Celebrities: DJ Ötzi avoids alcohol – Panorama

(Photo: Matthias Röder / dpa)

DJ Ötzi, 50, Austrian entertainer, avoids parties. “I try to keep my energy with myself,” says Gerry Friedle, aka DJ Ötzi, of the German Press Agency. “Besides, I don’t drink alcohol.” The abstinence is a long-term consequence of his illnesses in childhood, up to the age of twelve he suffered from frequent epileptic seizures. “They avoided me, they avoided me, the madman.” Friedle’s love for a woman later ended in homelessness. To find a new love, he ventured onto a karaoke stage – and discovered his talent to the applause of the audience.

Premiere of "Eternals'
(Photo: Valerie Macon / AFP)

Zahara Jolie-Pitt, 16, US actor’s daughter, wears secondhand fashion. At the premiere of the film “Eternals”, in which her mother Angelina Jolie plays the leading female role, Zahara wore a silver glitter dress in Los Angeles that was familiar to connoisseurs: Angelina Jolie wore the silver Elie Saab couture robe in the year Worn at the Oscars in 2014. Zahara is the third oldest of six children from Jolie and her ex-husband Brad Pitt, 57.

Man returns found money and becomes a national hero
(Photo: Anthony Duo / dpa)

Emmanuel Tuloe, 19, Liberian motorcycle taxi driver, has been named a national hero for his sincerity. He found cash worth US $ 50,000 wrapped in a plastic bag on the street and returned it to the owner, according to the newspaper Liberian Observer reported. George Weah, President of Liberia, one of the poorest countries in the world, praised the finder’s “extraordinary sense of morality” and awarded the young man the highest order in Liberia and also presented him with an educational grant, two motorbikes and a cash bonus. Tuloe, whose father had died early, had to drop out of seventh grade for lack of money.

Literature Service - 'Man God!'  by Wolf Biermann
(Photo: Bernd von Jutrczenka / dpa)

Wolf Biermann, 84, songwriter, doesn’t believe in God, but in people. “I was a believer for life,” he said of the New Westphalian. “My faith, however, is even crazier, because I don’t believe in a god or gods, but in people.” In addition, the almost 85-year-old emphasizes (his birthday is on November 15th): “I give up hope just in time: in death.” But he is in no hurry with that. Biermann was born in Hamburg in 1936 and moved to the GDR in 1953. Because of his criticism of the state and the party, he was banned from performing and publishing. In 1976, the GDR expelled him, accompanied by a large protest movement in East and West.

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