Blachman is a 2013 Danish talk show started by Thomas Blachman . The program features a woman in a bathrobe, walking into a black TV-studio, stepping into a spotlight, and getting naked in front of a male guest and Blachman himself, both sitting on a leather couch. The two men start talking about the beauty of the female body and their own roles as males.
7-495: The nude female - representing all ages and shapes - and the male guest, changes on every episode. There are a total of six episodes and one season of Blachman. The episodes and male guests are listed here: Season 1: 1. Jan Sonnergaard (April 2, 2013) 2. Erik Brandt (April 9, 2013) 3. Henrik Vibskov (April 16, 2013) 4. Simon Jul (April 23, 2013) 5. Shaka Loveless (April 30, 2013) 6. Sten Hegeler (May 7, 2013) This Denmark television programme-related article
14-477: A visit to a foreign country. His works have been translated into Icelandic, Norwegian, German, Czech, Italian, Dutch, and Serbo-Croatian. He has also contributed more than ten short stories for the two American magazines: Absinthe and Metamorphoses . Jan Sonnergaard received several grants from the Danish Arts Foundation , including a three-year scholarship in 2005. He was also a recipient of
21-480: Is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Jan Sonnergaard Jan Sonnergaard (15 August 1963—18 November 2016 ) was a Danish writer , novelist , and playwright . He is best known for his work Radiator , a collection of short stories released in 1997 which was a provocative and satirical look at Danish society. Many of Sonnergaard's works draw upon his own childhood in Copenhagen and he
28-574: Is noted for his distinctive and unconventional mix of cynical realism and social-surrealism. His works have gained international renown and been translated into many languages. Sonnergaard was born in Copenhagen and grew up in Virum . He received a Cand.mag. degree in comparative literature and philosophy from the University of Copenhagen in 1992. Between 1991 and 1992, he had also studied at
35-1094: The Free University of Berlin . Sonnergaard died on 21 November 2016 in Belgrade as a result of cardiac arrest . He had been in Belgrade promoting his books and was found dead in the apartment where he was staying. He is buried at Assistens Cemetery in Copenhagen. After publishing a couple of short stories in various journals and anthologies , Sonnergaard made his literary debut in 1997 with an acclaimed collection of short stories named Radiator , which focused on underclass life and marginalized populations in Denmark. Two more volumes were published in this trilogy: Last Sunday in October (2000) and I am still afraid of Caspar Michael Petersen (2003) which focused on middle and upper class life. In 2009, he published his first novel, About The Atomic Bomb’s Influence on
42-481: The Youth of Vilhelm Funk , about the way the nuclear threat of the cold war was a subconscious motivation for many people's lifestyle in the 1980s. In the following years, he published several other novels and collections of short stories. Sonnergaard also authored a play and wrote numerous articles, features, and op-eds in various newspapers and magazines, primarily Politiken . Thematically, Sonnergaard's works criticize
49-405: The meaninglessness and monotony of life in modern Denmark. He writes in a very direct and often provocative language that vividly depicts violence, alcohol and eroticism. His literature is always a comment on his time, and his work is always a direct comment on contemporary life. Most of his stories are told from a male perspective and often feature a retrospective glance at Sonnergaard's own youth or
#744255