I had the opportunity to draw a tarot card illustration of Ziggy for a Xeno Tarot Project as the Three of Swords!
Details about the symbolism in this artwork below the cut (/!\ Xenosaga spoilers /!\)
The Three of Swords tarot card is associated with hurt, betrayal and overcoming grief, which is very fitting for Ziggy. The card usually depicts a heart pierced by 3 swords, so I reused that imagery by having Ziggy's heart pierced by them. I wanted the swords to be more than objects, so I associated them to 3 characters who are cause of grief for Ziggy: to the left, Sharon, his wife, murdered with her son in front of him ; to the right, Canaan, who believed his existence had hurt Ziggy and chose to sacrifice his life to repent. The third sword is connected to the black silhouette in the back, the Black Testament, Voyager, the traitor.
The background is the stained glass from the Archon Cathedral, a place that haunts Ziggy, filled with death and despair. The red at the bottom represents the blood spilt there, and Voyager’s silhouette cutting the light from the window illustrates the heavy shadow he brought on Ziggy. The halo reinforces the cathedral aesthetic, and cuts Voyager’s shadow as a symbol of eventually overcoming that darkness he left behind.
The flowers over Ziggy’s chest, covering the swords wound, serve a similar purpose: they’re a rose of Sharon and momo peach blossoms, for the family he lost (Sharon & Joaquin) and the family he found (MOMO).
I hope you like this artwork as much as I enjoyed creating it!
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Z-I-G-G-Y It's short for Ziggurat...
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Notable characters from the Creed of Gethin trilogy! (including appearance changes between books for recurring mains)
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Okay Verfolgungsjagd mit Jan? LOVE IT.
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S.V. Dáte at HuffPost:
WASHINGTON — A presidential order to the military to conduct a coup to keep him in office “might well be an official act,” Donald Trump’s lawyer told the Supreme Court Thursday on the question of whether Trump’s attempted coup is immune from prosecution.
The extraordinary exchange was among several in lengthy oral arguments before the justices, who will now decide whether the former president will stand trial on federal charges based on his actions leading up to the violent assault on the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.
Trump has been claiming that all his actions as president were “official acts” and therefore immune from prosecution entirely. While justices seemed skeptical of that assertion, most expressed concern that former presidents could be prosecuted in bad faith and for political reasons in the years to come.
“Reliance on the good faith of the prosecutor may not be enough,” Chief Justice John Roberts told Department of Justice lawyer Michael Dreeben.
“I take that concern,” added Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson. “I think it’s a real thing.”
How justices decide to protect future presidents from prosecutions based on their legitimate official actions could decide whether Trump faces a trial at all before the November election on the Jan. 6 indictment. If the court orders trial judge Tanya Chutkan to hold an evidentiary hearing to weed out the “official” components of Trump’s actions versus the ones for his private or political gain, that hearing and potential appeals of her ruling could consume many more months.
And if Trump wins back the White House, he could order prosecutors to drop all unresolved federal charges against him.
While Dreeben did not refer to the coming election at all, he repeated his boss special counsel Jack Smith’s request that the case be sent back to Chutkan with instructions that concerns about not punishing “official” acts be dealt with in jury instructions, rather than a separate hearing.
“We would like to present that as an integrated picture to the jury so that it sees the sequence and the gravity of the conduct and why each step occurred,” Dreeben said.
Trump’s lawyer, John Sauer, meanwhile came in for even more pointed questioning from most of the justices, but none more on point than Elena Kagan’s question about 40 minutes in.
“How about if the president orders the military to stage a coup?” Kagan asked.
“That might well be an official act,” Sauer answered.
Sauer also claimed that a presidential assassination of a political rival as well as the sale of nuclear secrets to a foreign power could also be defended as official acts immune from prosecution.
Trump was not at the Supreme Court during the oral arguments Thursday but rather was in a different courtroom, in lower Manhattan, in the early phase of an unrelated criminal trial.
During the oral arguments for the Trump v. United States presidential immunity case at SCOTUS on Thursday, Trump lawyer John Sauer told the court that even a military coup would be immune from prosecution as an "official act."
See Also:
HuffPost: Trump Lawyer Argues He Could Legally Order Assassination Of Political Rival
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LETTERS FROM AN AMERICAN
January 9, 2024
HEATHER COX RICHARDSON
JAN 10, 2024
On the docket today in front of three judges on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit was the question of whether former presidents can be prosecuted for things they did while in office. The issue at hand is whether Trump can be tried for his attempt to overturn the 2020 presidential election, but Trump has also been charged in three other criminal cases: a national case over his mishandling of national security documents, a state case in Georgia for interfering with the 2020 election there, and a state case in New York for paying hush money to adult film actress Stormy Daniels. He is also facing a number of civil cases.
A federal grand jury working under Special Counsel Jack Smith brought four criminal charges against the former president on August 1. Trump’s lawyers have argued not that he didn’t do what he is accused of, but that his position as president at the time gives him immunity from prosecution for breaking laws. In this case, they are arguing that he cannot be tried now because he has already been impeached and acquitted for his actions. They argue that a president can be charged criminally only if he has been impeached and convicted.
A quick reminder: Impeachment is a political process, not a legal one. A president could be impeached simply for watching TV all day, which is not a crime but which would make it impossible to do the job. Another reminder: as NBC’s Vaughn Hillyard documented today, in Trump’s second impeachment trial, his own lawyer Bruce Castor assured the Senate that “the text of the Constitution…makes very clear that a former President is subject to criminal sanction after his presidency for any illegal acts he commits.”
A number of Republican Senators—including then Senate majority leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY)—agreed, saying they would acquit Trump but expected him to answer to the law rather than the political system. “We have a criminal justice system in this country,” McConnell said. “We have civil litigation. And former Presidents are not immune from being held accountable by either one.”
Interestingly, Trump’s argument that he cannot now be charged with crimes makes the Republican senators who voted to acquit him complicit. It’s an acknowledgement of what was clear all along: they could have stopped him at any point, but they repeatedly chose not to. Now he is explicitly suggesting that their behavior shields him from answering to the law.
Today, Trump’s lawyer D. John Sauer told the court that so long as he was not impeached and convicted for his actions, a president could do virtually anything. "Could a president order SEAL Team Six to assassinate a political rival?" Judge Florence Pan asked. "That's an official act: an order to SEAL Team Six.” Sauer answered that Congress would have to impeach and convict that president before he could be charged with a crime. "But if he weren't, there would be no criminal prosecution, no criminal liability for that?" Pan asked. Sauer again emphasized that Congress would have to act before any indictment could take place. “So your answer is no,” Pan said.
In his brief to the court opposing Trump’s claim, Special Counsel Smith pointed out that there is nothing in history to support Trump’s argument and that Nixon’s accepting a pardon “reflects the consensus view that a former President is subject to prosecution after leaving office.”
Trump’s approach, Smith wrote in a hard-hitting paragraph, “would grant immunity from criminal prosecution to a President who accepts a bribe in exchange for directing a lucrative government contract to the payer; a President who instructs the FBI Director to plant incriminating evidence on a political enemy; a President who orders the National Guard to murder his most prominent critics; or a President who sells nuclear secrets to a foreign adversary, because in each of these scenarios, the President could assert that he was simply executing the laws; or communicating with the Department of Justice; or discharging his powers as Commander-in-Chief; or engaging in foreign diplomacy. Under the defendant’s framework, the Nation would have no recourse to deter a President from inciting his supporters during a State of the Union address to kill opposing lawmakers—thereby hamstringing any impeachment proceeding—to ensure that he remains in office unlawfully.”
While presidential immunity is a crucially important question, it seems unlikely that any court will conclude that a U.S. president can act however they wish without any accountability before the law. Certainly the framers of the Constitution never intended such a thing (if you listen closely, you can hear them spinning in their graves). More recently, in 1974, the Supreme Court in United States v. Nixon ruled unanimously that President Richard Nixon could not use claims of executive privilege to withhold evidence from a criminal prosecution. Even more recently, on December 29, three judges on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit ruled that Trump does not have absolute immunity from civil lawsuits.
But the more pressing immediate question is when the court can resume progress on the case, which is stalled during appeals. The case is scheduled for trial on March 4, and Trump has been trying to drag it out—as he has all his trials—with the evident hope that it can be delayed until after the election. When Trump appealed the decision of the district court that he was not immune, Special Counsel Smith tried to move things along by taking the case directly to the Supreme Court, but the court declined to take it at that point. The case will almost certainly end up there again, at which time the justices could let the appeals court decision stand or agree to take it up. If they take it up, they could decide it quickly or delay it until after the election.
Today, in The Bulwark, nineteen former Republican members of Congress called on the courts, especially the Supreme Court, to move the case forward as quickly as possible. Calling out “Trump’s gambit to escape accountability altogether: assert an unprecedented claim of absolute presidential immunity from criminal prosecution and use the appellate process to delay the trial until after the November election,” they defended the public’s right to have “critical information they need before they cast their ballots in November.”
Noting that as former members of Congress, they were “not persuaded that the argument [for presidential immunity] has any basis in law or history,” they said that whatever the courts decide, they should do it quickly. “Permitting delay would…undermine the rule of law [and] the integrity of the 2024 election,” they wrote.
Although it is unusual for a defendant to attend such a hearing, Trump was at court today, clearly intending to use the case as part of his campaign. Perry Stein of the Washington Post noted that Trump recently lied to supporters that President Joe Biden was “forcing me into a courtroom in our nation’s capital” to weaken his campaign.
LETTERS FROM AN AMERICAN
HEATHER COX RICHARDSON
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Polizeiruf 110 „Black Box“
Und dann Sommerpause, was eine Scheiße, was soll ich mit meinem Leben machen solange??
Qualität lebt.
Wenn nicht ein Mensch von nem Zug überfahren wird heute, dann bin ich sauer
GAY?
GAY!
Mord in der Regio? Hatten wir das schon mal? 9€ Ticket Wut? Auf die DB weil Klima wieder nicht funktioniert?
Traumatisierte Kommissarinnen for the win!
Da kommen schon wieder so Gefühle in mir hoch weißte?
Rosa nächste Folge wahrscheinlich auch so MIR GEHT'S GUT nein darling geht's dir nicht
Hat Brasch nen Pawlak to her inner Herzog?
Mäht da wer Rasen?
Tür auf weil unverarbeitetes Trauma oder ist die Klima wirklich kaputt?
Omg er ist voller Blut und hat messy hair! HOT.
Omg er heult! Noch hotter!
SAG AMAL
WIE KONNTE DAS DENN JETZT SO ESKALIEREN
Ich schau seit zehn Minuten-
Die Arme oha :(
Aber wenn Polizeiruf also der schlechtere Tatort (sorry) der traumatisierten Kommissarin schon Panikattacken gibt... ist es dann safe to say, dass Rosa da auch durch muss?
Weil, bei Gott, das verkrafte ich nicht.
Wenn dann muss Jan verdammt nochmal bei ihr sein und- ok ich hör auf jetzt, wir sind ja in Magdeburg, ist ja guuhuuut
Wehe übrigens WEHE diese lovestory geht scheiße aus
Wobei ich mich frag ob der eine sich nicht zu sehr schämt für die Beziehung, ich weiß nicht ich weiß nicht
Er ist vom LKA, er ist BÖSE
die vom LKA sind IMMER BÖSE.
Bro... Schon wieder die Tür...
Schatzi dir geht's echt nicht gut
Und die restlichen 60min liest sie jetzt, wie der Fall ausgeht werden wir nie erfahren, weil dann die Sendezeit vorbei ist
Ich mag ihren Kollegen by the way
PTSD schatzi guck gut hin
Omg gleich schmeißt sie mit Stühlen oder??
CHILL
Er lügt ABER CHILL
Ich glaub Adam ist das Problem.
Also der Name.
Alle Krimi Adams sind doch gay, traumatised und stecken SO TIEF in der Scheiße
BRUDER WIE SÜß
ALSO TRAUMA ABER SÜß
GENAU SO EINE SZENE FÜR JAN UND ROSA
GENAU SO EINE!!!!!
Aw ma schweet littleh gayz are not feeling so guuuud?
Are we... getting gay sex? NO OF FUCKING COURSE NOT
Ich kann auch gut mit Bällen
Omg Nachtkrapp my beloved
He snackin
DU HAST AUCH PTSD
ZEHN MONATE?
Z E H N
Die hat seit 10 Monaten unbehandelte PTSD?
Ok warte bei Rosa sinds mindestens 12-
HAHA FUUUUCK
She knows... she knows.
Ich glaub keinen Tee, ne.
PS: Ich liebe dich! DAS KANN DOCH NUR SCHIEFGEHEN SO
Armer bre :( er ist so gay und traumatisiert, ich möchte ihn umarmen
das "getötet" nur so YEEEEEET YAAAAAY
Bruder ich bin verwirrt
"Wir könnten uns ergänzen"
ENDLICH MAL FUNCTIONAL COLLEAGUES
MY PLATONIC EXCELLENCE <3
Bei Gott ich werde ein Edit von ihnen machen, die sind so söft
Der Bre is mit seinem Obstorigami beschäftigt, er will jetz nicht in Keller
Ahh der harte Fade SUCHT EUCH MAL NEN GUTEN CUTTER
Adam bre mach keinen scheiss
Adam bre is despawned
Nein er is despawned
No animals were harmed in the-
Nevermind.
Aber WARUM müssen sie IMMER vögeln
Den fucking Tod von seiner Mum miterlebt alterrrrr what the fuuuuuuuuuck
Boah ihr wollt mich doch verarschen
POLIZEIRUF WAS SOLL DAS
SO STARTEN WIR ALSO IN DIE SOMMERPAUSE JA? TRAUMATISIERT? GUT. FICKT EUCH.
Hagrid als er Harry gefunden hat so:
Omg sie macht die Tür zu?
Ne als ob ihr sie jetzt so schnell geheilt habt
MINUSPUNKT
Anyway. Mit Trauma in die Sommerpause. Gut oder? Ne find ich auch nicht.
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Will <b>Trump's</b> Jan. 6 Trial Take Place Before the Election? - POLITICO
New Post has been published on https://www.google.com/url?rct=j&sa=t&url=https://www.politico.com/news/magazine/2024/01/22/trump-jan-6-trial-polls-00136688&ct=ga&cd=CAIyGjUzM2UwMTY5ZmFhZTIwMGQ6Y29tOmVuOlVT&usg=AOvVaw3ZdXhJpYMycAzB6r4HlEUV
Will Trump's Jan. 6 Trial Take Place Before the Election? - POLITICO
Here’s the real timeline for Trump’s criminal trials. A sketch depicts former President Donald Trump listening as his attorney D. John Sauer …
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Antonio Velardo shares: Here are the lawyers arguing the case. by Alan Feuer
By Alan Feuer
Arguing for the special counsel: James I. Pearce, a career federal prosecutor who played a role in some Jan. 6 cases; and for former President Donald Trump, D. John Sauer, a former solicitor general of Missouri.
Published: January 9, 2024 at 09:30AM
from NYT U.S. https://ift.tt/Ny81qPx
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SIZE MATTERS. SCALE IN PHOTOGRAPHY. Kunstpalast, Berlin Group Show. 31st Jan 2024.
"Everything changes in an image when the zoom slider is adjusted: certain things are highlighted, detached from their context, exaggerated or reinterpreted. They move closer to us, allowing us to study them, or blur before our eyes"
The scale of a pictorial subject or image format harbours great creative possibilities – but also the potential for manipulation. For the first time, an exhibition comprehensively examines the considerable yet often subtle shifts in meaning that accompany changes in size in photography. Works from the late nineteenth century to the present day raise questions about how scale affects our perception and handling of photographic images.
Photography can change its dimensions more easily than any other medium; pictures can be effortlessly blown up into large images on museum walls and billboards, or shrunk down to a thumbnail on a mobile phone screen. While photography traditionally reproduces the world in miniature, it can also present things in a life-size or even larger-than-life-size format and render the invisible visible.
“While painters have to determine the size of their canvas before applying the first brushstroke, photography is a medium without fixed measurements at the moment of its creation when the shutter is released. It is only afterwards that a decision is made about whether an image will materialise and, if so, in what dimensions,” explains Felix Krämer, general director of the Kunstpalast. “A defining and unique feature of photography is that size is a mutable quality, which is something we want to highlight with this exhibition.”
Bernd und Hilla Becher, Kristleifur Björnsson, Karl Blossfeldt, Georg Böttger, Katt Both, Renata Bracksieck, Natalie Czech, Jan Dibbets, Josef Maria Eder und Eduard Valenta, Leonard Elfert, Claudia Fährenkemper, Hanna Josing, Alex Grein, Andreas Gursky, Franz Hanfstaengl, Erik Kessels, Heinrich Koch, Jochen Lempert, Rosa Menkman, Duane Michals, Joanna Nencek, Floris M. Neusüss, Georg Pahl, Trevor Paglen, W. Paulcker, Sigmar Polke, Seth Price, Timm Rautert, Amanda Ross-Ho, Evan Roth, Thomas Ruff, August Sander, Adrian Sauer, Morgaine Schäfer, Hugo Schmölz, Karl-Hugo Schmölz, Katharina Sieverding, Kathrin Sonntag, Lucia Sotnikova, Simon Starling, Clare Strand, Carl Strüwe, Andrzej Steinbach, Julius Stinde, Anna Stüdeli, Wolfgang Tillmans, Moritz Wegwerth, René Zuber
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Kathmandu - Summer Never Sleeps from Daniel Warwick on Vimeo.
Music / 'Jimmy, Renda-Se‘ by Tom Zé
Director / Daniel Warwick
DoP / Jan David Günther
Production Company / Scoundrel
Exec Producer / Adrian Shapiro
Producer / Morgan Benson Taylor
Editor / Adam Wills
Client / Kathmandu
Client CCO / Eva Barrett
Client Head of Global Brand Comms / Michaela Clark
Client Global Head of Social Media / Shailyn Shah
Creative Agency / Special Group New Zealand
Chief Creative Officer / Tony Bradbourne
Executive Producer / Sally Lankshear
Senior Producer / Casey King
Executive Creative Director / Lisa Fedyszyn & Jonathan McMahon
Creative Director / David Shirley
Associate Creative Director / Julia Ferrier
Storyboards / Otto Wiezorek
Cast
Duc Jeremy Vu
Oscar Kapoya
Bobbie Twaddle
Julia Aguilar
Tjaša Žibert (The fantastic Mrs Fox)
Abiola Efunshile
Egshing Varga
Eva Mauricio
Kani Obelga
Matej Pusnik (Mr Merman)
1st AD / Nikolaus Sauer
2nd AD / Nataša Uzunović
Choreographer / Erik Bukovnik
Service Production / Bas Productions
Service Exec Producer / Andrej Caruso
Line Producer / Luka Jauh
Production Manager / Patrik Šimenc
Production Coordinator / Martina Crnkovic
Unit/Set PA / Sebastjan Logar
Unit/Set PA / Blaž Pogačar
TC/Prod. Driver #1 / Andrej Repovž
Location Manager SLO / Blaž Bačar
Location Manager IT / Miha Repič
Production Designer / Miha Knific & Lara Štefančič
Art Director / Lara Štefančič
Prop on Set / Žan Kalan
Stylist / Tina Tanko
Stylist Assistant / Suzana Bićanić
Make Up Artist / Nastja Pestivšek
Make Up Artist Assistant / Kristina Mandić
Hair Stylist / Borut Novak
1st AC / Pavel Kurak
Loader / Jan Skriecka
2nd AC / Luka Podobnikar
Video Assist / Noel Šimenc
Video Assist / Jernej Valenčič
Gaffer / Jernej Prebil
Best Boy / Marko Perne
Electrician / Jani Podmilšak
Electrician / Marjan Vidmar
Electrician / Dušan Praznik
Electrician / Jurij Wolgemut
Electrician / Jernej Korenčan
Electrician / Jon Prebil
Electrician / Urh Cerovnik
Light Operator / David
Crane Operator / Luka Zdešar
Key Grip / Rok Grdin
Grip / Ivan Radeljak
Grip / Aljaž Založnik
SFX Master / Aleš Šmuc
SFX / Jan Januš
Animal Wrangler / Jože Ilc
SOME / Anže Lovšin
Sound Master / Martin Jelovšek
Catering Coordinator / Jernej Konda
Craft / Rok Vengust
Craft / Sara Ogrizek
Chef / Jaka Hergeršič
Chef Assistant / Petra Skopec
Driver / Franc Vidmar
Post Production / Bepic Berlin
Creative VFX Supervisor & Partner / Basti Konradt
Post & VFX Producer / Lion Graf
VFX Artists:
Motion Graphics / Tulio Inoue
Flame Artist / Chris Weingart
Cartoon Animation / Laurie Herman
Endshot Painting / Paula Blesa
Colourist / Sarah Salzmann
Post Production:
Mario Borgmeier
Milan Braune
Soundmix / Stefan Kraatz
Sound Producer / Maurice Krämer
Special Thanks to
Andrea Roman & Zauberberg
Dirk Kübler Filmversicherung Berlin
Jakob Rühle
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Deutsche Welle
Ich habe gestern stundenlang mein Zimmer aufgeräumt. Das war auch wirklich ___ nötig. a) sauer b) salzig c) bitter
— DW Deutsch lernen (@dw_learngerman) Jan 24, 2023
https://twitter.com/dw_learngerman/status/1617900279344599045
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Music / 'Jimmy, Renda-Se‘ by Tom Zé Director / Daniel Warwick DoP / Jan David Günther Production Company / Scoundrel Exec Producer / Adrian Shapiro Producer / Morgan Benson Taylor Editor / Adam Wills Client / Kathmandu Client CCO / Eva Barrett Client Head of Global Brand Comms / Michaela Clark Client Global Head of Social Media / Shailyn Shah Creative Agency / Special Group New Zealand Chief Creative Officer / Tony Bradbourne Executive Producer / Sally Lankshear Senior Producer / Casey King Executive Creative Director / Lisa Fedyszyn & Jonathan McMahon Creative Director / David Shirley Associate Creative Director / Julia Ferrier Storyboards / Otto Wiezorek Cast Duc Jeremy Vu Oscar Kapoya Bobbie Twaddle Julia Aguilar Tjaša Žibert (The fantastic Mrs Fox) Abiola Efunshile Egshing Varga Eva Mauricio Kani Obelga Matej Pusnik (Mr Merman) 1st AD / Nikolaus Sauer 2nd AD / Nataša Uzunović Choreographer / Erik Bukovnik Service Production / Bas Productions Service Exec Producer / Andrej Caruso Line Producer / Luka Jauh Production Manager / Patrik Šimenc Production Coordinator / Martina Crnkovic Unit/Set PA / Sebastjan Logar Unit/Set PA / Blaž Pogačar TC/Prod. Driver #1 / Andrej Repovž Location Manager SLO / Blaž Bačar Location Manager IT / Miha Repič Production Designer / Miha Knific & Lara Štefančič Art Director / Lara Štefančič Prop on Set / Žan Kalan Stylist / Tina Tanko Stylist Assistant / Suzana Bićanić Make Up Artist / Nastja Pestivšek Make Up Artist Assistant / Kristina Mandić Hair Stylist / Borut Novak 1st AC / Pavel Kurak Loader / Jan Skriecka 2nd AC / Luka Podobnikar Video Assist / Noel Šimenc Video Assist / Jernej Valenčič Gaffer / Jernej Prebil Best Boy / Marko Perne Electrician / Jani Podmilšak Electrician / Marjan Vidmar Electrician / Dušan Praznik Electrician / Jurij Wolgemut Electrician / Jernej Korenčan Electrician / Jon Prebil Electrician / Urh Cerovnik Light Operator / David Crane Operator / Luka Zdešar Key Grip / Rok Grdin Grip / Ivan Radeljak Grip / Aljaž Založnik SFX Master / Aleš Šmuc SFX / Jan Januš Animal Wrangler / Jože Ilc SOME / Anže Lovšin Sound Master / Martin Jelovšek Catering Coordinator / Jernej Konda Craft / Rok Vengust Craft / Sara Ogrizek Chef / Jaka Hergeršič Chef Assistant / Petra Skopec Driver / Franc Vidmar Post Production / Bepic Berlin Creative VFX Supervisor & Partner / Basti Konradt Post & VFX Producer / Lion Graf VFX Artists: Motion Graphics / Tulio Inoue Flame Artist / Chris Weingart Cartoon Animation / Laurie Herman Endshot Painting / Paula Blesa Colourist / Sarah Salzmann Post Production: Mario Borgmeier Milan Braune Soundmix / Stefan Kraatz Sound Producer / Maurice Krämer Special Thanks to Andrea Roman & Zauberberg Dirk Kübler Filmversicherung Berlin Jakob Rühle
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Jenaer Altstadtfest - Party, Livemusik, Rummel. Jena feiert 10 Tage lang.
Herbst-Stimmung in Jenas "Guter Partystube" - Jenaer Altstadtfest vom 16. bis 25. September 2022
Zehn Tage lang feiert die Stadt in Jenas "Guter Partystube" – mit Blasmusik und Blues, Tanz, Show und Rock'n'Roll. Jeder Tag und Abend hat seinen eigenen Charakter mit spezifischen Highlights.
➤ Weitere Nachrichten aus Jena
Jenaer Altstadtfest, Foto: Frank Liebold / Jenafotografx (Archiv)
Das Bühnenprogramm des Jenaer Altstadtfest hält für jeden Geschmack und jede Altersgruppe die passende Unterhaltung bereit.
Fr. 16.09.2022
19:00 Uhr
Eröffnung und traditioneller Bieranstich
19:30 Uhr
Jazzpolizei | akustischer Swing und Dixie vom Feinsten
21:00 Uhr
Letzte Instanz | Deutsch-rockende Brachialromantik
Sa. 17.09.2022
11:00 Uhr
Brass Band BlechKLANG des Blasmusikvereins Carl Zeiss Jena
13:30 Uhr
Dance Company Schnapphans e. V. Jena
15:00 Uhr
Die Leut vom Wald | Leidenschaftliche Volksmusik
19:30 Uhr
Rockset – a tribute to Roxette
So. 18.09.2022
11:00 Uhr
Dirk Wasmund Trio | Jazz, Rock, Pop, Chanson
13:00 Uhr
Jenaer Tanzhaus e. V.
15:00 Uhr
Inkspot Swingband | Handgemachte swingende Musik
19:00 Uhr
Goodbeats | Coversongs von Pop bis Rock über Soul und Funk
Veranstaltungstipp:
vocatium Jena 2022 – Fachmesse für Ausbildung und Studium, 28./29.09. in der Sparkassen Arena
vocatium Jena 2022 – Fachmesse für Ausbildung und Studium, Foto: Frank Liebold
Mo. 19.09.2022
20:00 Uhr
Lichtbildarena-OpenAir: Sri Lanka – Im Reich der Elefanten
Die. 20.09.2022
18:00 Uhr
Mini-Tanzkurs: „Rockabilly Jive“
19:00 Uhr
The Firebirds | Rock’n’Roll-Sounds der 50er und 60er Jahre
Mi. 21.09.2022
Familientag auf dem Rummel
16:00 Uhr
Die Kinder der Kita Bertolla singen für das Publikum.
16:30 Uhr
KAOSCLOWN | Magic Comedy Artistic
18:00 Uhr
BIBA und die Butzemänner | Die Party-Show-Band
Do. 22.09.2022
19:00 Uhr
GoGorillas | Hits der 90er
Anzeige:
Jena Fotokalender 2023 – Die Facetten einer Stadt auf 13 wunderschönen Motivseiten
Jenaer Fotomomente 2023 – Wundervolle Aufnahmen für deine Wand im Format A2 und A3
Fr. 23.09.2022
Ladies Night auf dem Rummel
18:00 Uhr
Rudi Tuesday Band | Rock, Folk, Blugrass und Indie
20:00 Uhr
THE ABERLOUR‘s | Celtic Folk‘n‘Beat
Sa. 24.09.2022
11:00 Uhr
Blasorchester SCHOTT Jena e. V.
13:30 Uhr
Show Ballett Formel 1 e. V.
15:00 Uhr
Fleck-Sauer-Ensemble | Zurück in die Zeit der 20er und 30er Jahre
20:00 Uhr
Golden Glitter Band | Große deutsche Schlagerparade der 70er
So. 25.09.2022
11:00 Uhr
P-Seventy Show Dancers e. V.
13:00 Uhr
Abschluss des 1. Thüringer Ukulelefests
Eröffnung mit Jan Haasler, Hardy C. Lugerth
(Special Guest: Tom Ziegenspeck)
14:00 Uhr
Ukuleleklassen aus Jena stellen sich vor
14:30 Uhr
Geschichtenerzählerin Antje Horn
mit Ukulelebegleitung Philipp Schäffler
15:00 Uhr
Mitmachkonzert: Live und als Stream
16:00 Uhr
Chansons mit den Duo Charlotte & Elisabeth
17:00 Uhr
All Star Jam
Das Jenaer Altstadtfest hat für Sie geöffnet:
freitags/samstags 11 – 23 Uhr
Sonntag bis Donnerstag 11 – 22 Uhr (am Sonntag, den 25. September 11 – 18 Uhr)
Der Eintritt ist frei!
Veranstaltungen im Eventkalender >>
Info, JenaKultur
Foto, Frank Liebold // Jenafotografx
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