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Hannes Lindemann

Hans-Günther[1] “Hannes” Lindemann (* 28 December 1922 – † 17 April 2015[2]) was a German physician, sailing pioneer, canoeist and author who became known for his Atlantic crossings in very small boats.

Interview with WDR5 on his 90th birthday in 2012 and report.

From 1955 onwards, he conducted several self-experiments to test the ability of a shipwrecked sailor to survive on the high seas under extreme psychological and physical stress. In 1955, he sailed the Atlantic in a dugout canoe, the Liberia, measuring 7.70 m x 0.70 m and weighing approximately 600 kg, specially built in Liberia. The following year, he sailed in an even smaller folding canoe (5.20 m x 0.87 m, 27 kg), the Liberia III.

Lindemann equipped a standard two-seater Klepper folding boat of the Aerius II type with 60 cans of food, 96 cans of milk and 72 cans of beer, and 3 liters of water and crossed the Atlantic from the Canary Islands to St. Martin in the Netherlands Antilles. Although he carried a sextant for navigation, a floating anchor for rest breaks, and fishing tackle, he did not use a stove and ate the fish he caught raw. Lindemann cast doubt on Alain Bombard’s theory, which was discussed at the time, that shipwrecked sailors could meet their drinking water needs solely from salt water or the flesh of caught fish: he survived only by supplementing his supplies with collected rainwater. During the 72 days of the Atlantic crossing, he lost 25 kilograms of body weight and survived several hurricanes and two capsizes. He attributed his success to careful mental preparation for his journey through autogenic training and autosuggestion.

Lindemann subsequently enjoyed success as an author: “Alone Across the Ocean” is a logbook-like account of his first voyages. “One Man, One Boat, Two Continents” describes the experiences of a third Atlantic crossing in 1960 and summarizes conversations with African statesmen and with Albert Schweitzer, with whom he worked for a time as a doctor in Lambaréné (Gabon). He wrote several works on the subject of autogenic training, worked as a health educator for the German Red Cross, and taught at the University of Bonn on the topics of autogenic training and mental hygiene. His guidebooks have appeared in numerous editions.

Hannes Lindemann last lived in Bonn-Bad Godesberg. Wolfgang Ellenberger once had a telephone conversation with him.

https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hannes_Lindemann

https://www.yacht.de/yachten/klassiker/hannes-lindemann-mit-dem-faltboot-ueber-den-atlantik


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Karl Kruszelnicki

Karl Sven Woytek Sas Konkovitch Matthew Kruszelnicki AM (born 1948), often referred to as Dr Karl,[2] is an Australian science communicator and populariser,[2] who is known as an author and a science commentator on Australian radio, television, and podcasts.

Kruszelnicki is the Julius Sumner Miller Fellow in the Science Foundation for Physics at the School of PhysicsUniversity of Sydney.

Kruszelnicki was awarded a Master of Biomedical Engineering degree at the University of New South Wales. He completed his Bachelor of Medicine and Bachelor of Surgery degrees at Sydney University in 1986.

After primary school, Kruszelnicki’s first job was ditch digger in the Wollongong suburb of Dapto.[11] He also worked as a filmmaker, car mechanic, TV weatherman and as roadie for Slim DustyBo Diddley and Chuck Berry.[12] While working as a taxi driver in Sydney, he was beaten unconscious after picking up a passenger trying to escape a group of men.[1]

Kruszelnicki presented the first series of Quantum (replaced by Catalyst) in 1985. As a science communicator and presenter, he appears on the Seven Network’s Weekend Sunrise and on ABC TV. From early 2008 to 2010 he co-hosted a TV series called Sleek Geeks with Adam Spencer.

Kruszelnicki presented a program on ABC TV in January 2025 titled Dr Karl’s How Things Work.[16]

Kruszelnicki does a number of weekly radio shows and podcasts. His hour-long show on ABC radio station Triple J has been going on in one form or another since 1981; this weekly science talkback show, Science with Dr Karl, is broadcast on Thursday mornings from 11:00 am to midday and attracts up to 300,000 listeners; it is also available as a podcast.[17]

Kruszelnicki also often helps with other science and education Triple J promotions such as the Sleek Geek Week roadshow with Adam Spencer and Caroline Pegram. He and Adam Spencer released the Sleek Geeks podcast regularly until December 2015.[18] Also, Since 2016, he has hosted the podcast Shirtloads of Science.[19][20]

For many years, until March 2020, Kruszelnicki appeared on a live weekly late-night link-up on BBC Radio 5 Live‘s Up All Night, usually with Rhod Sharp, answering science questions.[21] In 2017, he hosted Dr. Karl’s Outrageous Acts of Science on Discovery Channel (Australia).[22]

Kruszelnicki writes a regular column for Australian Geographic magazine, called ‘Need to Know’, which is republished as a blog on the magazine’s website.[23] He has also written for the Sydney Morning Herald‘s Good Weekend magazine.[24]

In 1981, he appeared on an Australian radio documentary about death and near-death experiences that aired on the ABCAnd When I Die, Will I Be Dead?[25] It was adapted into a book in 1987.

Politics

Kruszelnicki was an unsuccessful candidate for the Australian Senate in the 2007 Australian federal election. He was placed number two on the Climate Change Coalition ticket in New South Wales.[27]

In 2015, Kruszelnicki appeared in an Australian Government advertising campaign for the recently published intergenerational report. He had previously agreed to do the campaign, believing it would be a “non-political, bipartisan, independent report.” After its publication, however, he backed away from the campaign, describing it as “flawed”. “How can you possibly have a report that looks at the next 40 years and doesn’t mention climate change? It should have acknowledged that climate change is real and we cause it and it will be messy.”

https://www.abc.net.au/news/karl-kruszelnicki/8462002

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karl_Kruszelnicki


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Gerhard Kittel

Gerhard Kittel (* March 4, 1925 in Berolzheim, North Baden; † November 9, 2011 in Marloffstein) was a German otolaryngologist, phoniatrist, and pediatric audiologist who, as a university professor in Erlangen, played a key role in establishing the field in Germany and Europe.

Gerhard Kittel also wrote poems and poetry, but his early work was lost in the turmoil of World War II. He subsequently published texts and books, especially after his retirement, including a poetry series published by Specht-Verlag. He was a member of the German Federal Association of Doctor-Writers.

He wrote a poem for the European Congress of Doctor-Writers in October 2002 in Bad Säckingen, Southern Germany:

Gerhard KittelEuropalied“rough” english translation:
Schwestern, Brüder, reicht die Hand,Brothers, sisters take your hand
lasst vergessen Streit und Leid,let´s forget quarrels and suffering
schätzet euer Vaterland,estimate your own country
stärkt Europas Einigkeit.and enforce Europe´s unity.
Lebt in Freiheit ohne Krieg,Live in freedom without war,
haltet Neid für immer fern,hold away jealousy forever,
ist Europa selbst schon Sieg,is Europe already a victory
leuchtet auf der Zukunft Stern.the star of future is gleaming.
Seht den Kontinent im Licht,See the continent in the light
fühlt und denkt und handelt recht,feel, think and act in the right way,
rächet das Vergang´ne nicht,do not revenge the past things
keiner sei des Anderen Knecht!nobody be the knight of the other!

https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gerhard_Kittel_(Mediziner)


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Katja Kessler

From a humanistic high school straight to dental school, then a career in journalism, later a bestselling author, and now a sought-after interior designer – Katja Kessler has reinvented herself several times over. In the podcast “Der Finanz-Gourmet,” she talks to Carolin Tsalkas and Oliver Morath about her unusual journey.

In the podcast, she provides fascinating insights into the world of design, exposes the most common mistakes in interior design, and reveals her three secrets to success. “The opportunity will present itself at some point,” she says, “but you have to seize it.”

Instead of taking over her father’s practice, Kessler interned at the Axel Springer publishing house and caused a stir with her front-page articles about nude photos of the BILD newspaper. She was given her own column and reported on high society at home and abroad for four years. In 2002, Kessler married Kai Diekmann, then editor-in-chief of Bild and later publisher of the Bild Group. The two have four children[1] and live in Potsdam.

“I was bathed in dragon’s blood,” Kessler says of her path. Studying dentistry, which she completed at her father’s request, felt “like Carnival.” But the courage to change paid off: As a journalist for the Bild newspaper, she met celebrities such as the Dalai Lama and Brad Pitt, spent a year with Dieter Bohlen for his biography (sales: one million copies) and experienced bizarre moments with Prince Albert in Cannes.

Kessler also published in the FAZ, the Für Sie and the Welt am Sonntag and wrote with Dieter Bohlen his biographies Nothing but the Truth (2002) and Behind the Scenes (2003). For her work she has been awarded, among other things, the Champagne Prize for Joie de Vivre[3] and – together with Bohlen – the Golden Feather. This prize was awarded because the book “was the first time that the feature sections of well-known newspapers dealt with the phenomenon of the tabloids”.[4] Her first novel, Heartbeats, was published in 2007, followed in 2008 by The Mommy Book: Pregnancy, Birth and the Ten Months After, and in 2009 she published Ask Me Honey, I Know Better, a novel in which she writes partly autobiographically about her marriage to Diekmann. On March 8, 2011, Kessler’s funny and factual stories, “The Schatzi Experiment or The Day I Decided to Train My Husband,” were published. In 2014, she published “Silicon Madness: How I Emigrated to California with Schatzi.”

Kessler also appeared as a “parenting expert” on the RTL program “Erwachsen auf Probe.”

She has been self-employed as an interior designer since 2018. In November 2023, four of her interior design projects—Villa Meeresstern and Das Kulm (both in the Baltic Sea resort of Heringsdorf), Berlin’s “Ullsteinhalle,” and the “H1” in Bielefeld—were nominated for the SBID Award in London, which Villa Meeresstern ultimately won.

Webseite

https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Katja_Kessler

Bei Dieter Bohlen


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Balazs Fabinyi

Mit dem Pianisten Dr.Balazs Fabinyi und dem Bariton Joseph Schlömicher-Thier bei einem Liederabend in St.Pölten

https://www.facebook.com/balazs.fabinyi


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Willem Kersing

Willem Kersing has been playing the piano since he was five years old. His teachers have included George van Renesse, Johan Patist, Jerome Lowenthal, and Herman Strategier. He studied at the conservatories in Utrecht and Enschede. He accompanies many singers, including members of the Nationale Reisopera, and has collaborated with Ank Reinders. For several years, he has accompanied singers coached by Marion van den Akker. He plays chamber music in many ensembles and, after retiring from teaching medicine there, organizes a music festival at Burg Feistritz in Austria. Several recordings of him are available on YouTube.

Willem Kersing is married to the author Hebrina Blok (see www.hebrinablok.nl). They have two children and five grandchildren.

In a benefit concert at the Salzburg Residence with singer-songwriter Joseph Schlömicher-Thier:

https://www.youtube.com/@willemkersing9041/featured

https://www.linkedin.com/in/willem-kersing-2a22a3a

https://www.facebook.com/willem.kersing.7

https://www.linkedin.com/in/willem-kersing-2a22a3a


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Heinrich Hoffmann

Heinrich Hoffmann (June 13, 1809 in Frankfurt am Main; September 20, 1894 in Frankfurt am Main) was a German psychiatrist, poet, and children’s book author. He is the author of Struwwelpeter (The Struwwel Peter). He also used the pseudonyms Heulalius von Heulenburg, Reimerich Kinderlieb, Peter Struwwel, and Polycarpus Gastfenger.

Politics

In 1848, he was a member of the Frankfurt Preliminary Parliament. He hosted the revolutionary Friedrich Hecker in his household. Hoffmann himself advocated a constitutional monarchy under Prussian rule and was a member of the Hereditary Imperial Party. In his satirical works “Handbook for Diggers or Concise Instructions on Becoming a People’s Man in a Few Days” (1848) and “The Howler Mirror” (1849), he strongly opposed the republicans. In 1866, he supported the annexation of the Free City of Frankfurt by Prussia.

Literarische Werke

From 1842 onwards, Hoffmann published poems and plays under various pseudonyms. He described himself as an occasional verse writer. He became known worldwide through his children’s book, Struwwelpeter, which he illustrated himself and wrote for his eldest son for Christmas 1844. Presumably in 1858, Hoffmann created a new version with modified illustrations; all subsequent editions of Struwwelpeter are based on this.

In 1851, he published his Christmas fairy tale “King Nutcracker and Poor Reinhold.” The first edition was illustrated with a drawing by the author depicting the Frankfurt Christmas market.

After his retirement, he wrote his memoirs, which were not published until 1926.

Memberships, Private Life

As a student in Heidelberg, Hoffmann had been a member of the Corps Alemannia since 1830, later an honorary member.[3] In 1836, he joined the Masonic lodge “Zur Einigkeit.” After a few years, he left because it did not admit Jews.[4]

In the fall of 1840, Hoffmann founded the Society of Tutti Frutti and its Baths in the Ganges in Frankfurt am Main, a society of writers, artists, and scholars whose members adopted specially chosen “fruit names.” Hoffmann himself was the “Onion.” The members included Franz Xaver Schnyder von Wartensee (“Pine Cone”), Ludwig Braunfels (“Chestnut”), Wilhelm Speyer (“Betel”), Theodor Creizenach (“Deadly Nightshade”), Carl Trost (“Thorn Apple”), Friedrich Maximilian Hessemer (“Date”), Eduard Schmidt von der Launitz (“Juniper”), Lorenz Diefenbach (“Strawberry”), Georg Eduard Steitz (“Nut 2”), Johann David Passavant (“Pomeranian Orange”), Heinrich von Rustige (“Nut”) and Philipp Veit (“Fennel”).

Interesting humorous version of Struwwelpeter by Böhmermann:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=–X5XjyynMw

In 1845, he co-founded a medical association and composed “Wine Songs for Doctors” for social occasions.

He died after a stroke and was buried in Frankfurt’s Main Cemetery (at the Wall, No. 541, honorary grave).[6]

A street in Frankfurt-Niederrad is named after him, where the Clinic for Psychiatry, Psychosomatics, and Psychotherapy of the Frankfurt University Hospital is now located. Two museums are dedicated to him, as are several memorial plaques at his former residences in Frankfurt.

Dice Game

Mr. Fix von Bickenbach’s Journey Around the World in 77 Days, Struwwelpeter Museum, Frankfurt am Main, 2012. Available as a facsimile in a slipcase.[7]

Museum

The Heinrich Hoffmann and Struwwelpeter Museum has been located in Frankfurt am Main since 1977, providing information about the life and work of this man and his classic children’s book.[8] In September 2019, the museum, now known as “Struwwelpeter,” moved to its current location.-Museum“, in das Haus zum Esslinger in der Neuen Frankfurter Altstadt.[9]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heinrich_Hoffmann_(author)

https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heinrich_Hoffmann

https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Struwwelpeter

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Struwwelpeter


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Milad Shadrooh

Dr. Milad begann 2012 mit seiner Tätigkeit als Dozent für Zahnmedizin und hat seitdem Tausende von Zahnärzten in Zahnschienen und kosmetischer Zahnheilkunde geschult. Darüber hinaus hält er Vorlesungen für Zahnmedizinstudenten an verschiedenen Universitäten in Großbritannien und im Ausland. Im Jahr 2020 gründete Dr. Milad gemeinsam mit seinem Freund und Kollegen Dr. Robbie Hughes, einem sehr erfolgreichen Zahnarzt und Unternehmer, Avantgarde Dentistry.

2024 führten sie „Same Day Smile“ ein, ein Konzept, das innerhalb eines Tages ein außergewöhnliches Lächeln ermöglicht.

Dr Milad began lecturing in dentistry in 2012, and he has trained thousands of dentists in dental aligners and cosmetic dentistry since, as well as lecturing to dental students at various universities throughout the UK and abroad. In 2020, Dr Milad joined forces with his friend and colleague Dr Robbie Hughes, a very successful dentist and fellow entrepreneur, to establish Avantgarde Dentistry.

In 2024, they have launched Same Day Smile, a concept that can deliver outstanding smile makeovers in one day.

https://singingdentist.com

https://www.facebook.com/dentistsinging

https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCGh_mtyy1pJ67wVkqK11xsg

https://www.instagram.com/singingdentist


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André Hieronymus

No one should later claim they weren’t warned:
The magic shows of dentist Franz, aka André Hieronymus, are not for the sunny-natured.

No glittering curtain, no scantily clad assistant, no half-hour of fussing over a single rabbit trick.


Hieronymus’ magic is short and painful, with no feel-good guarantee, but guaranteed to be funny!

Talk to your doctor or psychologist about risks and side effects.

https://hieronymus.biz

https://www.youtube.com/@andrehieronymus4237


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Oliver Erens

Oliver Erens (born February 2, 1967 in Heidelberg) is a German physician, publicist, magician, and author.

He actively pursued his hobby, magic, alongside his school and university studies. Since then, he has increasingly focused on writing about magic. Since 1995, he has published specialist books on magic, for which he was honored with the title of “Author of the Year” in 1996. From 2004 to 2011, he was an editor of the magazine “MAGIE” of the Magic Circle of Germany. From 1986 to 2000, he was a regular contributor to the magic magazine “Magische Welt”, for which he wrote around 80 articles.

From 2003 to 2010 he was part of the editorial team of the club magazine Magie.

https://zauberbuch.webflow.io

List of publications: https://zauberbuch.webflow.io/veroeffentlichungen

https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oliver_Erens

https://www.youtube.com/@zimtbaer