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In seven steps: How Stone Age farmers Scarlett Johansson made the sex symbol

2019-11-08T14:04:49.959Z


Zigzagging through world history: Danny Kringiel embarks on an absurd journey through time - and discovers that somehow everything has something to do with everything. Even tooth decay with karaoke.



How Stone Age farmers made Scarlett Johansson a sex symbol

Step 1: Finally work properly!

The ice age was barely over, the last mammoths were not cold yet, when Homo sapiens came around 10,000 years ago to an idea that changed everything: Had previously been expelled as a nomadic hunter-gatherer with berry picking, Schweinetothauen and miles of hikes time, discovered man now farming . From then on, the pigs needed for the deadwood were simply raised by themselves, planted their own berries and settled down locally.

This so-called "Neolithic Revolution", with which the Neolithic Age began, was decisive for the further development of humans. They became sedentary, specializing in areas such as cattle breeding, cereals cultivation, vegetable breeding - which made bartering necessary. Individual ownership became more important: how much fertile soil, seed, crop someone owned was suddenly crucial to how well he was doing. All of these changes have made the world's population grow faster than a nomadic lifestyle would have. But at the same time something else grew, namely ...

2nd step: Root treatment with the hand ax

... holes in the teeth of humans. For the changed eating habits had unwanted side effects: Agriculture led to a carbohydrate-rich diet such as cereals, potatoes, corn. Unfortunately, bacteria living in the human oral flora, such as Streptococcus mutans, convert carbohydrates into acids that attack enamel. The storage of stocks, which began with agriculture, also had a negative effect - because in many foods the sugar content increases with storage time.

And so with the triumph of agriculture also for the tooth rot golden times began: Had previously only one to five percent of the hunter-gatherers suffered from tooth decay, these numbers increased now and again. To the present day, in which only less than one percent of adult Germans have no problems with tooth decay. The people of the Neolithic probably had scarcer growling stomachs than their ancestors - but more often perforated teeth. A horse-trading that led to the creation of one of the most important and unpopular professions in human history: dentist.

Well, dentists in the narrower sense may not have been the helpers who, in the Neolithic Age, started poking at the rotten bits of their contemporaries with sharp flint stones. With such an archaic device and without anesthetic, a dental treatment must have been as painful as it was dangerous. But after all, it was about life and death: Not a few people died in the Neolithic still in the aftermath of caries. Perhaps arose by these gruesome treatment methods already something like a primal fear of the person in front of the dentist. Even thousands of years later, the visit to the Dentist was still a real horror for many despite modern drills and anesthesia. That was especially true for ...

3rd step: Rocker with fear of the dentist

... the British Farrokh Bulsara. His teeth had been a sensitive subject since his childhood in Zanzibar - for Bulsara had four extra teeth and a noticeable overbite. This was to unsettle him all his life: he often tried to move his upper lip so that one could not see the protruding teeth, or he held a hand over his mouth as he spoke. Therefore, the visit to the dentist was probably even more unpleasant for him than for most people. Bulsara avoided going to the dentist-except, it was really unavoidable.

Despite this shame, he managed to develop self-confidence as a young man. He soon turned out to be a gifted musician, learned to play the piano, sang in the school choir and founded a band. However, his big breakthrough came years later: Bulsara's father had been a diplomat of the British colonial government in Zanzibar, and when it came to revolution in 1964 against the Sultan, they fled to London. There Farrokh offered new opportunities: In 1970, he founded a rock band with acquaintances, she called Queen and acted as their singer - under the stage name Freddie Mercury . With their bombast rock, Queen stormed the charts and became record millionaires through hits like "Killer Queen" and "Bohemian Rhapsody". Mercury could easily have afforded the best dentists in the world, but his aversion was still there: he visited dentists only when there was no other way. And one of those cases ...

4th step: Queen and the punks

... happened on December 1, 1976. Just over a week earlier, Queen had released her fourth studio album "A Night at the Opera". Just the band had changed their label. Now she wanted to make a similar venture with her new work, a complex, overflowing arranged album like the Beatles once did with "Sgt. Pepper". The expectation was enormous, and the band went on a PR tour. A particularly important date was now scheduled for the evening of December 1: An appearance on the British TV show "Today" with presenter Bill Grundy. Grundy was known for his aggressive style, he was said to have alcohol problems, but the program was well known and provided an important advertising opportunity. But just now, Freddie Mercury was plaguing such a toothache that he inevitably had to go to the hated dentist.

Queens new record label EMI sought under pressure a last-minute replacement for the appearance - and decided on a then unknown young rock band from London, which was notorious for her wild behavior. And so the belligerent Grundy saw in the evening a crowd of young people with brightly dyed hair, garish make-up, piercings and swastika armbands opposite. Only about 90 seconds passed the live talk, but that was enough for a national television scandal : Grundy said he was drunk and addressed the musicians and their entourage with outright disdain. The band in turn accused him of words like "fuck" and "shit" - then an unimaginable moral offense on television. But Grundy tried to tease out even more: when he started digging in one of the musicians' companions, they called him "dirty fucker" and "fucking rotter" under Grundy's encouragement, until finally the redeeming credits music started and the band members started to dance to it , The bizarre performance ...

5th step: Punks and the Queen

... went through the media nationwide. Although the scandal was aired only in the area around London, but the indignant headlines of the British gossip all over England drew attention to the fleas who had used such tremendous words on state television: "dirt and frenzy!" headlined the "Daily Mirror" the next day, describing how the station's phone lines collapsed before complaining about the "dirtiest terms on British television." The station separated from moderator Bill Grundy.

For his guests, the scandal was much more positive: The controversy marked the breakthrough of the Sex Pistols, as their provocative band name read. They became the forerunners of a new music movement that quickly gained international importance: punk. Soon, the name of the British talk show rogue around the globe was known. A few months after the TV appearance appeared on October 28, 1977 her first - and only - studio album: "Never Mind the Bollocks, Here's the Sex Pistols". Even his pre-single "God Save the Queen" had further consolidated the scandal image of the band: Even the manufacturer of the record cover - a photo of Queen Elizabeth II, pasted over his mouth and eyes - found the design an offensive. And in the press shop employees laid down their work because they wanted nothing to do with this lese majeste. The resistance was enormous: chain stores refused to sell the song, radio stations in England boycotted him, the police blew up a promotion campaign on a Thames ferry. And yet, the song climbed to number one in the English charts, a triumph for the punk scene. But the protest song against the monarchy was supposed to reach a completely unexpected significance decades later in a completely different part of the earth than ...

Step 6: Karaoke with episodes

... in the 1990s Japanese journalist Fumihiro Hayashi performed the punk rock classic "God Save the Queen" on a karaoke evening in Tokyo. Hayashi had made a name for himself as the publisher of the Japanese hipster fashion magazine "Dune" in the chic crowd of the Japanese metropolis. On that day, he had a girlfriend with them, whose pictures he had already published in "Dune" - an aspiring, young photographer from the US called Sofia Coppola, daughter of Hollywood director Francis Ford Coppola.

Sofia Coppola had tried as a model, as a photographer - but ultimately she should be in the footsteps of her famous father and also become a director. And of course, her Karaoke trip with Hayashi would inspire her to her most famous film: The artist, who also called himself "Charlie Brown", freaked out in the presentation of the Sex Pistols song so much that Coppola, according to the online film magazine " Indiewire "immediately thought:" I have to put that in a movie. "She did, and in 2003 ...

Step 7: In pink panties to the top of the world

... opened Coppola's film "Lost in Translation" shot in Tokyo with a shot of the buttocks of the American actress Scarlett Johansson , covered by a semi-transparent pink panties. An attitude, Coppola revealed later in an interview that she borrowed from a painting by the artist John Kacere.

In the film, the Park Hyatt hotel in Tokyo learns about aging US actor Bob (Bill Murray) and young college graduate Charlotte, whose marriages are in crisis and feel isolated in Tokyo's strangeness. During their nightly meetings in the hotel bar, the unequal couple gets closer and closer. Until Bob finally chooses Roxy Music for a long karaoke night, "More than This," and the two seem to admit their hopeless love by their looks alone.

Although the two movie characters did not end up as a couple - for Scarlett Johansson's career, the melancholy romantic comedy with the permissive first camera shot undoubtedly had a happy ending. With "Lost in Translation" the then little known newcomer was suddenly a sex symbol and one of the biggest female Hollywood stars. Although Johansson often expressed criticism in interviews about her erotic image, this proved to be extremely lucrative: With an annual income of $ 40.5 million, she was, according to "Forbes" 2018, the highest paid actress in the world.

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Source: spiegel

All news articles on 2019-11-08

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