People reports: Always nice and thin – panorama

Kate Moss, 48, British model, does not only have positive memories of her early working years. “I think I was a scapegoat for a lot of people’s problems,” she said in a BBC interview aired on Sunday, citing discussions about her low weight as a young model. “I have never suffered from anorexia.” After a photo series by the photographer Corinne Day with Moss for British “Vogue” in 1993, there were debates about the so-called “heroin chic” – extremely thin, almost emaciated-looking figures. “I never did heroin either. I was so skinny because I didn’t eat when I was shooting and I’ve always been skinny,” Moss told the BBC.

(Photo: Oliver Dietze/dpa)

Reiner Calmund, 73, former football manager, does not give up sweets after his gastric bypass surgery. “I’m a sweet guy, I haven’t completely got rid of that either, but I eat a lot less,” he said pharmacy magazine. Since his operation two years ago, Calmund has halved his weight from 180 kg to 90 kg. The Rhinelander has lived with his wife and daughter in Saarlouis, Saarland, for around ten years. With the weight reduction, he has gained quality of life: “I can go for a walk and I no longer get gasps. I can move, I can tie my shoes and play badminton with my daughter in the garden,” said “Calli”.

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(Photo: Warner Bros.)

Ryan Gosling, 41, Canadian Hollywood star, did not meet with enthusiasm from his little daughters with the role of Ken in the movie “Barbie”. The 41-year-old said he actually wanted to play in a film that he could show his six- and seven-year-old daughters Augsburg General. “That also played into why I did the ‘Barbie’ movie a little bit,” he said. But the girls couldn’t do anything with the Ken he embodied, the Canadian said. “Why do you want to be Ken?” the kids would ask him. “Nobody wants to play with Ken!”. From her perspective, only Barbie is of interest.

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(Photo: Carsten Koall/dpa)

Ulrich Tucur, 64, actor, doesn’t like smartphones. People who “can’t exist without these damn light boxes” depressed him. “Of course, to tell the truth, I own a laptop, but you open it in the evening with pointed fingers, and that’s enough,” he told dpa. “I need a phone to make calls and maybe text.” When asked if he was old-fashioned, he replied that in a world that forces humans to connect to machines and that is gradually abolishing all autonomy, how can one be anything but old-fashioned.

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