Montag, 6. Februar 2012
The growing appeal of coloured trousers - FT vom Wochenende


Boys Aloud.

CHELSEA FARMER'S CLUB - AVANTGARDE SEIT ANNO DAZUMAL.

http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/2/dc202b92-4900-11e1-88f0-00144feabdc0.html#axzz1lbaIh1PS







http://www.ft.com/
http://www.chelseafarmersclub.de/

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Montag, 31. Januar 2011
The anti-Twitter



"The first sign I get that Charlie Rose has entered the room is when the suave maître d’ of Michael’s restaurant, a haunt of New York’s powerbrokers, rushes across to my table and declares, with a thrilled tone: “He’s here!”

I glance over, and see a tall figure by the door, wearing an understated, tweedy overcoat. Slowly, he makes his way towards me. It takes a very long time: as he passes each table, he reaches out, shakes hands, graciously receives compliments and exchanges pleasantries, as if on a royal progress.

Perhaps that is fitting; at 69, Rose is one of the nearest things that New York has to media royalty these days. Each night, he hosts an hour-long, serious interview-cum-talk show, that appears on Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) affiliates and (in the past couple of years) on Bloomberg television, too. There he grills a sequence of (mostly) powerful or fascinating people, on a set that is famously austere: a trademark oak table, with a simple black backdrop.

Contrary to modern media convention, he never sends questions to his audience in advance. Nor – unlike most modern talk shows on American television – is there angry vitriol. Instead, the show is conducted on Rose’s terms, as a genial debate; or, he prefers to say, a lengthy “conversational arc”.

Yet in spite of this rather unfashionable approach – or perhaps because of it – the show is beloved by the American elite; particularly in Manhattan, and, as his walk to our table demonstrated, particularly in Michael’s restaurant.

Eventually, after navigating the packed room, Rose arrives at my table and casually chucks his coat on a chair with a supremely confident, easy air. “It’s fine there,” he tells an overly solicitious waiter. Then he greets me with great bonhomie and southern charm; we have met each other a couple of times before, most recently when I appeared as a guest on his show two nights before, in a debate about America’s fiscal woes.

“I was going to ask you to have dinner – it would be much more fun than lunch, quieter,” he starts, oozing seductive charm. “But I wasn’t sure if you had a husband, and children. Do you?” asks Rose, who was divorced in 1980; a subsequent long relationship with Amanda Burden, a socialite and city-planning advocate, ended five or so years ago (the couple still has, says Rose, a unique relationship: “I am close to her children”, whom he regards as “family”).

I laugh, and mumble about my family. “Well, we will have to stick with lunch,” he says, pulling a face. “I don’t want to ruin your reputation for parenting.” Uneasily, it occurs to me that I am at a distinct disadvantage interviewing a man who is himself a brilliantly skilled interviewer; a master at charming his subjects into revealing interesting pieces of information.

A waiter hovers and I ask for sparkling water. Rose breezily specifies that “tap water is fine”, and then glances vaguely at the menu. It is a couple of years since he suffered a heart scare but his face and physique could belong to a man of 50. Cheerfully, Rose explains to me that he makes it a priority to eat sensibly and exercise each day. At the grand old age of 69, he is certainly not the oldest television personality in America; it was only last year that the 77-year-old former CNN host Larry King announced his retirement. But he has younger, up-and-coming competitors, ranging from comedians (think Jay Leno), to comedians-cum-pundits (Bill Maher), to opinionated pundits (Glenn Beck or Rachel Maddow). Maintaining a ruggedly handsome, seemingly ageless face, is a key part of Rose’s appeal.

With a minimum of fuss we place our orders: Rose chooses a simple Cobb salad; I opt for blackened cod and a side of spinach. The food at Michael’s is trendy and healthy; it does not feature many carbs. Then, almost without preamble, Rose starts discussing the issue dearest to his heart: his recent shows. He is particularly animated about a recent debate he staged on Afghanistan. “My job [on these shows] is just to ask questions, so with Afghanistan you have to ask: ‘Why are we [Americans] there? People say that we are there because of al-Qaeda, but there is no al-Qaeda in Afghanistan, they are in Pakistan! So then you have to say: ‘What are we going to do about Pakistan?’”

So what do you think America should do? I ask, conscious the issue is provoking heated debate. Over the years, Rose has built his career by extracting information from others; he himself never takes political sides on air. And, while it is widely assumed that he holds liberal views, he refuses to back any party – or policy – in public. “I don’t talk about my politics,” he explains. “I am registered as an independent.”

True to form, Rose orchestrates another twist in the conversation and asks how long I have been in New York. I explain that I got my current job 10 months earlier and that it feels “a huge privilege to be here at such a pivotal point in American history and the media”.

He nods enthusiastically. “I cannot imagine anything that I would rather do than have the opportunities I have now, to do interesting things – these opportunities coming out of the economic collapse, new administration, the recent [mid-term] elections, the fact that the Chinese president has come for a state visit ... ”

I ask Rose about his early career. With practised ease, he tells me his life tale. He grew up in a tiny country town in North Carolina, in a rural area heavily dependent on tobacco farming, where his parents ran a small shop. From a young age Rose – who has no siblings – helped mind the store and he still has a farm in the state. “My parents had a great work ethic,” he recalls. However, he escaped his home town by attending Duke University in Durham, North Carolina, to study history and law, where he also met his wife, Mary. After graduation he briefly worked for Bankers Trust bank. But he quickly decided that he was not cut out for banking. So when Mary got a job for the BBC in New York he, too, drifted into journalism, originally as a television producer.

His big break came in 1984 when he was offered a chance to do an (initially) very low-profile interview programme on CBS. “[It] was from 2am to 6am – before anybody started doing anything at that time,” Rose chuckles. “The [company] wasn’t sure anyone would watch – they would flip it over, do it once from 2am to 4am, and then repeat.”

But, against the odds, the graveyard slot started to attract viewers, both for the quality of its guests and for Rose’s easy-but-serious southern style. His star began to rise. “It was great having the luxury of a whole two hours. We realised that we could really make a difference with engaged conversation with interesting people.” By 1993, he had a show in his own name on Public Broadcasting Service. Since then his fame has steadily grown.

So, can you get anyone you want on your shows these days? I ask, as the food arrives. His plate is a bowl of well chopped salad; my plate is an elegant array of artfully cooked cod. “It’s easier than it has ever been, but I still can’t get President Obama to sit down with me,” he admits, in a slightly confidential tone. “[US Treasury secretary] Tim Geithner, [US defence secretary] Bob Gates, Secretary Clinton and everybody else has done it. But Obama won’t. And there are other people I want on because I admire their talents, but haven’t got. Like Jasper Johns, the artist. And I pushed hard to do Lucian Freud.”

He pauses, as he flicks through a mental Rolodex of famous names. “Harold Pinter did some with me – we had some wonderful conversations before he died! But Jack Nicholson? He does not do television interviews. Oh, and I always tried to get Marlon Brando and could never really convince him ... And I would love to have a conversation with Nancy Reagan. And a series of conversations about his political life with Bill Clinton.”

So what has been the best interview? He flashes another smooth smile. “I’m not prepared to say that.”

But have there been disasters? Big fights? “A long time ago Edward Teller [a scientist who was the model for Dr Strangelove] walked off – but that was just Edward Teller.”

This is not the sort of dramatic stuff that sells other television shows in America, where shouting matches are almost commonplace. But, as I listen to Rose talk about his approach, it occurs to me that this difference is also the secret of his success. In an age dominated by angry blogs – which have become doubly so since the Arizona shooting earlier this month – Rose stands out precisely because he is thoughtful and neutral. Moreover, at a time of frenzied bursts of short electronic news, Rose delights in offering an extended, all-too-human conversation.

So, I observe, you are the anti-Twitter!

He laughs, and explains that what he really wants to do in the next few years is to keep celebrating the concept of “conversation”. He is, for example, thinking of writing a book about “friendship”. He recently started keeping a diary that he hopes will act like an archaeological record of his spoken adventures. One of the reasons why he loves New York, he adds, is that a vast number of bright and ambitious people are crammed into such a small space that they – and their ideas – can constantly collide. And, of course, talk.

His ambitions could run further still. These days Oprah Winfrey is shaking the media world by creating not just a show that bears her name but an entire network too. “It would be wonderful to become what Oprah has become: she is in such a class of her own, as an entrepreneur, as a performer and an icon,” Rose admits. “The idea of building a series of programmes and choosing people that I think have talent to do them would be a very interesting idea. I would love to show that television can have soul, depth and range.”

But how long does he think he can continue to do so? Indignantly, he explains that he maintains his form by running with his dog, Barclay, around Central Park each day. It is very convenient, he adds, since he lives on 59th Street and 5th Avenue.

The waiter appears and removes our plates; he has eaten half of his salad, while I have finished off my (fairly spartan) cod. I order a double espresso; Rose just a regular coffee. Dessert is not even discussed.

So if he could choose three dream guests for the perfect show, I ask, who would they be? He pauses for a long time. “I would love to have a long and serious conversation with the Pope. And Woody Allen, whom I have never interviewed.”

There is another long, pregnant pause. “Then, after those two? Steve Jobs,” he continues.

My mind boggles at the combination; where would that “conversation arc” go? He laughs loudly and freely, and I notice that the once-packed restaurant has almost emptied; somehow, almost two hours have glided by, seamlessly and unnoticed. And I am still not clear who exactly has orchestrated that.

I ask for the bill, and we walk out. For a second, as he strides down the street in his brown coat, he looks almost anonymous. But when I return to my desk, a colleague tells me that as we sat eating, Michael’s has proudly tweeted to the world: “In the house: Charlie Rose and Gillian Tett!” Those electronic sound bites have a way of intruding; even for a man who is trying to take the old-fashioned art of conversation to a new extreme."

----
Gillian Tett is the FT’s US managing editor


http://www.ft.com/cms/s/2/847e4ce8-2a61-11e0-804a-00144feab49a.html#axzz1CbsZ6Ik1





http://www.charlierose.com/
http://www.ft.com/

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Sonntag, 3. Juni 2007
Green is the New Black


http://planetswitch.co.uk/planetswitch.htm


http://planetswitch.co.uk/

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Montag, 2. April 2007
Wochenende der Eitelkeiten - 'Spiessig' ist das neue 'Cool'


Unsere geliebte Chrystia Freeland – wie immer beseelt von der Erforschung des Grosstrends `Megareichtum´ - schreibt in der Weekend FT vom “Uncommon Wealth”.
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/bde3ed04-de38-11db-afa7-000b5df10621.html Chrystia zitiert den Wall-Street-Investmentbanker Felix Rohatyn, den die Finanzpotenz seiner Klienten mittlerweile sprachlos laesst:

“I find the mass of money that is being accumulated by individuals staggering. ... If you suddenly have $4bn in your bank account, I don’t know what you do. It is one thing to decide how you will deal with a fortune of $500m. I used to think that was a huge amount of money. But, to a lot of people, it is not any more.”

Dann sprachen wir am Wochenende kurz mit einem Freund in L.A., der uns illustrierte, wie Beverly Hills den neuen Rolls Royce erwartet – „...die haben sechs Luxuswagen in der Garage, koennen es nicht erwarten bis ihr neues Ultraluxuscabrio ausgeliefert wird und car-sharen nen Hybrid zu den Oscars...“ – Amerika. - So ist das.

Bei Autos faellt uns Motorfreund Ulf Poschardt ein – und schon sind wir mittendrin in der Berliner Republik und wolln dann auch zwei Takte zur deutschen „VanFair“ sagen.

Generell: Two thumbs up! - SPIESSIG ist das neue COOL. Und das hat Poschardt genau erkannt. - Viele Kritiker uebringens noch nicht. - Und deshalb ist die VanFair auch um Nasenlaengen der ParkAvenue voraus (- und manch anderen theoretisch auch). - Soweit, so gut. - Dann haben wir am Wochenende nochmal son bischen in Poschardt-Veroeffentlichungen gelesen - mit dem ueblichen leichten - aber sehr bestimmten - Unbehagen. - Vieles macht der Mann richtig. Sieht es richtig. Fuehlt es richtig. Nur dann verargumentiert er das immer auf sone miefig autoritaer- intellektuelle Art. Komische Sache. Nen Berufungsbuergerlicher der seine Position aus linksintellektuellen Referenzwelten schneidet.
Ganz komische Sache...
-
Die Positionierung von Vanity Fair jedenfalls stimmt und gefaellt uns recht gut.

All thumbs up!
Auch toll, dass das Magazin im Wochenrhythmus rauskommt. - Da koennen sie schneller aus ihren Fehlern lernen. - Fail, fail again, fail better...

Viel Erfolg und Vergnuegen!

Und - wer 's noch nicht kennt: Hier ist die legaendaere Poschhardt-Charakterstudie "Vanity Fear" von Niels Ruf:
a) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c0UdE2ISi7g
b) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c7bHXmKp1Mc

In diesem Sinne.


http://www.ft.com/
http://www.rolls-roycemotorcars.com/
http://vanityfair.de/

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Montag, 12. März 2007
Muddling through


Noch hat sich keiner gefunden, das cfc-Heimatquiz zu loesen http://cfc.blogger.de/stories/721552/ - Liebe Freunde, das macht Spass: anschauen, einwirken lassen und runter schreiben. - Let's go!

In der Zwischenzeit: hier sind zwei schoene Artikel zu anderen lustigen Voelkern aus der FT vom Wochenende.

Beim Lunch mit der FT wird der japanische Mathematikprofessor und Gesellschaftsautor Masahiko Fujiwara zu seinem neuen Buch "The Dignity of a State" befragt. Fujiwara ruft in diesem weithin beachteten Werk seine Landsleute auf, sich wieder staerker auf die urjapanischen Tugenden von Naturverbundenheit und aesthetischer Lebenspraxis zu besinnen. Er sagt, es habe Japan ein halbes Jahrhundert - erst an haltloser Wohlstandsversessenheit und dann an Wirtschaftsrezession - gekostet, um endlich zu erkennen, was man alles verloren hat.

“Japan used to despise money, just like English gentlemen,” he says. “But after the war, under American influence, we concentrated on prosperity.”
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/ee7f11fc-cc75-11db-9339-000b5df10621.html

-
In "Stuck in the Muddle" schreibt Richard Tomkins von der bedrohten Mittelklasse in einem England, dessen neue Oberschicht aus globalen Plutokraten und Popstars besteht.
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/c2dfee66-ce57-11db-b5c8-000b5df10621.html

Wir lesen das immer wieder http://cfc.blogger.de/stories/638267/ und auch immer wieder gerne, weil das einen Rahmen beschreibt, der nicht fuer England exklusiv ist, sondern fuer die Mittelschichten generell gilt.
Wir lesen das deshalb immer gerne, weil dieser Sachverhalt auch das Potential in sich birgt, in Deutschland das Gesellschaftsfundament heimatlichen Schubladendenkens arg erschuettern zu koennen. -
... Wenn das mal kein kein Grund zur Freude ist.


http://www.ft.com/home/europe

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Sonntag, 17. Dezember 2006
Faites votre jeu


So, Ihr Lieben, - the verdict is out... - wie Eure Welt aussehen wird - und teilweise schon aussieht - lesen wir in rasantem Tempo in einer uebervollen Weekend FT zwei Wochen vor Jahresende.

-
Vom 7.-10. Dezember war in Miami das fuenfte Mal die Art Basel zu Gast - wobei - ehrlich gesagt ist sie da schon zu Hause, denn das Konzept auf zweitem Standbein hat sich zu dem Winter-Must der Kunst- und anderer Szenen entwickelt - und die Umsaetze jagen ins Astronomische...
"According to the private aircraft company NetJets, more than 200 flights have been chartered to bring customers to Miami this year, which is actually more than the Super Bowl and second only, in this shameless hierarchy of jet-set event management, to the Oscar night.
...
(A New York art dealer...) "I just don't know where all the money is coming from." He says he used to understand the players in the contemporary art market - "you waited till you got married, then when you hit 45, you did some good works for the Whitney and started a collection" - but now the scene has irrevocably changed. "There are guys out there who can't even get a date, they are so nerdy, and they have $30m art collections."
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/89e8dcc6-8c3a-11db-9684-0000779e2340.html

-
In "Stuck in the Middle" erfahren wir vom grossen Verlierer unseres jungen Jahrhunderts - von der gradlinigen Mittelklasse, der einstmaligen Stuetze unseres Gesellschaftsmodells. - Wer gestern noch das Leben um einen sicheren Buerostuhl baute, muss heute seine Produktivitaet - und das Wohl seiner Lieben - 1:1 gegen Mitbewerber in Fernost verteidigen - und das - bei verlorenen Renten - mit dem Ruecken zur nackten Wand. http://www.ft.com/cms/s/f7d97ea2-8a78-11db-8940-0000779e2340.html

1995 schrieb Jeremy Rifkin sein Buch "Das Ende der Arbeit (The End Of Work: The Decline Of The Global Labor Force And The Dawn Of The Post-Market Era)". - Wir koennen dem nun getrost "Das Ende von Management und Verwaltung" hinzufuegen. http://www.foet.org/JeremyRifkin.htm

Ein Blick in die Zukunft ist natuerlich immer Spekulation, doch sieht es so aus, als ob sich die Schere weiter oeffnet, und das auch viel schneller, als manchem lieb sein wird.
Wer sich erfindungsreich auf die Seite derer schlaegt, deren Wohlstand von Investmentbankern sieben Tage die Woche rund um die Uhr rund um den Globus vergroessert wird, kann ebenfalls zu den Gewinnern gehoeren. Kreativkapital nennt sich dann, was Kuenstler, Designer, Musiker und Anbieter diversester Services fuer sich selbst und zum kulturellen Gewinn, Wohlbefinden und Spassvergnuegen einer neuen globalen Oberklasse einsetzen und das dann wiederum als Finanzkapital mehren koennen... Wir sehen das schon ueberall. Und Richard Florida packte es 2004 in seinem Buch "The Rise of the Creative Class" auch noch in schoene Theorie. http://www.creativeclass.org/

-

http://www.flickr.com/photos/fidgetingwildly/sets/72157594404354809/

So. Der Jahreszeit angemessen gibt es hier Winterimpressionen von Bergdorf Goodman.
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/56ea2904-8caf-11db-9684-0000779e2340.html
Wer Reichtum at work and at play sehen moechte, geht nach New York. Wer da nicht mehr mithalten kann, kommt nach Berlin.

-
Weiter in der Weekend FT vom 17.Dezember: Design, Design, Design... zB ganz einfache Tangram-Regalsysteme http://www.ft.com/cms/s/6105ddde-8caf-11db-9684-0000779e2340.html
http://www.thecoolhunter.net/lifestyle/LAGO-FORWARD-THINKING-DESIGN/
(die Idee wird man bald ueberall sehen)

Und dann... die Rettung fuer jeden, der wenig Geld hat und trotzdem in Luxus leben will: Sitting in Style - Housesitting von Luxusanwesen
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/6b037166-8b9c-11db-a61f-0000779e2340.html
http://www.mindmyhouse.com , http://www.housecarers.com , http://www.housesitworld.com , http://www.caretaker.org , http://www.housesitads.com.au

Die FT ist auch deshalb die beste Zeitung der Welt, weil man all das dort in einer Ausgabe finden kann - und viel mehr natuerlich.

Have a great time, wherever you are.


http://www.ft.com/home/europe

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Montag, 23. Oktober 2006
Superior Interiors


Aus der how-to-spend-it interiors edition vom Wochenende:Ugly Edition's "shadow sticker", £80.


http://www.ft.com/
http://www.ugly-home.com/

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Samstag, 2. September 2006
Protestrasur + Weekend FT


Gerade zurueck vom Fruehstueck.
Vor selbigem auf http://www.thingsmagazine.net/ aus dem WWI-Tagebuch eines englischen Luftwaffenoffiziers gelesen - von Protestrasuren und wie man hinter den deutschen Linien Hunnen-Karikaturen abgeworfen hat.

'June 20th (1916). Orderly Officer. Instructed Signallers. Wrote to Claudia. Went up to take photos, our manifold blows off. Do photos after tea. Dropped half a dozen of Heath Robinson's 'Hunlikely' books of cartoons of the Germans on their side of the line... June 22th. Three of us shave our moustaches as a 'protest' against overwork and Brock takes it seriously, quotes Kings Regs. and forbids us to leave the aerodrome until we've grown another one.'

http://www.thingsmagazine.net/2006_09_01_oldthings.htm#115710333729563747

Beim Fruehstueck dann in der Weekend FT http://www.ft.com/ ueber Wein in Shanghai, das Revival des Memphis-Design, Tyler Brules verwegen Plan zur Revolutionierung der politischen Systeme weltweit und ueber das perfekte Wochenende, wie es sich Charles Saumarez Smith vorstellt.
http://www.ft.com/artsandweekend
Besorgt Euch die Zeitung. Auch dieses Wochenende - wie jedes erste im Monat - mit der schoenen Hochglanzbeilage "How to spend it".

Have a great weekend everyone.


http://www.ft.com/
http://www.thingsmagazine.net/

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Sonntag, 2. Juli 2006
Matthew kann in London bleiben


Abwaerts geht's mit Victoria B. - Ist sie uns nicht lange genug auf die Nerven gegangen mit ihren funny friends und ihrem unnachahmlichen Stil?!! - Vorbei, vorbei, jetzt ist es vorbei - von Dir will niemand mehr was wissen - und von Deinem Mann auch nicht. - Ab gehts nach Hause - und: herzlichen Dank fuer den Besuch.

Wer glaubt, dass ich son bisken zu hart hier bin und irgendwie der Fussball voll mit mir durchgebrannt ist - ist er - sollte sich mal kurz zu Gemuete fuehren, was unser Freund Matthew Engel (Englaender) ueber den englischen Fussball vor dem verloren Spiel am Samstag in der FT (unser Lieblingszeitung - neben Fox&Hound - aus England) geschrieben hat.

Matthew drohte sogar, auszuwandern, falls seine Mannschaft die Meisterschaft gewinnen wuerde. - Schlechter Fussball. Schlechtes Management. Schlechter Trainer. Mieser Stil. Sehr spezielle Spielerfrauen. Schlecht fuer England.

-
Matthew, gut fuer Dich, gut fuer England und gut fuer uns alle:
Die englische Mannschaft hat gegen grossartige Portugiesen verloren.


Well spoken, Matthew!

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/ddf1c062-02d8-11db-9231-0000779e2340.html

(Matthews Pamphlet "Time to say the unsayable about England" auch in Auszuegen in der comment section.)

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Montag, 12. Juni 2006
Tyler's list


Der Mann, der die Lounge erfunden hat, hoert immer noch Lounge-Musik (fairerweise muss man sagen, Tyler Brûlé schreibt, dass er nach ewigen Betteln seiner Leser seine aktuelle top20 veroeffentlicht - eigentlich hatte er das nie tun wollen - und nicht tun solln? - sein wir nicht so kritisch - Musikgeschmack ist in gewisser Weise immer limitiert...)

http://news.ft.com/cms/s/2c241f72-f7a4-11da-9481-0000779e2340.html

Der grosse Tyler Brûlé, der mit seinem Magazin wallpaper seinerzeit fuer die Popularitaet von Design mehr getan hat als sonst jemand. - Der Brûlé, dem wir es verdanken, dass jede Boutique und Kneipe sprichwoertliche Lounge geworden ist - gut, es gibt deutlich Schlimmeres als Fluhafenaesthetik, das muss man sagen.

So - und dieser Tyler Brûlé hoert immer noch Lounge-Musik... hmmm. Wir verzeihen ihm, denn wir moegen ihn - irgendwie.
Gleichzeitig faellt uns wiedermal auf, wie furchtbar unironisch "lounge, easy listening, wellness etc..." in uns widerhallt...
... und Gumball-Pilot ist Tyler - glaube ich - auch keiner...

Anyway. Liste der 20 Titel, die Tyler zum Joggen braucht, auch im Anhang.

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