Recommendations of the Editorial team
An archive classic from April 2016.
The “Game of Thrones” series is particularly known for two things: enormous brutality and light clothing. Emilia Clarke finds it unjust that there are so many naked women to be seen-and demands that men should also be completely naked in the fantasy series.
In the talk show “The Late Late Show with James Corden” was the Daenerys actress and spoke there, among other things, about her campaign “Freedom for the Penis” (“#Freethep”): she was fed up with the fact that only women have to pull off blank, but in men the genital part is or is not even shown at all.
But not only Emilia Clarke demands more naked men, acting colleague Kevin Bacon is also committed to naked men and In August 2015 even turned a video that he uploaded on YouTube has.
But back to Emilia Clarke! Maybe in the upcoming sixth season of “Game of Thrones”, your wish will finally come true. Until then, you can watch your appearance on the talk show with James Corden.
Emilia Clarke: #Freethep
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_lwfuld4iuo
Season 6 of “Game of Thrones” will run on Sky in Germany from April 25, 2016.
“Game of Thrones” Is history. In the meantime we know who made it onto the iron throne (the answer is amazing!). Even if there is now a crowd of spectators who want nothing more than a restart of the final seasonthere was inevitably an end for the most popular series of the decade in addition to “The Big Bang Theory”.
We remember “Lost”which with his esoteric attempt at an end, puzzle many unresolved and some nonsense finters played his complete reputation. Hardly anyone speaks of “Lost” more than one of the best series of all time – and only because of the tired conclusion.
So “Game of Thrones” had to endure. And inevitably. Because of the so-called “Peak-End Rule”. Don’t you know? But you should! This is a heuristic approach of psychology, in German also the highest level of the Gennant. In short, it is about experiencing and remembering a situation can clearly differentiate between us.
The brain plays a prank
The Nobel Prize winner Daniel Kahneman once found that the experience of a situation is often evaluated differently by the brain than the memory. Our handling of memories therefore has complex consequences of how we evaluate certain events, especially in the future.
Related to emotional events, this means that, if they are asked later, people usually only remember the most powerful (most beautiful, most unpleasant, most painful) moment in an ongoing process – and the end point! Everything in between seems to be completely meaningless for the evaluation of the overall complex. (You can find a concrete description of the Peak-end Rule HERE). If the end is gentle, then the memory of it is more positive. If it fails more violently, then more relaxed phases are displaced in emotional memory.

