6 Lies America Taught Me About Germany 🇩🇪

2024 ж. 23 Мам.
227 131 Рет қаралды

After moving to Germany and living in Germany, we quickly realized there were some culture shocks we were having because of "lies" that we were taught in the US about Germany...what things do Germans do or not do that we didn't expect based on these German stereotypes?? Find out here 😊
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❤️Aubrey was a Speech-Language Pathologist and Donnie was a graphic designer, but we both had a dream to #travel the world and experience cultures. After three years of being married and dreaming about if something like this great adventure would be possible, we decided to quit the rat race and take on the world. We sold everything we had, quit our jobs, and took off! After 9 months of aimless and nonstop travel, we now get to fulfill our dreams of #LivingAbroad as #expats as we move to #Germany!
00:00 - Video Starts of course
1:39 - Lie 1
4:13 - Lie 2
6:42 - Lie 3
9:35 - Lie 4 & 5
13:22 - Lie 6
16:23 - Bloopers

Пікірлер
  • What is it like for Americans seeing Germany for the FIRST TIME? Watch my friend's first ever impression of Germany here 👉 kzhead.info/sun/f9SSqtKSoJdpg5E/bejne.html Be sure to check out our video where my sister and her family came to Germany and we talked about their take on Germany as well 👉 kzhead.info/sun/hLyxe8uanZtoaYU/bejne.html Also, here’s the video where my brother and his wife came and visited us for the first time 👉 kzhead.info/sun/dc2afqimiXqeZqs/bejne.html\ Enjoy 😊

    @PassportTwo@PassportTwo7 ай бұрын
    • Ihr wohnt doch in Enkenbach-Alsenborn, oder? Da fahr ich regelmäßig durch :-D Dann müsstest du ja eigentlich auch ab und an mal die Flexx nehmen anstatt die DB

      @Gutenberg1977@Gutenberg19777 ай бұрын
    • Fact about Hitler's way of speaking: He practiced that for his public speeches in particular. It drew attention because it was so different from normal german people heared all day that if kind of stuck for that fact alone....which is indeed the reasony why he did this. People who interacted with him outside of the public speeches - like his secretary Traudl Junge for example - mentioned that even Hitler did not use this harsh pronounciation in his every day life.

      @HH-hd7nd@HH-hd7nd7 ай бұрын
    • hey wehen u search for beautiful looking citys check out Hann.Münden in Niedersachsen, a little, beautiful, old historic town :)

      @Commander-Es-Scheppert@Commander-Es-Scheppert7 ай бұрын
    • Tatsächlich nicht 😊@@Gutenberg1977

      @PassportTwo@PassportTwo7 ай бұрын
    • Dude man, you really are hilarious

      @user-lu9il2qv5s@user-lu9il2qv5s6 ай бұрын
  • Actually, Germany used to have a train station in pretty much every second village. It just has been either removed throughout the last decades or it was destroyed in WW2 and never rebuilt afterwards. The biggest removal probably happened since the 1990s, because the German train system was privatized and therefore the unprofitable tracks had to be removed. (Which was insanely stupid, as we know today)

    @fr89k@fr89k7 ай бұрын
    • And what we could have known just by taking a look at Great Britains Railroad going to the shitters once Thatcher implemented the naive "the market always knows best".

      @oldfrittenfett1276@oldfrittenfett12767 ай бұрын
    • @@oldfrittenfett1276 The market totally fails on pretty much every infrastructure.

      @fr89k@fr89k7 ай бұрын
    • @@fr89k Yes. Postal, Busses, Trains, Police sometimes...

      @oldfrittenfett1276@oldfrittenfett12767 ай бұрын
    • That information is wrong. The railway system in Germany is still state owned.

      @matthiassimon1739@matthiassimon17396 ай бұрын
    • @@matthiassimon1739 The rails, like the streets. the other parts are a stock corporation. The stocks are still held in part by the state, but as a stock corporation, it must make profit above serving the citicens.

      @oldfrittenfett1276@oldfrittenfett12766 ай бұрын
  • No, no, we definitively curse Uppsala - they know what they did.

    @ZachSeineVideos@ZachSeineVideos7 ай бұрын
    • We just decided not to talk about that incident.

      @4Astaroth@4Astaroth7 ай бұрын
    • Obviously not the same linguistic language, but seems a coincidence with the French “oop la / opla”

      @andyt8216@andyt82167 ай бұрын
    • ​@@andyt8216It isn't the same "linguistic language" the same way my water isn't as wet as yours.😂

      @ropeburn6684@ropeburn66847 ай бұрын
    • Ups + hoppla = Uppsala uppsala (deutsch) = uppsele (schwäbisch/swabian) = hoppala (österreichisch/austrian) We certainly need a dictionary German - Austrian / Austrian - German.

      @MichaelBurggraf-gm8vl@MichaelBurggraf-gm8vl7 ай бұрын
    • My point is French is a Romance language. Most of the replies to me have no bearing on this.

      @andyt8216@andyt82167 ай бұрын
  • The thing with the harsh dialect is, in every american TV-Show or Movie they speak german like a Klingon. :)

    @uwegroote7456@uwegroote74567 ай бұрын
    • In Germany mostly it's dubbed into German.

      @dutchgamer842@dutchgamer8427 ай бұрын
    • Exactly 😂

      @RainOfChaos91@RainOfChaos917 ай бұрын
    • Best example: you can speak Schmetterling very soft and have not so Schmetter it ;) Also you can speak Butterfly very hard.

      @Lukeddd@Lukeddd7 ай бұрын
    • ​@@Lukedddvery good examples in my humble opinion.

      @lefloeck@lefloeck7 ай бұрын
    • The American TV/Movie-world want to keep up "appearances". In this world ... a German who is actually capable to speak English well... doesn't exist. This "harsh dialect" makes the American Movie/TV-makers feel better.

      @Alex2007MUC@Alex2007MUC5 ай бұрын
  • I am German and I once met an American girl in Costa Rica. She asked me where I am from and I answered I am from the Black Forest. She then started a discussion with me accusing me of lying as the black forest would be a secluded area where you could not "be from". Mind she has never been even in Europe. Some people are so goofy 🤣

    @eliane_ysabel@eliane_ysabel5 ай бұрын
    • One American INSISTED it was "AustraALIa" and not "Austria", when I said where I was from. xD An interesting amount of US Americans wouldn't find the world on a map of the world. But they absolutely know everything about everywhere, much better than people from everywhere else.

      @lethfuil@lethfuil2 ай бұрын
    • @@lethfuil 🤣🤣🤣

      @BaerbelBorn@BaerbelBorn17 күн бұрын
    • @@lethfuil so true, and it explains a lot.

      @BaerbelBorn@BaerbelBorn17 күн бұрын
    • ​@@lethfuil Americans and Geography aren't friend ngl

      @kretecek_rl@kretecek_rl9 күн бұрын
  • I am German, from and in Germany, I have had Americans online tell me, that Christmas pickles are a very common German tradition and when I told them that it really isn't they told me, that I just don't know German culture and that his family is "really" German and kept the traditions, while mine obviously just forgot everything, sooo, yeah, it was a weird conversation. Oh, and it is of course "die Nutella".

    @GGysar@GGysar7 ай бұрын
    • Yeah, those pickles are an American invention and seem to come up on practically every German-American channel.

      @KaiHenningsen@KaiHenningsen7 ай бұрын
    • der/die/das Nutella ... Als Germanist kann ich sagen, dass es einen Grundsatz gibt, der sagt, wenn man ein vergleichbares Wort einsetzen kann, dann auch der Artikel dieses Wortes benutzt werden kann. Ich kann also sagen "die Nutella", denn es gibt "die Schokocreme", "der Nutella" entsprechend für "der Brotaufstrich". Da Nutella kein Wort aus der deutschen Sprache ist und diesen Fällen meistens das Neutrum, also das, verwendet wird, sind wir bei "das Nutella". Alle drei Varianten sind möglich. Welcher Artikel verwendet wird, wird vom Alter des Sprechers und seiner regionalen Herkunft bestimmt. Einer Studie zufolge bevorzugen allerdings 64% den Artikel "das".

      @stephanieheiler2327@stephanieheiler23277 ай бұрын
    • @GGysar - sorry - but Americans are very bigheaded… 🙄 Don‘t know who taught them they know everything better… 🤦🏼‍♀️

      @IZaubermausI@IZaubermausI7 ай бұрын
    • @@stephanieheiler2327 Ist das nicht eher eine Art Faustregel statt eines Grundsatzes? Ansonsten wäre dem Grundsatz zufolge aus der Ähnlichkeit zu dem Wort 'Nutella' dann auch 'der/die/das Schokocreme', 'der/die/das Brotaustrich' richtig, aber auch 'das Aufsatz'/'der Essay', 'die kleine Boot'/'das Nussschale', 'die Abschnitt'/'der Passage', ..., was ich alles als falsch ansehen würde .

      @derwolf7810@derwolf78107 ай бұрын
    • @@derwolf7810 Ich verstehe den Gedankengang ☺️ Aber das Genus der deutschen Wörter ist inhärent, also dem Wort innewohnend. Der Artikel zeigt den Genus nur an, da man es am Wort selbst nicht mehr erkennen kann. Deswegen fühlen sich manche Dinge automatisch falsch an.

      @stephanieheiler2327@stephanieheiler23277 ай бұрын
  • I’ve spent a lot of time in the US and I’m afraid to say that the whole water beer thing doesn’t refer to the alcohol content, but rather the flavor.

    @Psoewish@Psoewish6 ай бұрын
    • As in Germany, you just have to choose the right beer. I always find it kinda funny when fellow Germans, proud of the Reinheitsgebot (totally overhyped btw), talk bad about American beers because they only tried Millers but then try to convince you that Bitburger or so is the best beer ever :D

      @L0mb4x@L0mb4x5 ай бұрын
    • ​​@@L0mb4xthere are actually people, who like Bitburger?! I only know people, who buy that, when it's discounted

      @p3chv0gel22@p3chv0gel223 ай бұрын
    • @@L0mb4x Let's be real here, all of the best selling beers in Germany taste basically the same. You can make the test for yourself. If you ever have a friend who says they only buy Bitburger or Becks or whatever because they think that one tastes the best, sit them down with three glasses of beer and ask them which one is the one they like most. I've done this 4 times now, no one ever got their "favorite" right and they still had a 33% chance XD If you want good German beer, try craft beers and buy from the breweries themselves. So many unique flavors it's insane. And I suppose that's the same for American beer because why wouldn't it? [btw. when it comes to those brands that everyone drinks, Czech beer is superior ;)]

      @passio-735@passio-7353 ай бұрын
    • @@passio-735 I totally agree with you. Maybe my comment was a bit misleading. I am a german craft beer nerd and home brewer 😉. I tried to make the point that it is unfair to judge the US beer culture by its best selling beers and even if you choose to do so, it will not be a high level contest if you compare it with Germanys best selling ones. Doing this test with all the TV advertised beers with my friends is on my list for years 😀 . It gets even funnier if you include beers they "hate" or with a bad reputation, like Oettinger.

      @L0mb4x@L0mb4x3 ай бұрын
    • But I guess it's because we think of bud light when we think about american beer. I'm a casual Pils drinker but even I have to honor the incredible and fast growing diversity of craft beer and smaller breweries in the US, while our local breweries die out.

      @NeurosenkavalierEmilSinclair@NeurosenkavalierEmilSinclair2 ай бұрын
  • More "general german" for upsala is just "uups" with a long u. Depending on how long the u is it can mean "i made a small mistake" or "ok, we die now"

    @DieselsVideos@DieselsVideos7 ай бұрын
  • The difference between a 5 % American and a 5 % German beer is. You filter yours, we do not-in most cases. There is something called Stammwürze in a beer and the higher the amount, the stronger the effect of the beer. So filter that out, you get Pißwasser with 5 %, do not do that and you have a beer, that will eff you up quickly. Also...you use maize to make beer, which is not a beer ingredient to begin with.

    @Kivas_Fajo@Kivas_Fajo7 ай бұрын
    • Nur weil das hinterwälder Reinheitsgebot von Anno schießmichtot noch nicht wusste, dass man Bier auch aus so unbekannten Pflänzchen wie Reis und Mais brauen kann, heißt das nicht, dass das dann kein bier ist. Aber du hast Recht, die komischen amerikanischen Biere haben zu wenig Stammwürze. Bier muss wie das Flüssigbrot schmecken, was es ist!

      @JonaxII@JonaxII7 ай бұрын
    • @@JonaxII Wenn man Bier aus Reis und Mais brauen kann, wieso haben dann die Chinesen und Azteken oder Maya keines gebraut? Darauf kommen kann man auch mit nem Maisbrot, dass nass rumlag und gärte...oder mit Reiskuchen. Reisschnaps haben sie Ja, aber zum Bier Erfinden hat's dann doch wohl ned ganz gereicht, wa? Hinterwäldler sind die, die seit Tausenden Jahren den gleichen Mist machen wie wir und trotzdem noch nie drauf kamen wie man ein Bier braut. Gerade im Fall der Chinesen mit 7000 Jahren verbriefter Geschichte...echt peinlich.

      @Kivas_Fajo@Kivas_Fajo7 ай бұрын
    • I'm preeeeetty sure alcohol content of beverages is measured in percent (%). The one you used (which my phone can't even reproduce) is used for blood alcohol concentration.

      @Atlessa@Atlessa7 ай бұрын
    • @@Atlessa You are, sorry for the pun, 100 % correct. Aaaaand I corrected my mistake, thanks to your insight. It is called Promille with the two 00, which obviously means by the thousand, not as with %, by the hundred.

      @Kivas_Fajo@Kivas_Fajo7 ай бұрын
    • Wir hatten uns doch 1516 darauf geeinigt das wir es nicht Pisswasser sondern Kölsch nennen! 🙄🙄🙄

      @TomRuhrpott@TomRuhrpott7 ай бұрын
  • Another myth that exists (even worldwide), is that the evil person with the harsh pronunciation you mentioned is a German. In fact he missed being a German by about 500 metres and is Austrian instead.

    @Acampestre@Acampestre7 ай бұрын
    • Well, but he had the German citizenship and also fought for Germany in WWII. So it's kinda negligible that he was born in Braunau

      @user-vk1pz7ry1l@user-vk1pz7ry1l7 ай бұрын
    • In that time, an austrian was like a prussian or bavarian. Just one type of german. That we devide between germans and austrians is a thing coming from post ww2.

      @Hans_Holt@Hans_Holt7 ай бұрын
    • ​@@Hans_Holtnot really, different Emperors. 😉 Alone the fact that Hitler had to cheat for getting German citizenship is pretty revealing.

      @denniskrenz2080@denniskrenz20807 ай бұрын
    • @@Hans_Holt Bullshit. Österreicher brauchten zur Zeit von Preußen sogar eine Genehmigung, um das Staatsgebiet zu betreten, geschweige davon was nötig war, wenn sie sich dort niederlassen wollten.

      @Eysenbeiss@Eysenbeiss6 ай бұрын
    • ​@@user-vk1pz7ry1lFought? :-D What did he fight in WW2, gastritis?

      @GilbMLRS@GilbMLRS5 ай бұрын
  • I live in Koblenz (Germany) opposite the Rhine river boat cruise stop were hundreds of international tourist groups arrive every week - right in front of my door step. I mostly can identify American tourist groups immediately. One example is the way older generation people (70+) are dressed, like grandmas with Baseball caps 🧢 or grandpas with Sketcher sport shoes and / or oversized shirts. European people in that age category are usually dressed way more conservative. I say usually - not always 😉 Additionally the loudness they produce is directly recognizable (uuuhhhhh, wooow, amazing….) 😅

    @MausTheGerman@MausTheGerman7 ай бұрын
    • And the elderly women in Germany rarely walk around with purple, pink or other colorfully tinted hair. I'm sure it will be different in a few years when my generation gets older. 😂

      @anunearthlychild8569@anunearthlychild85697 ай бұрын
    • @@anunearthlychild8569 Oh yeah, you can bet on that. My hair is considered brunette, though technically i'm blonde (dark blonde, but still). I have 2 white hairs by now and they are literally as white as snow. And as soon as i can dye my hair neon pink without destroying it first through bleach, i sure as hell will. And a month later, it will be mist-blue. And then purple with cyan stripes.

      @olgahein4384@olgahein43847 ай бұрын
    • Exactely. I could hear an american group having a conversation 500 Meters away :D Also, young women always have "like" or "literally" in each sentence.

      @thepineapple8434@thepineapple84347 ай бұрын
    • Das mag daran liegen, weil die Alten in Deutschland sonst ausgelacht werden würden. getreu dem Motto: "Guck mal wie der/die Alte rumläuft mit Teenagerklamotten!".

      @g.f.w.6402@g.f.w.64027 ай бұрын
    • Damals hatte sich unsere eigentlich grauhaarige Lehrerin die Haare lila gefärbt, und schon hatte sie einen neuen Spitznamen: Milka-Kuh😅

      @Klassenfeind@Klassenfeind7 ай бұрын
  • Btw, the house thing, it really depends how old the town, city or village is. There's a lot of variation even within the same towns

    @elrohirshouldercheaptrick9452@elrohirshouldercheaptrick94527 ай бұрын
    • It also depends on wether the british and americans liked it or didnt like it during ww2. My town is pretty old (around a thousand years old) but we got almost no houses like that because of the war where they just burned everything down for fun (my town isnt that near to any big city they just passed through, met a few HJ boys, decided to burn the town and then continue driving towards the east). If ww2 didnt happen, then yea outside of big cities mosf houses would look like this.

      @cantinadudes@cantinadudes7 ай бұрын
    • A very good example is Bremen we have the Schnoor from the 14th century, Dom 11th century (at least the foundation) and the City Hall was built in the 13th century. Right next to those we have new soulless corporate buildings. It's a mixture of how old the place is, how bad were the ww I and II and how many buildings were built till then.

      @R4v3n_666@R4v3n_6663 ай бұрын
  • I‘ve been to Frankenmuth / Michigan 6 weeks ago, which claims to be a (very) German town. I had a Bratwurst and it didn’t taste like a Bratwurst and the fact that it was served in a Hot Dog bun killed me 😅 Everything there was full of Christmas shops which I also found quite funny, especially when I saw that nearly all the Christmas stuff was LED blinking plastic stuff 😅 Even the architecture, were they tried to make the town looking a little bit of „German“ with it’s fake timbered houses and the standard American concrete sidewalks was kind of hilarious to me. When I went into one of fake timbered house grocery stores and asked for German bread in the bakery department they looked at me as if I would come from planet Mars. If that is what Americans combine with Germany - Halleluja 😅 sorry if that sounds rude, but it was a little shocking to me.

    @MausTheGerman@MausTheGerman7 ай бұрын
    • The fact that the culture of immigrants develops differently over a long period of time than the culture of their country of origin is completely normal and a worldwide phenomenon. This probably has less to do with the wrong American idea of ​​us than with the fact that German immigrants tried to preserve part of their culture over generations, but some of it was lost or developed independently.

      @klarasee806@klarasee8067 ай бұрын
    • @@klarasee806 agreed!

      @MausTheGerman@MausTheGerman7 ай бұрын
    • @@klarasee806- Well, besides the fact that the huge minority of Americans of German heritage had to get rid of their German identity in WWI (and whatever was left with WWII), so the remnants of that "identity" are mainly artificial.

      @agn855@agn8557 ай бұрын
    • Even Germantown PA doesn't look German...🤓🤔😂😂

      @martinkasper197@martinkasper1977 ай бұрын
    • @@klarasee806It’s not about cultures developing differently. It’s about people claiming to be like us when they clearly aren’t.

      @Midnight.Creepypastas@Midnight.Creepypastas7 ай бұрын
  • What I love about German attitude towards fashion is that you can go all in of you feel like it but there’s no obligation to do so. You can go almost anywhere in anything and that includes your boring outdoor clothes that you just like because they’re so damn comfy. If I want to put in effort I do but no one looks at me weird when I don’t.

    @user-ny2fk9gm1k@user-ny2fk9gm1k7 ай бұрын
    • Well a couple of things are (fortunately) still frowned upon in public in Germany: PJs and sweats (the ones most people wear at home when they don’t expect to see anyone and just want to be comfortable).

      @jennyh4025@jennyh40257 ай бұрын
    • ​@@jennyh4025well. Yeah. And for good reason. PJ outside of your house? Why would you wanna do that?

      @lefloeck@lefloeck7 ай бұрын
    • @@lefloeck don’t ask me. I feel bad wearing my comfy-sweat pants going to the washing machine downstairs when I might encounter neighbors.🤷‍♀️

      @jennyh4025@jennyh40257 ай бұрын
    • It's so fun when you watch people at the cash register. I once had a woman dressed to nines including those red soled Louboutins in front of me at the Lidl cash register. I was dressed in jeans, t-shirt, and sneakers and behind me was someone in his paint-spalttered work-clothes and boots. And that was in rural Germany.

      @shadowfox009x@shadowfox009x5 ай бұрын
    • To be honest, I've pretty much never worn a Jogginghose at home in my life, not due to snobbery but because I absolutely just don't feel it and don't know why I should take of my street clothes as soon as I enter the house. I wear my jeans or other pants and buisness shirt because I like wearing them and feel orderly doing that and that the day is associated with wearing this day clothing. So, I find it very comfortable to wear them throughout the day, no need to ease my legs etc. with other cotton. This would feel like going to sleep for me. For me, outdoor/buisness cloth is associated with starting the day and easy clothes are associated with going to sleep. The day does not really start before taking off the sleep cloth, taking a shower and wearing my everyday outdoor cloth for me, even on the weekend. It's like a psychological signal that now the "work" (Not meaning real work but at Home stuff) can start, and wearing a Jogginghose or something like that in the day would make me feel like a vampire and automatically give me the feeling of going to bed. Oh, and I also do not really like t-shirts, rarely wear one. I guess, Lagerfeld would be proud. 😝

      @SamWinchester000@SamWinchester0005 ай бұрын
  • Great observations! Two remarks: Houses - you showed small towns and villages In cities, most people live in big appartement buildings Transport It is really a shame that our railway system was allowed to decay like that. They are investing more now, but we will never reach Swiss standards

    @hwbartels-ss2lg@hwbartels-ss2lg7 ай бұрын
    • In the U.S. we have tried to upgrade our railroads for more than fifty years. Unfortunately whenever it comes up it becomes a political issue and in the U.S. our system makes it very easy to kill good ideas.

      @charliesmith4072@charliesmith40727 ай бұрын
    • @charliesmith4072 In general, there's only one railroad track, and it is used by both freight trains and passenger trains. Freight trains by law have a priority over passenger trains. If a freight train is coming, the passenger train has to pull off to a siding to wait for the freight train to pass. This sometimes means sitting on the side track, going nowhere, for as much as four hours.

      @graydonwilson5550@graydonwilson55507 ай бұрын
    • @@graydonwilson5550 This statement is not correct ; Amtrak has a nationwide priority over freight -BUT - as freight trains are getting longer and longer the sidings are too short for them now. This is done on purpose ! Railway companies are not required to invest in longer sidings - so the short passenger train has to wait…

      @aoilpe@aoilpe6 ай бұрын
    • @@aoilpe Interesting. A very practical application that I hadn't understood. Thanks.

      @graydonwilson5550@graydonwilson55506 ай бұрын
    • Yup it is COMPLETELY unreliable for commuting now. I need to get an ebike or a motorcycle. If i just ride my bike over a direct bikepath (trasse) (essen - duisburg) i can arrive at uni in 45minutes reliably... but if i take the train i dont know if its delayed/runs at all/or just stops mid track so you cant get out and are trapped in delay... this can take up to two hours in bad cases... so: Riding bike 1:30 commuting time every time (okay not when you are getting pulled out by an overzealous cop for riding on the wrong bikepath as one of them is just a disaster in duisburg) Riding public transport: 2:30 h to 4 hours 😂😂🤦‍♂️🤦‍♂️

      @jimpanse1638@jimpanse16385 ай бұрын
  • As a gardener, there is no bad weather, just bad clothing!

    @Why-D@Why-D7 ай бұрын
    • As a (grand)mother I always say the same 😂

      @IZaubermausI@IZaubermausI7 ай бұрын
    • Im no gardener but i still confirm

      @RubenPinke@RubenPinke21 күн бұрын
    • And "we are not out of sugar"😂

      @Random.Micheal_Aft0n@Random.Micheal_Aft0nКүн бұрын
  • Nie sieht man Reetdachhäuser :( Man findet sie an der gesammten Küste.

    @steffent.6477@steffent.64777 ай бұрын
  • As a Swiss guy in his fourties who has never had to buy a car: The public transport thing is real in urban parts of Switzerland (and some big cities in Germany). In the countryside, there'll often be only a few buses a day. My parents live in the mountains, and the absolutely need their car.

    @philippbobkaufmann4004@philippbobkaufmann40047 ай бұрын
    • That's true for basically everywhere. Even the countries which have the best reputation for public transport. If you live rural, you need a car. There is no difference between Europe and the US. The difference is just that in the US you'll need the car in the big cities, too. In Europe for the most part you don't.

      @Tokru86@Tokru865 ай бұрын
    • @@Tokru86the difference is the us public transport is a joke because these bend over for the car

      @MaticTheProto@MaticTheProto5 ай бұрын
    • Yeah. I live in Berlin and have no need for a car, even if the public transport isnt always reliable or great. When the trains fail for some reason, it's annoying, but you can deal with it simply by the sheer amount of connection options and different types of public transport - busses, subway, different types of trains, etc. Besides, it's cool how the public transport is almost always working in some capacity, no matter what time in the night or which day it is. I have my issues with the public transport, but I ve never felt the need to get a car, cause it seems like a hassle to have one in a city like Berlin. But I have definitely heard from friends that come from smaller, rural towns (Dörfer) that a car is a must, and I can understand that. Germany as a whole is still very different than when you compare the public transport situation in other countries. I originally come from a huge metropolis that is outside of Europe and 4 times the size of Berlin, but it's a city with a much larger focus on cars than public transport, and that is one of the worse aspects about it. Now that I get the priviledge of living in a very walkable city, I enjoy it immensely, although I am aware that other European cities do it much better than Berlin.

      @liaspooked4980@liaspooked49803 ай бұрын
  • I live in a gingerbread house in a gingerbread street, we have flower pods at our windows and my dad wears sandals with socks 🇩🇪❤

    @garrusvakarian6462@garrusvakarian64625 ай бұрын
  • When I went to Canada (for a Highschool year) 16 years ago, close to the US Boarder, peope were shocked to hear that I've never attended an Oktoberfest or that I have never worn a Dirndl. So many people think that every German attends the Oktoberfest (and wears the typical Clothing). One of my school friends back in Germany married and invited their host parents from America. They were disappointed to see that she married in a plain white dress as they thought Dirndl and Lederhose is the way to go seeing Influencers from the south wearing it. I'm living in the Northern part and this stuff is simply not popular. Younger people might attend a local oktoberfest gathering bit it's more like any other party they would attend.

    @Regenteufel@Regenteufel7 ай бұрын
  • I like your 1954 vintage jersey. On a side note, a lot of the characterless looking inner cities and towns in Germany are by courtesy of the 8th US Air Force.

    @Custer0706@Custer07067 ай бұрын
    • Exactly. Nachkriegs Nachbau. Or to be more fair...'are by courtesy of WW2'.

      @misottovoce@misottovoce7 ай бұрын
  • Der Nutella Brotaufstrich. Die Nutella Haselnusscreme. Das Glas Nutella. Meist gebraucht: Mein Nutella 😄

    @SafezoneExpert@SafezoneExpert7 ай бұрын
    • Es heißt die Nutella, alles andere hört sich scheisse an.

      @scofield321@scofield3217 ай бұрын
    • Eigentlich heißt es nur Nutella, ohne Artikel, weil es der Markenname ist.

      @Lady_Cryalot@Lady_Cryalot7 ай бұрын
    • @@Lady_Cryalot Ja. Und zB bei mir "das Nutella" als Kuzform für "das Nutella-Glas".

      @zuckerzwerg123@zuckerzwerg1237 ай бұрын
    • Bei uns nur: Nutella, nicht der, nicht die, höchstens das (Nutella Glas). Oder einfach: Das da. Oder auch: Gib mal rüber.

      @darkredvan@darkredvan7 ай бұрын
    • ​@@darkredvangenau. "Gib mal Nutella rüber", wie in "Reich mir bitte Salat". Ansonsten "das Glas Nutella steht im Schrank"

      @einwitzigenname585@einwitzigenname5857 ай бұрын
  • Interesting, largely accurate observations - as always. Why architecture is often rather austere in Germany would be worth a whole video of its own. As every so often in Germany the consequences of WW2 play a huge role.

    @amainzergoesplaces568@amainzergoesplaces5687 ай бұрын
  • Hello 🙂 regarding german sounding harsh: J. W. von Goethe, Friedrich Schiller or Theodor Fontane ! They have shown how soft and melodious the german language can sound ;-)

    @lucientruth@lucientruth7 ай бұрын
  • Those were mainly very true observations :D I want to add two things of my own. The train system really can be troubling, however on average it is actually doing "Okay" looking at statistics in comparison to the landmass its covering. Furthermore I would suggest to differ between real trains from DB for example and those in cities or connecting close cities (Tram, S-Bahn, U-Bahn (Subway)), because those are very reliable most of the time. The point about the homes is true, naturally you cannot have beautiful and colorful houses everywhere :D There are various building styles across the country but also it depends on the age of the houses. Most beautiful looking homes are very old and have been restored or renewed over the years. Also WWII matters a lot, because many german cities got bombed to a degree that nearly all buildings were destroyed. After that, it was more practical to build in the way they did. Some old houses or landmarks got rebuilt and some were lucky enough to not get destroyed, but in general that is one of the main reasons, that some areas may look more gray or plain. Your videos are very accurate though and the quality is increasing every time :D

    @noobschrauber4293@noobschrauber42937 ай бұрын
  • Public transport: as long as you have enough options in your area, everything is good, but as soon as there is a route closure in one area and the weekend timetable applies to the other area, your local public transport app can actually recommend taking the bike if you have to leave at a certain time. (Yes, since the weekend timetable for the bus lines showed a 40-minute waiting time and the S-Bahn wasn't working, our local public transport provider recommended going by bike ;) =25 minutes for this specific route)

    @manub.3847@manub.38477 ай бұрын
  • Geraniums and other flowers in front of almost every window is a regional thing. I grew up in Hessian, where it‘s very common, and I know it from other regions as well, but here in the north of Germany, it‘s rare.

    @klarasee806@klarasee8067 ай бұрын
    • That photo of the house with all the flowers looked more like the Berner Oberland in Switzerland - I holidayed near Interlaken in this summer.

      @missharry5727@missharry57277 ай бұрын
  • Alcohol in beer: Regular German beer usually has between 4.7 to 5.3 percent of alcohol. The ones you showed are from multi-brand corporations. They are predominantely what I call "me too corporations" --> the others have success with it, let's do the same. You will have more diversity when you look into local brands. And, as you said, we have stonger beers. We also have "Dünnbier" (thin beer) with a lot less alcohol and a growing market share of non-alcoholic beer with meanwhile a reasonable taste.

    @McGhinch@McGhinch7 ай бұрын
  • I’m from the Midwest but I lived in Germany, almost 50 years. When comparing German to American beer, the issue is not the alcohol, it is just the amount of artificial flavours and sugar and other crap that Americans allow in their beer. My German girlfriend almost puked when we went to Los Angeles, and she drank a sip of Löwenbräu, thinking it was German beer. Sie sagte, da ist Zucker drin!

    @daveking3494@daveking3494Ай бұрын
  • Loved your reaction to the houses when you first came here. I always have the same reaction even though I'm German myself. I live in the northwest, close to the Dutch border, and nearly all houses here are red brick, so when I travel to other other parts of the country, I always marvel at all the plastered houses, especially if they're colourful :D

    @sarbeyinwonderland@sarbeyinwonderland7 ай бұрын
    • I love our red brick Houses

      @alexamurawski4524@alexamurawski45247 ай бұрын
    • @@alexamurawski4524 Me too, but I'm so used to them that it's always a surprise when I realise that the rest of the country doesn't live in red brick 😅

      @sarbeyinwonderland@sarbeyinwonderland7 ай бұрын
    • I live in the Ruhrgebiet, which was practically bombed flat during WWII and the oldest houses in my city were build around 1900, so whenever I visit a city/village with houses that are older I really feel like in a fairy tale. xD

      @lauramarschmallow2922@lauramarschmallow29227 ай бұрын
    • What I don't get about some Northern German towns is that there's quite a few that thought it'd be a good idea to pave their pedestrian areas with red brick, so all the walls of buildings and the floor are the same colour. Don't know why some thought that would look good

      @leDespicable@leDespicable7 ай бұрын
    • Isn't the redbrick just the outer wall? So redbrick then insulation then concrete which is finished with drywall (not drywall as wall itself, but finish for the concrete)

      @dutchgamer842@dutchgamer8427 ай бұрын
  • Brick houses/plastered houses: That really depends on the area. I grew up in Stuttgart, back then -- a long time ago -- brick houses showed a lack of finances of the owner. Houses were build with bricks and then plastered. It was just to make them look beautiful and to show you have the money for that. When I went to North-Germany, the houses were often covered with what they call "Riemchen" (Clinker brick slips) to have them appear to be made of bricks...a head-scratching experience

    @McGhinch@McGhinch7 ай бұрын
    • "Riemchen-Klinker" was used more in the 1960s/1970s because it was cheaper and real clinker stone was difficult to obtain. When our friends built their semi-detached house in the 1990s, the desired clinker brick was pre-ordered for over six months. Clinker also helps as a “seal”, since real clinker brick houses can often be backed with "sealant material" in order to a) preserve the façade, b) maintain the required values for reducing energy consumption.

      @manub.3847@manub.38477 ай бұрын
    • Those fake bricks are a trip! I guess I should have known they would have a name. Some of the loveliest regional housing styles, IMO, is Niedersachsen's red brick and black Fachwerk buildings. They express such pride, in my eyes. And beauty and practicality. I'm lucky enough to live in the land of Schiefer houses with white trim, bright green shutters and doors. Gorgeous!

      @LythaWausW@LythaWausW7 ай бұрын
  • I love the sense of humor you bring to this "Germany vs. US" topic! I know there are a lot of stereotypes being fostered on both sides of the ocean, and it's people like you who shed some light to understand each other better. That's important and great!

    @HJPhilippi@HJPhilippi2 ай бұрын
  • Public transport: as long as you are close to very frequented routes or cities as well, it might be well available. But as soon as you are in more rural regions, having a driving license is a must (and it's sometimes even more important as a passport)

    @thomasblohm3073@thomasblohm30737 ай бұрын
  • Having lived in Europe back in the 1980s, I recognized a couple of the places you had pics of for housing examples... and they're so noticeable *because* they're not the modern standard housing. :-) Your "vroom vroom" segment brought back memories of a late-night tram ride during which the tram driver, a *much* older gentleman, was coughing & hacking so much that we were afraid he'd keel over dead before we got to the end of the line... where we had parked our car, because the only public transportation that reached our house was a once-per-hour bus that only ran during daylight hours. (BTW, I traveled around France, Germany, and the Benelux by train a *lot* and wish we had a system like that here in the US.) As far as fashion goes, we lived just outside Brussels in the 1980s and I would often go downtown and divert myself by picking out the American tourists... with the knowledge that there was about a 15% chance that I had mistakenly picked out German tourists. (On the other hand, if I ignored clothing, the American tourists were far too easy to pick out by their behavior & loudness.)

    @nairbvel@nairbvel7 ай бұрын
  • That was fun , very well done👍. As far as clothing in Germany is concerned, a big change has taken place since the 1960s, when people generally dressed more formally. Today Germany is a European melting pot (and I like that a lot) . People dress according to the occasion or their well-beeing. BUT NEVER in pyjamas or jogging trousers (these old worn out😅). Nutella on its own is "das" / Nutella as cream is "die" . Greetings from Cologne 🤗

    @ElkeSiegburg@ElkeSiegburg7 ай бұрын
    • It's always "die Nutella".

      @desperadox7565@desperadox75654 ай бұрын
  • Hitler was not german but austrian…….

    @missvi1619@missvi16197 ай бұрын
    • No excrement, Sherlock.

      @MachtNixPasstSo@MachtNixPasstSoАй бұрын
  • Oh! I miss Germany!!! The people, the food, the villages!

    @sharonsteedly1950@sharonsteedly19507 ай бұрын
    • Me too!

      @Vylika@Vylika7 ай бұрын
  • People pay significantly different amounts of attention to how fashionable their clothes are, depending on the city. My new hometown is a pretty wealthy student city with many art/music/social/health related studycourses and people here dress just way better than people in the last 2 cities I lived in. I think wealthy, young, female, arts/music/acting are factors that contribute to better fashion.

    @gregorgiebel1377@gregorgiebel13777 ай бұрын
    • good fashion is not bad but at the end of the day I don't care that much lol

      @heinrich6294@heinrich62947 ай бұрын
    • You think? 😂

      @swiggles4342@swiggles43427 ай бұрын
    • Fashion is insanely overrated, and it's insanely cringe when people link it to other things in life as if it would reflect how smart you are

      @Ray25689@Ray256897 ай бұрын
  • About the houses: The building style is called "Fachwerkhaus". This is a building style you only find in parts of Germany (mostly southern Germany as far as I know, I wasnt that often in northern Germany as Swabian Girl). This are relicts from earlier times and many city centers kept them an renovated them. But newer houses didnt look like this and especially big cities doesnt look anymore like this. If you aber want to visit Germany and want to see this kind of houses especially: Tübingen, Speyer and Rothenburg ob der Tauber are my personal Fachwerkhäuser-Hottips.

    @Freundinnen100@Freundinnen1007 ай бұрын
    • As a person from the north-east I can tell you this is not true. I need to assume about the the north-west, thought I believe the same holds true for them. The old fisherman houses in my small village could be called Fachwerkhäuser, and if you google „Bäderarchitektur“ you‘ll even see that your traditional „Fachwerkhäuser“ aren’t the only cute old-style buildings in germany ;) (even though some of them might even categorize as Fachwerk, never spent any time felling all of them up :)) And if that doesn’t convince you, at least accept Thuringia as having some of the most beautiful Fachwerkhäuser, since one topped with slate roof tiles must be one of the most idyllic views of my life. I hope I do not come off as rude, just wanted to add my knowledge on the topic of historical architecture:)

      @sini234@sini2347 ай бұрын
    • @@sini234 Thanks for clarification! The only northern or western cities in Germany I visit, didnt had Fachwerkhäuser, so I assumed that. But its nice to know, that I am wrong and everybody I Germany can enjoy this beautiful style of buildings 🤣 But I also love inner cities with this bride, colorful houses, as mentioned in this video.

      @Freundinnen100@Freundinnen1007 ай бұрын
    • @@sini234Ja, auch im Nordwesten haben wir Fachwerkhäuser. Ein Beispiel vor Ort wäre das 'Hus Blomendal'. Würde aber behaupten, dass die Backstein+Holzbalken-Variante häufiger ist als die "Nur Holz"-Variante mit weißen Wänden. - Siehe dazu Niedersächsisches Fachwerk/Hallenhaus, die sich häufig bei Bauernhöfen finden.

      @TheSylfaein@TheSylfaein7 ай бұрын
    • There are different half-timbered house styles in different regions of Germany. Wernigerode and Quedlinburg, for example, are two beautiful examples in Saxony-Anhalt.

      @cumuluscloud3854@cumuluscloud38545 ай бұрын
    • I’m from NRW (Rhineland) and there’s a lot of them here :)

      @elena3941@elena39415 ай бұрын
  • Nutella is made up of the English word "Nut" and the Italian feminine article “she”. When put together it creates an Italian diminutive. I advocate paying a little tribute to the Italian language and therefore call it "Die Nutella"❣

    @grysufeuermelder9602@grysufeuermelder96027 ай бұрын
    • Thanks a lot, I fully agree! 😄

      @sydgo227@sydgo22724 күн бұрын
    • In Italian, Nutella is DEFINITELY feminine. La Nutella, not “il Nutella”. Most words ending in “a” are feminine in Italian. There are few exceptions. And let’s not forget that Nutella is made by Ferrero, a historical Italian brand.

      @giuliobernacchia1848@giuliobernacchia184811 күн бұрын
  • I think the beer comparison (and the joke) comes from the impression that many Americans enjoy their "light" beer (with ~4% abv) and compare it to Oktoberfest beer that is not just served in 1l mugs but also has over 6% abv

    @thetj8243@thetj82437 ай бұрын
  • Nutella: Forget about "der". Choose between "die" (my choice) and "das".

    @michaelschuckart2217@michaelschuckart22177 ай бұрын
    • Or leave it at just "Nutella".😅

      @EsterHorbach-it9tb@EsterHorbach-it9tbАй бұрын
    • It is only a brand name. It has no article.

      @xamidi@xamidi28 күн бұрын
    • Diiiiiie!!!! 😄😄 „Das“ feels like a crime… 🤣

      @sydgo227@sydgo22724 күн бұрын
  • The article for Nutella depends. As Nutella has no own 'gernder', it is neutral a.k.a. das Nutella, because it is 'das' (undefined object). As an item, you can refer to it as the Nutella-Aufstrich(everything you spread of bread= Aufstrich. Maybe a bit like creme), and as that, it would be 'der' Aufstrich, so 'der' Nutella (Aufstrich). You can refer to it as the Nutella-glas, whit glas also having the neutral article 'das'. But you can go wild and refer to it as 'die' Nutella-Creme (yeah we also have that) - which is a bit wild, as the german word for creme also refers to lotions and such and isen't exactly correct for food, but wiedly adopted from internation products - like with cheese cream etc. Creme in german is female, so 'die' would be correct. If you want, you can also simplify it as chocklate, which also would be female. So in some way everything can be correct, and there might only be a "order of correctness" by the order of more logically definitions of what that brown sludge actually is. In the weird realm of GER, you might find different articles more logical in different cultural or social bubbles. Still we're a patchwork of tribes and immigration, shaping a wonderfull fabric of colorfull disagrement^^

    @nikitatarsov5172@nikitatarsov51725 ай бұрын
  • I think the joke about the beer is manly due to light beer. In the region where I am, we do not have light beer at all. Edit: Correction: Not anymore. I remember that 20 years ago there was a beer that was called 2.8 (zwo-acht) but it was discontinued because noone bought it.

    @RainerLP@RainerLP7 ай бұрын
    • My father bought it. Many brands had a light version with around 2,5 percent in the late 90s early 2000s. When they discontinued because not many liked it, he mixed his beer with water when he had to drive or wanted to daydrink. After a couple of years he just decided to just drink only one or none bottles of proper beer instead of watered down beer.

      @analholes77@analholes777 ай бұрын
    • I dunno, our local Kaufland carries the extremely budget-friendly 5,0 and 2,5, I think it was a radler. it's been a while since I drank it

      @lauramarschmallow2922@lauramarschmallow29227 ай бұрын
  • Wow! The mountain you showed at the beginning of the video is the Watzmann and i can actually see it from my window! So cool that my hometown is featured😊

    @Zelo_1@Zelo_14 күн бұрын
  • One of my favourite German "cute" words is "Fledermaus" for Bat. I mean "Fledermausmann" hardly sounds like they would put terror into Gotham's criminals. One big issue though is that English is a Germanic language, but also takes a lot from French and Latin. Due to the influence of the Norman Conquest, the Catholic Church, and Renaissance art and culture, French and Latin tended to be used for higher purposes, the arts and sciences, whereas old English was used more for everyday things and by the common people. Over time as the languages integrated into modern English, the softer French and Latin words have been used for softer things, wheras the harsher Germanic words have been used for harsher things. There is a reason we eat a nice juicy bit of Beef or Pork (both from French origins) not dirty, smelly, rolling in filth Cow or Pig (from Germanic origins). We even deliberately choose our words to sound harsh, for example a lot of swear words. Take "Merde" or "Putain" which to our ears sound much more pleasant than the English equivalents. Other languages don't have the same distinction between harsh and soft words.

    @ChrisCooper312@ChrisCooper3127 ай бұрын
    • Compare the old English "flittermouse."

      @missharry5727@missharry57277 ай бұрын
    • it all depends on how you pronounce it. German can be spoken softly with some nearly unnoticable r's when they are not a main part of the word. Or you can speak with a different "meldoy" of sorts and stress the consonants and it will sound a lot harsher.

      @Salzui@Salzui5 ай бұрын
    • @@Salzui Some German diaclects also have this nice roling R-sound almost like the italian language.

      @sawanna508@sawanna5085 ай бұрын
  • I know the use of "Upsala", too. But you can also just say "Ups". (I'm from the South of Lower Saxony.) You can say: The more people live in an area, the better the connection of public transport is. Best it is in big cities. Normally, I use no article with Nutella. But when I do, I use "das Nutella".

    @HalfEye79@HalfEye797 ай бұрын
    • But even in big cities there are often directions and parts which are better connected. If you need a connection which doesn't fit that it gets bad. Either you need to switch bus/train several times or the bus goes a long way with lots of stops. In my city going to my work needed about an hour with several trains/busses. Now we have new lines and it may take between 35-55min(1 to 2 stops). Car: 10min, Bike: 20min. Guess what I'm not using.

      @reinhard8053@reinhard80537 ай бұрын
    • ​@@reinhard8053 Yes, a collegue of mine told me that, if he would use public transportation to work he has to hope the second bus is late. Else he don't get it and his commute is at least 30 min. But when he gets to work before the traffic lights are on, it just takes a few minutes by car.

      @HalfEye79@HalfEye797 ай бұрын
    • I‘d say „ups“ is even more common than „uppsala“, but of course we know it (Rhineland Palatine here). And - sorry to say - it‘s „die Nutella“, of course! 😃

      @sydgo227@sydgo22724 күн бұрын
  • Incredibly ironic, how you could have picked any austrian painter clip, but you chose one where he says "we want peace, but we reject oppression" 😂😂😂

    @TheItalianoAssassino@TheItalianoAssassino7 ай бұрын
  • On many beerfests the beer has about 6% alcohol and comes in big glasses, so it is easy to get very drunk. Nutella is italian and the word uses the female diminutive -ella so that implies a female article. Ferrero however doesn't specify any genus, so whatever is used the most is the correct way. That is either "das" or "die" at the moment.

    @christophstahl8169@christophstahl81697 ай бұрын
    • Look closely at the jar. nutella is not spelled with a capital "N". Hence nutella is not a noun and it therefore has no article.

      @ChRW123@ChRW1237 ай бұрын
    • What its supposed to then?​@@ChRW123

      @Zeylo89@Zeylo89Ай бұрын
  • Beer: In the USA "light beer" is a thing, while in Germany it is simply unknown. So I guess most people compare "Bud light" and similar to "regular" beer.

    @dearseall@dearseall7 ай бұрын
    • That's not true. There are german light beers, like e.g. Jever Light or Warsteiner Extra. There are many more, and typically their alcohol content is reduced by 30 to 40%, i.e. 2.5 to 4%.

      @MattBlue@MattBlue7 ай бұрын
    • Isn't bud light just alcohol free beer?

      @trillionbones89@trillionbones895 ай бұрын
  • Uppsala: Some areas say "ups!", some areas have "hoppla!" that sometime is extended to "hoppala!". Maybe, I am not a linguist, they got mixed by somebody who wanted to appear funny and accidentally became a trendsetter. (that could have happened more or less simultaneously in several places.)

    @McGhinch@McGhinch7 ай бұрын
  • Comment on the houses: A lof of houses did look like these "fairytale" examples that you showed. It is called "Fachwerkhaus" which describes the wooden struts you can see. Unfortunately basically every city center of any moderatly large city was bombed to dust during WW2 and in the resulting rebuilding in the 50s and 60s some massive idiots decided that conrete blocks should be the new design of city centers. I heavily recommend visiting cities that have been spared bombing during WW2 and still feature beautifuly so called "old cities" in their city center. One example is Konstance at Lake Constance which has been spared bombing since they left on their lights at night to seem like a swiss city. Usually german cities turned off all lights at night to make it harder for bomber to carpet bomb the civilian centers during WW2 but Konstanz knew that swiss cities leave their lights on (since they were not involved in the war) and thus if they leave their lights on american and british pilots will think its a swiss city and therefore not bomb it.

    @thedarknightnicht@thedarknightnicht5 ай бұрын
    • Clever❤

      @chrispepinot@chrispepinot5 ай бұрын
    • Weren't there some bombings of Swiss cities during the Second World War?

      @MarcLeonbacher-lb2oe@MarcLeonbacher-lb2oeАй бұрын
  • As someone who spent all my free time growing up in Rheinland-Pfalz, no-one in England would ever believed me when I would talk about being surrounded by vineyards. Now my friends are delighted when I bring back some delicious local wine. 😂 Nein danke, I'm allergic to tree nuts, which sucks extra hard as a German.

    @lynxak47alice@lynxak47alice7 ай бұрын
  • Fun fact: Hitler was Austrian born and raised, when he first came to Germany he was already 25 years old.

    @HG_Budde@HG_Budde6 ай бұрын
  • I can pick out an American just by the way you walk 😁I always tell my hubby: You push yourself through the world.. He is like a tank!

    @elkevera@elkevera7 ай бұрын
  • For lie 3, It heavily depends on where you live. In my area, for example, there a BUNCH of houses like the ones you see in pictures, but I do live in more of a rural area.

    @evas.7121@evas.71215 ай бұрын
  • 6:30 also remember that beer bottles in Germany are almost always nearly 17 fl.oz vs 12 fl.oz. in the US

    @stefan0325@stefan03257 ай бұрын
    • I assure you volume is measured in liters or half-liters. What is an fl.oz. vs. oz. How can a society still work with these unpractical units.

      @emilwandel@emilwandel7 ай бұрын
  • Der, die or das Nutella doesn't matter. But it's important to have an opinion. And protect it with ISSO, as in "ich schrei sonst"! 😁

    @fairphoneuser9009@fairphoneuser90097 ай бұрын
    • Danke! Hiermit adoptiert: ISSO oder ISSU - I schrei sunscht 🤣🤣

      @quatschgans@quatschgans7 ай бұрын
  • From the place I lived at I can confirm: The houses you showed, the "ginger bread" houses, needing a car, not needing a car, DB/ Gemany trains being wonky af I can not confirm: bright flowers infont of every window

    @Lea-im3wr@Lea-im3wr7 ай бұрын
  • Yeah just wearing comfortable and practical or durable clothes is definitely a higher priority to me than whether the colors go nicely with each other. I'm usually just wearing my black jeans and one of a few different color hoodies. That's usually good enough for me.

    @UberDragon@UberDragon5 ай бұрын
  • Nice discussion of the public transport situation. In fact, the railway system today is only roughly a third of what it once was (early 20th century). Many rails were bombed in WWII and/or simply neglected afterwards, because Germany went total car. Today it makes a huge difference if you live in a densely populated town or the countryside. Btw, is there Carsharing in the US? I'm living in a smallish town and for me, using a shared car only when I need it has proven a very efficient way to avoid buying one.

    @borisniclas-tolle5076@borisniclas-tolle50767 ай бұрын
  • Das Nutella.

    @martinmarheinecke7677@martinmarheinecke76777 ай бұрын
    • Am häufigsten ist aber laut Duden die weibliche Form, die Nutella. Es ist jedoch auch zu beachten, dass die sächliche Form das Nutella ebenfalls viel in Gebrauch ist. Die Verwendung von der Nutella ist dagegen eher selten.

      @burkhardproksch637@burkhardproksch6377 ай бұрын
    • @@burkhardproksch637 Scheiss auf Duden. Ich sage seit 50 Jahren "das Nutella". Was die Leute in 50 Jahren dazu sagen, interessiert mich nicht.

      @CycloTourist@CycloTourist7 ай бұрын
  • really funny video - love the "harshness" in your German examples - Danke

    @gitarrenpost@gitarrenpost7 ай бұрын
  • 10:46 & 12:55 "Der Fußbus fährt immer!" (The foot-bus drives at all times) Basically meaning you can always rely on your feet to get somewhere. It's a somewhat popular saying in the army.

    @jj_senpai@jj_senpai7 ай бұрын
  • In Germany, wearing a baseball cap is a dead giveaway that you are Turkish. 😂😂😂

    @daveking3494@daveking3494Ай бұрын
  • I will defend sandals + socks to the bitter end. Sandals/flip flops are just more healthy for your feet and in many hot countries they only wear this. The difference to germany is simply that weather here is too cold to always use them barefoot. Actually since i came back from Thailand i start to use sandals/flip flops almost every time and yes, colder season demand socks. Its still better than having sweaty feet in sport shoes all the time and also simply feeling more uncomfortable.

    @LegioXXI@LegioXXI7 ай бұрын
    • Yeah they literally work like the fancy „breathing shoes“

      @MaticTheProto@MaticTheProto5 ай бұрын
    • Sandals and flip flops really are two very separate things. There is actually nothing wrong with sandals and socks but there is everything wrong with flip flops in most situations.

      @str.77@str.775 ай бұрын
  • The vintage football (soccer) shirt looks amazing on you!

    @svetlanashorse@svetlanashorse7 ай бұрын
  • You have to visit Dresden (the "Neustadt" part) and look at the Houses!

    @nepomukmezger5112@nepomukmezger51125 ай бұрын
  • Generally speaking about clothing: widely used are jeans, in all varieties but dirty ones (ok if you are just repairing your car, bike, whatever). I prefer to wear button down shirts, but that is just personal preference. Hats (Stetsons) would stick out, as would Sports wear (if not doing sports), sneakers are definitely „in“. Advice for women: please avoid wearing leggings in public, it’s a no go. Wearing High Heels in the wrong places might attract the wrong kind of men.

    @darkredvan@darkredvan7 ай бұрын
    • High heels are a problem with the cobblestone pavement. I live in a city with as lot of them and 5 cm is the highest i can wear.

      @arnolsi@arnolsi7 ай бұрын
    • Sports wear makes you look eastern european.

      @oldfrittenfett1276@oldfrittenfett12767 ай бұрын
  • About the first rumor: You know, the angry man that got rejected by an art school wasn’t even German and how he speaks is even sketchy to me as a native speaker. But I’m also aware that we chose him as the leader and didn’t do anything so he would stop what he did and as we say in Germany: Mitgehangen, mitgefangen.

    @hazelnusseis@hazelnusseis7 ай бұрын
  • I definitely noticed everything you said about the homes. White sqares with a tile roof and flowers was definitely the norm where i visited. No split foyers/ bi- levels to be found!

    @jcr3500@jcr35007 ай бұрын
    • Used to be common. Always depressing googling for pictures of german cities pre ww2

      @MaticTheProto@MaticTheProto5 ай бұрын
  • As a german from Baden-Württemberg, this video was really fun to watch. And of course its the neutrum, das Nutella.

    @Magic_yolo@Magic_yoloАй бұрын
  • No Bavarian beers in your list 😈 They're usually around 5% as well, though. Regarding houses, you showed lots of small town houses. In the city centers, we have taller buildings, and lots of concrete, glass and steel. One thing you rarely see are skyscrapers though. There are a few cities in Germany known for having those, but generally, German houses are somewhere between 2 and 5 floors. Bungalows or taller buildings being more outliers. Also that buildings that are the size of an entire block are much rarer than in big US city centers, as are buildings that are completely freestanding. Germany has much more small groups of buildings.

    @uliwitness@uliwitness7 ай бұрын
  • If you like a singing dialect then you should visit the region of Mannheim, where every word seems to have at least the range of an octave. 😉

    @Al69BfR@Al69BfR7 ай бұрын
    • Spot on. I lived in Sandhoven. My other problem is that Germans have problems pronouncing the Capital I. They wanted to call me Yan (Jan) rather than Ian. In the end I used my middle name, James. They had no trouble with that.

      @MENSA.lady2@MENSA.lady27 ай бұрын
    • @@MENSA.lady2I don‘t think that’s because we have problems to pronounce the capital I, as we don‘t. Its sound also exists in the German language, and this even applies to the dialect they speak in Mannheim 😉 Both the name Ian and the German name Jan are a short form of John or Johann / Johannes, which derives from the Greek name Ioannes and the Hebrew word Jochanan. So Jan is the German equivalent to Ian. I think it's very common around the globe to "translate" foreign names into their country-specific equivalents. Many Germans even pronounce my German name wrong. There are some similar names with different pronounciation, so it‘s sometimes getting mixed up.

      @klarasee806@klarasee8067 ай бұрын
  • the bad weather thing is said here in scotland and i heard people say it in holland so i think its just senseable advice about being ready for the changeable northern european weather that is ubiquitous in all of these countries

    @andrewmcewan8081@andrewmcewan80814 ай бұрын
  • I love how you pronounced Schmetterling!

    @OpheliaPumpernickel@OpheliaPumpernickel2 ай бұрын
  • I would never have guessed that Budweiser has more alcohol than Warsteiner. Thanks for that research. That college warning about the beer reminds me of what baby boomers told their kids, "The pot we smoked had way less THC in it than today." *lol*

    @LythaWausW@LythaWausW7 ай бұрын
  • As for the strong beer stereotype, could it be that Americans have confused German and Belgian beer? The latter may be very strong indeed.

    @christopherx7428@christopherx74287 ай бұрын
  • German Guy here, your facts are so true and funny at the same time! :D Keep going with these videos !!

    @eikl.3892@eikl.38925 ай бұрын
  • I'm kinda surprised that German is considered rough / hard sounding - specifically on the word 'Schmetterling' if the english word BUTTERFLY does basically follow the same principle - except many english speakers seem to have forgotten, what a 'T' sounds like ^^ I have to add that I had an Englishman as a neighbor who lived in my small home village for roughly 10 years. He always wanted to own a traditional farm house surrounding a yard. And he told me all offers he got in England were way over his price range. So over contacts to a real estate agent from Germany he got the opportunity and bought the house just accross our house. His first wife was a teacher and had some knowledge in German - but for most of the time I became their translator. We had long talks about life and his experiences. Now after turning 81 he finally got official visa for his second wife and her 2 daughters and they live in the outskirts of Greater London. I kinda miss him

    @Beliar275@Beliar2757 ай бұрын
  • Great summary! (says a German) I hope your US viewers who are going to come here will take most of it in! Especially the fashion thing: yes, wear what you want to wear. There's no German dress code. In my Southt-Western neck of the German woods, it's mostly die Nutella, sometimes das, never der. I kind of have the feeling that Nutella is (even just grammatically speaking) gender-less.

    @pfalzgraf7527@pfalzgraf75277 ай бұрын
    • When I grew up in Bavaria it was still common for butter being referred to as "der". And my ancient great aunt also put Nutella in that bracket - she was the only one, though. But then we weren't allowed Nutella at anyone else's so it kind of stuck with me.

      @Piggelgesicht@Piggelgesicht7 ай бұрын
    • Actually, I'd say there is a German dress code. Don't leave the house in your pajamas. That one is strictly a no. I hear Americans do that all the time.

      @KaiHenningsen@KaiHenningsen7 ай бұрын
    • Agree with the “das” (in my neck of the woods) or “die” (have heard that in some parts of the country) Nutella theory. Never (!) “der”.

      @Custer0706@Custer07067 ай бұрын
  • That Hiter Clip was the most perfect example because he was actually talking about "achieving peace" in that tone! Also it is DAS Nutella!

    @jovi1078@jovi10785 ай бұрын
    • It obviously is DIE Nutella and Htler was actually lying in that clip. It was "We want peace BUT..."

      @str.77@str.775 ай бұрын
    • First of all: no, its DIE Nutella, Second: and he speaks in an austrian accent so he doesn't even sound like Hochdeutsch

      @oo_louise_oo9208@oo_louise_oo9208Ай бұрын
  • lol, you driven through my home town…Esslingen on the way to Kernen Stetten…wasn’t there almost 15 years, but i am nearly sure you drove there

    @NeomOne@NeomOne6 ай бұрын
  • 8:42 Omg, it's Ramstein. I literally work just a three minute walk from where you are driving there.

    @auntclechris@auntclechris3 ай бұрын
  • Nutella is just Nutella. I think I've rarely used an article to go with it. "Kannst du mir mal das Nutella reichen?" - so I guess in my opinion it's "das". But in the end I just don't want Ferrero to change the recipe... 😂

    @ChocoBetty@ChocoBetty7 ай бұрын
    • It's "Die Nutella" and always has been. I have no idea where people here get that it's "das" from. I have never heard that in my life and I've lived in 4 different states and Austria and work for Swiss people. I have never heard ANYONE ever say "Das Nutella"

      @LeutnantJoker@LeutnantJoker2 ай бұрын
    • @@LeutnantJoker Unfortunately I‘ve heard „das“ many times… yuck, freaks! 🤣

      @sydgo227@sydgo22724 күн бұрын
  • The timber frame houses do exist, but it is a very regional thing (mainly the South) and many have been covered up over the years. I live in a timber frame house, but you don't see it outside but for the shape of it (upper levels overlapping the lower ones). It still is a nightmare if you want to fix something on the walls as you don't know what is in the walls. If you are lucky there is wood, if you are unlucky it is empty or it has big river pebbles and you ruin your drill. German trains are currently in a dire state, several decades of zero investments and a very efficient and ruthless car lobby take their toll, so the punctuality overall has dropped to barely 60%, if your train actually runs. Proper investment into a train system can give great results, you mentioned Switzerland which is a very good example. As for fashion: Germany is the very last country with a fashion sense, even from a practicality POV it is dreadful. The colors are old-fashioned, the style is old-fashioned, every town has the same shops selling the same stuff, the most boring place to be for anything fashionable. Nutella totally depends where you are: here in the South (BaWü and Bavaria) it is Der Nutella, in Switzerland we tend to say Das Nutella

    @MyriamSchweingruber@MyriamSchweingruber7 ай бұрын
    • Half-timbered houses are not specifically Southern German. You won't find them at all in southern Bavaria. But there are many in Lower Saxony (Stade, Celle, Goslar, Hann. Münden), Saxony-Anhalt (Quedlinburg, Wernigerode, Halberstadt), Thuringia (Mühlhausen, Schmalkalden, Ummerstadt), Northrhine-Westphalia (Freudenberg, Bergisch Neukirchen, Rheda-Wiedenbrück, Monschau), Rhineland-Palatinate (Reiferscheid, Bernkastel-Kues, Bacharach; Meisenheim) and of course Hesse (Fritzlar, Rotenburg/Fulda, Alsfeld, Seligenstadt, Miltenberg).

      @olafgogmo5426@olafgogmo54267 ай бұрын
  • Thanks for giving a more realistic picture of public transport. We don't all live in cities! When we want to go to the edges of the country its a different story 🙄 In this small town, right in the middle Denmark, we've got departures to the biggest cities every half hour. But that's not where my son lives! I take a every half hour bus, all right, to connect to a ferry that sails once an hour - to connect to a bus, to connect to the last bus, that only goes every second hour - some of the day. On one side there's no regular connection all the way to the ferry harbour, so I call a taxi-bus 2 hours in advance to go the 30 km between ferry and busstop. I'll get there, but if I don't plan the trip propperly, I'll be spending hours waiting at various stations Peace and love

    @ane-louisestampe7939@ane-louisestampe79397 ай бұрын
  • I live near Köln and the train connection to my suburb town is great. I commute to Köln for work, and it takes me only 40 minutes with the train. So I did suppose that that's normal. But yeah, the Rheinland-Pfalz disappointed me. There are fabulous castles along the Mosel river, but to some of them there is no train or bus connection at all. And yeah, DB is the most common small talk topic😂

    @anastasiiazdorikova@anastasiiazdorikova5 ай бұрын
  • As for the harshness, as a German currently learning Dutch, I think all of the Netherlands laugh in Dutch that they managed to lie low so the rest of the world would point the finger at German. Seriously. Dutch is giving me a sore throat! It is that much harsher!

    @corvuscorone7735@corvuscorone77357 ай бұрын
    • In my ears, Dutch is a freakin’ cute language! Even swear words sound cute to me in the Netherlands.

      @klarasee806@klarasee8067 ай бұрын
  • The more I watch videos about America vs other country’s the more I feel like they are actually disconnected from the world and instead live in their own one

    @cubixxvpro@cubixxvpro5 ай бұрын
  • Rhienland Phalz was where my family and I lived in for four years from the '80s to the '90s. We were stationed at Bitburg.

    @michealcormier2555@michealcormier25555 ай бұрын
  • Das Nutella is the only thing that sounds correct, I can kinda maybe see die, but der is like wtf are you doing? and no just because it fits for der Nutellaaufstrich doesn't help because that is the particle of Aufstrich not of Nutella... Yeah it is mostly if you live in a big city where you don't need a car in germany, many people still have one because it can still be useful to have one if you have to transport big things, but you can very comfortably live in a german city without a car.

    @nijinoshita3301@nijinoshita33017 ай бұрын
  • Uppsala is not a regional thing. We in Baden-Württemberg say it too and it's the same in other parts of Germany as well.

    @martinbruhn5274@martinbruhn52747 ай бұрын
    • Als Schwabe reicht ein einfaches: Ha nô!

      @jaysigma@jaysigma7 ай бұрын
    • We use it in Vienna as well. So it's not even just a German thing... 😁

      @fairphoneuser9009@fairphoneuser90097 ай бұрын
    • Even If I know Uppsala, I don't use it... it's more Hoppala 😂

      @quatschgans@quatschgans7 ай бұрын
    • @@quatschgans Those are two different words, even though they sound similar.

      @fairphoneuser9009@fairphoneuser90097 ай бұрын
    • It's not used at all where I live. I knew it and heard it before, but nobody ever uses it. Have to visit other parts of the country or have to have some phone calls to ever encounter it. So that makes it regional.

      @dnocturn84@dnocturn847 ай бұрын
  • yeah, the typical villages in the Pfalz and greater region. when i see them, i know I am home :D

    @HIMzone666returns@HIMzone666returns7 ай бұрын
  • I tried Coors and even when it has 5% it tastes like water. Regarding public transportation, you can relate on trains and busses when you live in a city. Smaller places usually suck. I only use busses and it works fine.

    @Chrree@ChrreeАй бұрын
  • I've been to Helen, GA. A fake german town with fake timbered houses and everything made of very real american plastic. It was tragic, it was hilarious, it was saddening. Reichadler everywhere, I even saw two swastikas.

    @DeBedschbacher@DeBedschbacher7 ай бұрын
    • How could they forget the comunist symbols. Don't they know that Germany is a socialist country now. Only joking.

      @Kaktusgurke-id4dd@Kaktusgurke-id4dd7 ай бұрын
    • Oh no. Now I kinda want to travel there… Katastrophentourismus :P

      @MaticTheProto@MaticTheProto5 ай бұрын
  • "Das Nutella" oder eventuell "die Nutella". "Der" geht so gar nicht. (Hessen) :-)

    @mizapf@mizapf7 ай бұрын
  • yeah, in germany, larger cities are more likely to be connected by public transport. a lot of my family lives in a pretty rural part of the country and the only way to visit my grandma is to drive by car

    @sentient_dinosaurplush@sentient_dinosaurplush6 ай бұрын
  • I am from Frankfurt. You don’t need a car. Actually trying to park anywhere is a hassle. It’s cheaper and more convenient to use public transportation. Also it’s a bonus to walk everywhere.

    @vemo916@vemo9165 күн бұрын
  • In my opinion there are only three popular languages that sound harsh, russian, chinese and arabic. Edit:Mandarin not kantonese

    @anarkitty0@anarkitty07 ай бұрын
    • Agreed in terms of Mandarin and Arabic, although I think that’s only from our foreign perspective. Russian doesn‘t sound harsh to me at all. Maybe it’s because I speak it a little bit? Generally I think every language is so much more than just grammatics and vocabulary. When you spend some time in a foreign country and learn its language, you eventually start to you hear it with a native speaker‘s ears, and from that point, its sweet music magically appears.

      @klarasee806@klarasee8067 ай бұрын
    • Japanese.

      @arnolsi@arnolsi7 ай бұрын
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