The fact that a well-known TV presenter is now supposed to be with a gentleman who is a doctor should not interest us here, but the paparazzi picture that shows
colorful
of the two does: Because he kisses her on the lips – while she is mouthing - Wearing nose protection.
Karl Lauterbach would have a heart attack: doesn't the man who works in the health sector himself know that he's sucking up all the Covid viruses that have made themselves comfortable there throughout the day?
Note: If kissing in Corona times, then everyone should both wear face masks, if possible an FFP2 mask.
Jorg Thomann
Editor in the “Life” section of the Frankfurter Allgemeine Sunday newspaper.
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Whether it's the masks or the fact that she's hardly in front of the camera anymore, Cameron Diaz has said of her looks, according to the
Gala
: "I don't care.
I almost never wash my face either.”
Gala
doesn't let that rest, she consults a dermatologist, who warns of “blackheads, oily skin, inflammation or redness”, but maybe Diaz also lets her husband regularly reveal the danger zone lick off
Perfect is boring
The heart sheets demonstrate how to avoid tricky terrain in their reports about Helen Mirren, who recently revealed her recipe for success: "Always be punctual and nice"
(Das goldene Blatt)
or "Be punctual and a good person"
(Neue Post)
.
Wording that has been carefully toned down with the aging readership in mind, the correct translation of Mirren's words uttered in English should be: "Be on time and don't be an ass."
According to the Goldener Blatt
, Mirren's colleague Jane Fonda
explained: "Being perfect is pretty boring!" That's why, as we read on, "she resolves to 'simply not be perfect' in the future".
A good idea, but, as we know from our own experience, not that easy to implement.
Sylvie Meis is not yet bored with her apparently perfect husband, who tells
Frau im Spiegel
: “When it comes to romance, my husband tops everything.
On our first wedding anniversary last year, he surprised me with a candlelight dinner including a saxophone player and fireworks by the sea.
He knows that I love something like that very much.” That's nice, but we ask ourselves: How does your husband know something like that?
Has he, as inconspicuously as possible, steered the conversation towards this: Tell me, do you actually like saxophone players?
Has he researched which sea is where fireworks are currently taking place, and has he taken her there and seen how she reacts to it?
Sitting and lying down evenings
Harry Wijnvoord tells
Frau im Spiegel
about his plans to marry his wife Iris in a church on a cruise ship, the celebration will be broadcast by a television station for three days.
Wijnvoord is certain that they are made for each other: "During our sitting evenings, we listened to music until four in the morning," he says, and when a
woman in the mirror
asks what "sitting evenings" are, he explains: "Go there we don't go into the living room to watch TV, but stay seated at the dining table, drink a glass of wine, listen to music and talk.” How do the two of them like to watch TV – standing up?
Tom Kaulitz, on the other hand, reported
Gala
in his podcast: "Heidi lies on me every night." Harry Wijnvoord would say: You make a bed night.
But especially in these times it is right and important that we all move closer together.
Singer Semino Rossi, who separated from his wife two years ago and, according to the
picture
, "temporarily moved into a mobile home", has returned to the common house: "We are together again!" A wise decision, with these petrol prices, life would be in Mobile home was also too expensive in the long run.
Cheyenne Ochsenknecht, on the other hand, lives with her partner on the farm and tells
Gala
: "Nino gave me a calf for my birthday that I fell in love with." And that's not all: "He also gave me a rabbit for pregnancy and a Pony for Christmas – and a pig and a lamb.” And does that really appeal to her?
"I like that," assures Ochsenknecht.
"It doesn't always have to be shoes or a bag." If she gets a flock of geese, two turkeys, five goats, 30 chickens and a rooster at Easter, it might well be a bag again.
Meanwhile, her mother Natascha Ochsenknecht invites
The New Leaf
to her “cozy single apartment in Berlin”, which is 190 square meters.
"And can there also be a man in the house again?" Asks the paper, to which Ochsenknecht replies: "If the right person comes along - then definitely.
But the charisma has to attract me from the first moment – otherwise I'll be out!” That would be a shame for the man, but it would also have something good: when she's out, he would have her cozy single apartment all to himself.