Celebrities: Hoeneß about prison time – Panorama

Uli Hoeneß, 72, honorary president of FC Bayern, remembers a special meeting in prison. In 2014 he was imprisoned for tax evasion, in the podcast Ruhr News He now revealed that Ottmar Hitzfeld was one of his first visitors back then. The former Bayern coach even traveled to Landsberg the evening before so as not to miss the visiting time. “That’s typical Ottmar Hitzfeld. I would never do that, I would have gotten up at six o’clock and maybe come too late. But no, Ottmar spent the night there so that he could be at the prison gate on time,” said Hoeneß. Hitzfeld actually wanted to buy wine, but that was forbidden. According to Hoeneß, visitors could instead “bring two euros and then you can buy chocolate.” They both enjoyed these together.

(Photo: Hannes P Albert/dpa)

Harrison Ford, 81, actor, made an Austrian collector happy with his forgetfulness. He once left the script for the legendary first Star Wars film in a London apartment he rented during filming. Now the loose leaf collection entitled “The Adventures Of Luke Starkiller” has been auctioned in Great Britain for 10,795 pounds (around 12,622 euros), reports the Guardian. Ford is introduced as the cynical hero Han Solo, explained the auction house Excalibur Auctions in Kings Langley. The script also contains scenes and characters that were cut from the final version of the film.

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(Photo: Kay Nietfeld/dpa)

Luisa Neubauer, 27, climate activist, likes to turn up the music. In an interview with the Daily Mirror She said she was constantly being attacked and didn’t want to accept this constant threat, the death threats, the stalking, the rape fantasies in mailboxes as normality in her life. For her, this is not a private problem, but rather a social grievance. Still, she tries not to give up. Activism also means finding out “how not to lose love for the world despite adversity, how not to become bitter despite setbacks, but how to bring a love of life into the world.” It also helps her to look beyond her own horizons. A friend in Uganda, for example, runs the risk of being arrested for every sentence she says. She is still committed. According to Neubauer, it also helps to “turn up the music regularly.”

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(Photo: Armin Weigel/dpa)

Stefan Oster, 58, Bishop of Passau, advises fasting against blasphemy. All believers should consciously take time for silence every day until Easter, in front of a cross, an icon, a candle, it says in his pastoral letter. “Let us sincerely ask Jesus to be with us – and that we may feel more and more of his quiet, unobtrusive presence.” Afterwards, everyone should practice looking at their fellow human beings “that tries to see and say the good in others.” And combine this with the intention to refrain from using blasphemous words.

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(Photo: Angelika Warmuth/dpa)

Ben Becker, 59, actor, attaches great importance to order. “With me you can eat off the floor,” he told the private radio station Hit Radio FFH. “People who come to me first need time to look,” says Becker. “Little statements are happening everywhere. And if I see something not in its place, I move it back.”

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