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Oelikoeli en andere goden

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‘Mijn God heet Oelikoeli en Oelikoelie heeft maar één gelovige en die gelovige ben ik. Hoe ik Oelikoeli ken? Door zijn profeet Jean-Marie, een hoogbejaarde zwerver die mij ooit over hem vertelde. Jean-Marie is inmiddels dood. Hij is op 3 februari 1981 zeer bewust onder een auto gelopen in het Parijse tunneltje waar zestien jaar later Prinses Diana zou omkomen.’ Zo begint Youp zijn column op 11 februari 2006. Om te eindigen met:‘Geloof is namelijk een stok om op te leunen en niet om mee te slaan.’ In zijn reactie rondom het tumult over ‘de verboden Deense cartoons’ heeft Youp zijn visie verpakt in een fantasievolle vertelling. Hiermee laat Van ’t Hek weer eens zien hoe hij zijn vondsten creatief in een column verpakt. En aan onderwerpen geen gebrek... Iedere zaterdag kijkt de lezer van NRC Handelsblad uit naar wat Youp nu weer heeft bedacht. En gelukkig voor de abonnees en niet-abonnees van deze krant verschijnt er weer een bundeling van die columns. Want de columns van Youp hebben één unieke kwaliteit: ze zijn het waard om te lezen én te herlezen.

159 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2006

32 people want to read

About the author

Youp van 't Hek

74 books23 followers
Youp van 't Hek is a Dutch comedian and a columnist for NRC Handelsblad. He was born and raised in the Gooi, a upper class region to the southeast of Amsterdam. His youth there served as an inspiration for his ironic attitude toward the rich, the successful and all those who are pretending to be either. After being kicked out of several high schools, he finally completed the one where he also led the school theater, and moved to Amsterdam. There he was one of the founding members of Cabaret NAR (Cabaret Jester). Throughout all the changes in Cabaret NAR, Youp was the only constant factor in it and because of him focusing more and more on their shows, he gradually became Cabaret NAR. In the beginning he (or Cabaret NAR) was not very successful, often not even successful enough to pay for their own shows. During all this he worked in some of those boring, mind-numbing, riskless, black-and-white, have-to-wear-a-suit, 9-to-5 kind of office jobs, which later inspired many of his jokes and imitations.

In the early 1980s Cabaret NAR success declined and Youp moved on as a solo artist. From then on he has had great popularity. Though his shows and statements may be considered controversial, he has developed himself, not only as a comedian, but also as an idealist. His humor is always mixed with a sense of irony towards modern life, culture, and national and international politics. Other themes often found in his shows and humor are death, hypocrisy, the innocence of children, the sincerity of the elderly, the gap between what society expects from you and what you, deep in your heart, want the most, and the question: "When would you call someone crazy and when would you call him/her normal or healthy?".

His big break came in 1983 on KRO's "De alles is anders-show". His energetic performance made him a household name overnight.

He is known as "the Buckler of Dutch comedians" because he ridiculed Buckler, a low-alcohol beer brewed by Heineken in his 1989 end-of-year show so effectively, sales plummeted and the brand was eventually withdrawn from the market.[1] Youp has often cited this as the best joke in his career and has subsequently referred to it in all his retrospective shows.

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55 reviews1 follower
April 9, 2022
Vooral leuk om gebeurtenissen uit je eigen jeugd eens terug te lezen, maar verder niet zo mijn stijl.
Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews