Olli Schulz
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Speak your words out. And there you really have to say, performance points to Olaf Scholz, of course. I found it spectacular, of course prepared. I thought the cool thing about it, he prepared it and Linden obviously didn't see it coming. And you're like, what? Why didn't you see that coming, dude? Do you think you're the only one who has any side-talks or what? That's what I thought.
Do you think that Friedrich Merz, I can imagine that Christian Lindner might have noticed at that moment that he had been a little tool, that he was actually just a tool for superordinate interests, because his party is at 3% in the polls. Why should he want to re-evaluate? To be honest. And above all, why do you have to do it now?
If you look at the Bild and the Welt, there is one tear-jerking article about Christian Lindner. He just put a fucking template in there and then he was released. Dude, you really saw that coming. And honestly, three years ago. That didn't happen long ago. That's strange. I wonder if Christian Lindner is not just a tool in the end and who might tell him that it could possibly be like that.
But I think in situations like this right now, do you really think it's a good idea to say, we can support Ukraine, but only if we cut the citizen's money? No, man. Adults learn at some point. There is a certain simultaneity of challenges and you have to solve them at the same time. And if you can't do that with the money you have, then you have to see where you get the money from.
Bridges have to be built, even if Russia attacks Ukraine. And you can't just sit on the street in washing machine boxes because you want to save a billion. You have to do it all at the same time. Unfortunately, it's not possible to weigh it up against each other. Well, come on.
Me too, but I have to say one important thing, I have to say one important thing, I have to say one important thing, I have to say one important thing, I have to say one important thing, I have to say one important thing, I have to say one important thing, I have to say one important thing, I have to say one important thing, I have to say one important thing, I have to say one important thing, I have to say one important thing, I have to say one important thing, I have to say one important thing, I have to say one important thing, I have to say one important thing, I have to say one important thing, I have to say one important thing, I have to say one important thing, I have to say one important thing, I have to say one important thing, I have to say one important thing, I have to say one important thing,
To be so surprised, I thought the performance was only interesting, then he really takes years on his own responsibility and then it comes to his own responsibility and then it suddenly collapses and wants to be saved or something. So that's kind of a bit strange.
Well, I think it's exciting and no one has made a good figure and I'm looking forward to a chancellorship of Friedrich Merz, no matter how long it takes. I wonder with whom, maybe with the BSW, with Sarah Wagenknecht. That would perhaps be the only option after the election. I was very grateful that I didn't get much from the fascists. So they did say something, but it was somehow uninteresting.
And that gave me hope that maybe when Olaf Scholz, Robert Habeck, Friedrich Merz and then somehow one of the Nazis are elected, that it doesn't play a role so much, because the people then pull together again, that it might lead to a bit of... Because they really don't have any solutions at all. And do you want to do it like in America?
Do you want to do it like in America and vote for the fascists? Fortunately, we have a wider range. And I think to myself in the end, what is that?
The Sorcerer of the East. Wolfgang Thierse is the Sorcerer of the East.
You just sent me the poster, I just saw the theater and thought that's tiny. I know that.
Yes, I also liked that. You are very similar. This roughness, this masculinity, it's both.
Was that a white taco shop? Yes, I know. Really? In a corner like that? In a corner in downtown, right? Yeah, yeah, downtown. Yeah, I know, of course.
And it was really, really good.
And there was a slice of lemon on top, lime on top.
Yes, I actually have a few songs that I would like to put on the list today. On the one hand, I just clicked on it, so it clicked so hectic in the background, a song that I haven't put on yet, but I should have done it a long time ago, namely a very excellent version of the David Bowie classic Live on Mars. By the way, it's from Sophie Anna Kouroussa and it's from the David Bowie musical Lazarus.
I think there was one of his absolute late works, it was a bit of an attempt to do something like the ABBA musical with David Bowie songs, but it didn't really work out because David Bowie is not ABBA. And there's a whole, no, Sophia Ann Caruso is her name, live on Mars.
And I thought at first it was a little girl or a little boy who sings it, because it sounds so bell-like, like Heintje to his best times. And somehow, I don't know, I don't know. There are songs, when they are sung with inbounds, even if it's a bit kitschy, then they touch you at a point where you think, what, dude, how is that? That's what happens to me with the song Sophia and Caruso.
It's a bit sad, a bit melancholic and you hear more in the voice than you heard with Bowie. And that's just such a great song. And then just something completely different, to look a little bit ahead, an old absolute classic, which is also not on our list, namely from Busta Rhymes. And that would be my songs. It may be that a third, maybe even a fourth comes on it. Oh, here it is.