Last Chance: Vivian Maier – Street Photographer
Following the first exhibition of Maier’s works in Norway in 2010 and last year’s acclaimed documentary Finding Vivian Maier, Berliners can finally get a close look at a selection of 120 of her...
View ArticleThe Olympic debate
On Mon, Mar 16, the German Olympic Council will announce its nomination for Hamburg or Berlin as host of the 2024 Olympics. While Hamburg's all for the Games, Berlin finds itself divided. Read the...
View ArticleSuburban fetishism
OUT NOW! Following characters through weird sexual situations, THE LITTLE DEATH is a masterpiece of middle-class black comedy.
View ArticleCalling a genocide a genocide
A century after the Armenian genocide, the Gorki Theater commemorates the tragedy with talks and performances. In a debate on Saturday, April 4, Jürgen Gottschlich will push for Germany to recognise...
View ArticleNew Neukölln screens
Everyone's favourite hipster neighbourhood is becoming a cinephile destination as well, with two DIY cinemas popping up in recent months: the Italian-flavoured Il Kino and the wild,...
View Article(Finally) calling a genocide a genocide
After a century of denial, the German government has finally recognised the 1915 Armenian genocide. Historian Jürgen Gottschlich tells us what this means.
View ArticleCycling in Berlin: Part 2
What's the best app for finding cycling routes? Is there an Airbnb for bikes? We answer these questions and more in this tech-focused instalment of our Berlin bike guide.
View ArticleInterview with a vampyre
If you missed our May issue, you missed this confession from a real, live Berlin vampyre. Don't panic – now we'll let you suck up every delicious drop for free.
View ArticleQueer in the city
The big gay day in Berlin is coming. That's right, Christopher Street Day (CSD) and its alternative in Kreuzberg (KCSD) are happening Sat, Jun 27. But why limit all the fun to just one day? Here's a...
View ArticleThe Burning Hell, MoreEats and Dropout Patrol
Led by congenial everyday poet and occasional Berliner Mathias Kom, the rowdy Canadian fivesome (no, they're not a black metal band) return to the Kantine with support from The Dropout Patrol and a...
View ArticleAre you getting played?
How do we "play" social media? Why is Facebook like a comic book? Graphic novelist Gabriel S. Moses explains it all at the Disruption Network Lab event A Game Of You, at Bethanien from Aug 8-9.
View ArticleMauerpark history lesson
Mauerpark hasn't always been a raucous circus of karaoke and impulsive buys. On your next visit, stop by the free photo exhibition about the history of the park on through Aug 30 and don't end the...
View ArticleWomen and whiskey
Since opening in a former Spätkauf over a year ago, DIY bar/cafe/bookshop/what-have-you Poor and Literate, is the spot for the literate of PBerg. Peruse second-hand books, or check one of their many...
View ArticleSweet dreams, Schnute
Today, October 12, Berlin said goodbye to its last-ever "city bear" – a 34-year-old named Schnute, kept in a special cage in Mitte. Read about the controversy that marked her last few years of life in...
View ArticleSaving Wiesenburg
The crumbling, 110-year-old bohemian castle Wiesenburg sits in the heart of Wedding. What's endangering the former homeless shelter turned art complex? Read this excerpt from Exberliner's Wedding issue...
View ArticleSuburban fetishism
OUT NOW! Following characters through weird sexual situations, THE LITTLE DEATH is a masterpiece of middle-class black comedy.
View ArticleCalling a genocide a genocide
A century after the Armenian genocide, the Gorki Theater commemorates the tragedy with talks and performances. In a debate on Saturday, April 4, Jürgen Gottschlich will push for Germany to recognise...
View ArticleNew Neukölln screens
Everyone's favourite hipster neighbourhood is becoming a cinephile destination as well, with two DIY cinemas popping up in recent months: the Italian-flavoured Il Kino and the wild,...
View Article(Finally) calling a genocide a genocide
After a century of denial, the German government has finally recognised the 1915 Armenian genocide. Historian Jürgen Gottschlich tells us what this means.
View Article