

With Heufer-Umlauf, Böhmermann hosted a bi-weekly show on Radio Eins from November 2011 to September 2012 under the same title. Starting in January 2011, Böhmermann toured Germany for several weeks with Klaas Heufer-Umlauf with the satirical improv cabaret show " Zwei alte Hasen erzählen von früher". Until April 2011, he hosted Beeck & Böhmermann on 1Live together with Simon Beeck. In 2010, Böhmermann joined Lateline and wrote the column Gott fragt, Böhmermann antwortet (God asks, Böhmermann answers) for the youth edition of the Süddeutsche Zeitung newspaper. Until 2011, the radio station 1Live ran the monthly satire and entertainment program " Die ganz große Jan Böhmermann Radioschau". From 2009, Böhmermann was a member of the ensemble of Harald Schmidt's program on ARD. In the same year, Böhmermann published his first book " Alles, alles über Deutschland - Halbwissen kompakt". The program TV-Helden was awarded the 2009 German Television Prize in the category " Best Comedy Program." The program was also awarded the German Television Award. This action inspired a group of Turkish carnivalists from Dortmund to found a real first Turkish carnival club. In January 2009, Böhmermann founded the " First Turkish Carnival Club of Germany (1st TKVD)" as part of a satirical action for the RTL program TV-Helden.

In 2007, WDR television broadcast Böhmermann's six-part comedy show Echt Böhmermann.
#Radioeins satire show series
In the follow-up series Lukas' WG, Böhmermann moved his main character into a shared apartment with the mascot of 1. For the 2008 European Soccer-Championship, Böhmermann launched the podcast " Pod-Olski - Der EM-Podcast von Lukas", which made it to the top of the iTunes podcast charts.

Podolski sued against it without success and refused interview requests from ARD during the 2006 World Cup.
#Radioeins satire show professional
There he invented the column "Lukas' Tagebuch" (Lukas' Diary), a parody of the Cologne professional soccer player Lukas Podolski. In 2004, he moved to 1Live on WDR as a presenter and comedian. He also dropped out of his studies at the University of Cologne in history, sociology, and theater, film, and television studies. He applied to three drama schools, was rejected every time, and a fourth time successfully at the Hanover Drama School, where he did not compete. In 1999, he began working as a moderator and reporter at " Radio Bremen". In 1997, Böhmermann gained his first journalistic experience at " Die Norddeutsche", a local edition of Bremen's daily newspapers. He served as a lay judge at the local court of Cologne. Even though he remains silent about his private life, it is known that he has multiple children. His father died from leukemia when Böhmermann was 17 years old. His mother had immigrated to Germany in the early 1970s, and was part of the German minority in Poland. Böhmermann was born and raised in Bremen.
