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Norman Ohler: Hitler, Nazis, Drugs, WW2, Blitzkrieg, LSD, MKUltra & CIA | Lex Fridman Podcast #481

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- Hitler invited three young tank generals to his

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office, and they had a plan, which was the plan to go through the Ardennes

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Mountains. That was the victorious idea. So it's not the

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drugs, actually, that idea to go through the Ardennes Mountains. If you, if you think

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monocausal, you would say that's the reason. That idea was

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genius, and Hitler immediately understood it, because before, the

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plan was to attack in the north of Belgium, which is the same as World War

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I. It becomes a stalemate, and they fight for months, and no one

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really moves, and it's bloody, and nothing's happening. It's

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bad. But that was the only plan that they had. That's why the high

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command said, "No, we're not going to do it. It's stupid." But these three tank generals,

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they said, "Look, if we go with the whole army through the Ardennes

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Mountains," and like Hitler, "Eh, this is not possible. This is like a mountain range.

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How can the whole German army fit through this

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eye of a needle," basically. And they said, "No, we can do it because

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everyone misunderstands what tanks can do. Tanks are not

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slow machines in the back that wait for the

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action to happen, and then support this somehow. We're going to use tanks in

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the front as race cars, basically. We're going to

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overpower the enemy. We're going to be in France

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before they know it. We are already behind them, but it would only

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work if you would reach Sedan, the border city of France, within three

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days and three nights, and that was only possible if you don't stop."

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Suddenly, Ranke realized that his moment had come because

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he had the recipe how people could stay awake for three days and three nights.

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Before that, he was kind of an outsider, like the freak with the drug idea. Suddenly, he became

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...like- ..."Okay, tell us, how does it work?" And he gave lectures in front of

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the officers, and he wrote a stimulant decree where a whole

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army is prescribed a drug, in this case methamphetamine, how much should

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be taken, and at what intervals. This became a very big thing.

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And then Temmler had to deliver 35 million dosages

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to the front lines. And then on May 10th, they took their

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methamphetamine and they started the surprise attack through the Ardennes Mountains.

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- The following is a conversation with Norman Ohler, author of

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Blitzed: Drugs in the Third Reich. A book

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that investigates what role psychoactive drugs, particularly

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stimulants such as methamphetamine, played in the military

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history of World War II. It is a book that two legendary

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historians, Ian Kershaw and Antony Beevor, give very high

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praise to. Ian Kershaw describes it as, "Very well

2:36

researched, serious piece of scholarship." And Antony Beevor

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describes it as, "Remarkable work of research."

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And it is indeed a remarkable work of research. Norman went

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deep into the archives using primary sources to uncover

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a perspective on Hitler and the Third Reich that has before this been

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mostly ignored by historians. He also wrote

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Tripped: Nazi Germany, the CIA, and the Dawn of the Psychedelic

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Age. And he's now working on a new book with the

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possible title of Stoned Sapiens, great

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title, looking at the history of human civilization

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through the lens of drugs. This is the Lex

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Fridman Podcast. To support it, please check out our sponsors in the

3:22

description and consider subscribing to this

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channel. And now, dear friends, here's Norman Ohler.

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Tell me the origin story of meth,

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methamphetamine, and Pervitin, its brand name drug version, in

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the context of Nazi Germany in the late 1930s. Let's start there.

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- I think you're right to ask about the context because without the

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context, it's not really understandable. So what was the

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situation? In the 20s, the Nazi movement basically started, and it started in

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Bavarian beer halls. So alcohol was the drug of

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choice of the early Nazi movement. The only guy that didn't

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drink was Hitler. He was a teetotaler, I guess you

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say. So that was happening in Munich. So alcohol and

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National Socialism are very closely connected. At the same

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time, in the 20s, in Berlin, there was a completely different thing going

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on. People were taking all kinds of drugs. This had

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to do, actually, with the defeat of Germany in the First World War. I mean, the context

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is a big context. The Versailles Treaty had the effect that the German economy

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was not really able to recover after the end of World

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War I. The Versailles Treaty was written basically by the Western

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victorious powers. Germany had no say in the negotiations. And I'm

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certainly not a German nationalist, not even a German

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patriot, but even I would say that the Versailles Treaty

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treated Germany somewhat unfairly. I mean, it laid all the blame on Germany. And,

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I mean, a war is a very complex thing, and the First World War

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to examine how it actually started is a very complex, you know,

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story, and there's many factors to it. But the Versailles Treaty just said it was

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Germany's fault, and then Germany had to do all these

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payments to the allies. It couldn't create a new economy.

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It couldn't have a new army. So it was — the economy really went down. Everything in Berlin

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was cheap, and the people were also using

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substances that were very cheap in huge quantities. So while in

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Bavaria, they were drinking alcohol, and alcohol in the brain,

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stimulates behavior, group behavior: us

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against them. You can actually examine this. A neuroscientist

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would know exactly how this works. While in Berlin, the drugs that were used

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were morphine. There was cocaine, there was

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mescaline, there was ether. So people were experimenting.

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Everyone developed a different mindset. It was all... you know, you didn't

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behave in a way

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that some kind of authority would like you to behave in, because the authority had

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just lost the First World War and there was no real authority

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in Berlin. People were doing whatever they wanted to do, and they were intoxicating

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themselves in the way they wanted to do it. So the population, in a way, if you

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just look at Munich and Berlin, was growing apart. Like, there

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were the alcohol people in Munich, the Nazis, and then there were these

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weird, diverse, LGBTQ, whatever kind of scene in Berlin. Like,

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actresses sniffing ether in the morning and then making crazy moves.

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- Could you speak to the nature of the motivation of the drug use in Berlin at the

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time? Was it rebellion? Was it a way to deal with the

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difficult economic depression? Was it just the natural thing that young people do to

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explore themselves, to understand the world, to develop their culture? Like, what do we

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understand about drug use there?

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- All of these factors come together. But it was the first time in modern history,

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in Germany at least, that there was no emperor. Like, before

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that, Kaiser Wilhelm, everything was very strict, you know? You

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had to... you couldn't go crazy, you know, as a young person. You couldn't

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be a young person. But now in the Weimar Republic in the '20s, you could.

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No one stopped you, so people went crazy. That's what made

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Berlin into the city that it still somehow is. And maybe

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later we talk about contemporary Berlin. It kind of... it's

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still has that vibe, you know? That's why people still come to Berlin. Drugs are

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cheap, you can move however you want, there's no authority. So that created

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a rift between the Nazis in Munich, and they always hated Berlin

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and what was going on in Berlin. So, for example, Goebbels, the later

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propaganda minister, he called the situation in Berlin the

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hated asphalt reality of Berlin.

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He hated that. And when the Nazis then were able to take power in

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1933, one of the first things they did

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was to really prosecute people who were taking drugs,

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because they wanted to, you know, bring everyone back into the fold.

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And I think that's... You asked what was the reason for people taking

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so many drugs. They were accessible, they were

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cheap, but I think the most important thing is that

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they let you find yourself maybe, or lose

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yourself, you know? Also possible, you know?

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- Can we also talk about that here, because

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you have a connection to this place, Berlin, and this

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part of the world. Can you just briefly speak to that so

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we can contextualize even deeper the personal aspect

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of this? Because you understand the music of the people,

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the land, its history. There's something you can only really

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understand if you've been there and you have taken it

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in. And we'll return to this topic in multiple contexts, but in this

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particular way, as one human being who writes about this place,

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what's your own story?

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- I grew up in West Germany, and this was during the World War. And

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Berlin, the walled-in city, was always like a big

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fascination. There was a wall, there was actually a wall in the city

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preventing people to move into another part. And I was from the

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West, fortunate enough to be from the free West, so I could

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travel to Berlin and I could leave. I could look at it, and I always loved Berlin. I thought it

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was a very vibey place. And then when the wall came down, I was still

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in school but I immediately got into the car of my parents and drove there.

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I wanted to see how it came down. And then Berlin really, in the

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'90s, became a place that was very attractive to me and I

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moved there then in the '90s. I was first living in New York. I wrote my first

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novel in New York, and I loved New York before Giuliani became

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mayor. It was... He ruined the city. Before that,

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it was not gentrified. Or let's say he introduced gentrification, and

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gentrification is a big topic. I still lived in the

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ungentrified New York City for like 300 bucks a month rent,

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and everyone I knew was an artist.

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- You loved the diversity of it?

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- Yeah, I loved it. I wrote my first novel there. I took LSD for

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the first time in Downtown Manhattan on a Saturday night.

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- So you're kind of like a German Kerouac type character, but

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moved a few decades forward.

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- I wouldn't compare myself to another writer, but I think Kerouac is pretty cool.

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But he's an amphetamine writer. "On the Road" was apparently

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written in two weeks on amphetamines. And, but it's good. Amphetamines

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are not bad per se. We can also talk about these so-called bad drugs,

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you know, because basically they're neutral. But let's not lose the thread.

11:00

- Yes. Yes. New York, Berlin-

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- Even though New York was-

11:02

- Yes.

11:02

- Oh, yeah. And then I was in New York. I was in a health food store, one of the first.

11:06

Like, there weren't health food stores back then a lot, but there was one on

11:10

First Avenue. And suddenly there was an announcement,

11:14

which was unusual in the health food store. I think it was called Prana, Prana

11:18

Foods. And the announcement was that Kurt Cobain had just shot himself.

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It was like... and I had been actually, and still am, a

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Nirvana fan. I've seen one of the last concerts of Nirvana in

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New York City, and it was amazing. But he killed himself.

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And the next day, I received a music cassette from a friend

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of mine from Berlin with electronic music, and I realized that

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there had been a paradigm shift, obviously. Rock music with the hero on

11:45

stage was dead. Now it was, you know, dance,

11:50

electronic music, which a lot of people today think it's kind of simplistic

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music form, but it's actually a very highly intelligent music form. At least it was in

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the '90s. People were really experimenting with that music. That was the new

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music. That was actually the reason I moved to Berlin. I really decided I'd leave

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New York City. I'm going to move to Berlin. And then in

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Berlin, to answer your question,

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I fell in love with something that probably reminded me

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of the '20s, even though I wasn't there in the '20s.

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That really... The city was very open. The wall had just... was still, you know...

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I mean, it's a few years later, but still, the wall, it felt like it just came down.

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There was... Germany was... Berlin was not yet the capital of Germany. That was still in

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Bonn. So Berlin was a very

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cheap, and cultural, and crazy city, probably a bit like in the '20s, actually.

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And that's how I fell in love with it, and that's how I became interested in this electronic scene.

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I mean, I visited many dance venues then, so-called clubs.

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- Yeah, it's one of the hubs in the world of electronic music.

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- They claim that techno was kind of invented in Berlin, but it also comes

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from Detroit. So Detroit and Berlin are like the techno hubs, I would say.

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- Yeah, electronic music is a soundtrack for some of the most interesting

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experiences this earth has ever created, right? Just it gets people

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together in some interesting ways. So it's not just the music itself,

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