermeier now, then “Lost” and “Bully & Rick,” and the little Marci will be happy as can be. Good night.

.

Anti-Ana Art:

18-year-old Allison Harvard is one of the new stars on the popular website MySpace. With her emaciated appearance and her artistic pictures and photos, she quickly built up a fine fan base.

The student soon had to defend herself against accusations of anorexia, which repeatedly overshadowed her unique art. Allison is tired of constantly seeing “emaciated photos sent to her by email or through comments (on her MySpace page).” She “likes food and she likes to starve.”

In any case, she is a potentially very high-quality artist who will surely make it big someday—although painters are famously often only successful after their death. Anyone who already appreciates her can check out her website. And she has good chances of becoming famous, because MySpace has already turned many unknowns into stars overnight.

.

The Battle of eSports:

What has been actively promoted abroad for years—especially in Asia and the USA—is now also trying to gain a foothold in Germany. We’re talking about eSports, meaning computer games played in national and international tournaments and leagues, supported by high-profile sponsors. Some online portals and the TV channel GIGA are trying to popularize digital sports and should really be working hand in hand to achieve that. But appearances are deceptive.

The eSports scene is currently in turmoil. Germany’s biggest eSports broadcaster, GIGA, recently issued a warning to the popular online platform Gamesports. According to the TV station, the site violated youth protection laws by offering videos of non-youth-rated games around the clock, publicly and uncensored. GIGA and its pay channel GIGA II were allegedly at a disadvantage because they were only allowed to present these games late at night.

So far, so good. But of course, there’s more to it. It’s no secret that GIGA II’s eSports coverage hasn’t been a major financial success for Turtle Entertainment, since fewer subscribers are willing to pay for content that was available for free on Gamesports.

Among many eSports enthusiasts, the former NBC channel has fallen from grace, as GIGA has long been considered profit-hungry and accused of simply trying to eliminate a competitor. What they may not have expected is that fans would overwhelmingly stick with Gamesports. The accusation: GIGA should be advancing eSports, not tearing down key pillars of the movement just to become a supposed monopoly.

.

Hornier Than War:

There are two things that instantly give my buddy Ali a hard-on: pretty girls and “World of Warcraft – Burning Crusade.” For one of the two, the first beta keys were sent out a few days ago, and the chosen ones can already live the game on exclusive servers beyond the new console generation.

What WoW means to all the basement kids out there is—speaking the nerd language—irrelevant to some. As Randy’s colleague asks in the already legendary South Park episode #1008: “Is that a computer game?” For the fewest: yes. For the others, it’s an existence, a world full of adventure and friends, the fine line between fame and destruction.

And to keep it that way, Blizzard will launch the expansion to the most successful MMORPG of all time in about a month. With new races, new areas, and a new interface. And even I, whom WoW never really managed to hook—because I was honestly afraid I’d end up like Cartman if I indulged too long—can hardly wait, alongside the Wii, to fight the Alliance with the Blood Elves in a guild with Ali and the others.

If you’re now also turned on by this magnificent life-devourer, you should definitely tune in to GIGA tonight at 10 p.m. With the help of beta keys, they’ll be offering a first look at the new sections in a special broadcast. The well-known gaming channel can be accessed via Astra Digital or via stream. Have fun!

.

People:

The Strategist of Life
Heartbreak made Ana and me good friends. I enjoy surrendering to her bizarre and crazy philosophies of life, even though there are days when I would gladly hurl the man-eater against a wall. She sees life as a game and tries to make the best of good and bad situations, even if her sweet head sometimes keeps her from taking the easy paths of being. I value her as a bright spot in this gray everyday life and hope that this friendship will not fade as quickly as it began.

The Worldly One
Over the last few years, Mille has matured into a grown-up and (mostly) reliable friend. Which is quite a miracle if you think back to the stories of the ZSC before the turn of the millennium. He was never particularly good with girls, but he has been with the lovely Annette for quite some time now, and that seems to be working out. At the moment, he is working obsessively on mastering the mysteries of Wing Chun in order to protect me from comet zombies and the robot mafia in the distant future.

The Player
If anyone embodies the game itself, it’s Ali. He just gets it. Both the game with the controller or keyboard and the game with the attractive specimens of the female race. Ali has always been like a little brother to me, but also someone who reminded me of justice and the courage to speak the truth, even if time has corrupted him somewhat. The boy has potential like grains of sand on the beach—let’s see what he makes of it.

The Chaotic One
I can hardly remember the time when Eniz didn’t seize every opportunity to gradually lead humanity toward ruin. Often you didn’t really know what to think of him, but we were once something like best buddies, and perhaps we still are in some way. I’ve promised to write a comprehensive biography of his life someday, and I will.

The Better One
You either like André or you don’t. A polarizing character, so to speak. You can do a lot of fun things with him—together we are a well-coordinated but also mysterious team. Only sometimes there are those strange moments when he becomes a little unsettling to me. They are hard to put into words and disappear as quickly as they come. At the moment, he is regularly delighting our mutual acquaintance Lisa, and she is enjoying it to the fullest.

.

The New Generation of Rock Dwarfs:

Some of you may remember the demand by many German musicians for a German music quota on national radio, modeled after France. The request was rejected on the grounds that German music already had a solid place in the media—provided it was good enough.

Several years have passed since then, and if you turn on VIVA PLUS or Antenne Bayern today, you hardly even notice that half of the material being broadcast comes from Germany. Juli, Silbermond, and Aggro Berlin ushered in the new generation of German music—and now the next wave is waiting at the door. Whether it’s the polarizing Killerpilze, the trigger-happy Liza Li, or Fotos: German punk-rock-whatever is back in fashion and is being played.

As the most likable representative and to reintroduce the well-known “Favorites of the Week,” I’ve chosen the 16-year-old Senta-Sofia Delliponti, whose song “Scheissegal” is currently making the rounds on rotation.

Once seen as a child star on Star Search, she now has her own record deal with my favorite label, Universal, and is making quite a racket with her voice. Of course, one shouldn’t expect overly profound lyrics (yet), but her songs seem likable and are catchy. A hint of mainstream inevitably accompanies her boy-hating songs, but the target audience is pubescent girls who find Tokio Hotel too gay and Bushido too Bushido. And her sugary punk songs hit that demographic right on the mark.

.

The Disappearance of the Ex-Girlfriend Curse:

I had actually accepted a life-shaping lesson: that my ex-girlfriends hated me. Because I had someone else, because I broke their hearts, because I didn’t appreciate them… There were many good reasons, and I understood them all. Like so many couples, we always promised to remain good friends after the breakup, but then came the mudslinging, and those resolutions quickly faded. Ana and I called this phenomenon the “ex-girlfriend curse.”

For years, this theory proved true. Friendship with an ex? Forget it! Until this week. After Becca and I somehow managed to maintain a strange variation of friendship even after our relationship ended, more and more of the girls I once had something with—who previously would only acknowledge me with a disdainful glance on the street or at parties—started getting in touch.

Thanks to ICQ, SMS, and the power of fate meeting in the open street, it suddenly seems that all the breakup problems and arguments have been forgotten. Normal conversations are possible again—yes, even childish but heartwarming “HDLs” and kisses. I don’t want to jinx it, but apparently the curse has been broken. Why? That question remains unanswered. Now all that’s missing is for Kathi or Geli to get in touch again, but something tells me hell would freeze over first.

.

Hearts, Tomatoes, and Stars:

What could be nicer than sitting comfortably at home on a Friday evening with people you like, getting pleasantly intoxicated on Beck’s Green Lemon, blasting Billy Talent and The Killers at full volume, and hosting Super Smash Bros. Melee tournaments? Exactly: nothing.

If you take these evenings as an example, not much has really changed in the seven years most of us have known each other so well. Sarah still has a sharper tongue than a seasoned madam, Ali can win any video game you put in front of him—even blindfolded—and Kalli remains the disturbed, somewhat odd character he has always been. Outwardly, everyone seems to have changed; inwardly, not so much.

I thought the old days were long gone. The summers at the Zugspitz playground, shooting balls at the old hut, and gaming competitions on various Nintendo consoles. But apparently that’s not true at all. Maybe the ZSC isn’t dead after all. And that’s a beautiful feeling.

.

The Browser of Your Trust:

In the field of online design, there are certain rules that absolutely have to be observed. One of them is that visitors should be free to choose which browser they want to use. After all, there are many good and capable browsers: Opera, Firefox, Safari... and then there is it: Internet Explorer from my favorite company Microsoft. The horror of every web designer.

In all the browsers I tested, this site is displayed perfectly. Except in IE. And hoping that it might only be due to the outdated version 6—no, even the newest Release Candidate of IE7 simply pushes the sidebars downwards. In theory, it could be irrelevant to me that a single browser does not display my site correctly. But not when more than 90 percent of all internet users still use this masterpiece of an .exe file.

I’ve now spent the entire afternoon trying to make TOKYOPUNK IE7-compliant. I failed. There are now two options: either hope that Microsoft shows mercy and revises IE7 once again (which I honestly doubt), or keep trying to teach this thing to display the sidebars properly to the right of the posts. Until then, I apologize that IE users have to see my website so messed up. But I’m not allowed to force you to use, for example, the stylish Opera browser or the very good Firefox.

P.S.: Apparently some visitors think the sidebars at the bottom left are intentional. Well then: all part of the alternative design *g*.

.

Bad Music but Sangria:

On Friday evening there was a beautiful night sky. A wonderful mix of small black clouds and a dark blue starry sky shone above us, and a big round moon cast its light on a small youth center in Irsingen where Bianca and Mandy’s birthday party took place.

After I clearly emerged as the winner in “Super Smash Bros. Melee,” André, Kevin and I first drove to Bad Wörishofen to pick up little Lisa. The whole thing was accompanied by loud Rammstein music, of which I especially liked “Moscow.”

We arrived a bit late, but the cool ones always come last. Many people were already completely drunk. I paid my 3 euros entrance fee and received a stylish stamp from a dark-haired beauty. Straight to the bar. I didn’t want Ana to win the race for biggest party drunk. Unfortunately, two completely different people had already overtaken us (I won’t name names ;).

The music was bad, although I don’t remember it that well anymore. But I can still hear the Backstreet Boys ringing in my ears, so it can’t have been that great. I sat on the couch, holding my stolen bottle of sangria, and watched Cindy—who isn’t that little anymore—dancing *g*. I thought it was a nice evening, and Ana definitely had her fun in the end. Maximum fun.

.

Make Love, Not Warcraft:

I normally have something against embedded YouTube videos, but this one is absolutely insane. I watched the new “South Park” episode three times in a row – simply awesome.

.

Iris’ Prince Charming:

The whole world is searching for the love of their life, that one person it could be, with whom the impossible might become reality. In this lifelong quest, there are people who don’t know at all what they want, and there are people like Irina, who know exactly what they expect from their partner. And don’t we all wish for a relationship like that?

.

Games and Mike:

I was actually waiting for a very specific photo to attach to this post, but Mike and Hiro shot over 40,000 pictures on their Germany tour, so it was unfortunately impossible for them to find my photo with Mike that quickly. Oh well, I’ll just use this great snapshot from Indiezone.

Let’s begin chronologically with Friday, which we honored with a small orgy of gaming and drinking. We smashed each other up in “Super Smash Bros. Melee,” crashed into each other in “Simpsons Road Rage,” and raced against each other in “Sonic Adventure 2 Battle.” The Simpsons game really got on my nerves, but in SSBM I was really good this time – after Ali, of course. Eniz the jerk didn’t manage to show up – I’m still waiting for him.

Saturday started a bit more quietly. After Ali and André disappeared to Melly and Lisa, only John and Kalli were left, playing WoW all afternoon while I sat in front of the TV or played GameCube. At least we finished off the leftover Beck’s and got some food from the Chinese place.

In the evening we headed to Mike Park at the Hirsch with my three winning tickets. André and Ana, who had just returned from her class trip, came along. The last time I had been to the Hirsch was about three years ago. Back then we still hung out with the Lindenberg girls – yeah, those were the days. Drinking every weekend in Anja’s cabin, making out with the now-vanished Nane, camping in the woods with Robert and Sophie. But I digress.

The “support act” Rank warmed up the crowd, and then Mike Park and his cheerful buddy and technician Hiro gave it everything they had. As you can read on his blog, he found the Hirsch crowd a bit too loud, but he played every song he knew and truly convinced everyone. He ended the small, video-accompanied gig with “From Korea,” then sold “Plea for Peace” merchandise, signed CDs, and posed for photos with new and old fans. It was a great evening – Mike Park is warmly welcome back anytime.

By the way, on Mike Park’s own label, Asian Man Records, you can download tons of free and mostly very good tracks from some truly unknown artists. From rock to ballads to reggae, there’s everything the label’s various artists have to offer.

.

Did I Win?:

And how I did. I’m known as the lucky child of the sun. And guess what I picked from the cradle of fate this time: two tickets to the Mike Park concert on Saturday at the Hirsch. Well, once again money saved. Thanks go out to Buchloe Rock City.

.

Mike Park:

Mike Park

.

Nothing to Worry About, Sir:

Well, somehow I just don’t really have much worth writing about at the moment. Right now I’m basically just waiting for South Park. I went to the hairdresser today and had my holy mane shaved off my head. That was pretty much the highlight of the day. Otherwise, I’ve rediscovered my love for The Sims 2 and I’m trying to raise the biggest slut in all of Veronaville, which of course makes me, as a passionate voyeur, very happy.

So you don’t get too bored, you’re allowed to take a little look at my squeaky colorful desktop. Let’s see how long I can stand this color assault:

Update: What a load of crap. MTV is showing some kind of fashion event. Well then I’ll just watch GIGA Games. That’s pretty entertaining too.

.

MTV Is Free:

At least temporarily. So if your TV runs via Astra Digital, you can currently receive all European MTV and VIVA channels free of charge. I can’t tell you whether this is a mistake or an intentional promotion, but you should definitely hurry. It’s kind of funny to see what’s on abroad — exactly the same stuff as here ;).

.

How Universal Saved Music:

Once upon a time in a faraway land, people and animals did terrible things with music: they shared it, uploaded music videos, and posted song lyrics on their websites for everyone to use freely. The poor musicians saw no other option and sought protection and help from the avenger of the bleating masses: Universal.

With thick briefcases and countless soulless lawyers, they marched into battle against file-sharing networks, music forums, and lyrics websites, striking down one opponent after another. But why stop when it was just getting fun? There was still so much injustice in the world. They peeked over a nearby bush and spotted new—and some old—enemies: little teens happily celebrating their idols on platforms like YouTube and MySpace, letting their favorite songs play in the background or uploading music videos without written permission.

Universal and its allies couldn’t believe their eyes. How dare fans and customers simply enjoy their hobby and show which music they liked? How dare they play otherwise un-downloadable music for each other and use music videos as free advertising for Universal? What if unknown good bands became famous because of it? No! This injustice had to end immediately. Let’s sue those platforms!

Even if it brought more publicity to the artists? Of course! After all, they still remembered how MTV had built a billion-dollar empire by broadcasting music videos for free—on Universal’s back. But the fact that their beloved record label would never have become so big if MTV hadn’t aired their music—that never crossed the minds of those greedy bastards.

And how does our little fairy tale end? Universal forbids everyone from even listening to their music beyond two meters—soundproof walls should do the trick. On the internet, only five-second MIDI files may be used for promotional purposes. They’re best friends with Viacom, since MTV switched to the dark side years ago and became a greedy corporation too. iTunes and Musicload no longer exist because nobody quite understood Universal’s pricing ideas of €9.99 per song, and lawsuits are still being fired like cannon shots—against anyone who dares to hum their favorite song in public. Are they even allowed to do all that? Of course they are! After all, Universal invented music… didn’t they?

.

Do You Already Have All Your Presents?:

All good people can look forward to December 8 like little Flocke, because that’s when my favorite childhood company, Nintendo, will rise again and crush the competition: the Wii will be released in Europe!

God, finally sleepless and booze-filled Super Smash Bros. nights again, wild jumping around in The Legend of Zelda, and adventures with fat Mario. What more could a giant baby like me wish for? But until then, I first need a job to afford the 250-euro beast. I hardly spend money on anything else ;)

Now I’m going to make myself some cornflakes.

.

Autumn Mix:

Autumn is at our doorstep, and what could be nicer than crawling into bed while it gets colder outside and listening on your MP3 player iPod to the greatest hits of yesterday and today? Here’s my autumn mix, which will hopefully sweeten the time until Christmas for you:

So, I’m off to make some cornflakes now.

.

The Evil Is Back:

Figures that I, as a pseudo-punk, couldn’t stand that white design for long. So I quickly went back to the cool darkness — “back into the mud,” so to speak. Nice, right?!

My day was pretty relaxed. I chatted with Becca, Ana stopped by for a bit, and then Steffi and I went to V-Markt and the video store. After that we watched Freddy Krueger 3 and that disgusting Hannibal Holocaust — actually it was pretty boring, but still so damn disgusting.

Tomorrow I’m heading to Kaufbeuren to pick up the DVD burner for the Windows PC from Techno Markt — it’s been broken for over a year. About time.

Now I’ll listen to a few songs by Mike Park to see if it’s worth making a pilgrimage to the Hirsch to see him the Saturday after next.

Oh, and my favorite software, iTunes, released a new version yesterday. That’s how I stumbled upon the really good station Idobi Radio, which plays everything from alternative to modern rock. I had it running almost all day and it kept playing awesome songs — am I just too easy to please? ;)

.

Call 9/11:

I associate the first day of school in 2001 with television images of all kinds. For days we all just sat in front of the TV and stared spellbound at the endlessly repeated footage of the World Trade Center, at commercial-free music television, at expressions of mourning from shopping channels, and at the synchronization of channels from the ProSiebenSat.1 and RTL families.

Let us remember the victims and their friends and families of the event that brought the world together, yet at the same time tore it into two parts.

9/11 — we will remember.

.

The Bourbon Tastes Like Coconut:

The sky is glowing bright blue and fresh, a rerun of The O.C. is on ProSieben, and the weekend is coming to an end. I went to bed early yesterday, so I was up all the earlier. Saturday was boring, so let’s focus on the much better Friday.

It was our first unofficial class reunion and almost everyone showed up. It’s the first class I’ve stayed in touch with so much even after school, and I think that’s great. I still party with some of them; with others I chat on ICQ and by text message. We met at the Plärrer in Kaufbeuren and staggered, singing loudly, into the Pic. But we didn’t stay long and most of us headed to the PM.

Before that, though, we ran into André’s sister Ilka and her slightly tipsy friend, who asked us to pick them up from the fair in Kaufering and take them home. We had to make an unforeseen stop in a meadow where we taught Melly how to throw up — she ignored Bumsi’s tip involving a blade of grass.

PM was awesome. The bourbon — which, according to Ilka, also tasted like coconut — and the new Billy Talent CD blasting loudly did their job. I also ran into Verena and the really cute Koksi, which I had never properly noticed before. We drank, talked, and danced (jumped, swayed, wiggled — call it what you want). Great evening.

I don’t even want to think about the sobering Saturday. I need to stop sitting in front of stupid ICQ all day and/or staring at my phone waiting for Rebecca to get in touch. I actually wanted to meet up with her, but maybe it just didn’t and doesn’t work out. The curse of my ex-girlfriends is slowly making itself felt. And that’s a shame. But at least I hope things go smoothly tonight at Bierzelt-Tobi’s and that we’ll play table soccer and drink — that’s exactly what I need right now.

.

Back to California:

SPOILER WARNING! The first promo photos for the fourth season of my favorite series “The O.C.” have been released and unfortunately destroy the last hopes that Marissa might have survived the car crash and that the whole thing was just a promo gag — all publications are without Mischa Barton.

At TheOCshow.com you can already see some of the new cast members. As announced, the fourth season will probably slowly focus on the new generation of Newport Beach, which means that Kaitlin and her new friends will get more space in the series.

On YouTube, fans can already watch the official FOX trailer for season 4, which will start in the U.S. at the beginning of November. When the newest stories will reach us is still unclear, but it will probably take until spring 2007.

.

The Case of Natascha:

Natascha Kampusch has touched the world with her story — the story that has been on every TV and radio station for the past two weeks and about which one always wondered what the face behind it might look like.

She is beautiful — everyone who watched her first interview on ORF2 or RTL yesterday agreed on that. She makes a very strong, intellectual, and composed impression, unimaginable for many when you consider that she was held captive in a basement dungeon for eight whole years.

Like millions of others, this story moved and touched me as well. I wish Natascha all the best on her future path and hope that she will soon be able to live a completely normal life — just as she wishes.

.

PlayStation 3 Only in Spring:

There has always been one rule in the video game scene: If you live in Europe, you’re basically screwed. First Japan, then America, and at some point the old continent — that was and still is the motto.

While the highly anticipated PlayStation 3 will be delivered in Japan and the U.S. as early as November, Europeans will have to be patient for quite some time — until spring 2007.

Sony announced that the excessively long waiting period is due to PAL components, which are currently being produced in insufficient quantities. Unlike the NTSC components for the U.S. and Japan, these are manufactured exclusively for Europe. Luckily for me, I’m planning to get the Nintendo Wii anyway. Its launch date will be announced on September 15, 2006.

.

Blogging Connects:

Almost everyone who runs their own blog writes, sooner or later, a post about the blogosphere. And today is the day I will do the same.

Blogging has nowadays become something natural. Everyone blogs: students, celebrities, the unemployed, children — always under warnings from the press not to reveal too much, to avoid provocative photos, and to keep secrets to themselves. But only a few pay attention to these warning voices.

It’s fun, it connects, it changes. Yes, blogging changes the world. They are not just the “bathroom walls of the internet,” as criticized by the press; they influence ways of thinking and promote the individual freedom of every single person. Of course, many don’t care what new top Anni T. from B. bought on Monday or how good Fred Z.’s beer tasted last night. But that’s exactly what makes it beautiful: that everyone is free to decide what to write, what to read, or what to comment on.

Welcome to the wonderful Web 2.0. A guide for aspiring bloggers can be found at MEX Blog, and a role model should be, for example, internet pioneer John Perry Barlow. Have fun changing the world!

.

The Power of Truth:

“Information is power,” they always say in our beautiful country. Spies, detectives, journalists — entire industries specialize in finding the one thing that truly counts in life: the truth.

Who stole the watch, what was the weapon, who cheated on whom. The truth has endless faces; the lie even more. In that sense, it has probably existed ever since humans were able to communicate and learned that sometimes it is better to keep quiet if information might put them in a worse position.

Everyone has their own skeletons in the closet, and those who break out of this network also tear apart the supposedly protective web of lies of others. Corruption, treachery, envy. Somewhere in the world, the truth is being spoken right now — shouldn’t we join it?

.

We’re Going to Berlin:

Alright, the weekend was already a few days ago, but since I have nothing else to write about, let’s take a look at this Saturday evening in the smallest small-town metropolis in the world.

Movie night with drinking was the motto at André’s place. Ana, Lisa, André, some of his friends, and I watched “Eurotrip” (so I could finally see it), “Date Movie,” which didn’t get any funnier the second time around, and “The Fog,” which contained more wit than the previous film. There was plenty of Beck’s Green Lemon and a few nice girls — so it was quite fun.

.

Kneipentour That Didn’t Deserve the Name:

I was a bit surprised when I opened the door last night and Ben was standing there—I hadn’t seen him in months. So a pub crawl was on the agenda, arranged through various connections. Slowly everyone arrived and we set off to the first bar of the evening: the Balu.

That my best friend Ana had already gotten pretty drunk before the evening had really begun was impossible to ignore, but I tried to tone down her excesses a little and still enjoy the party. Many of my old and newer buddies were there—almost like the old Fritz days.

After midnight, half of us moved on to the Chap, where I ran into my ex Karina’s little brother and his friend. There was drinking, flirting, shouting—basically a fun night. And tonight it continues: André is hosting a video night combined with drinking and a small party. And I’ll finally get to see “Eurotrip.” Olé.

.

Welcome to MUC:

Somewhat hastily, Ana and I drove to Munich yesterday morning, and I even forgot to bring reading material and my beloved iPod. Fortunately, our blonde fellow passengers were interesting enough to keep boredom at bay. The weather in Bavaria’s capital was lovely, though now and then a cloud cast the city into shadow.

We took part in a half-hour consumer survey for Powerrade, rating color and taste, and scored a whole bag of gummy bears. Since Karstadt was celebrating its 125th anniversary, we also won two bottles of sparkling wine, which we later enjoyed in front of the Frauenkirche. For lunch we went to Pizza Hut, then on to GRAVIS, and in the afternoon we spent two hours at Hugendubel browsing books that tackled important questions like “Why do men have nipples?” and “Can molecules exist in two places at once?”

In the evening we bought a completely overpriced and disgusting salad from a large German butcher chain and then went to the Mathäser cinema. Unfortunately there weren’t any decent films, and “Pirates of the Caribbean 2” was just too long for us. So back home, where we got a little drunk and watched my favorite movie, “Lost in Translation.” Munich, we’ll be back!

.

The Power of Indifference:

The more indifferent I am about things, the higher the chances that they work out. I’ve experienced that firsthand these past days and weeks. I was lonely. And whenever I really need people around me, suddenly no one is there. But when I want to quietly work on my website, they’re knocking down my door.

All my life I somehow got by. And now, when I’ve actually started thinking seriously about my future, I mess up my graduation like no one else. When I’m not in the mood for sex, I get offers from everywhere. But when I truly crave physical closeness, no girl wants to hear from me. Whenever my relationship with Becca felt relatively unimportant to me, it worked perfectly. But when I put my whole heart into it, she breaks up with me.

So what do we learn from this? Screw it. That’s when it works—even with the stupid neighbor. And as Liam Lynch so aptly sang: “Whatever!”

.

Is That You, Mommy?:

Thunder Eater and our hero Ankorman face each other on the lonely Chicken-Wing-Chun Mountain. The villain sneers at him: “With Capgras syndrome, someone believes that a close relative or friend has been replaced by a double!” But Ankorman manages to escape.

.

Bounty Hunter Charm:

After “Domino,” I was really into this U.S. bounty hunter world. Just hunting criminals without rules or superiors—how awesome is that? When Ana didn’t show up yesterday, I lay in bed and had to choose between “Dog the Bounty Hunter” on RTL II and a camper documentary on VOX.

Being the adventurous type, I chose Dog and witnessed two hot chases in the name of justice. The fact that the “hardened criminals” were just slightly rebellious teenagers who gave in faster than some viewers would have liked was cleverly concealed by quick cuts and dull country rock music. Only the image of George W. Bush in every other scene slightly dampened my sympathy for this terribly nice family—but as long as they hunt in God’s name, I can live with it.

.

A Call for Silence of Symbols:

The internet is huge and offers plenty of platforms—forums, chats, guestbooks—for perverts and lunatics around the world. Powerless, we must watch as one particular creature from this bit-and-byte hell tries to conquer the digital world.

Emerging in the last millennium, especially among little girls obsessed with “Sailor Moon,” a certain symbol became popular to express a specific kind of joke and outshine the mischievous winking smiley. I admit it: I used it too, and I led many of you to keep it alive in instant messengers around the globe.

But now it has to stop. I’m talking about “^^”. This symbol, preferred by softies, must be pushed back to where it crawled out from: the anime and manga forums. Girls and other devoted fans may keep using it—but everyone else, please: drop the “^^” today. Thank you.

.

Domino:

It rarely happens that I add a new favorite movie to my list, but yesterday Becca and I watched the 1½-hour music video “Domino” starring the sexy Keira Knightley. I absolutely love films that feel like an extended trailer, and this one really delivered—MTV style!

Unfortunately, the film went a bit unnoticed when it was released and didn’t receive the recognition it deserved. Great cast, super-fast story, stunning visuals—Domino Harvey’s semi-biography is simply awesome.

.

Bagel Cravings:

As is well known, I’m a huge fan of “The O.C., California.” And another trend from the show has now caught up with me: bagels! The Jewish Cohen family eats this national dish every day for breakfast, so Becca and I went out yesterday to buy some.

We found them at Norma—Mr. Bagels in plain, sesame, and raisin varieties. And now I’m sitting here stuffing two bagels into myself. One half topped with hearty cream cheese, the other with Géramont and salami. Really delicious! Oh, and this afternoon there’s new O.C. to watch!

.

Wide View:

I removed the curtains from my windows—just like I used to have them before. And suddenly you feel much freer. Now when I sit at my computer and look ahead, I have a great view of the sky, the clouds, or even the stars and the moon. Really inspiring.

Only the window needs cleaning again. And that plant could use some water too. We’ll see.

.

L’amour est mort:

Rebecca and I have ended our almost two-and-a-half-year relationship. And it feels good. We promised each other to remain very good friends, and maybe we’ll even get to know each other better now. What remains is a time full of beautiful experiences.

What follows will hopefully be a friendship with everything that belongs to it: deep conversations, having a good time together, and hot, wet friendship sex ;). As I always tell my buddies: even a breakup is not the end forever. Who knows what the future holds. And as a wise little black boy once said: “Where are the hookers?” ;)

.

In the Bush:

Thunder Eater and our hero Ankorman meet in the deepest Brazilian jungle. The villain yells at him: “Indian timber thieves work together with naked women. When forest rangers catch the men in the woods, the women start screaming. Out of fear of the police, the rangers usually disappear again!” But Ankorman managed to escape.

.

Frog Hunting:

After Ana and I explored Buchloe’s secret paths at night the day before yesterday, we unintentionally went frog hunting yesterday. Somewhere near John’s house we came across two little frogs and, with great fun, caught them and took them home.

I felt like a little boy holding those tiny frogs in my hands. They were really cute, but at home I had to read online that it’s forbidden to keep native frogs, so we released them back into the grass. Goodbye Ernie and Bert. Maybe one day I’ll have real frogs in a terrarium—they’re truly adorable.

.

The Full O.C. Experience:

I’m tired, I didn’t sleep all night, and the weather outside isn’t even that bad. André, Lisa, and I drank, ate, and why all this? Because of “O.C., California.” We watched almost the entire first season for 15 hours straight—from 4 p.m. to 7:30 a.m.

Since we were bored, I simply had to introduce André to the beautiful world of Newport Beach: the intrigues, the emotions, and the humor of O.C.—if you haven’t experienced it, you haven’t lived. At first our young Shaolin resisted a bit, but after Marissa’s death trip in Tijuana, that little jerk Oliver, and Seth’s sex problem with Summer, he gradually forgot those naive thoughts about scripts, sets, and actors. O.C. is real. O.C. lives in our hearts. And I’m drunk and tired, but I still have great spelling, right?!

.

Madeleine:

This evening I am waiting for Madeleine. I brought lilacs; I bring some every week—Madeleine likes that. We’ll take tram thirty-three to eat fries at Eugène’s; Madeleine loves that so much. Madeleine is my Christmas, my America. Even though she’s far too good for me, as her cousin says.

But tonight I’m waiting for Madeleine, and it’s raining on my lilacs like every week, and Madeleine doesn’t arrive. Still, tomorrow I will wait for Madeleine again. I will bring lilacs, we’ll take the tram, go to the cinema, and I will tell her “I love you.” And Madeleine will love that.

.

Vincent Gallo:

Thunder Eater threatens our hero Ankorman with a nourishing lip gloss and shouts: “Singer and actor Vincent Gallo wanted to auction off his sperm for one million US dollars via eBay in the fall of 2005. He preferred blond women directly descended from German Wehrmacht soldiers!” But Ankorman managed to escape.

.

Microsoft Advertises with a Mac:

Microsoft made a small blunder on its website. With “Click. You’re clean,” the software company promotes a campaign against unwanted programs on Windows PCs. The problem: the image showed an Apple PowerBook in use. Microsoft only learned about it from the blogosphere.

The satisfied man was quickly replaced with a mother and her child. But thanks for the tip, Microsoft—we’ve known for a long time that Macs are secure.

.

The Prague Video:

Do you already miss school as much as I do? Take one more look back at one of the best school years of your life: 12th grade FOS. You met new and old friends, celebrated great parties, and went on an unforgettable study trip!

Return once more to Prague and relive three days full of drinking, partying, and hotel destruction! All this and much more can be found on the DVD “Praha 05,” offering almost four hours of deep and uncensored insights into the wild happenings—reserved exclusively for those who were there! Order your copy today for only 5 euros including blank DVD and shipping. The trailer is available online. So what are you waiting for?

.

The Pirates Are Coming:

And this time Usopp wouldn’t even be lying. In a few weeks, the German branch of the international pirate movement is set to launch. Unfortunately, it has little to do with Jack Sparrow or Monkey D. Luffy, but rather with the trend initiated by the Swedish torrent website The Pirate Bay to improve the image of music, film, and game piracy.

Across half of Europe, Russia, and the USA, the “Pirate Party” has already established itself and caused political unrest. In their manifesto, they speak of reclaiming civil rights, smashing the transparent citizen, and easing or abolishing anti-piracy laws.

All in all, certainly an interesting party. Despite early growing pains, it is sure to strike a nerve with many. Good luck—and don’t forget the rum!

.

The Last Cat:

She is the last of three siblings still remaining: Koko. Sweet, small, with peculiar colors. The little diva has turned into an affection-craving cuddle muffin, even though she may soon lose her left eye. There are medications that are supposed to prevent it, but Koko isn’t stupid and notices that something is mixed into her food. The ointment is useless, injections are not an option. With a lot of luck, the illness might go away on its own. Brave little cat.

.

Breathe:

Do you feel this lightness too? It’s wonderful. As of today, TOKYOPUNK shines again in new splendor. Away with the ballast. No unnecessary statistics, no petty category search, and no restrictive layout. Goodbye, long loading times. Now I am free.

At last I can use images wider than 400 pixels without fearing they’ll ruin the overall appearance. Gone are the tiny 150x104 images that always meant a loss of creativity. I can write, embed videos, use graphics whenever, wherever, and however I want. Hello world!

I thank Alvin Woon for the wonderful, though somewhat restrictive, theme “Wonderwall.” You’re welcome to use it, but my version shall be history forever. Because here it is: the Simpla theme by ifelse. And my variation will bear the expressive title “Breathe.”

When I usually get my hands on a new theme, I strip it down to the bone and stuff it with my own ideas. But this time I could change very little; it’s nearly perfect for a new beginning. Just a few small CSS and icon adjustments and a bit of extra dieting, and it was done. Let the fresh breeze carry you away.

.

A Night in the Winter Garden:

Betty’s 18th birthday was already a week ago, but it’s never too late to remember the night in the winter garden. On one side Julian, who kept sprawling and turning so much that he was almost always half lying on top of me; beneath me a certain Patrick, who recited entire novels in his sleep; and to my right Ana, who had already had quite a bit to drink.

The party that preceded this long night was quite alright. The music was mostly okay, the drinks served their purpose, and I didn’t know half of the guests—and didn’t get to know them either. Betty’s parents were very kind and accommodating, and there was delicious meat loaf with potato salad. I’m already looking forward to next year and hope the winter garden will be equipped with beds by then.

.

My New Messenger:

If I’m already sitting at home and staring at the screen for half the day, it’s about time to dedicate an entry to my messenger—the gateway to the outside world, so to speak. My new choice is called iChat AV. Apple’s instant messenger impresses with an extremely pleasant and elegant design; no games, no ads, no frills—just me and the person I’m talking to. That’s how chatting becomes fun.

And what Apple plans to integrate into the newest generation of iChat can be checked out on their website.

.

Aua, That Really Hurts:

“Popstars” is back—the show RTL II quite rightly shoved off onto competitor ProSieben. And already the first half of the premiere is painful. No, this time it’s not just the off-key voices and shattered dreams; like in the last unnecessary seasons, it’s the whole surrounding circus. While “Deutschland sucht den Superstar” on RTL—despite or perhaps because of Dieter Bohlen—has a polished, almost glamorous touch, “Popstars” is the gutter counterpart that will hopefully disappear from this nation’s TV sets as quickly as “Teenstar.”

Detlef “D!” Soost radiates about as much charm as drain cleaner, constantly puts himself in the spotlight, and never lets anyone finish speaking. He’s clearly never heard of cool lines or humor, and maybe this season will finally bring about the heart attack I’ve been predicting—caused by taking everything far too seriously. I love Nina Hagen because she’s simply too outrageous for this world, but if she tells one more person that their voice is at least good enough for the choir, I’ll personally kick her back to whatever quirky planet she came from. Only her support for the sweet seventeen-year-old Melanie from Frankfurt saved her today from total incompetence and from being overruled by her male “colleagues.” I don’t know Dieter Falk, just like I didn’t know Heinz Henn back then. He probably has the most brains in the group—but you wouldn’t know it from this show. New angels for the country? No thanks—and now get lost!

.

Adios, Billy Boy:

I hate big corporations that screw over their customers. I’m not against globalization, but when a globally successful company thinks it can treat people like cash cows and feed them knock-off products and false information, it makes me sick. Of course, I’m talking about Microsoft once again, and I can now proudly say that as of today I am 100% Microsoft-free.

After switching to Apple, deleting the Microsoft Office package and Virtual PC, I have now also parted ways with MSN Messenger—which means you can no longer reach me through it. Even though AOL and its ICQ system aren’t exactly spotless either, the majority of my contacts are there, so I’m not completely free from manipulative corporations yet. But better half free than not at all.

PS: Since I’m not directly connected to the ICQ network, I can neither send nor receive offline messages! So either wait until I’m online, or send me an SMS or email—otherwise your message will vanish into eternal oblivion.

.

Rugrats Grown Up:

For years we’ve watched Chuckie, Tommy and the gang grow up, shared in their adventures as they explored their big and scary world, and stood by their side when they battled the big, bad Angelica. But now we’ll finally see what happens when those little babies become teenagers.

Starting at the end of August, the Viacom channel Nick will air the new series “All Grown Up!,” which takes place ten years after the final Rugrats episode. Let’s just hope Grandpa is still around…

.

A Day Without Meaning:

Tuesday, August 8, 2006—a day you could have shoved just about anywhere else. It had absolutely no purpose whatsoever, for anyone. I spent the day in front of my Mac, jumping around in the Giga forum and watching The Simpsons four times.

Ana was so bored she wanted to find herself a boyfriend just so she could do sports with him. Irina wanted to go inline skating but ended up staying home all day. And my cousin was swallowed by her PC after playing Solitaire for hours.

So thanks, world, for this headache-inducing and utterly pointless Tuesday. Thank God “South Park” is on now…

.

Spanner:

So, my baby has been at a summer camp in Greece since Thursday—for two weeks. Sun, beach, and sea—what more could you want? Add to that animation, karaoke contests, and fashion shows—there’s really a lot going on.

What makes this vacation exciting for me as well is the fact that the organizer, Hoeffmann Reisen, posts daily reports, photos, and even videos of the activities down there on their website. So I can basically keep an eye on what my sweetheart is up to.

Oh, and I hope the people in charge noticed that the guy in the photo above no longer has a head. What exactly is going on at that summer camp…?

.

The Night of the Apple:

In the Apple world, today was exceptional from 5 p.m. onward. Steve Jobs, Apple’s CEO, with his almost worship-worthy keynotes, is always a guiding light in the digital universe. Armed with waffles and Beck’s Green Lemon, I stared at the screen in anticipation.

Late in the afternoon, the major Apple sites switched to live mode, and at exactly 6 p.m.—an hour before Jobs’ big speech—the Apple Stores traditionally went offline. In various Mac fan chats, the buzz was intense; everyone behaved like little kids on Christmas. New Macs, Mac OS X 10.5, iPhone, new iPods—the wishes were huge.

For over an hour, the illustrated live ticker delivered minute-by-minute updates from California. Unfortunately, the developer conference wasn’t quite what fans had hoped for. No new iPod, no iPhone, no new Mac mini. The Mac Pro, the fastest Mac ever, was unveiled—but as the name suggests, it’s not exactly for average consumers.

The new Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard was also introduced, though only a few of its innovations were shown—partly to keep Microsoft from quickly copying them into the soon-to-be-released Vista. Features like Time Machine, which automatically creates backups and reconstructs your system when needed, and Spaces with its virtual desktops were presented.

The big showstopper was missing, however, and this time there was no expected “One more thing…” at the end of the keynote to send everyone into a frenzy. Anyone who wants to experience the keynote can check Apple’s site for the stream. As for me, I’ll keep looking forward to the new Mac OS X—and hope someone’s excited about the new Mac Pro.

.

Apple Takes Off:

For Mac fans, there are two major events each year: Macworld in January and the WWDC in August—which starts tomorrow. Apple is a company that has learned how to surprise. Information is laid out like a scavenger hunt, but rarely does it actually lead to the treasure. For weeks and months, Apple rumor sites and news agencies around the world have been fighting over every tiny piece of information.

It’s certain that Apple will unveil its long-awaited new operating system, Mac OS X 10.5 (Leopard), which at release will be light-years ahead of the sinking competitor Windows Vista. There will probably also be new Macs and the first Intel servers. The rest, I—and the rest of the world—will see tomorrow during Steve Jobs’ traditional keynote. I love my Apple!

.

Welcome Back:

For several months, a certain page informed visitors that www.amypink.com was the new address of my website. Still, many were quite irritated when the transitional page suddenly disappeared and they found themselves staring at an advertising site. Almost no one could bring themselves—whether out of laziness or solidarity—to update their bookmarks.

Because I’m so nice, I’ve now resurrected the old domain www.marceltv.com and hope the returnees will finally let MarcelTV rest and reach my site through www.amypink.com from now on. And this time, I didn’t set up an automatic redirect in advance.

.

Eat My Shorts Again:

Fascinating conversations with her trees…? Well, that’s another topic. After neither the truly awful “Lotta-Lotte” nor “Sex and the City”—without sex and cut down to half an hour—worked out, my new favorite channel (guess why?!) is returning to old habits: “The Simpsons” will once again air in a double episode at 6 p.m. starting Monday. My God, ProSieben, you could have saved yourself a lot of money and trouble.

.

Goodbye, Sarah:

Oh MTV Europe, there was a time when you were cool. You fought against AIDS, against the mainstream, against conformity. You meant a lot to young people. But now you bombard viewers with ringtone ads, become subscription-based, and fire your best employees.

And now the sympathetic and incredibly sweet Sarah Kuttner has to go. I admit I didn’t always watch her show, and sometimes it was a bit strange or dull—but it was one of those shows that just made you feel good knowing it existed. Knowing there were still shows on your side, sharing your thoughts, even daring to criticize their own employer, MTV. And now MTV has canceled her.

Sarah, I wish you all the best on your journey. Don’t let the TAZ drag you down—and please start your own awesome channel.

.

Outrageous:

Starting in 2007, channels like RTL, RTL II, Super RTL, n-tv, RTL Shop, traumpartner.tv, Vox, MTV, Viva, Nick, and the upcoming Comedy Central will only be available via encrypted satellite. HELLO!? Are they crazy?

3.50 euros a month plus a connection fee of around 50 euros plus a new receiver for about 100 euros—just to keep watching the same old commercials and ringtone ads. RTL and Viacom can kiss my ass—if I didn’t know that ProSieben, Sat.1, and Kabel 1 would likely follow suit if Astra Digital’s Dolphin project succeeds.

I think it’s an absolute outrage, and I hope they go bankrupt. But something tells me that someone here in the group doesn’t care at all, right?

.

Pirates of the Caribbean 2:

Leading up to the second installment of the “Pirates of the Caribbean” trilogy, reviews were mixed. Was it better or worse than the first? I already knew beforehand: better!

Although “Dead Man’s Chest” is quite long, you don’t really feel it, because it’s packed with action, suspense, humor, and story. We even stayed until the very end just to find out what happened to the dog.

The varied and imaginative fight scenes, the beautiful Keira Knightley, and the hottest guy in the world, Johnny Depp, make “Pirates of the Caribbean – Dead Man’s Chest” one of my new absolute favorite films. And I’m already looking forward to “At World’s End.”

.

A Little One, All Grown Up:

Yes, today is the day we’ve all been waiting for—because several bets finally expire: Will Lydia stay that small even when she grows up? And as our correspondents from CNN and National Geographic have discovered: Yes, even at 18, Lydia isn’t taller than a park bench.

But that doesn’t matter, because she’s still an incredibly amazing woman who knows what she wants and when she wants it. Together with her (almost) new love, she will roam Germany until she’s extradited to Brazil and spends her later years on a local veranda.

I say: All the best and happy birthday, dear Lydia!

.

Day at the Lake:

Even yesterday, the apocalyptic heat showed no mercy and burned down on the world early in the morning. Becca and I made our way to the Lamerdingen gravel pit lake, which the Türkheim high school newspaper—bearing the most creative title imaginable—rated as good: with ice cream cart, ducks, and fish but without shade.

I didn’t see any ducks or fish, but I did see plenty of elderly breasts and an older gentleman to whom nothing seemed embarrassing anymore.

The cool water couldn’t hold us for long, so we drove home and stuffed ourselves with fatty baked cheese, which worked surprisingly well despite the oppressive heat. In the evening, Becca, Ana, Martin, Marina, her boyfriend Basti, and I went to the Chap, where little Straub immediately started getting on our nerves (“Play something!”). Otherwise it was quite fun, even though I still think 12 marks for a cocktail is very expensive.

.

Life’s Changing:

You were actually supposed to be greeted here with a completely new and modern design, but after a long time of tinkering and coding, once it was finally finished, I realized I still liked the current one better. So you’ll have to look forward to a new look until I get sick of this one. But for now, it just fits perfectly.

So what’s new in this world… Becca and I are back together. After our little excursions into other territories, we’ve found our way back to each other. Tonight we’re going out for Chinese food and maybe to the gravel pit lake beforehand, if the weather gets a bit nicer. Look forward to tomorrow—hopefully there’ll finally be a “Favourite of the Week” again after a long time. It’s about time TOKYOPUNK got a bit of routine back.

.

It’s Time:

Once again, proof that all the planning in the world often doesn’t help at all. We had actually planned to go to the open-air event in Irsingen last night, but as everyone knows, the world came to an end instead. So Ana and I stayed at my place, watched some guessing show on RTL followed by a blooper show, and then listened to the new Muse album half the night.

I’m realizing that it’s time to get over Becca. Even though James Blunt’s “Goodbye My Lover,” which I didn’t even like that much before, now totally reminds me of my current situation (and the fact that Becca looks a lot like Mischa Barton doesn’t make it any easier) — there’s no point in thinking about it any further. She’s not coming back anyway. That’s just how the world—and the weather—works. Now it’s time to rediscover the beautiful sides of life everyone keeps talking about.

.

Attack of the Killer Horseflies:

It was hot today. Really hot. Good thing there are gravel pit lakes. But before we could cool off, I had to wait a full hour for Ana and Irina. When I arrived, they suddenly realized they still needed to shave, buy a prepaid phone card at the gas station, and decide whether to wear a skirt instead of pants—or the other way around. Well, women. In the meantime, I played a bit with the cats and admired the huge flat-screen TV in the living room.

Finally, we headed off to Eniz, who had already been waiting outside for hours. On the way, I almost ran over Ali, who preferred going to the outdoor pool in Türkheim with his girls. Eniz absolutely needed sunflower oil from Edeka, which he uses instead of sunscreen. Can anyone confirm that this actually makes you tan? Or do you just get fried faster?

Eventually we arrived at the Ettringen gravel pit lake and, after spending half an hour looking for a decent spot (only to end up parking right next to the car anyway), we jumped straight into the water. We even swam across the entire lake once, battling nasty algae, organized horsefly attacks, and bird droppings. There was cold ice cream, cute girls, and the smell of sizzling sunflower oil on Eniz’s skin—what more could you want?

.

The Bitch Turns Seventeen:

She’s sweet, hot, and loves devouring unsuspecting men for breakfast: yes, I’m talking about Iri! Around here she became especially famous thanks to the most downloaded photo on this site, in which you could admire her and her two great arguments.

Today she’s actually celebrating her 17th birthday, and I’d like to wish her all the very best! Have a great celebration!

.

Solo:

Rebecca broke up with me. It was predictable, but when it actually happens, it still hits you somehow. Many people will be happy because they finally achieved what they wanted. But overall, it was Rebecca’s move, and I understand her. I wasn’t always the boyfriend I should have been, and I can understand that at 17 she wants to gain more experiences.

I managed to distract myself relatively well yesterday and today; ever since Karina and Tanja, I know how to deal with heartbreak. And yet my thoughts will probably still drift back to her whenever I see “Sturm der Liebe” or Enrique Iglesias somewhere. I wish you all the best on your path—you were a wonderful and almost perfect girlfriend, maybe even too perfect for me. Take care.

.

Chikatetsu Is Online:

The reason I neglected my website a bit last week is my new online magazine, which has gone live in the past few days: CHIKATETSU. It focuses entirely on trends, lifestyle, and culture from Japan. It’s worth taking a look!

.

World Cup 2006 in Munich:

The 2006 World Cup was really awesome. Becca and I went to Munich, bought jerseys of our favorite teams, and rocked the city. You can find the pictures here.

.

What the Hell?:

I actually just wanted to go to the bathroom and quickly check in on “Animal Crossing” on my Nintendo DS. But what was waiting for me after the loading screen? An angry mole named Don Resetti, who first thanked me on behalf of Nintendo for buying the game and then scolded me for turning off my DS last time without saving. Crazy, right?

I’d never experienced anything like that before. The lecture went on for at least five minutes and my battery was close to dying. And as if that wasn’t enough, he sternly warned me that if he had to come back again, he’d get much tougher. Maybe I should do it on purpose...?

.

Leaf Whispering:

If you have something to say but don’t necessarily have your own blog, you should check out listenagain.org. There, you’re invited to write an idea and a short story on a sheet of paper and send it in. You should give it a try!

.

Does He Reset My Dashboard?:

So, I finally sat down and redesigned my Dashboard. Here’s what it looks like now:

When I press the amazing F12 key, these useful—and less useful but even cuter—features magically appear. Starting at the top left, you can see my stylish calendar, next to it the cool clock, then a system monitor, and beside that my Dashboard pet, a turtle I named Bordi, who somehow doesn’t really do anything.

One row below you’ll find the useful weather widget (which obviously isn’t entirely accurate), underneath that the CNN live ticker keeping me up to date, and one level further down a small TV screen where I can watch channels from all over the world. Next to it is perhaps the most important thing: the orange calculator. Indispensable!

Now turn your head all the way to the right and you’ll see the Wikipedia widget, which supplies me with useful information in seconds. Beneath that is a small web radio giving me access to stations worldwide. Web 2.0 is awesome and I love it. With my all-around information base, I’m now prepared for the end of the world. And heaven forbid the internet goes down... ^

.

South Park and Drinking:

André and I met up spontaneously last night, bought a crate of Beck’s Green Lemon and some chips, and then watched 16 (!) episodes of “South Park” in English back to back.

Among other things, we had to witness Paris Hilton doing outrageous things, Mr. Slave taking things even further, Butters accidentally massacring half his audience, the boys taking on the Chinese mafia, Stan being told to sleep with a llama because he didn’t vote, Al Gore trying to drown the boys, Butters turning into a girl, Eric thinking he’s dead, America burying its head in the sand because “Family Guy” aired a Mohammed cartoon, Tom Cruise hiding in the closet, South Park turning gay because job seekers from the future show up, Eric passing fake jewelry, and Chef being impaled and torn apart because he wanted to make “sweet love” to little children.

It was hilarious, even though my right arm hurt all night. No, not because of what you pigs are thinking, but because I had to hold one Beck’s after another for five hours. They took our jobs!

.

Power and Rebel:

Becca and I were out and about in Munich yesterday. It was a sunny, peaceful, and beautiful day. We took the subway to Becca’s new school and had a good look around—luckily neither the students nor the teachers seemed to care.

Then we went back into the city, ate at Pizza Hut, checked out the latest MacBooks at the Gravis Store, and I bought some kind of raspberry iced tea shake at Starbucks. It was too sweet for me; I actually wanted lemon and mango, but they were out. Then we headed to Saturn, looked at notebooks again (because my sweetheart might buy one), and browsed for new DVDs and CDs.

When we came back outside, the world was ending. Within minutes the sky over Munich turned from dark blue to dark gray. An eerie wind swept through the shopping street and you could feel the first drops of rain. So we went into Hugendubel, where I bought a new book: “Power and Rebel” by the Norwegian newcomer Matias Faldbakken.

The story sounds relatively harmless at first: two very different men—one a conformist, power-obsessed business consultant, the other Rebel, a cynical jerk who hates everything and himself—living in a crumbling society marked by an “omnipresent struggle for youth, symbols, logos, bodies, sex” and “ideas in the age of multinational corporations.” Together they search for “individual freedom in the 21st century,” and soon there is a furious showdown in which two attractive teenage girls and passages from “Mein Kampf” play a crucial role.

I’m not that far yet. But one thing is clear: if you want to buy the book—which was released here in punk-style editions (black and white), but in the original with a cover in old German script reminiscent of the Third Reich—you should first grab it, read the first three pages, and if you’re not completely disgusted, then you’ll probably read the rest.

We made it home relatively dry, although Munich’s main station gets pretty creepy when everything outside turns black and the thunder and lightning suddenly remind you of a bombing raid.

.

Super Mario:

We are proud to welcome a living legend as our Favorite of the Week: the wonderful Super Mario! His biography reads like a Hollywood movie. Created in 1981 by video game legend Shigeru Miyamoto, the chubby Italian who switched careers from carpenter to plumber—together with his younger brother Luigi and the green dinosaur Yoshi—managed to rescue princesses and entire kingdoms and conquer the world.

But he has no time to rest on his laurels, because this week he proves himself once again in his latest game, “New Super Mario Bros.,” released exclusively for the Nintendo DS and celebrated as Mario’s revival. May he free the Mushroom Kingdom once again!

.

The Official AmyPink “My Generation” Charts:

So, I sat down and created my very own “TOKYOPUNK My Generation Charts” with the ten songs that have burned themselves most deeply into my brain over the course of my life. It’s obvious that everyone has a unique top 10 of their lifetime, and I hereby invite you to post your own top 10 in the comments if you feel like it. Anyway, here are mine:

01: t.A.T.u. “All The Things She Said”
02: Phantom Planet “California”
03: Avril Lavigne “I’m With You”
04: Silbermond “Through the Night”
05: Sum 41 “Fat Lip”
06: the brilliant green “Rainy Days Never Stay”
07: Johnny Cash “Hurt”
08: Imogen Heap “Hide And Seek”
09: Green Day “Time Of Your Life”
10: Evanescence “My Immortal”

As the saying goes: The best rock songs are always the ballads. So now it’s your turn!

.

Nothing New – New Style:

Once again the style stamp has come down on my blog. The last design was a bit low in contrast, so this almost-new version shines with a darker background and a new front picture, where this time I gave free rein to my foot fetishism ^^.

At the bottom of the blog you can see a new bar that is supposed to show the latest photos and videos. Technically I haven’t quite finished it yet, but I didn’t want to keep the blog closed forever just because this feature isn’t working properly.

Otherwise, not much has changed and basically everything stays the same. Tadaa.

.

Where Is the Noise Coming From?:

Through felixbeck.de I discovered Last.fm, a personalized web radio service. Sounds cool—and it is. You download the small player, enter a band or artist to start, and it begins playing a song. It remembers your musical taste with every session.

If you don’t like a song, you simply skip it. If you especially like one, you can mark it as a favorite. Gradually, Last.fm builds a music profile of you and spoils you with your favorite tracks.

It’s anonymous, it’s free, and there’s something for every musical taste. So what are you waiting for?

.

The Blue Samurai Are Eliminated:

Unfortunately, the Japanese team did not reach the round of 16 and has been eliminated from the 2006 FIFA World Cup in Germany. Although they started strong against Brazil, it was ultimately a fight against windmills, as they were playing not only against time but also against the parallel match between Croatia and Australia.

It’s a shame it turned out this way; they were certainly capable of more. Well, maybe next time. Really too bad.

So now I guess I’ll switch to Becca’s side and cheer for South Korea with her. Sayonara, you blue samurai.

.

I Hate Microsoft:

I don’t know why, but today I feel such a deep, heartfelt hatred toward Microsoft and its Windows. Okay, actually I do know why: because everyone around me is an ignorant Windows zombie who knows nothing else and has been infected for years by this third-rate system.

They don’t care that Microsoft is a greedy, incompetent, manipulative corporation and that Windows has a direct line into the brains of its slaves. “Where do you want to go today?” Yeah, right.

Windows just got lucky back then: Apple’s Macintosh was financially weakened, Steve Jobs didn’t license it out, and Linux was still mainly a server system. Those are the only reasons Windows now runs on 9 out of 10 computers—not because it’s good, innovative, or secure.

Microsoft ignores international standards, fails to keep its system clean, and instead of closing the security holes it opened even further with its new Internet Explorer, it blames the user and blocks programs by default “for safety reasons.”

I respect the programmers who work day and night on this system and pour their souls into the project. But the path Microsoft chose is wrong and not honorable.

Anyway, why am I even getting so worked up? Preaching doesn’t help. Anyone who wants to stay blind can’t be helped. Have fun with a system that doesn’t inspire your creativity but pushes it in a very specific direction: Microsoft’s.

It’s a nice feeling to be on the right side.

.

Welcome to Starcity:

I’ve been sitting up half the night and all morning playing this game, and if Amanda Bynes hadn’t been just a bit faster, “Animal Crossing: Wild World” would have been my favorite of the week.

You travel by taxi to a new life, it’s pouring rain, and the quirky driver interrogates you about yourself. Once you arrive, you find yourself in a small town (I named mine “Starcity,” very original, I know ^^) inhabited by strange talking animals.

You meet Tom Nook, who owns the little shop and sells you the rundown house you’re standing in front of. Since you’re completely broke—“Bells” are the in-game currency—you have to pay off your loan. So you start working part-time at Tom Nook’s shop, though he fires you pretty quickly.

The goal is to build a huge, beautifully furnished house. But as always, the journey is the reward. The game adapts to real time and date, so events change throughout the year. With a Wi-Fi connection, you can visit friends’ towns or invite them to yours. You can even send a message in a bottle that might wash up on someone else’s beach.

New neighbors move in, you collect rare fish, fossils, and insects for the museum, find useful items in the lost-and-found, run errands, complete small quests, and search for golden items. It’s a packed and innovative game from Nintendo—and best of all, I can even take it to the bathroom.

.

Nintendo Rulez:

I did it: today in Kaufbeuren. Even though I kept telling Mille I definitely wouldn’t buy a Nintendo DS Lite, I suddenly changed my mind. It was lying there all alone, in black. I just had to have it.

Along with it, I bought the ultimate trend game. No, not “Nintendogs,” but “Animal Crossing: Wild World.” Let’s see if it’s really as awesome as GIGA, the ads, and so many people online claim it is.

Becca and I also searched online for affordable holiday apartments, since we want to go to Bibione together all alone this year—it’s going to be fun.

And while the world outside is going under, I’m going to take care of my new treasure.

.

Microsoft and Sony Copy the Wii Controller:

It has long been known that Sony copied the controller of Nintendo’s new Wii console for its upcoming PlayStation 3, and the Japanese entertainment giant received plenty of ridicule for it. Now Peter Moore, Corporate Vice President of Microsoft, has also announced that there will be a new standard controller for the Xbox 360 that will technically be based on Nintendo’s version. Apparently, neither company has heard of original ideas.

.

Only One Will Survive:

Recently I’ve been thinking a lot about the three major operating systems: Windows, Linux, and Mac OS X. A lot depends on them—perhaps more than we can imagine today. As experts have said: only one of them will survive. But which one? And which one would we want to work and live with in the distant future?

What will tomorrow’s user look like? A brainless inmate of the Windows world, an overly loyal member of the white Apple sect, or a slightly odd-smelling hippie from the supposedly free Linux world? The idea that one company—one corporation—might one day dominate the computer and internet world is frightening. And it makes no difference whether that company is Microsoft, Apple, or some future corporation.

Linux is truly free—free from corruption, free from power- and money-hungry individuals. No one stands above Linux; it consists of many parts that together form a whole. And that is its strength.

Science fiction may be a fitting, if slightly dubious, term for my next thought. As Albert Einstein once said: I know not with what weapons World War III will be fought, but World War IV will be fought with sticks and stones. And I already know this: when the world has become desert, water is unaffordable, and civilization exists only in fragments, the world will communicate through Linux.

Thank you for your attention. And remember my words.

.

Amanda Bynes:

My favorite of the week may not be the most successful actress of our time, but in my opinion she is the most likable and at the same time the sweetest: Amanda Bynes. In films like What a Girl Wants and She’s the Man, as well as in her sitcom What I Like About You, she convinces with wit, charm, and that certain something. Truly sweet—and whenever you get the chance to see her, take it.

.

Windows Vista Is Dumb:

No, really. I wanted to give it a chance. After almost 15 years with Windows, I downloaded the Beta 2 and upgraded my mother’s XP installation. Now I’m back on my Mac, feeling a mix of frustration and satisfaction. Vista is little more than a polished and more complicated XP. Where are the revolutions Microsoft promised?

The structure is the same as XP—from the loading screen to the login screen to the desktop. The taskbar is black. Wow. Programs constantly ask whether I’m sure I want to open them. Drivers for sound and network cards weren’t recognized. Even as a beta, it’s disappointing.

I’m not trying to judge too harshly—but I’m glad to return to Mac OS X. Have fun, Windows devotees.

.

Japan Loses to Australia:

The Blue Samurai suffered a surprising defeat against underdog Australia. Even though they were leading 1–0 after the 80th minute, the Aussies scored three goals within ten minutes. Japanese fans are calling for coach Zico’s resignation, and others blame the referee.

Good thing I waited before writing this entry—otherwise it would have sounded much angrier.

.

Invader Zim:

It sometimes takes me a while to appreciate a series. That was the case with The O.C., and now it’s the same with Invader Zim. In this cartoon, an alien tries to destroy the world while pretending to be a normal student on Earth.

What makes it great is the futuristic, depressive, apocalyptic setting—completely different from typical colorful Nickelodeon shows. It’s not very successful, but that just makes it a cool underdog.

.

Lostprophets:

The British nu-metal and hard rock band Lostprophets, fronted by Ian Watkins, deliver strong rock music from various directions. I especially recommend their new single “Rooftops.” More information can be found on their official website.

.

Nick Comedy Is Ending:

I’m a huge fan of sitcoms like The King of Queens, Friends, and Mad About You. Nick Comedy aired some great ones, but now it’s ending its program. The children’s channel Nick will broadcast around the clock instead.

At the end of the year, VIVA Plus will be replaced by Comedy Central. Hopefully the “new” season of Mad About You will return. That would be great.

.

Pink Is the New Green:

Welcome back. As you can see, Tokyo Punk’s design has changed—from green to hot pink. Why? Because pink stands for rebellion, punk, and a dirty hot lifestyle. Welcome to the new dimension.

.

Maxeen in Buchloe:

On Friday, the Los Angeles newcomer punk band Maxeen will play at the youth center in Buchloe. They’ve already received good reviews in Germany. Admission starts at 8:30 p.m., showtime is at 9:00 p.m.

Even though I probably won’t make it, don’t miss this awesome band. Let’s rock.

.

Wii Are the Revolution:

I can’t wait for the launch of Nintendo’s new super-console, the Wii. Love or hate the name, it fits the feeling this system wants to convey. Jumping around the room with the controller like it’s a sword—that’s going to be fun. Check out the great trailer for the upcoming Rayman.

.

It’s-a Me, Koko:

Becca and her family have three adorable kittens, and our favorite is Koko. She was the first to eat on her own and use the litter box. Koko will be our pet when we move into our own apartment one day.

.

Ill on a Sunny Monday Morning:

It’s a beautiful day, and I’m sick. I spent the weekend feeling miserable and stayed home watching the Wii trailer. Visiting the doctor today was at least an excuse to walk outside in the sunshine.

.

Imogen Heap:

WARNING: SPOILER! One of the saddest TV moments ever was the death of Marissa Cooper on The O.C.. In the finale, Imogen Heap performed a cover of “Hallelujah” by Jeff Buckley. It was monumental. For more information, visit their official website.

.

California, Here We Come:

The whole world seems to push me toward California—The O.C., the E3 in Los Angeles, the Red Hot Chili Peppers, Hollywood parties. Okay, I surrender! Who has a ticket for me?

.

Super Smash Bros. Brawl:

My favorite multiplayer game is back! Mario, Zelda, and friends return in Super Smash Bros. Brawl for the Nintendo Wii. It’s going to be spectacular.

.

AmyPink Starts MBeu:

This week TOKYOPUNK launched the first European portal about actress and The O.C. star Mischa Barton: MBeu. Visitor numbers are promising, and it’s a great opportunity to work intensively with online publishing.

.

Back to California:

ProSieben confirmed that season three of The O.C. will air in Germany starting June 3. Rumors about major changes and possibly losing a main character make the finale one of the saddest ever.

.

Today the E3 Begins:

The world’s biggest video game expo, E3, opens its doors in Los Angeles. Highly anticipated are the PlayStation 3 and the Nintendo Wii presentations. I’m especially excited about the Wii.

.

So a Presentation Can Be Fun:

I spent all Saturday finishing a social studies presentation about China censoring the internet. Instead of going to parties, I researched Falun Gong, Yahoo!, and Shi Tao—and later rewarded myself with a World of Warcraft run.

.

I’m So Hungry:

School was good, I went to the barber, the gym, and met my girlfriend. We’re planning a romantic evening with good food and Asti. Right now, I’m starving—time for tuna pizza.

.

BoA:

Our current favorite of the week is Korean pop singer BoA (Kwon Boa), born November 5, 1986. Popular across Asia, she delivers strong K- and J-pop hits like “Duvet,” “Nobody but You,” and “Next Step.”

.

Revolution’s New Name Is Wii:

Nintendo’s new console, formerly known as Revolution, is now called Wii. It stands for “We,” symbolizing that gamers and non-gamers can play together. I’m excited!

.

Nintendo Games Officially Free:

Nintendo announced that classic games for NES, SNES, and N64 can be downloaded for free once the Revolution launches (between October 2006 and March 2007). Earlier titles from other publishers will cost a few dollars. With every bit of news, I want the Revolution even more!

.

Popetown on MTV Germany:

Since MTV announced it would broadcast the cartoon “Popetown,” originally produced by the BBC but never aired, Germany has been divided. The episodes revolve around the life of a mischievous little pope and greedy cardinals. The German party CDU even reported the channel to the police. Major TV stations such as RTL and ProSieben have reported nationwide on the debate.

The Church wants MTV to remove “Popetown” from its upcoming program, claiming the cartoon violates Christian beliefs. MTV has taken a step back and now plans to show only one episode as part of a live discussion in Berlin. Guests will include spokespersons of church organizations as well as personalities from the media, culture scene, and viewers. The event is scheduled for May 3, 2006, at 9:30 PM CET.

In my opinion, MTV should be free to broadcast this show, and I don’t believe it violates Christian belief. We will see how funny it really is. But one thing is certain: this nationwide debate is the biggest promotional boost MTV Germany could have wished for.

.

Summer’s Back:

Oh, it’s wonderful outside — the long winter finally seems to be over. Nice girls in tight tops are out shopping, the sky is a deep dark blue, and the sun shines all day long. But I hope this temperature isn’t the maximum yet.

Summer, here are my wishes: a heatwave like in 2003, playing soccer shirtless like in the best summer ever — 1999 — and hot summer rain! Not too many wishes, right? So come on!

.

Shiina Ringo:

Shiina Ringo was born on November 25, 1978, in Saitama Prefecture and creates a truly wild version of Japanese pop music mixed with a typical American style. She’s our favorite of the week because in her video for “Tsumi to Batsu” she wears witch-like hair and looks incredibly sexy.

If you want to listen to her music, start with “Kōfukuron,” “Koko de Kiss Shite,” and “Tsumi to Batsu.”

.

Zapping Impossible:

Electronics giant Philips has applied for patent number 20060070095 for a new television technology that would prevent viewers from switching channels during commercial breaks. Broadcasters would send a signal activating this mode, making it impossible to change the channel.

What the hell…? Will the next invention prevent viewers from turning off their TV sets altogether?

.

Boycott Yahoo and Microsoft:

Reporters Without Borders obtained a copy of the verdict in the case of Jiang Lijun, who was sentenced to four years in prison for his online pro-democracy articles. The documents show that Yahoo! helped Chinese police identify him. This is the third case proving the involvement of the American internet company.

I have decided to boycott Yahoo!. The fact that Microsoft censored Chinese blogs using the words “freedom” and “democracy,” and provides software that enables internet censorship in China, only increases my aversion to this alliance. I can’t afford to boycott Google as well, but I will avoid Microsoft and Yahoo! products and services in the future — and I hope you will do the same.

.

Do You Speak English?:

Yeah! I’ve done it: the new design is online! You might wonder why I’m writing in English. In earlier versions, I also tried to become more international by writing in the world’s number one internet language, so more people could understand my thoughts and messages.

Please be kind — I don’t speak English perfectly, but I hope you can understand what I’m writing. So welcome to the new amypink. It was hard work figuring out all the functions. A big thank you to Alvin Woon, the creator of this wonderful WordPress theme.

Have fun and don’t forget to leave a comment. Old posts will remain in German — I’m too lazy to translate them — but everything else will soon be available in English.

.

Links:

This page is a collection of my favorite links, grouped into different themes:

I Love Blogparty — A selection of inspiring blogs and creative personalities.

I Love Underwear Vending Machines — Japanese culture, lifestyle, music, and art.

I Love French Kisses — Photography, art, alternative culture, and provocative aesthetics.

I Love Rebellion — Fashion, activism, art, and independent voices.

I Love Noise — Music, radio, and sound from indie to pop.

I Love iLife — Apple, design, digital lifestyle, and creative inspiration.

.

Mysterious Places:

When I signed up for Arathi Basin in World of Warcraft today, I first went questing on Kalimdor, because from experience I knew it could take a while for the battleground to open.

After rescuing a fair maiden from a fortress with my Hinode and defeating her brother who had turned to evil, I got a little bored and began to explore. So I wandered through some uncharted areas. For a while I simply swam along the western coast heading south, actually just wanting to see whether you could reach Silithus by following the shore.

After some time, however, I was surprised to see a few flags and a windmill. Carefully I swam to the beach, not knowing whether it was an Alliance camp or perhaps even the Horde. But when I arrived, I realized that there was not a single soul there—only a few birds circling in the beautiful blue sky and small, nicely painted boats drifting calmly along the shore.

I continued on and discovered a cave that looked like a troll’s face. Bravely I entered it, only to find in its long corridors that nothing alive dwelled there—no monsters, nothing. Maybe I was even the very first to ever see this secret place. Who knows what might one day be there.

.

Columnist Wanted:

It’s that time again: TOKYOPUNK is looking for a new columnist! You can find more information here. I’m looking forward to your applications!

.

Fedde Fedde Parddy:

Today was a strange day, so I’ll just ramble about yesterday instead. Becca and I made gypsy-style schnitzel with tomato spaetzle for lunch—really delicious.

Later I went shopping in Kaufbeuren with Mille and bought some new clothes, including my very first pair of Chucks.

In the evening I went to the P.M. with Mille and Ana—totally awesome. Vodka-Bull in a huge mug for only five euros. I relearned the freestyle dance with Knuffi and even ran into Enzo and Gino. And a lot of my ex-girlfriends were there as well.

.

Orange Range:

My current favorites are a J-Rock band from Okinawa: Orange Range, who have been signed with Sony since 2003. The group—Naoto, Ryo, Yamato, Yoh, and Hiroki—creates relaxed J-Rock mixed with pop and hip hop. A successful blend that immediately sticks in your head.

I recommend the song “Hana” from the film Ima, Ai ni Yukimas and the funny track “Onegai! Señorita,” whose video is amazing. More information can be found on their official website.

.

I Love My Mac:

On www.ilovemymac.ch you’ll find a somehow creepy but content-wise great song that explains—in a not entirely flawless musical way—why people like me love our Mac so much: I love my Mac! Definitely give it a listen.

And if you search a little, you’ll even find the song in English, Swedish, and soon in Japanese.

.

I Did Art:

I was very creative and made this phenomenally huge photo-glass-something-collage-gallery.

The thing measures about 1 meter by 70 centimeters and is really gigantic. I quickly took a photo before it falls down again.

And I made more art: basically just a picture frame I bought in Munich and stuffed something from a magazine into—but I think it looks really good. Simply art!

Now go make some art yourselves and send it to me! Art rulez world!

.

Apple Is Awesome – The Mighty Mouse Is Crap:

You know I’m a huge Apple fan and I love my Mac, but now I have to publicly complain about one of their products: the Mighty Mouse—Apple’s first two-button mouse.

I really tried to be patient with it. The first one didn’t work, so I exchanged it, but the replacement had exactly the same problems. With some practice it’s manageable, but for nearly 60 euros I expect something different.

It constantly confuses whether I’m left- or right-clicking, because to right-click you have to keep your index finger on the left side; otherwise the sensors freak out. The scroll ball has to be cleaned five times a week, which is hard work since you can’t remove it.

It’s really beautiful, but you can honestly forget about this thing. And the worst part: Apple doesn’t even admit the flaw. “Cleaning? Just turn it upside down, shake it, and wipe the scroll ball with a damp cloth—done!” Yeah right. Nothing works.

Microsoft may make crappy software (except on the Mac) and ugly hardware, but at least it works. So Apple: looks aren’t everything!

.

Too Many World of Warcraft Players:

Six million people worldwide are playing the online role-playing game "World of Warcraft" – too many, according to the game developer Blizzard. Delivery of the game to retailers has been halted in order not to overload the currently available servers. A new European data center is now supposed to help relieve the network and make it possible to resume sales of the game.

.

I Am Bart Simpson:

On Sandra’s blog I found a link to a Simpsons personality test that tells you which member of the Simpsons crew you are. I am (of course ^^) Bart:

You Are Bart Simpson

Very misunderstood, most people just dismiss you as “trouble.” Little do they know that you're wise and well accomplished beyond your years.

You will be remembered for: starring in your own TV show and saving the town from a comet.

Your life philosophy: “I don't know why I did it, I don't know why I enjoyed it, and I don't know why I'll do it again!”

You can find the test online.

.

Bad Mood:

Today was the low point of this gloomy week and the weeks of bad atmosphere at school. While Meggi had been sparkling with wit and charm last year and the year before, her tolerance level noticeably dropped after the Prague trip. The pressure from school is clearly getting to her. Where she used to delight everyone with her cheerful personality, now every tiny noise is answered with a constant “Psssst,” which only makes the mood worse.

André plays the savior of justice and nips any good mood not initiated by him in the bud (not meant as harshly as it sounds), yet laughs loudly when he finds something funny, without caring if others are trying to follow the lesson. And there are plenty of other examples of unfairness.

I know I don’t take school as seriously as I probably should, and it’s nowhere near as important to me as it is for others (I’m against the system, don’t want to fit into a pattern, hate pre-determined paths… you know my rant ^^), but I haven’t found a solution to this problem and probably won’t in the remaining weeks of school.

This irritated end-of-term atmosphere is really getting on my nerves. At the beginning of the year everyone was full of life and I truly thought I’d feel very comfortable, especially after Prague. But now everyone is exhausted and at the end of their nerves. Understandable, but still—there’s aggression and resentment in the air everywhere. Even thick air would be a blessing compared to this. And now the stupid weather is in a bad mood too. It’s really starting to piss me off!

.

Boot Camp:

Today’s release of the beta version of “Boot Camp” officially offers what clever hackers had already attempted and achieved months earlier: running Windows XP as a standalone operating system on a Mac. A beta version of the program, which will ship with the new Mac OS X version “Leopard,” has now been released.

This is of course a major step for Apple products, because many customers who previously (for whatever reason ^^) depended on Windows XP will likely be drawn to the comfort and design of Macs and prefer running their operating system on a Mac. At the same time, customers are tempted to try Mac OS X and will most likely realize that it is the better alternative.

The software is available for free download. All you need is an Intel-based Mac and a Windows XP CD with Service Pack 2. And as Apple kindly notes: “Unfortunately, Windows XP and even the upcoming Vista are still stuck in the ’80s and require the outdated BIOS. But don’t worry, Boot Camp can handle both centuries.” In that spirit: Have fun discovering Mac OS X!

.

Three Episodes for Luck:

I was never a big fan of hospital series. Only “Scrubs” managed to win my heart, but I never quite understood fans who had to watch every episode of ER. For three weeks now I’ve been giving a new show a chance, and as everyone knows, the third episode is the most important: you know all the characters, their stories and importance, you’ve seen two hopefully good episodes and you’re eager for more. If the third episode doesn’t meet expectations, you ban the series forever.

This time the candidate was “Grey’s Anatomy,” the new US hit series from ABC, now airing here on ProSieben. And I have to say: I like it. The characters are good, the storylines too. No hospital series will ever surpass the humor of Scrubs, but it works here as well. And there are plenty of emotions, especially when that O.C.-style beautiful music plays in the background and Grey indulges in heartfelt self-reflection.

Good series. ProSieben got lucky after the flops “Las Vegas” and “Lotta in Love” and finally brought something worthwhile to the screen. And next up, please new episodes of The O.C. Thank you.

.

Warcraft Down:

Well… here I am. I actually wanted to do some nice questing in WoW and then the server said goodbye in the countdown and kicked us out. And now I don’t know what to do. Well, let’s see what the internet has to offer.

.

Just Say It’s Getting Warm:

Yo damn, today it’s really warm and humid, even though rain clouds are already hanging in the sky again. I’ve got such a headache today, like I spent all of last night drinking… oh well.

I guess I slowly have to realize that GIGA won’t be broadcasting anymore starting Monday. And how do you best get rid of sadness? With shopping! So Becca, Mille, his girlfriend Annette and I went off to Munich yesterday and spent a lot of money.

It doesn’t look like much, but it was damn expensive: “The Sims 2 – University” for my Mac, two CDs by the lovely Ai Otsuka, two stylish picture frames, two magazines and some other random stuff. We ate at Pizza Hut; it was quite fun.

The magazine with the weird cartoon creature on the cover cost 20 euros (but it comes with a CD-ROM…), and it’s really useful because it explains how to create cool cartoon characters in Illustrator—not ordinary comic figures, but really well-designed ones. I’d love to create my own mascot for Tokyo Punk. Let’s see how that works out.

Great, now it’s raining too. Well, nothing you can do. Have a nice rest of the weekend, you guys!

Oh, and PS: Happy belated 30th birthday to Apple! Yesterday I just didn’t get around to writing an entry. Good luck in the future, Steve.

.

Goodbye Giga Green:

Today is the day: Giga will close its doors and the coolest show on this planet will come to an end! The longest internet party in the world is unfortunately over… Farewell Giga Green, I will miss you! We followed the G!

.

Lena Is Top Model:

Heidi Klum has found her German top model: Lena Gercke!

The likable and beautiful Lena was also my favorite and I wish her lots of success in the modeling industry!

.

Sleeping Players:

According to Perrin Kaplan (Nintendo’s “VP of Marketing and Corporate Affairs”), the Revolution will particularly appeal to “sleeping players” who have lost interest in video games due to nearly always identical games and who are supposed to be “reawakened” by the Nintendo Revolution.

For years I’ve been looking for an explanation as to why I hardly play any video games anymore (the last game I truly completed with pleasure was The Legend of Zelda: Majora’s Mask on the N64), and thanks to Mr. Kaplan’s words I’ve finally figured it out: it’s not my fault that I’m no longer an active gamer, but the games themselves, none of which have managed to captivate me lately! Now I’m even more excited about the Nintendo Revolution and can only hope that Nintendo keeps its promise in this regard!

.

Lotta in Crisis:

“Lotta in Love,” ProSieben’s counterpart to “Verliebt in Berlin,” has only been on air for two days and has already sparked an unusually large wave of boycotts. After the huge advertising campaign, ProSieben probably had hoped for a different start. Thousands are already protesting for the show to be canceled, as it replaced an episode of “The Simpsons.” Even the show’s own forum will probably soon be closed, since no Lotta fan dares to enter anymore—it’s being completely flooded by people who hate the series.

Well, poor Janine Reinhardt. I really do feel sorry for her. But that’s television today: democratic right up to cancellation!

.

The Last Few Days at a Glance:

Friday:
On the first day of the freshly begun weekend, we were all at Ana’s long-awaited birthday party at the Americano in Türkheim. Although we left after two hours because of a bit of boredom, I was still quite tipsy. I realized that I haven’t done anything with most of them in quite a while. With some of them, I understand why though… Mille’s new girlfriend is the totally nice Annette. Hopefully she’ll come to Munich with us on Saturday—I think she’s really funny, and Becca seemed to get along really well with her too.

Saturday and Sunday:
Saturday was kind of a strange day, don’t know why. I stayed over at Becca’s, and then things were already better ;). Sunday was just a typical lazy Sunday—I sat in front of the TV or the Mac and taught Becca how to fish and gather resources in World of Warcraft.

Monday:
The first school day of the week was quite amusing. In English we made posters, in accounting my favorite words Apple and iPod came up, and I was able to prove to Katha that I can easily unhook a bra with one hand ;).

.

State of Emergency in Buchloe:

After a 33-year-old Turkish woman was stabbed to death by her husband about a week ago in Buchloe, a full-blown family feud has been raging in my hometown since yesterday. In order not to alarm the public, the local press is also not reporting on the incidents. We can only hope that the conflicts will end peacefully.

.

Enough Is Enough for the SPD:

First the SPD loses its Gerd, then CDU’s Merkel becomes Chancellor, and now animal rights activists are protesting against the red-garter cow featured in their advertising. Now the SPD has finally had enough and is calling in help from the guardians of space and the conquerors of Lord Z and Ivan Ooze: the Power Rangers SPD are here!

We’ll see whether, after their huge successes, they might fail at this task…

.

Mega Drive Games on the Nintendo Revolution:

As Nintendo Online reports, Nintendo will also offer Sega Mega Drive games for download on its upcoming console, the Revolution. This would mean that players could soon load classics like "Sonic the Hedgehog" or "Shining Force" onto their new favorite console.

It has long been known that Nintendo will provide games from its former consoles such as the Super Nintendo, Nintendo 64, and NES via an online portal. Whether this service will be free or paid is not yet known.

.

I Am Error:

It is the story of a man of few words who lives there in the middle of Hyrule in his huge house. Four large windows and a table are all he needs to live. And even when the prophesied hero Link, savior of Hyrule and protector of Princess Zelda, enters his home, he knows the right words to accompany his guest on his arduous journey: “I am Error.”

That says it all.

.

Happy Birthday, Ana:

Our former MARCELTV.COM columnist turns exactly 18 today, and so we warmly welcome her to the club of the old folks (just kidding!). Without getting too emotional, I think everyone who knows Ana is aware of what a wonderful person she is. I have never experienced her as arrogant, bitchy, or mean, but always open and receptive to her surroundings and to her friends’ problems.

You can have a lot of fun with her, but also have truly profound conversations. Please stay the way you are at heart and don’t pick up too much from your bitchy sister (*g*).

With that in mind: All the best on your 18th birthday!!

.

How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days:

I’ll spare you the words about one of the crappiest school days ever. To forget the stress, I went with Becca, her sister, and her sister’s boyfriend to a typically American romantic comedy: "How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days" with Matthew McConaughey and Sarah Jessica Parker. Even though I’m not a huge fan of the genre, I’ve somehow seen almost all of these films in the cinema.

It was quite funny, even though you could predict exactly how the movie would unfold. But you don’t always need to watch the most suspenseful film in the world; sometimes it’s enough to have a tried-and-true story retold in an updated way. Afterwards, we met up with Patricia and her friend—who had been watching "The Wild Soccer Bunch 3" with Jimi and Wilson Ochsenknecht as well as Sarah Kim Gries—at McDonald’s. It was quite a fun day; now I just mustn’t forget to wish Ana a happy birthday later!

.

See Life as a Video Game:

School was pretty boring today despite the wonderful special rule of having only four classes, and the Battleship rematch with Bene had to be canceled at short notice. In the afternoon, I watched one of the last Giga Green episodes with regret and then went with Becca to her sister Steffi’s birthday.

I just got back from the gym with Ana, where we watched Mille doing strange exercises with sticks and swore that one of them was John. She told me that she sees her fitness routine as a video game where she has to level up each time. With that mindset, it’s actually fun for her. Now I’m making a pizza in the oven, writing on my blog, watching "Grey’s Anatomy," and still have to prepare flashcards for business administration and study computer science. Wish me luck!

.

GIGA Says Goodbye:

German television is really starting to annoy me! First my beloved "The O.C." gets canceled and will most likely only return next fall on Premiere, then "The Simpsons" are dropped because of a "Verliebt in Berlin" copy, and now this: I just found out—with regret (why do I always find out about these things last?!)—that my favorite show GIGA will come to an end on March 31. The parent company NBC unfortunately has other plans for the format.

I hadn’t been watching for very long and therefore didn’t experience much of GIGA’s seven-year history, but I have to say that it really hurts that this step is being taken. I always found the balance between the Cologne and Berlin teams very well done; they complemented each other perfectly.

GIGA was one of my favorite shows, and you, the GIGA team, always brightened my afternoons! Thank you for the truly wonderful time, and I hope to see you again soon! And to GIGA Cologne I want to say: Do everything you can to fill this gap again! With your arrogant eSports programs, the loss of almost all the good GIGA GAMES editors, and your constant bickering among yourselves, you’re completely on the wrong path!

BYE GIGA!

.

World Cup, Here We Come!:

Today I came home from school and my mom told me that she won two tickets to the World Cup on Punkt 12 on RTL. Awesome, right? We don’t know which match they’re for yet, and we’re not sure whether we’ll keep them or sell them on eBay. I think it’s really cool. If Japan wins, I’ll try to convince her that we should go ^^.

.

Spring’s Back Again:

… and heaven help him if he disappears again! Seriously, there’ll be trouble! Today I saw the first girls walking around in short tops — very pleasant, I must say ^^. This morning I played a bit of Warcraft and then watched one and a half episodes of the third season of The O.C. in English (Will Marissa replace her old friends with new ones? Will Julie survive now that they’re totally broke? And will Kirsten and Sandy’s marriage ever go back to how it used to be…? So many questions ^^). After that I went to Mille’s and we watched a horror movie called Boogeyman. Even though it was kind of trashy, it actually wasn’t that bad. Except for the ending — that sucked. And the alternative ending (with those inserted people…) wasn’t any better. Afterwards we actually wanted to visit Eniz, Ali & Co., but they weren’t home, so we changed our route and went to Iri and Ana’s instead. Then the three of us went to the gym (I was finally back after almost a month off…^^). After that I stood around in the dark outside Lidl with Ana for about fifteen minutes waiting for her dad. It was actually a really cool day today — the sun does me good. And especially the new track by Shakira and Wyclef Jean, “Hips Don’t Lie,” adds to my sunny mood. ^^

.

Tokyopunk Starts Again:

I’ve completely switched over to WordPress now and dropped my dark, international design. I just can’t be bothered anymore to spend ages working on a design that pisses me off a few minutes after uploading it. I really like this design—it fits well and it’s super easy to customize. But it’s late, so I’m not doing anything else tonight. Tobias is a superstar. Good night.

.

That Was the Weekend:

So, the first holiday weekend is over. On Saturday afternoon there was an amazingly good meal at Becca’s mom’s place; I was so stuffed. Then we played Singstar 80’s, and at some point I freaked out so much that I just left *g*. Saturday evening my baby stayed over at my place again. We made some delicious baked cheese and then watched DSDS.

The next day we just lounged around, and in the evening I once again played World of Warcraft to excess – I finally want to reach level 60!! Betty and Mandy also stopped by yesterday.

Alright then, let’s see what the next few days bring. See you later, you lovely people.

.

An Annoying Day:

First of all, I want to wish Steve Jobs, the founder and CEO of Apple, a happy 51st birthday! Today is one of those typical days when you ask yourself why you didn’t just stay in bed. Everyone was so irritated today, and apart from a lot of “White Power, Black Power” shouting, there wasn’t much fun to be had.

Maybe it was because last night almost all of us went to see “Woyzeck” at the Munich Volkstheater. The actors were quite good, but I almost fell asleep – Rebecca too. We went out to eat beforehand, at the Augustiner Keller or something like that; that wasn’t very good either. All in all, yesterday was something special, but the action on offer really wasn’t that exciting.

I still have to do my presentation on Apple this week, and tonight I’m staying over at Becca’s because her mom is cooking a big lunch tomorrow. I’m already looking forward to it and hope I’ll do better at Singstar than last time. I also hope to finally level up in World of Warcraft! Let’s see how many nights that will cost me. So, have a nice evening and enjoy the various carnival parties!

.

Messed Up BWR:

Today was not a glorious day in my seven-year-long battle against BWR. After just five minutes, I practically handed in today’s BWR exam almost blank to the responsible teacher. But then I went home – I just couldn’t be bothered anymore.

Oh yeah, Eniz, I wish you all the best for your birthday, wherever you may be right now! Tomorrow I’m meeting Becca in KF-City; I’m already looking forward to it. And now I’m going to keep working. Take care, folks.

.

The Song of Fortune:

The countdown is on: iTunes is about to reach the download of its one-billionth song. And the lucky person who clicks the button at the right moment can expect fantastic prizes: 20 iPods, a $10,000 music voucher, a brand-new 20-inch iMac with Intel chip, and the naming of a music scholarship.

So what are you waiting for? Download iTunes today and win!

Edit: We would like to point out that this contest is organized by Apple and not by us!

.

Simply Disappeared:

When new products appear somewhere, everyone knows about it, and if you don’t, you’re immediately out. But when products disappear again, hardly anyone notices. Take beverages, for example. Just last summer, a little light-blue cartoon creature was bouncing through the advertising world, constantly calling out a cute “Qoo”: gone.

Or the feel-good drink ipsei, whose sense of satisfaction only lasted a very short time. But that’s life: full of change and the lesson that things come and go and there’s nothing you can do about it, right?

.

Back Again:

Yes, our beloved blog is back. God, how I missed it – our little friend to whom I can confide everything and who immediately tells it all to the big wide world. Unfortunately, you’ll have to excuse me for not writing much today, because it’s really very late.

Still, I would like to ceremoniously inaugurate this wonderful blog and hope that it will bring all of us lots of fun and joy.

.

After the Battle:

Alright, I survived my birthday and the party that came with it, and today I’m just chilling at home. A lot of people showed up and I had a really good time, even though there were a few minor disturbances — and my awesome favorite perfume disappeared (well, after a trip to V-Markt, that was sorted out too). Thanks to everyone who congratulated me by email and SMS and whom I couldn’t reply to for reasons of time and cost. Next time I’ll also make sure more photos are taken. For now, I’m just glad we still have a day off tomorrow. I’ve got zero motivation for school, but it has to be done. So, good night folks — see you around. P.S.: The links page has now been completely redesigned and should be error-free.

.

People I Know:

Becca is my sweetheart. I’ve chosen myself a great girlfriend—Becca is sometimes even crazier than I am. And that’s exactly what I love so much about her. I think the (short) breakup was a learning experience for us, and you know that you mean everything to me. I’m looking forward to our future together, and with that in mind, you sweet little pain in the neck: Let’s make love!

Mille is messing with the girls now. At first, I couldn’t stand him at all, but now I’ve known him for many years and since the collapse of the Zugspitzclique, we’ve become something like best buddies. Mille is a nice guy, but he can also often freak out and launch into one of his legendary tantrums, and the only thing that usually helps is to get out of there. After a few messed-up relationships, he’s now turning the tables and letting the girls dance to his tune.

Eniz spreads chaos everywhere. We’ve been through so much together—good and bad—that I often find myself longing for the good old days at the Zugspitzclique, when everything was still perfect. Zugspitz, Nintendo, and cornflakes—there’s no better combination. But now everything is different. Since Eniz moved away from Buchloe, we rarely see each other. Hopefully that will change again someday.

Ali has girls wrapped around his finger. Ali isn’t Ali anymore—I’ve been hearing that phrase more and more often lately. As a little boy, he was the one who always stood up for law and order, no matter what the cost. And for that, I always had great respect for him. As predicted, girls are now falling over themselves to get his attention, and I hope that my respect for him still means something today. And by the way, you’re welcome to hang out with the gang again, Alican!

Lydia is as cheeky as she is petite. She is one of the most honest people I know, and I know that I can talk to her about anything. Unfortunately, our friendship has not been blessed with good fortune; dark clouds always seem to appear somewhere, but together we will manage, won’t we, little one?

Madi laughs openly and heartily. I first saw her bowling in Bad Wörishofen, and just like back then, she’s always great fun to be around. We’ll always remember her siren-like laugh in particular. Today, she’s happily married to Palle.

Betty likes to mess around. Yes, Betty, she’s a real rascal. Overjoyed with her Basti, she hops around and one of her most exciting hobbies is to torment and annoy poor little Marci (me!!). The nerve of her, where’s the rabies when you need it?

Mandy is nice and quiet. Our favorite Mandy is a really nice girl who is a lot of fun to be around. She recently broke up with John, but breakups aren’t the end of the world. (See, I didn’t make a joke about your name this time.)

John switched to the dark side. Johnnyboy, one man, many women, even more stories, many of which the media is not allowed to drag into the public eye. Until recently, he was still with Mandy, but she couldn’t stand the strain.

Meggi has remained very young at heart. Without Meggi, my school days would be dreary, gray, and empty. She lets the sun shine into my heart and the hearts of every overwhelmed student, even if there are days when nothing is more annoying than her childish comments, but I guess I’ll just have to live with that. And Andi, too, with whom she has been happily together for ages.

André likes to write. André is similar to me in many ways. In class, he likes to write perverse poems that only Meggy understands, and he is one of the few who still bother with French. A handsome lad. I’m looking forward to your birthday party.

Katha always has her whip with her. Girls who look so sweet and lovely are usually crafty, and that’s exactly how it is with Katha. When she opens her sweet mouth, only nasty things come out, and despite the sweet undertone, you always ask yourself afterwards: Did I hear that right?!

Jacky knows how to defend herself. Jacqueline is new to the class, like me, but we both settled in very quickly. She’s been dating the owner of Joey’s Pizza for years, and the pizzas there are really good, so she’s already landed herself a good catch.

Andi is a multi-talented guy. He’s a very complex character who likes to make silly comments, speak his mind, and loves to imitate my disabled laugh. He’s a huge Playboy fan and has everything—from towels to wallets—with the bunny logo on it.

Marion never laughs at my jokes. Marion is also in my class and, if I remember correctly, has her own band at home with which she makes noise music. She’s totally fine, even if she sometimes makes stupid jokes or doesn’t get mine.

Tine runs a dating agency. Yeah, Christine, she’s really living it up. She’s not even on the bus for the study trip, and she’s already flirting wildly with our bus driver Heinz (see our Prague video). She also keeps turning around during class; come on, girl, pay attention, or you’ll never amount to anything.

Elena has a beautiful body. Elena reminds me a lot of an ex-girlfriend of mine. She was once voted Miss Russian Disco or something like that, which is no surprise given her stunning body. With her strong opinions and pretentious understanding, she drives many teachers to despair.

Chrissy is having fun on the bus. Christine gave us a lot of fun and joy on the study trip to Prague, especially her comments about a “soccer club” in 1935 were hilarious. You can have a good time with her.

Bene is all fired up. The firefighter is repeating 12th grade with me, and without him, classes and everything else would be pretty boring. He’s turning into a total nerd (I got an A in math!), and I’m supposed to keep up with him.

Manu’s balls hurt. Manu takes personal pleasure in presenting things in such a pessimistic light that it sometimes really scares you. He recently broke up with his girlfriend. When he’s not having a bad day (which seems to be quite often), he’s fun to be around. His comments in particular are sometimes hilarious.

Ayse knows her goals. Ayse is in my class and will be again next year. She is quite determined and knows exactly what she wants, how she wants it, and when she wants it, and she is willing to take decisive action to achieve it. Let’s hope that next year goes well for all of us.

Julian understands women. Our womanizer Julian has never missed an opportunity, and even erotic moments with two women near a secluded party hut in the middle of the night are nothing new to him. So, gangster, keep it up and give women what they desperately need.

Klaus is missing. He’s my ex’s little brother. He used to hang out with us all the time, but since Ali started spending all his time with his girlfriends, I haven’t seen him at all. Klaus, where are you?

Cela knows his way around Buchloe. He’s one of Julian and Bobby’s best friends and attends pretty much every party. He’s cool and always good fun to be around.

Bianca is quiet and deep. That radiant smile says it all, doesn’t it? Happy and content with her Ben, she has everything it takes to warm our hearts with her happiness. Bianca is just a sweet girl.

Ana likes to philosophize. I think I will remember Ana for the rest of my life. She is one of those people who warm your heart when they are around, even though she refuses to send me that particular photo. She is special, and conversations with her are always enriching. Ana is happy again with Flo.

Irina likes to be crazy in her head. After Mile and her broke up, I haven’t seen her anymore, which I personally find quite a shame because I already liked her, even though I sometimes found her manner a bit extreme, but who am I to judge anyone? Hopefully we’ll see each other again sometime.

Verena is a gem. We used to be inseparable for a while, but now we unfortunately see each other less and less. Together we founded the Snob Club and were proud of it. She used to be Meggi’s best friend, but the relationship ended in a mini nuclear war. She is happy with her boyfriend Chris.

Julka knows what she wants. She was the person without whom I definitely would not have survived my time at the vocational training center. She is an incredibly honest and admirable person, and I liked her very much. I also miss my time at the facility, and I hope that everyone who was there back then is doing well today.

Palle loves parties. Without Palle, there would be no party—it’s as simple as that. Whether it’s genitals on the table or tall towers of glass, many things would have remained hidden from us if the goddess of alcohol hadn’t sent our golden boy to earth. He is happy with Madeleine.

Kalli is traveling alternatively. Yes, yes, Kalli, he’s something else. Unfortunately, things aren’t going so well with the girls, but he’ll soon be flying to Africa for a year to keep law and order there. Maybe he’ll come home with a pretty black girl, who knows.

Lisa is the little party girl. Lisa is a woman full of surprises and good humor, a real stunner. The half-American drives the guys crazy at the wildest parties and makes them lose their minds. But who else could do that if not her?

Anja doesn’t like me anymore. Those were the days, we remember camping somewhere abandoned in the woods and awesome parties in the mosquitoes. Unfortunately, she was always right about my ex, but it’s too late for that now.

Kerstin is totally crazy. Anja’s little sister visits me from time to time with her best friend Isi and tells me the wildest stories—love, sex, and cream cakes.

Dennis hates hairstyle jokes. My (favorite) cousin is often the only weapon against oppressive family gatherings or too many hairstyle jokes. He is well known and notorious in Rammingen, and together with his clique, he wreaks havoc in the nearby construction trailer.

Mona is slowly growing up. She is one of the biggest nuisances the world has ever seen. Only half an hour of Gute Zeiten, schlechte Zeiten can keep her from getting on people’s nerves, otherwise her favorite hobbies are snooping, asking questions, and not letting up.

Steffi is very sensible. Steffi is Becca’s oldest sister and probably the most sensible of them all. She has been with her boyfriend Patrick for quite a long time and they plan to stay together.

Sabi isn’t so sensible. Sabilein is now studying quite far away from home, much to her family’s dismay, but sometimes you just have to go your own way. I wish you the best of luck with that. Sabi is happy with her boyfriend Basti.

Pizi doesn’t even know how to be reasonable. Patricia and my cousin Ramona would make an absolutely diabolical pair when it comes to being the most endearing people of the century. She’s really crazy.

Bobby looks like Ryan from The O.C.. The last few months haven’t been easy for either of us, but now everything should be fine again. He’s an honest and emotional person, which I appreciate about him, and I hope he keeps those qualities.

Mela is open to anything. Mela is good friends with Chrissy and was briefly involved with Eniz. She doesn’t exactly live a monogamous lifestyle, doesn’t necessarily specialize in one gender, and is always in a good mood when I see her. Nice girl.

Knuffi is pretty crazy. Knuffi used to date Bobby, and I met her at Fritz’s. It was a really great time every weekend, but since Fritz’s closed, we rarely see each other anymore.

Chrisi has been through a lot. Chrisi isn’t exactly committed to monogamy either and was once with John. Many relationships and little nighttime visits followed, but she’s really nice and it’s always a lot of fun with her.

Juli is into Christian stuff. I got to know her through Lisa and the others. She’s a really nice girl and even—what’s it called?—oh, something in the church. That’s where it started with Bobby and Lydia at her birthday party.

Basti has a thing for foxes. He has achieved what no one thought possible: he has tamed Betty, the spinning fox. Together they make an animalistic couple. Basti himself is either totally nice or he can drive you crazy with rage; it’s always a surprise what kind of day you’re going to have with him.

Sarah is getting bigger and bigger. Sarah is completely crazy, and that hasn’t changed at all in the last five years. She’s now attending domestic science school in Kaufbeuren, and maybe we’ll see each other there more often. She’s a nice girl, but crazy. And she has pretty breasts.

Regi has become really sweet. Once Sarah’s best friend, she now mostly hangs out with Anja and Marion when I see her. She’s really nice and her little brother is a funny little guy.

Kerstin knows Kathi and Julian well. Kerstin used to date Mille and has had an eventful past. She’s a nice girl, but nowadays we rarely see each other at parties.

Susi is the punk chick. I was with her when I did my internship at the nursing home, but it didn’t last long. Like all my ex-girlfriends, she won’t talk to me anymore.

Kathi is good with three at once. She’s also an ex of mine, with whom I had a lot of fun while we were together. She doesn’t talk to me anymore either, and I just don’t know why...

Flo is a heartbreaker. He was with Lisa for a long time. Flo is one of Chris’s best friends. He’s a great guy and drives a nice car.

Geli wears white socks. I had a brief fling with her, but that didn’t last either. She was really nice, but now she has a total jerk for a boyfriend who always honks his horn when he drives past our house. Well, she has to live with him, not me.

Kathi likes snakes. She is John’s ex-girlfriend and has a snake in her room. Kathi is usually quite nice, but she can also get pretty hysterical and nasty when she needs to.

Tina looks hot in short dresses. She’s got a hot body, you have to give her that. She was with Ben for a short time, who is now famously with Bianca. Things are really going well for them. She always likes to say “Marciiiii” with a big grin afterwards.

Tanja is good at letting off steam. We’ve never met in person (except in photos), even though we only live a few miles apart. But we’ve been texting each other constantly for over a year now. She’s a bit of a rebel at heart and totally cute. I hope we’ll meet in person soon, and until then, keep mailin’ baby!

Ben speaks English well. Ben is English and has been with Bianca for a couple of months. He’s a nice guy, but I hardly ever see him, I don’t know why.

Tanja likes to look around. Tanja was my longest relationship so far, not counting the millions of breaks we took. We enjoyed cheating on each other often, so it couldn’t last. It’s good that we ended it before anyone got seriously hurt.

Helena has developed well. I was only with Helena for a month or so; she was my first girlfriend after Karina, but I just wanted to have fun anyway.

Karina was my first. She was my first real girlfriend and we were together for almost a year. It was a wonderful time with her. The last I heard from her was that she and her boyfriend are building a house in Bronnen. Well then, I wish them all the best for the future.

Sarah is quite precocious. I’ve known her for quite a while. She used to be good friends with the two Chrissys and Ina, but that soon came to an end. Today, she has devoted herself to the punk and rock movement and does everything her parents definitely wouldn’t like.

Flo has tamed Ana. Flo is a funny guy and Ana’s boyfriend. The two of them took a little break recently, but it only lasted three days or so, and now they’re happier than ever. So we’ll definitely see each other at the next party.

Isi tempts you with cake. Kerstin’s friend is a bit crazy, but she can bake good cakes. So if you’re reading this: I want a Black Forest cake! Bring it over right away!

Manu loves his guitar. Manu is pretty crazy and likes to play rock, punk, and sad songs on his guitar, which has brightened up many an hour for us in Prague. Keep playing, man!

Tobi’s name says it all. At his birthday party, I was totally drunk within two hours—he knows how to pace himself with alcohol. Otherwise, he can be a bit strange at times, but normally you can have a lot of fun with him.

.

More Winter in Munich:

Today I left a ridiculous amount of money in Munich because, despite the freezing cold, Becca and I bought so many beautiful things. First of all, two DVDs with Japanese films: Kiki’s Delivery Service, a Studio Ghibli anime (like Princess Mononoke, Spirited Away, and Howl’s Moving Castle), about the little witch Kiki and her funny black cat Jiji opening a small delivery service in the bakery of the kind Okino. Such a cute movie. Then the complete opposite: Izo, where the ghost of a samurai wanders around killing people — first his mother, his lover, his friends, and in the end he even confronts God himself. I also bought two CDs: one by Utada Hikaru — “Be My Last,” of course including a nice bonus video DVD — and one by the frontwoman of my favorite band the brilliant green: Tommy heavenly6 with her self-titled album. On top of that, I picked up an issue of the Japanese magazine Popeye, a copy of Muteen, two posters of kagerou and Merry, an iPod cassette adapter so I can finally listen to my iPod in the car (yes, we still have a cassette player in our car… g), and the Mac game Tropico 2, where you’re a pirate king building up an island à la Anno 1502. So cool. I also ate the biggest sandwich of my life at Subway — of course with double cheese and bacon. So good. Oh yeah, Basti — thanks for your repeated praise (always nice to hear g). You’re right, the links page should probably look different. Let’s see what can be done about that. Finally, I’d like to briefly respond to my good friend André, who was ranting about GQ magazine: I’ve been collecting that magazine since 2002. So don’t be so cheeky g. In that sense: take care and have a great evening, everyone. I’m off to become king of the pirates!!

.

Welcome to the Year of Change:

So, did you survive New Year’s Eve? Mine was pretty fun — I celebrated with Becca’s family and then we watched the last part of The Lord of the Rings. It was really cool. So, this year we’ve got a year of changes ahead of us — both good ones and not-so-good ones. Let’s start with the things that scare me. For one, there are the final exams and everything that comes after. Becca is finishing school too, and what she — and especially we — are going to do afterward is still a big question mark. But the good things are way cooler: the Nintendo Revolution is coming out and will delight us with its insanely awesome new controller and amazing new games. As for the rest of the changes, we’ll just let them come as they may. Tomorrow morning Becca and I are heading to Munich — SHOPPING!!! Awesome. Now I’ve got to get back to bed, we’re watching Pocahontas at the moment. So take care.

.

The Hangover Is Coming:

Alright folks, New Year’s Eve is just around the corner — so celebrate properly and slide smoothly and stylishly into the new year. Bye, see you next year.

.

Battlefield on the Desktop:

Good evening, dear common folk. I was in the city with Mille today and at Eniz in Türkheim, and otherwise I’ve been at home trying to finish the Prague film at record speed. I never thought the project would become this big—quite a few of my beloved programs and many files had to be sacrificed just to free up space for iMovie. My desktop is covered in gray question marks, all wondering where their associated programs have gone. As soon as the thing is finally finished, I’ll reinstall Tiger and take proper care of my Mac again.

At last, my xFactor has spat out the first episode of the third season of “The O.C.” I burned it straight to DVD and greedily watched it on my TV. Now I just have to wait for it to spit out the others… I absolutely need to know what happens next!

Alright, I’ll fire this thing up again to make it compress faster, although I have a feeling this could still take a while… But at least Aperture has finally been delivered, so I can play around with that in the meantime. Sleep good, folks!

.

The Revolution Is Just Around the Corner:

There is a company that is cult—almost a religion for some people. No, this time I’m not talking about Apple, but about a company that thinks in a not-so-different way, and about which I proudly declare: I am a Nintendo child!

Nintendo games have what other games often lack: a soul. Who doesn’t fondly remember hopping through the Mushroom Kingdom with Mario and Luigi night after night to rescue Princess Toadstool? Roaming through Hyrule with Link to defeat Ganon and uncover the secret of the Triforce? Experiencing space adventures with Fox McCloud and the rest of the Star Fox team to finally kick Andross’s butt? Or the journey around the world with Ark to restore the balance between good and evil, only to meet your other self in Antarctica?

Yes, Nintendo is something special, and every thought of it feels warm and comforting, because every game is tied to a cozy childhood memory.

2006 will open a new era: the Nintendo Revolution will launch with a sensational and unprecedented controller. Nintendo is keeping quiet—no official screenshots or titles yet—but you can assume we’re in for grand 3D adventures like we’ve never seen before. The GameCube was a flop, but I hope Nintendo has learned from its mistakes and will blow the entire competition off the field with its new console. Maybe that’s a bit unrealistic, but it’s a hopeful thought. And to celebrate and praise this new experience that’s about to arrive, MARCELTV.COM will feature weekly reviews of the greatest and best Nintendo games of all time in the sidebar.

.

I’m Sick:

So kids, did the Christmas dude bring you nice presents? He did for me, actually, although Christmas was waaay cooler and more exciting when you were a child.

I’m sick. I’ve got a cold, cough, hoarseness, and probably a fever, but I’m too lazy to check. Now I’m lying half-dead in bed watching “Pearl Harbor,” although I already know the Japanese aren’t going to win this time either. My sweetheart is in Freiburg visiting part of her family, but thank God she’s coming back home tomorrow so we can start our bed days together (well, not much of a change for me *g*).

Anyway, have a nice evening and a lovely second day of Christmas. And now back to RTL to sink into sentimentalism… and that constant piano music… beautiful…

.

Merry Weihnukkah:

So, the time has come: that strange old man will once again slide from house to house and stuff us with (mostly) wonderful presents. So let’s wish Mr. Santa Claus a good trip, leave him some cookies and milk by the fireplace, and also spare a thought for the people who aren’t as well off as we are.

In this spirit: Merry Christmas and a lovely Christmas Eve to all of you!

.

Christmas Is Just Around the Corner:

Today we had a totally awesome Christmas party at school. Karaoke, coffee and tea stands, a singles exchange, and way too much food — everything was there (except Fanta or Coke, so I was seriously dying of thirst). After that, I went into town with Katha and we looked for a few more presents. Then I ran into Meggi and rode home with her. After that, I went to my sweetheart’s place and then over to Steffi and Patrick’s to borrow a couple of awesome DVDs (*Sahara* and *Harry Potter IV*). Alright, I’ve got to get back to my baby in bed — I’m only here because she’s watching *Verliebt in Berlin* right now… Bye-bye.

.

Capitalist Pigs:

I don’t like apple rings as much as apple chips — but that’s just a side note. School was very entertaining today since it was the last real day of classes, though we still had to write a proper economics test that left the class pretty divided afterward. Tomorrow’s the Christmas party — we’re selling tasty pizza, and I already know I’m going to devour half of it since I’m hungry already. Oh — I’ve got a pizza in the oven right now g. I’m flipping back and forth between “Fettes Brot” and Home Alone (don’t say anything — everyone’s seen that movie a thousand times… g). Oh yeah, some of you might have briefly noticed that tiny little change on MARCELTV.COM, which has now been reversed. Instead of the nice lyrics from the brilliant green, commercialism took over and there was a lovely iTunes ad to see. Now I’m torn: nice lyrics or mostly ugly ad banners? What do you think about ads on this page? Write it in the comments. I also now know which subject I’ll be giving my presentation in — IT class. Topic: of course, Apple!! Alright, now I’m going to eat my pizza and continue editing the Prague video. Take care, you lovely people — and if you’re still not in the Christmas spirit (like me g), then all I can say is: oh well.

.

Hello Everyone:

Yeah, finally I can write a proper blog again. A lot has happened while my website was under construction. The weekend started with a massive snowstorm, which resulted in something crashing into our satellite dish and completely wrecking it. Until just now, I had nothing but ProSieben and SF1 (don’t ask me why…). On Sunday I watched that crazy show “Pisa – Battle of the Cantons” or something like that on Swiss TV. I only understood about half of it. Don’t the Swiss get some kind of condition from constantly having to pronounce those harsh “krrchs” and “krächs”? And why does every canton say “Good evening” differently? It’s such a small country — how can there be that many pronunciations? Anyway, school was okay the last few days. Everyone’s already on vacation today — and us?! Not until Friday afternoon. Tsk, tsk. I still have to buy Christmas presents. I know I’m totally going to do it at the last minute. Ran into an old buddy today who, despite an Abitur grade average of 2.5 — which seems unimaginable to me — is basically hanging around waiting for a university spot. Man, if only I hadn’t been so lazy in school. I should actually be studying business informatics right this very moment, but if I have to look at Excel or some stupid database one more time, I’m seriously going to lose it. Alright, I hope you’re making good use of this awesome little comment feature. After all, I was probably the last blog in the entire world to introduce one — but everyone has their first time *g*. With that in mind, sleep well and dream of Santa Claus. Bye-bye.

.

Frequently Asked Questions:

In one of my Mac magazines, the editors were asked to fill out a questionnaire for an anniversary. I’ll take the questions, but not the answers.

What is the greatest misfortune for you? Getting up early every day. Where would you like to live? Tokyo. What is perfect earthly happiness for you? Lying in bed with my girlfriend, relaxed and without a thought for reality.

What mistakes are you most likely to forgive? Funny ones. Your favorite fictional heroes? Kim, Kelhim, and Gorg from Wolfgang and Heike Hohlbein’s Magic Moon, who get to roam a beautiful and diverse fantasy world. Your favorite historical figure? Lilith, the first woman of mankind, and no one knows her.

Your favorite heroines in real life? Girls who have charisma. Your favorite heroines in poetry? Teeta. Your favorite painters? Satoshi Urushihara and Yoshiyuki Sadamoto. Your favorite composer? Nobuo Uematsu.

Grab the book closest to you, turn to page 18, and read sentence number 4. What does it say? The paved path leading from the gate circumvented the tree and continued on long and straight across a broad quadrangle, two three-storey concrete dorm buildings facing each other on either side of the path. From Haruki Murakami’s Norwegian Wood.

What qualities do you value most in a man? Self-control. What quality do you most appreciate in a woman? The ability to smile her way out of problems. Your favorite virtue? Thoughtfulness. Your favorite pastime? Sitting at my Mac.

Who or what would you have liked to be? Japanese. Your main character trait? Curiosity. What do you value most in your friends? Reliability and honesty. Your biggest flaw? I think too much. Your dream of happiness? A small house in the suburbs of Tokyo with my family.

What would be the greatest misfortune for you? Losing those I love. What would you like to be? Sillier. Your favorite color? Deep dark ocean blue. Your favorite flower? Sunflower. Your favorite bird? Hummingbird. Your favorite author? Wolfgang Hohlbein. Your favorite poet? I don’t have one.

Your heroes in real life? Everyone who fights for justice and equality. Your heroines in history? Jeanne d’Arc. Your favorite names? Nami, Rebecca. What do you detest most? When people suffer injustice. Which historical figures do you detest most? Hitler, although for a while I was very interested in him and his ability to seduce an entire nation.

Which military achievements do you admire most? Humanitarian ones, and those that make sense to me. Which reform do you admire most? The introduction of the euro, the step towards a united Europe.

What gift would you like to have? To be able to stop time. How would you like to die? With a smile. What would your last words be? It was beautiful. Your current state of mind? Mentally and physically tired. Your motto? Don’t dream your life, live your dream.

.

The End Is Near:

Soon, so many things we’ve gotten used to will be coming to an end. Whether it’s the finale of The O.C., the passing of the year 2005, or even the end of this website. But of course MARCELTV.COM will strike back even stronger in 2006 — with Version 7. A premiere, by the way, that I’m actually announcing an update. Let’s hope that brings us some luck. And then you’ll once again be flooded with my wonderful blog posts, just like you’re used to. It won’t be long now. Until then, stay loyal to MARCELTV.COM and stay tuned to see what’s still waiting for you here before the big update.

.

Back to the Roots:

Finally back online! Not much has changed, but Version 7.0 “Lena” returns MARCELTV to its roots. Design and content once again balance each other.

Unnecessary experimental sections were removed and new essential features like the comment function were added. Less is sometimes more — especially for professional websites.

Let’s leave the past behind and look forward to what’s possible with the new power of MARCELTV.COM.

.

Really Farewell From Orange County:

No!!! I don’t want it to end!! I knew this day would come, but not now… The finale was so awesome — an above-average number of O.C. people had to die, and the ending was as much a cry for help as it was unsatisfying. What’s going to happen to Kirsten and her husband Sandy? Will the Coopers become a happy family again? Will Ryan and Marissa be the dream couple again? So many questions — and then it just leaves you completely hanging. I love this series, and I know for sure I’ll be watching all the reruns again starting in January. And I’m already looking forward to fall, when it finally continues! O.C. Season 3 — here we come!! Take care, guys…

.

Farewell From Orange County:

Death — uh, I mean, John — was over at my place yesterday. Then we went out for a walk for about an hour and philosophized about the darker sides of humanity. It was pretty funny — especially his green contact lenses, they’re really intense. On the side, I also found out that Kalli doesn’t want anything to do with me anymore. I just wonder why? School was okay — we had a math test. Half of it went well, half not so great. We’ll see. I was just out and about in Kaufbeuren with Becca, and now I’m eagerly waiting for 9:15 p.m. when the last episode of The O.C. airs… The world is so cruel… Anyway, everyone watch it and then cry about it g. See you tonight!

.

Just Tuesday:

Peace, you children of peace. Today, for a change, there’s an actual blog post again, now that the podcast is out and therefore not causing any work at the moment. School was pretty fun today — we messed around a lot, which always makes school days much more bearable because I don’t feel like I’m just part of some controlled system. Then I went into downtown Kaufbeuren with Katha, had some tasty chicken wings from Kochlöffel. She was looking for a scarf for her mom, I wanted to grab the new Mac magazines, but neither of us found anything. Got home, immediately went to Feneberg with Mille and then bought some döner. I should actually be studying math now, but I’d rather watch The Simpsons. Well, nothing else comes to mind — except: Don’t miss O.C. tomorrow! Last episode!! WAHHH! WHY?!?! Teaser alert: You can already read on Prosieben.de what happens in season 3, but I didn’t want to spoil it for myself, so I’m staying away from it. Bye-bye.

.

Already Topcast:

Anyone who knows me knows I’m not a big fan of praising myself (g), but already our newest baby — the MARCELTV.COM official podcast — is one of the top podcasts on iTunes! So if you haven’t listened in yet, it’s your own fault. You can still find out how to download the podcast for free on iTunes.

.

We Are Podcast:

Well I’ll be damned — like the world’s been waiting for this: even we’ve got our own podcast now! It took a long time to get everything just right — choosing the perfect music and interesting topics — because of course the MARCELTV.COM podcast is supposed to shoot straight to number one as fast as possible! So join in and grab the official MARCELTV.COM podcast now on iTunes!

.

Quote of the Day:

Hi, I just found an awesome quote on SuicideGirls that I want to import here right away: "If you’re on a PC, your life will be happier if you give up Internet Explorer and start using Firefox instead. If you’re using a Mac, your life is already happy. Carry on." Nice, right? Just wanted to let you know real quick. Bye-bye.

.

A Train Ride Is Fun...:

We wrote a German exam for three hours today—pretty exhausting, but at least the classes afterward were just messing around and nothing serious anymore. On the two-car train at noon there were about five times as many people as should’ve fit in there—it was really crazy. First it wouldn’t even move, then there was this announcement like, “Track 3, please depart!” and then the power went out too. I was already afraid the next train would crash straight into us from behind, but eventually it finally started moving. Track changes were especially funny because everyone kept falling into each other. Well, it’s something everyone should experience at least once. No idea what’s happening tonight yet. I’m always kind of super lazy in the winter—guess we’ll see.

.

Awarded!:

Ta-da! MARCELTV.COM has won an award!

Specifically, the Tomy Gold Award. I’d like to thank my parents, my friends, my producers, and all the viewers of Neun Live and the Bean Soup Channel who made this possible for me!

Thank you very much!

.

Stickwit U:

School was pretty okay today, even though the day really got on my nerves. I went to the post office today and sent the 50 dollars off on their long journey—let’s see how long it takes until the people over there respond and activate me.

Otherwise nothing special happened today. I kept editing the Prague video, but then Mille came over and we went to Feneberg and then to his place, and he showed me One Piece on the PS2.

Hmm, I still don’t know which console I’m going to buy next generation—the Nintendo Revolution or the PS3. But I’ve still got time to decide. I’ll probably go with the one that has the best commercial.

Other than that, nothing special today. Oh yeah, I’m always happy to do link exchanges, so get in touch, kiddies!

Alright then, see you.

Oh yeah, I really like the new song by those Pussycat Dolls chicks—it’s actually pretty good.

By the way, what’s it called when you always think you’re in The Truman Show?

.

A Little Story:

Today I want to tell you a modern fairy tale that unfortunately really happened. There once was a happy American girl named Libby Hoeller. Good student, nice boyfriend.

When she flew to Washington D.C. to visit her best friend, she broke up with her boyfriend. In revenge, he uploaded a private webcam recording of them to KaZaA. Within hours it spread across the world.

I stumbled upon it while downloading “music.” Crazy idea, right? She’ll probably be marked by it forever, since the video will keep resurfacing.

And what do we learn? God bless America.

.

The Second-to-Last Time O.C.:

Becca and I are back together! Yeah okay, that was to be expected—we just belong together, even if some people don’t want to accept it. Tough luck to all her admirer-idiots *g* and to someone else in particular.

I went to the bank earlier and got myself 50 US dollars. It’s kind of an awesome feeling to hold something like that in your hands—I’ve honestly never held dollars before. I’m scared of next Wednesday because that’s when the last episode of The O.C. airs. I never would have thought Caleb (or however you spell him *g*) would die. The thing with Ryan and his brother is just mean. I’m curious what’s going to happen next, and I bet the whole Theresa thing will resurface—at the latest in the next season. I wonder if Sandy and Kirsten will make it? They just belong together; I can’t imagine it any other way.

Tomorrow we have a BWR exam. I haven’t studied at all because that subject bores me to death, and that’s not going to change for the rest of my life. In BWR I always feel like a computer calculating balance sheets. Someday computers will do all of that anyway. I don’t understand how anyone can waste their time on that. It’s like that guy who spent his whole life calculating the digits of Pi—now a computer does the same job in seconds. What a waste.

Oh yeah, I bought a new printer today. An HP. Because I couldn’t connect the old one to my Mac. Now really—good night, babies.

.

Sport Is Murder:

God, today was the first time in weeks that I went to school sports—and now I remember why I avoided it. We played basketball and afterward I was completely wiped out, gasping for air. I’m waiting for Becca right now.

I still need to go to the bank because I need 50 dollars to sign up for Suicide Girls. I think that site is brilliant—I’ve never seen such an inspiring site before. It’s worth the annual membership fee to me.

By the way, today for the first time in my life I took a BILD newspaper to the toilet. A monumental moment *g*.

.

Secret Santa Like the Elves:

School was okay today, but somehow yesterday was more fun—I have no idea why. Tuesdays always go by so slowly, even though we technically have the fewest classes. Tomorrow is Wednesday and that means sports. Oh God, I hate school sports, but once every two months I guess I’ll survive.

Today we decided who is giving whom a Secret Santa present. I have to give ********* something (it’s still a secret *g*). I already bought it when I was in town with Mille. He has more time again because his Sarah needs a break. Poor guy. Love is full of surprises.

I got a B in my English test today—the complete opposite of what I expect from the BWR exam the day after tomorrow. I hate BWR. Rebecca and I will probably get back together, even though her family—especially her mother—doesn’t like me anymore because she thinks I cheated on Becca and blah blah blah. No proof, but they still think that. I’m looking forward to seeing her tomorrow.

I wanted to clean my room today—it looks like Baghdad. Let’s see what the evening brings. Good night, kids.

.

Damn Alarm Clock:

Man, this morning I could’ve shot myself when the alarm went off again. Somehow I see my whole life compressed into that one moment when it drags me out of my dreams. Today I dreamed about my bonsai tree and going on some kind of trip with it—no idea.

School was pretty funny, although I feel like our BWR teacher has changed. At the beginning of the year I thought he was cool and that he’d finally teach me something, but lately he seems to be losing interest, always calls on the same three people, and doesn’t explain things properly anymore. Too bad.

In the afternoon I was in town with Mille. Just watched Who Wants to Be a Millionaire and in the commercials Deutschland sucht den Superstar. That’s it for today. Good night.

.

Bad Girls for Life:

If you know my site, you know that when I disappear without warning, an update might be coming—and what an update this is! Version 6.1 “Gogo” says goodbye to the nice MARCELTV.COM image and moves into a darker, less friendly direction.

The Japan design lasted long enough—it was time for something new. And what better reason than a breakup to reshape your life? Since my website is a crucial part of my life, it had to change too.

The “Sound / Video list” has disappeared once again into data heaven, but a new section has been born: the “Army Base.” Check it out and tell me in the guestbook what you think of the new design.

.

Japanese music I like:

The 28-year-old singer Namie Amuro, who gained stage experience in the music group Super Monkeys, is now a successful solo artist with fast-paced, R&B-influenced tracks and is one of the biggest names in showbiz. My recommended tracks are Come and As Good As.

Founded in 1997, the J-rock band Dir En Grey has had a turbulent past and was formed by several members of the disbanded group La:Sadies and the former bassist of GoSick. With their current album Withering to Death, they have become even darker and harder in 2005, yet despite this, or perhaps because of it, their fans love them and proved this at Dir en grey’s concert in Berlin. My recommended tracks are Jessica and Dead Tree.

Scrubs proves that medical dramas can also be funny. What makes Scrubs so funny are clearly the different characters who encounter each other episode after episode, such as the singing but suicidal hospital lawyer, the perpetually grumpy janitor, or the Pac-Man-playing and devilish senior physician. And at the end of each episode, you always learn something about life. Nice.

.

Winter in Munich:

Went to Munich with my mom to buy clothes and pick up my Mighty Mouse. It was freezing cold. Bought a proper scarf and gloves. We ate at a steakhouse — I devoured everything because I was starving.

The O.C. episode was amazing. I hadn’t seen the last one because of the class trip and didn’t even know Trey almost assaulted Marissa. Summer and the comic nerds are hilarious. The whole Sandy and Kirsten storyline hurts, though — it reminds me too much of Rebecca and me.

Good night.

.

Solo:

So now I’m single again. That hasn’t really happened in years. Being single means losing that “taken” aura that somehow always made you more attractive. It means removing photos, boxing up her things, rearranging my room.

It’s becoming a ritual. Dressing better, buying new clothes, emptying my wallet. Her parents will probably think I’m the asshole since they only know one side of the story.

I’ll have to go to more parties again. I’m better at talking to people than shouting in loud clubs. Maybe single life isn’t so bad. Future, here I come!

.

Too Many File Formats:

Putting a video on DVD on a Mac is more exhausting than I thought. There are tons of confusing file formats and options. After two hours it still said 845 minutes remaining.

I finally figured out I needed to install DivX properly so iMovie would export in decent quality. Everyone at school keeps asking when the video will be finished. I thought it would be easy, but it’s a lot of work.

Oh, and Rebecca and I broke up today. Too many internal disagreements about our relationship. I wish you all the best, sweetheart. Take care.

.

Different Views:

Recently I visited a friend and checked my site on his Windows PC using Internet Explorer. To my horror, it looked completely different than on my Mac. The navigation bar had a thick white line in the middle and the font wasn’t modern but old Times New Roman. On my Safari, Firefox, and even Mac Internet Explorer, everything looks mostly the same.

So my question: What does my site look like to you? I uploaded a comparison image showing how I see it. I’d appreciate it if someone could describe the differences.

.

Kangaroo with Fries:

Today we were at my grandma’s birthday at a restaurant and there was some crazy food. As a starter I had pumpkin seed soup—never had that before, and it was so good I even took the rest home. For the main course we had kangaroo meat that you grilled yourself on a hot stone, with fries and mayo. Pretty wild.

Unfortunately Ana doesn’t have time for her weekly column anymore. If anyone wants to take it over, write me an email.

.

Prague Is Awesome:

I just got back from Prague—wow, it was so awesome. We were partying constantly; my class is amazing. I’m editing the video I made so it becomes a watchable movie. I’m pretty exhausted now. Good night, Praha!

.

Shows I like:

The O.C. showcases the art of the modern soap opera. Anyone who disturbs me on Wednesday evenings can be sure of their imminent demise, because that’s when my absolute favorite series, The O.C., airs on ProSieben! The series deals with the everyday life of a high society family in Orange County, which consists mainly of intrigue, power, and sex, but of course also combines love and friendship in episodes that are always cool and never boring. Awesome!

One Piece takes you on exciting sea adventures. If I could choose to live in another world, it would be in One Piece. Every episode is an exciting surprise with all the characters that I immediately took to my heart when they first appeared. Setting sail with Ruffy, Nami, and the rest of the crew and searching the Grand Line for the legendary pirate treasure—that would be it. I hope this series never ends!

At the tender age of 14, Nami Tamaki celebrated success in 2003 with her first single Believe and later contributed the theme song to the anime series Gundam Seed. With her album Greeting, she also made it into the charts of other Asian countries. My recommended tracks are Believe and Realize.

.

See You Friday:

Choo choo—we’re going to Prague! Just saying goodbye before we leave for our class trip to the Czech Republic tomorrow. I hope my film project turns out well.

Ana’s column is on hold this week because she’s stressed, but she’ll be back soon with her wisdom. Promise!

.

Coming and Going:

Life is an eternal coming and going. You especially notice that when observing other people’s relationships. John and Mandy broke up — it simply wasn’t meant to be. After breakups, people try to fundamentally change their lives.

John joined the gothic crowd to “keep it real” and hopefully find a new relationship where he can be himself. On the other hand, Mille and Sarah are at the exciting beginning phase — spending every second together, going out to eat, living in the moment without thinking about houses or kids.

And then there are those in long-term relationships. The butterflies are gone. At some point it’s just about survival — with any means necessary. But maybe that’s an illusion too, because problems can quickly bring you back down to earth.

You can’t choose between beginning, preserving, or ending. You have to go through all of it — again and again — until you find the right person and die. Until then, there’s plenty of heartbeats and courage.

.

Music I like:

The Brilliant Green bring Japanese summer days into your home. The Japanese band consisting of Tommy (vocals), Ryo (guitar), and Shunsaku (bass) is my personal favorite JPop band. With songs like Rainy Days Never Stays and Forever to Me, they prove how cheerful, cheeky, and also sad Japanese music can be and is.

T.A.T.u. are bringing the Cold War back to life. Julia and Lena are the only remnants from the time when I listened to Russian music because of my ex-girlfriend, but they remain my favorite band that isn’t from Japan. All the Things She Said and All About Us are incomparable, and I can listen to them over and over again.

Ayumi Hamasaki is the queen of J-Pop. Their music was my first encounter with J-pop, back when there were only a few places to find this kind of music. If you didn’t want to ruin yourself financially with huge import costs, you had no choice but to download the tracks from KaZaA Lite. That’s where I came across them and listened to songs like July 1st, LOVE~refrain~, and Boys & Girls day and night. Today, things are different. Japanese music is becoming more and more popular and, as a result, more affordable in the form of CDs, but I will never forget Ayu’s songs.

.

Happy Birthday, My Love:

Hi baby, I just wanted to wish you a happy birthday. The party at your place was really fun. Thanks for the amazing time we’ve had so far—I hope it continues just like this or even better. I love you! Yours.

.

Back from Nowhere:

Installing the RAM in my Mac went smoothly, although I was scared of breaking the clips with my spatula (!). Afterward I decided to reinstall Tiger—but apparently I wasn’t paying attention and formatted the entire hard drive.

For a few hours my Mac was completely empty. But unlike my big crash in 2004, I didn’t panic. It felt like a moment of weightlessness and a fresh start.

Luckily my website was stored on the 1&1 server, otherwise it would have been gone too. I really need to burn it onto a CD as backup.

.

Movies I like:

Lost in Translation captivates with its sense of longing. Bob, an actor going through a midlife crisis, and Charlotte, the young, neglected wife of a successful photographer, meet by chance in the middle of Tokyo. They decide to paint the town red together. In doing so, they discover the little secrets behind the huge metropolis and its multifaceted inhabitants. The film is beautiful, and for me personally, the fact that it is set in Tokyo, where the two lonely souls find themselves, was of course a decisive factor.

Battle Royale confronts self-doubt. Due to a government measure, a Japanese problem school class finds itself on an evacuated island. Their mission: to kill each other with pans and machine guns within three days. If more than one survives the cheerfully announced and even televised on Japanese television but cruel game until the end of the deadline, everyone dies. Battle Royale is probably one of the most brutal films ever made and is also psychologically disturbing: Would you kill your best friends just to survive?

Princess Mononoke oscillates between war and love. In 16th-century Japan, a young warrior is cursed by an angry wild boar, causing him to be consumed from within. He leaves his home village to find the cause and the antidote far away, and encounters the young San, who was raised by wolves. Soon, Ashitaka finds himself in the middle of a nerve-wracking war between humans and nature, and he must quickly decide which side he is on. Princess Mononoke was one of the first major anime films I saw, which I first encountered at AniMagiC 1999 in Koblenz. I was immediately fascinated and moved by the grandiose adaptation of the story, the bombastic music, and the huge, beautiful images. I was particularly taken with the cute little forest spirits, the Kodamas, who were always running around shaking their heads.

.

Operation on an Open Heart:

Becca and I watched the MTV Europe Music Awards. Borat was one of the best hosts ever. Still, 99% of the artists were American—aren’t these the EUROPE Music Awards?

Today we went to Munich and I bought a 1GB memory module for my Mac mini. Installing it is like “open-heart surgery” because the Mac mini isn’t meant to be opened and the warranty expires. If I don’t blog soon, you’ll know I broke my Macintosh.

.

Windeln Vandals:

I heard on Giga that soon there will be a version of Windows you won’t install on your PC anymore—you’ll just log in online and your personal interface will load. Crazy, right? That would definitely stop software piracy.

Otherwise I helped Becca paint her room light blue and watched The O.C.. At Trey’s surprise party chaos broke out, and just before Ryan and Marissa kissed, the girl Trey had something with was found half-dead in the pool. Totally crazy—but great party.

.

He Shouldn’t Have Said That:

Today I helped Becca paint her room. It was really fun. We just need to spend more time together again, then things will work out between us.

Yesterday’s Halloween DVD night was a disaster. Especially Basti annoyed me so much. He criticized my TV, my room, the chips I bought, my internet connection, my web editor and the movies. “Wrong Turn” was boring, okay — but the worst thing he did was insult my Macintosh. That’s a mortal sin for me.

I hate Windows, Linux isn’t my thing, and Mac is simply MY operating system. It’s more intuitive, reliable and faster — and the same software exists for it. But fine, I don’t want to convert anyone.

Tonight I realized while entering a code for my phone card that I haven’t typed in a Windows activation key in ages. Another plus point. Good night. Apple rulez!

.

Never Heard of Holidays?:

This morning my mom stormed in at 7 a.m. yelling, “Get up, you overslept!” I was like, “I’m on vacation!” She left, but I couldn’t fall back asleep. So I sat at my Mac and worked on my website.

Yesterday I didn’t do anything. The others went to the September club. Mille dropped by briefly and we filmed some nonsense with the camera. Later I spent the whole evening typing out my MP3 list manually. That was a lot of work.

Let’s see what the day brings.

.

Sailor Moon:

Okay guys, it’s almost 3 a.m., I’m watching Nickelodeon and there’s this superhero with a toast for a head flying backwards with a cook clinging to his butt, farting on toast and blowing up a fish with TNT. Sure, makes total sense.

Anyway, tonight I went to P.M. for the first time. It’s way better than Nachtcafé — bigger, more options, even food. Only the alcohol prices are insane. A Smirnoff costs five euros.

Went there with Julian, Danny B., Mille, Ana and Knuffi. It was cool, especially the freestyle dancing, but just when I finally figured out the steps, it was over. I’m exhausted now. Going to bed. Too bad not everyone came along like they said they would.

.

Train Station:

Good morning, civilization. Yesterday was the last day of school, finally a week to relax. Before that we had eight brutal hours, though only the waiting for French class was funny. Prague could be amazing — if we already have so much fun at school, imagine how it’ll be there.

In the afternoon I hung around at the train station with Mille waiting for a girl from Fürstenfeldbruck he met online. She didn’t show up. In the evening he just left with a coworker instead, the rascal.

I first spent the evening with Ana and signed her up (with some shameless flattery *g*) to write a weekly column for my website. Later we went to the “September.” It was pretty fun. Everyone was there. I ran into Sarah and her friends. They talk such nonsense all the time — it’s crazy.

Things between Becca and me aren’t going so well at the moment, but maybe more on that another time.

.

Suicide Circle:

It is a normal day as people wait for their train at a Tokyo subway station. Some schoolgirls run down the stairs laughing and telling stories. A male voice announces the next train arriving. Suddenly, the schoolgirls line up, cheerfully shout 1, 2, 3 and jump onto the tracks together. A bloodbath with 54 dead.

The opening sequence is undoubtedly one of the most gruesome in film history. The police are baffled, but an anonymous caller leads the authorities to a mysterious website that predicts how many people will soon die by suicide, and suddenly a spiral made of human skin appears. The hunt begins.

Sion Sono created a film about the trend toward suicide that is currently rampant among Japanese youth, who can no longer withstand the immense pressure of Japanese society. With happiness in their eyes and Japanese pop music playing in the background, masses of people jump, throw themselves off buildings, and cut themselves to death in Suicide Circle. Exaggerated, but with a message that is by no means clear, even at the confusing end.

.

Math and No O.C.:

Today was a very strange day. I could barely get out of bed this morning and, as usual, stood around at the train station totally exhausted. I had to go to Kaufbeuren all by myself because Meggy stayed over at Andi’s and Ayse was sitting in another compartment with her friend. Then came the shock of the day: a math quiz. AGAIN. Hello? We just had one, and for once I actually got a good grade. Do they not want to grant me that?

No one was prepared. I probably got a straight F, and most others too. Such crap. Bene even threw a chair against the wall because he was so annoyed — which was kind of funny again.

In the last two classes we talked with our German teacher about what’s supposedly not so great about our class community, since some people don’t even want to come on the class trip to Prague. Everyone had to anonymously write down what bothered them. I thought that was an awesome idea, and it actually seemed productive. The guy really knows how to handle things.

Tomorrow is the last day of school before the holidays — thank God. Adios.

.

Math and The O.C.:

Oh come on, guys. How much longer do we have to wait for Ryan and Marissa to reunite? The hunt for Trey’s glass egg was kind of amusing, but I would have preferred to watch those two grow closer again (yeah, I’m such a voyeur *g*). Otherwise I spent almost the entire day finishing the website you can admire here. It’s going pretty well at the moment and I hope I can stick to the launch on November 1.

Got a B in math today. I seriously have no idea when I last got a B in math — probably back in secondary school *g*. Becca and I only talked briefly on the phone today. We’ll soon celebrate our one-and-a-half-year anniversary. That’s how it goes.

So sleep well, kids, and don’t forget to watch O.C. next week. Maybe something will finally happen between the ultimate dream couple.

.

Enemy of Relationships:

You can tell autumn has arrived not only by the brown leaves covering the streets and paths, but also because tough times are coming for all the young relationships that began in spring. Many couples I know – and this time I’ll include Becca and me – found each other in the beautiful warm spring, but now it’s getting colder and sweet infatuation has turned into an even grayer routine.

We’ll probably survive this winter, but many friends’ relationships have already fallen apart. Like B., whose girlfriend broke up with him at a drinking party – after over a year. Sad, sad. But life goes on, and who knows what breakups are good for.

.

Three Things I like:

Japanese pop music: As a big fan of everything that comes from Japan, my heart always beat faster when I heard Japanese music as a child. In the past, it was almost impossible to get hold of this kind of music, but today you can find tons of J-pop on the internet. My favorite artists are The Brilliant Green, Ayumi Hamasaki, and Utada Hikaru.

French Magazines: Although I dropped French because I didn’t find it useful, I really enjoy browsing through magazines from our neighboring country and broadening my horizons.

Cute girls with white socks: I don’t really remember where I got this thing about white socks, but anyway, I always go weak at the knees for cute girls, especially when they’re wearing white socks with matching sneakers. I’m such an old foot fetishist.

.

The Tower of Babel:

Yesterday was fun; we all met up in September because little Kalli had his birthday. The highlight of the evening was building a tower out of 100 beer crates – it was awesome. I’m even the new tower guardian now; let’s see what kind comes next. Now I’m heading to my sweetheart; we want to cook lunch together and talk about the problems we’re currently going through.

.

2LDK:

The two less-than-talented actresses Nozomi and Lana are forced to live together in a two-room apartment rented by their agency, even though they can’t stand each other. When both qualify for the lead role in a yakuza feature film, a psychological death spiral erupts between the luxury bitch Lana and the provincial mouse Nozomi, starting with pointed remarks and escalating to a fight to the death in which everything from beer openers to samurai swords to a chainsaw is allowed.—neither of them wants to leave the apartment as the loser, and little by little, many secrets from the past come to light.

The two independent directors Ryuhei Kitamura and Yukihiko Tsutsumi had bet against each other to see who could make the best film about a death duel in a confined space. At last year’s Independent Film Festival in San Francisco, 2LDK won against its rival Aragami, which stars two samurai.

2LDK begins innocently but builds to a grandiose finale and manages almost entirely without musical accompaniment. Only a sad J-pop song at the end and a little piano and string accompaniment here and there attempt to capture the mood. What makes this Japanese surprise hit so special is its focus on the two very talented actresses, whose catfights are really entertaining.

.

The O.C. Night:

I just got up. God, I felt terrible yesterday, threw up twice in the evening, no idea why. Becca and I decided to really try again properly, with all our hearts, because then it’ll work – that damn everyday routine should just disappear. I couldn’t sleep all night and from 8 p.m. until 5 a.m. I watched no less than ten (TEN!) episodes of The O.C. in a row without a break! God, that was so awesome. Of course I couldn’t go to school because of lack of sleep and nausea. Honestly, that didn’t bother me.

.

Pure Melancholy:

It’s nice and dark outside. I just watched two episodes of The O.C. back to back (bought the Season 1 DVD box today and the two soundtracks as well). Somehow there’s a melancholic mood here; “Rain City” by Turin Brakes is playing in the background. I don’t feel like writing about my day, so I’ll limit this blog to these few minutes of sadness and reflection.

I don’t know if the two of us will make it through this year…

.

Locked In:

God, I hate The O.C. – because it’s always over so quickly and leaves you with that melancholic feeling, not knowing what to do with it, and then you have to wait a whole week to find out what happens next. Due to technical reasons, this blog had to let several (!) episodes pass without comment, but that must not happen again. Especially now that all the “guest starrings” were written out pretty quickly and, after the reunion of Summer and Mr. Comic, nothing stands in the way of reviving the absolute dream couple Marissa and Ryan – not even the hot lesbian Alex – after the four of them were romantically locked in a shopping mall.

I do feel sorry for Alex, and honestly, this whole part of the season brought ABSOLUTELY NOTHING. Everything is exactly the same as it was shortly before the end of last season. So next Wednesday it continues with “The Blaze” at 10:10 p.m. (stay strong, there are two whole episodes of Charmed *ugh*!), where two thugs are set on Ryan by the jealous Alex.

.

Back from Holidays:

I’m back from vacation and was shocked to see that my site on the new server is even more cluttered with ads than before. I will completely redesign the site and upload it with my own .de domain. That may take a while—see you soon.

.

Nickelodeon Is Back:

It’s time to say goodbye to MTV2POP and welcome back Nickelodeon. It’s returning and taking many shows from Super RTL. Have fun—just in time for the start of school!

.

New Host:

I had to leave my longtime host Tripod because of excessive ads and because their pages aren’t listed on Google. Maybe I should finally become professional and get a real domain. For now, my site is hosted at cybton.com.

.

Eeny, Meeny, Mac – and You’re Gone:

I replaced the “Sound / Video lists” section with a new one called “Apple Macintosh.” After I switch, I’ll document my experiences with the Mac. This is a big step for me, and I’m excited to discover something completely new.

.

Wet Start to the Week:

My mother woke me at 8 a.m. because her car wouldn’t start. We pushed it through the rain until my uncle arrived with jumper cables. Now I’m tired but can’t sleep. My baby is coming later, and new One Piece episodes start today!

.

Everything Will Change:

The latest The O.C. episode was tough. Julie took over the company, Seth messed up with Summer, and Marissa suffered seeing Ryan with Lindsay. I still want Ryan and Marissa back together. Next episode: “The New Era.”

.

Mac Inside:

I’m slowly saying goodbye to Windows. Soon I’ll switch to the beautiful Apple world. No more system crashes or blue screens. Hello Aqua interface and elegant Apple design. The world would be better if everyone used a Macintosh.

.

Stared Death in the Face:

After the double episode of The O.C., I wanted to listen to music on my iPod—but nothing happened. It seemed dead. After panicking, I found instructions in an old iPod magazine on how to reset it. After several attempts, the Apple logo appeared and it started playing again. I had saved a life—what a moment!

.

Family Ties:

After missing three episodes of The O.C., I finally watched a double episode. Ryan wonders if his love for Lindsay is wrong since she is technically his aunt. Seth tries to impress Alex. Marissa suffers, and I still hope she and Ryan get back together. Tune in next Wednesday at 9:10 pm on ProSieben!

.

Mac Millionaire:

Next year I’m buying a new computer. The question is: Windows Vista or a new Macintosh? With Windows I know my way around and own many beloved programs. But a Macintosh would be a whole new world—Apple represents a different lifestyle. I think I’ve decided: Apple has my computer heart! I WANT A NEW MACINTOSH!

.

Rainy Sunday:

I like rain and the melancholic mood it creates. Luckily it didn’t rain yesterday because we were selling our stuff at a flea market between Bad Wörishofen and Irsingen. It got boring after a while, but I made nearly €300. In the evening I went to Becca’s mom’s birthday. Overall a nice day, but I’m glad we only have flea market stress once a year.

By the way, today is the Japanese festival of the dead, O-Bon. More about it soon in “Japan Exclusive.”

.

The New Windows:

Finally, there is new information about the Windows version that will revolutionize the computer world in 2006 and that I’m really looking forward to: “Windows Longhorn” will be called “Windows Vista”!

.

Terror Dream:

Last night I had a very strange dream. I was on a school trip when a huge forest fire broke out. I helped fleeing people when a man set a tree beside me on fire and shot at me. I escaped down a slope. Later, he turned into my girlfriend Rebecca, bleeding and lifeless. I tried to save her, but the doctor ignored her and she died. I woke up with a heavy, oppressive feeling that stayed with me all day.

.

Emreht:

Yesterday was fun: first my baby was with me and we had a deep conversation, then my favorite cousin visited, then Mille, Palle, and I went shopping in Kaufbeuren without any money, then we all went to the thermal spa in Bad Wörishofen (very funny), and finally we went out for pizza. I’m proud of that long sentence with few different words. Good night!

Oh, and I’ve already missed THREE EPISODES IN A ROW of The O.C.! I’ll never be able to catch up!

.

Quote of the Month:

As always at the beginning of each month, here is the quote of the month:

“Computer and video games use cutting-edge technology to take us out of our technology-driven everyday lives. They beat the system with its own weapons, so to speak. In the globalized, anonymous world, players are the last free heroes.”

.

Hallo-wien 5:

Last night we all watched Halloween 5 at Mille’s (let’s admit it—it was pretty boring). But something else happened: Cupid once again brought two lonely hearts together. This time his arrow struck our drink-loving Palle and the lively Madeleine. We all bow and wish them a long and happy relationship.

.

Lucky Number – New Design:

If you give your website a completely new design, you should say a few words about it. Version 5.2 is now darker, stranger, and simply suits me better than the bright white design of 5.0–5.1. Not only has the appearance been completely revised, but several new features have been added as well. There is now an improved archive at the end of the blog and, in the “Photos” section, not just a photo mix created by me but also galleries that will continue to expand.

More changes are in progress but not yet online. And for those annoyed that half of the “Sound / Video lists” section doesn’t work—measures have already been taken. So stay tuned and don’t forget to check back soon!

.

Movie: The Island:

Yesterday we spontaneously decided to all go to the Corona cinema. Some really wanted to see Mr. & Mrs. Smith, but I was more interested in The Island. So they went to one movie, and Lydia and I went to see The Island. And it was worth it! The film was breathtakingly well made—great story, great action, and amazing visuals. The beautiful Scarlett Johansson (from my favorite film Lost in Translation) and the likable Ewan McGregor (whom I also loved in Moulin Rouge) made it even more worth seeing.

However, the sponsor-heavy movie constantly hovered on the edge of credibility. Why was a Calvin Klein commercial from 2004 still running in a shop window in L.A. in 2015? Why were the inhabitants still playing under the same Xbox logo as today, even though the 360 is about to be released and would surely be outdated by 2015? And hasn’t the MSN logo changed in ten years? Still, you can overlook these minor inconsistencies because the movie was so strong overall. It was definitely worth the €8 admission.

Action: 5/5, Sex: 1/5, Humor: 2/5, Suspense: 5/5, Overall: 5/5

.

Happy Birthday, Bettylein:

Betty has finally made it to 17, and I would like to warmly congratulate her here! I wish you another exciting and worthwhile life! See you soon.

.

It’s Fun in Munich:

Yesterday we all went to Munich. The girls and the nerd Ben were able to travel for free because, like every year, the railway had a promotion where you could ride for free if you had a top grade on your report card. It was really fun. We had breakfast at Burger King, lunch at McDonald’s, and in the evening we went to Pizza Hut. So healthy.

Lydia, Betty, Bianca, and Ben hit up Orsay, Pimkie, and similar stores, while we wandered aimlessly through the city center, stopped by Saturn, and of course went to my favorite Munich shop, Neo Tokyo, where I immediately stocked up on a few J-pop CDs that slightly exceeded my budget. All in all, it was a nice day.

.

Blow:

God, damn, that movie really moved me. Seeing such an eventful life packed into two hours—and with my absolute favorite actor Johnny Depp—was deeply touching. The ending hurt my heart.

His sweet daughter hated—no, despised—him so much that she would never forgive him for breaking his vow. I hope something like that never happens to me. Action: 3/5. Sex: 1/5. Humor: 3/5. Suspense: 3/5. Overall: 5/5.

.

No Parking Spaces Anywhere:

We realized today that Bad Wörishofen is definitely not the most car-friendly city in Germany when we were all supposed to meet at Chaplin II. The place is quite nice, but it wasn’t exactly amazing—except for the bombardment that took place there and mentally sent us off to Baghdad.

It got funnier when we then drove to McDonald’s in Mindelheim. I think I might have even seen my ex-girlfriend there, though I’m not entirely sure anymore. The evening ended at the Mille, where I could hardly breathe during Freitag Nacht News because I was laughing so insanely hard.

Today my sweetheart is coming back from England, but we probably won’t see each other as quickly as expected. I love you, Rebecca—please don’t be mad at me.

.

Bad Movies and a Small Party:

Yesterday evening we all met up at the Mille and later wanted to go to the Chaplin. That’s when I ran into my sweetheart Sabrina and her funny friend—hope you two still had a nice evening.

We then had a small party at my place and rented the two probably most ridiculous movies I’ve seen in a while, though I didn’t pay much attention to them.

Unfortunately, there are currently some major and minor problems that are weighing on the group, which dampened the mood from time to time. I hope everything will be sorted out soon, although it will probably take quite some time and many conversations.

.

A New Era:

Oh, it could have been so nice. The last few minutes of Charmed had just finished, I sat down comfortably on my couch with my iced tea and my remote control, and I already heard, Previously on The O.C.... when suddenly the doorbell rang. I looked downstairs—who was standing there? Sarah and her friend—who is also named Sarah.

After long and silly but amusing conversations about label sex and squirting milk from breasts, I ended up missing the entire episode once they finally left. So unfortunately, I can’t give you a proper commentary on yesterday’s episode—sorry about that.

But I can roughly tell you what happened—I’ll just copy it from TV Spielfilm. Seth has the hots for Lindsay. Ryan is supposed to help him win over the new girl. But his plan doesn’t work out. Got it? More next week when it’s The SnO.C., Wednesday at 9:10 p.m. on ProSieben.

.

Stories of a Small Party:

Lydia celebrated her 17th birthday again yesterday in a small, quiet gathering with a barbecue party at home. Almost everyone was there, and I even dragged Eniz along, who happened to have the day off.

The evening was really fun—everyone was in a great mood. Betty got stung by a flying frog, I had a lot of fun with the grill lighter, the ketchup was spicy but unfortunately past its expiration date, and once again Madi completely stole the show with her phenomenally cute laugh.

But Eniz topped everything with a typical Eniz move—for legal reasons I can’t go into details here—which even caught the attention of an undercover police officer.

I’d like to thank Lydia and her parents for the free food and their wonderful hospitality—even if I really felt the ketchup properly today.

Now let’s all pray hard toward the heavens that the weather will be nice on Friday evening so we can have our party—and if not, that we’ll find another place where we can go wild and have fun.

.

Happy Birthday, Lydia:

Hi Lydia, I would like to take this opportunity to wish you all the best on your 17th birthday. I hope you stay just as you are and that we see each other again soon.

.

It’s Raining:

It’s raining, and with that, this weekend is coming to an end and will never return. My sweetheart started her big tour of England today, and yesterday was Lydia and Betty’s joint birthday party, which I unfortunately couldn’t attend due to scheduling conflicts. So, I’ll see what next week brings and hope that I can be there again next weekend. Good night, world.

.

Statement:

I am delighted that my guestbook is being used so actively. It’s the ideal way to send me an open message that is freely available to everyone. This post is a case in point.

I don’t want the time I spent with Kathi and Kerstin to be printed here in any way, because they weren’t real relationships. Besides, you have no right to publicly expose any assumptions about people who may have ‘expressed interest’ in others. This is a topic that can make you a lot of enemies, or has already done so. John.

You are right when you write that I should not publish intimate assumptions, and I am sorry that I did so. I was not aware of the negative impact and it will not happen again. However, one must also be able to distinguish between truth and speculation.

So I don’t think it’s wrong of me to write down the truth, even if it’s about a past relationship that was official and by no means private. Nevertheless, I must and will comply with your request and make changes to the document in question.

Of course, you can’t please everyone, and that is certainly not my goal. If anyone feels attacked or hurt by my posts, that was never my intention. I am sorry for that and would like to apologize again. I hope you can forgive me and I would be delighted if you continued to visit my website regularly. Yours, Marcel.

.

The Twin Effects:

Becca and I had a cozy DVD night together yesterday and watched The Twin Effects. And because I actually enjoy watching movies and will always do so, I want to start incorporating cool movie reviews from now on whenever I’ve seen a good film.

In any case, I really liked the movie, but my sweetheart found the action scenes pretty boring and unnecessary. Action: 5/5. Sex: 0/5. Humor: 4/5. Suspense: 3/5. Overall rating: 3/5.

.

This Is the Middle Ages:

Mille, Palle, Julian, Becca, and I made our way to the Tänzelfest in Kaufbeuren yesterday. After narrowly missing the train, hanging around at the station for an hour, and bumping into Steffi—who then came with us—we finally arrived. Mille and Palle were already drunk as skunks when we arrived, while Julian held back.

It was awesome, we met lots of people, because Alex and his buddy had just been in a fight and were looking for a quiet place in the Kochlöffel—thanks again to the blonde girl who spontaneously offered me her fries. Unfortunately, the evening was over relatively quickly for me because Becca had to go home early. I don’t know—yet—how the others got on.

.

Madagascar:

Rebecca and I went to the movies yesterday and saw Madagascar. I thought the movie was awesome, but she liked Shrek better. Still, I can really recommend this movie to everyone—it’s fantastic. Here’s my review of the movie: Action: 2/5. Sex: 0/5. Humor: 5/5. Suspense: 2/5. Overall rating: 5/5.

.

Ryan + Marissa:

What happened to sweet Marissa? After Ryan briefly left, she threw herself into alcohol addiction—which has nasty consequences, believe me—and slept with the gardener. Consequences? It’s pretty clear that joker Seth and his girlfriend are getting back together, but what really interests me is Ryan and Marissa.

And just when you thought life was beautiful again and the two would confess their eternal love for each other, that stupid Lindsay shows up in the next episode and turns his head. Hello?! Where are the fatal car accidents in TV series when you really need them?

We can only hope that Cupid will have mercy and bring Ryan and sweet Marissa back together, and wait and see what thoughts the next episode of The O.C. leaves us with. Next Wednesday, 9:10 p.m., ProSieben.

.

A Small Note on My Own Behalf:

The HTML code on my website should now be error-free, as a small script error had crept in during the last update, but this has now been fixed.

.

Attacks in London:

It’s happened again. I wake up, turn on the TV without suspecting anything bad, and once again I see a terrorist attack—this time in London. This seems to be becoming typical of our times. Can we even call it the age of terror?

And the terror is getting closer and closer. New York, Madrid, and now London. I hope that I never turn on the TV and see Berlin or Munich in flames. Our condolences go out to the victims and their families.

.

Different Than Expected:

The rumors are true, the BILD newspaper has its front page for tomorrow: Mille is in a relationship again, and contrary to what we thought, it’s not our little ray of sunshine Irina, but a 20-year-old named Steffi from Bobingen. Let’s hope this is a lasting relationship. If you want to know more about her, you can search for her on iLove.

.

No Comment:

A 25-year-old man stabbed his girlfriend, who was the same age, to death on a public street in Buchloe in Ostallgäu. The man was arrested at the scene of the crime. The police suspect that the woman’s intention to break up with him was the motive for the crime.

.

Battle Royale:

I would like to take this opportunity to thank Swiss television for broadcasting Battle Royale in its entirety and uncut —wasn’t it? I had thought that the German translation had been cut, but apparently not in Switzerland. Thank you very much for this long night, and please bring us more of the same.

.

Then It Turned Black:

It was a beautiful Monday morning. A rerun of The King of Queens was on TV, and I was sitting relaxed in front of my front page, once again thinking about the design and the topics I wanted to share with the world. Then it suddenly happened.

Weeks earlier, there had been signs of trouble with crackling and sudden color errors: the monitor imploded; the screen went black, and my desktop disappeared into the great beyond. And this time, to my horror, it made no attempt to display the familiar XP start screen.

That was probably the end of my beloved but ugly Dell CRT monitor. Well, to its credit, it had been around for almost ten years and it was only a matter of time before it gave up the ghost. But there is a silver lining to every cloud. Because now the way is finally clear for a new TFT flat screen. Yay!

A quick addendum about Friday night at the Nachtcafé. The train ride there was awesome, and sitting outside on the street from 2 a.m. was also awesome, but everything in between was pretty boring. We should go back to going to the Nachtcafé on Wednesdays when they have the 1-euro parties. At least Mille had a good time.

.

Paper War:

On Saturday, I went with Mille to the city’s newest trendy store: the Trend Factory, also known to some as the knick-knack store. We wandered around a bit, tried out the rubber breast, wondered what the sex candies were for, and looked at the posters.

I particularly liked one showing four pretty young women sitting scantily clad on an old sofa and looking lasciviously into the camera. Well, bad luck, but I didn’t have any money with me.

So on Monday morning, right after getting up, I went back to the store, shelled out the €6.95, and took the thing home with me. And anyone who knows these posters knows what a nerve-wracking task it is to unpack them without damaging them, roll them out without creasing or tearing them, and then hang them on the wall as neatly as possible.

Well, that’s how it ended up. A little crooked, not parallel to the walls and not in the middle of the free space. Damn, I had already pinned it firmly to the wall with ten pins so that no part of it would curl up.

So off with the thing again and deep into my mind. In the attic, yes, there was a large wooden surface, once the bottom of a huge glass picture frame, which, however, did not survive long due to my clumsiness. That would be perfect.

But how to get the poster onto the board? It was delivered with a large Godzilla poster. And how was it attached? I looked and saw: some kind of glue. So back to the attic, I grabbed a can labeled carpet and PVC glue (the only stuff that looked like glue) and a spatula and slathered it on the former picture frame.

I smeared it all over and carefully placed the poster on top. But the poster resisted and pulled back at both ends. That meant that two of the four pretty girls were immediately covered in carpet glue, while the other two could only sit there fearing for their existence.

Shit, I quickly grabbed some tissues and tried to get the stuff off the poster somehow, but then I realized my mistake of not spreading the glue evenly, and the poster lifted and warped over a large area, and the glue ran out from under the poster on the left and right.

Damn it, I had to get rid of that thing quickly, so I pulled and rip, yes, suddenly there were two posters, each with two women in white underwear. And both disgustingly smeared with glue.

I quickly dug out another €6.95, ran back down to the store, grabbed the same poster again (number 192, I was starting to remember) and took it to the salesperson, who looked at me a little puzzled, and then back up to my room.

I unpacked the poster, pinned it to the wall with nine pins, and looked at it. It hung a little crooked, not parallel to the walls and not in the middle of the free space. I leaned back proudly.

.

Family, Family:

A day that started out pretty boring is coming to an end. Today was a big family celebration, with relatives from the Far West coming to visit Germany, and everyone followed them to a pretty average restaurant in a sleepy village. Without my cousin and girlfriend, I probably wouldn’t have survived, so thank you Dennis and Rebecca (I love you).

Now, let’s move on to the joyful facts of life: Japan kicked Greece’s butt! God, that was one of the most exciting moments in my rather patchy career of watching soccer on TV. And June 19, 2005, will also go down in history as the day I watched almost the entire Formula 1 race in Indianapolis because no one was interested in the race itself, but only in the fact that almost no one was driving due to tire problems. The commentators were really funny.

.

The End of a Drama:

And then it was over. Mille and Irina had split up—not by mutual agreement, though not surprising to those in the know. It was very sad to see how the relationship between the two struggled to move forward, how Irina trampled on Mille’s heart from time to time, and how he looked past all her taunts almost without saying a word—out of love. But now it was over.

At some point, the bomb had to drop, as is the case with all people who put up with everything for a long time. And this time it was Mille’s bomb that hit Irina with full force and took the decision to break up out of her hands. Thank God he had figured it out for himself—the official statement being her loss of feelings for him.

But how will this Gute Zeiten, schlechte Zeiten-like love story continue? Everyone realizes that there is still something there, that this was not the end, and that now anything is possible—from reunification to joint suicide. Let’s wait and see!

.

Happy Birthday, Mom:

I would like to take this opportunity to wish my mom a happy birthday once again. Also, today was my last final exam, which I don’t really give a damn about because I’m repeating the year anyway (but I’m not the only one this year...). Finally, vacation!! What the hell is that beeping soundly outside my window?!

.

The O.C.:

Yesterday, I watched The O.C. on ProSieben for the first time. It’s amazing, considering how much I had resisted watching this series before. But this time, I sat there obediently and watched two episodes back-to-back. And I have to admit, this series is brilliant and probably one of the highlights on German television, which is currently full of reruns. I’m really looking forward to next Wednesday and can’t wait to see how it continues and who Theresa is pregnant by. Oh, and Marissa really does look like Rebecca—Mille was right about that.

.

Hello World:

My name is Marcel Winatschek. I was born on January 5, 1984, in the small Bavarian town of Buchloe, where I still live with my mother. I have a half-brother as well as a half-sister who live with my father in Turkey; I have only seen either of them once.

My girlfriend’s name is Rebecca, whom I’ve been with for a long time and whom I love more than anything. I’m still in school; I don’t know what I want to do after that. I’ve tried many things and done many internships, but somehow none of them really appealed to me.

I am a great admirer of Japanese culture and way of life. Even as a little boy, I always loved everything that came from the Land of the Rising Sun. I grew up with anime and manga, but like many others of my generation, I am now mainly interested in Japanese films, music, and the country beyond the horizon. My dream is to travel to Tokyo one day or maybe even live there with my baby.

I am both relaxed and fearful about the future, as I don’t want to be part of an exploitative system or be pushed to the margins of society.

I like lazing around, Apple, Japan, J-pop, pizza, television, One Piece, the internet, French magazines, baked cheese with fresh pretzels, girls wearing white socks, The O.C., SpongeBob, warm summer rain, photos, Nestea, channel surfing, baby cats, and Sarah Kuttner.

I don’t like people who have nothing to say but still shoot their mouths off, spinach, people who annoy me, high internet costs, patronizing behavior, unwanted advice, not enough time, knowing that everything is pointless anyway, frozen mushroom pan, war, Jamba, people who betray you, large crowds, spiders, and thoughts of the deportation of Jews when I board a Deutsche Bahn train, computer crashes.

.