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By: Jörg Heinrich
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ZDF presenter Katrin Müller-Hohenstein likes to show up in a chic Norwegian sweater in the Olympia studio. The TV review of the Winter Games.
Beijing - Jessy Wellmer, who "tenderly yells" at each other with Felix Neureuther. And Toni Innauer, who brings us non-ski jumpers closer to the nature of the "clothoids" in the curvature of the inrun curve of the ski jump. It's all fun and exciting. But no topic interested you, dear readers, more, more agitated than Katrin Müller-Hohenstein's lilac-colored ski outfit in the ZDF studio in Mainz. We've never had so many emails asking these pressing questions: Why is the woman wearing a Norwegian sweater under the blazing hot studio lights? And what does the lilac fumble cost? After three days of intensive research with the participation of Ms. Heinrich as a fashion consultant, we can finally provide you with answers today.
ZDF presenter Katrin Müller-Hohenstein in a Norwegian sweater
Why the Norwegian sweater in Mainz? The Chancellor is gone - but Katrin Müller-Hohenstein, the winter sports Merkel, is holding on. What the pant suit was for Angela, the Norwegian sweater is for Katrin. So you can recognize them straight away. If the KMH suddenly moderated in a casual hoodie, everyone would ask themselves: Who is the strange woman? Does she even know? In addition, the ZDF studio is on the LerchenBERG, get it? MOUNTAIN! We have also checked that for you: The LerchenBERG is at 84 meters, so almost alpine. It can get chilly at night, and you're lucky to have a Norwegian sweater.
Is it actually a Norwegian sweater? That's a good question. In the age of gender, you can no longer make things so easy for yourself. As we learned from the German embassy in Oslo, the designations NorwegianInPulli or also completely neutral Norway sweater are now appropriate. KMH also adheres to this in an exemplary manner. After she made the sweater models Håkon, Aksel, Sverre, Mikkel and Ole Einar in Pschongchang in 2018, the Norwegian sweaters Mette-Marit, Sophi, Stine, Liv and Ingebørg as well as the gender-neutral Norway jumper Holmenkollen.
How much does the fumble cost? Much! As before every Winter Olympics, Katrin asked herself: "Do I want Bogner?" And her answer was as usual: "Yes, I want Bogner!" Mrs. Heinrich spotted the lilac outfit in a practically identical design on the Bogner website. The cashmere sweater Sophi costs a whopping 899 euros. But it also offers a high rib knit turtleneck (Røllkragån). For the corresponding stirrup trousers made of soft shell with a tuck detail, which in our opinion look a little badly like the retro 70s, you have to pay a further 399 euros in fees. We really hope that the two-piece lilac union was cheaper at the factory outlet.
ZDF: Lilac as a symbol of farewell?
Is KMH thinking of farewell? A chronically poorly researched capital letter newspaper identified her outfit as "purple" and wrote it as "Katrin Milka-Hohenstein". But we fashion connoisseurs know that it is lilac. Experts associate this color with farewell and the achievement of a goal. So it could be that Katrin Merkel-Hohenstein and her fans will soon become very sentimental. But until then we will happily sing the ZDF Olympic songs All Years Flieder together and of course by Marianne Steghosenberg Flieder der Nacht, aha, they can often mean so much. Does it even mean that Kashmir-Katrin will become Merkel after the Olympics?