Vince Ebert - "Vince of Change"
Altes Forstamt, Aschaffenburg, Germany
Good news still exists: a member of the Last Generation movement recently had a child. Berlin's senate has passed a resolution requiring all new streets to be named after women. Dead ends included. A new study from the Ministry of Economics shows that solar parks can supply enough electricity at night too - as long as the panels are lit with floodlights. Technically feasible today. The big corporations are just blocking it, unfortunately.
Science cabaret artist and physicist Vince Ebert takes stock: have we become more rational, more level-headed, or even smarter over the past few years? Spoiler: no. Only 18% of the population wear a bicycle helmet, but 91% use a protective case for their phone. When reality increasingly resembles satire and government statements are practically indistinguishable from articles in the satirical Postillon - how is a satirist supposed to top that?
Vince Ebert refuses to give up, though. On the outside he may look like an old white man - but that's just a social construct. In "Vince of Change" he identifies as a 32-year-old tanned surf instructor from California, reaching entirely new audiences. His mission concerns us all: in an era that seems to be drowning in feelings, sensitivities and irrationality, he stubbornly holds up the banner of reason. And besides, he needs the money.











