15 Things Germans Don't Understand About Americans

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NALF

NALF

Күн бұрын

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• Why the US drinking ag...
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13:24 Eleven
14:33 Twelve
15:39 Thirteen
17:00 Fourteen
18:08 Fifteen

Пікірлер: 4 100
@cahinton.
@cahinton. 2 жыл бұрын
Every time I hear the "Americans wear shoes in the house" thing, a piece of my soul dies as a Minnesotan. We don't do that here. Shoes are removed at the door, and most living spaces will have a shoe rack right at the entrance.
@nuclearpoweredbrain2211
@nuclearpoweredbrain2211 2 жыл бұрын
I picked up that habit in Hawaii.
@christophersmirnoff5222
@christophersmirnoff5222 2 жыл бұрын
Mud rooms exist in rural areas in every state in America for a good reason.
@Rockmaster867
@Rockmaster867 2 жыл бұрын
Arent alot of Minnesotans originally from Germany?
@rickschultz9589
@rickschultz9589 2 жыл бұрын
I live in Wisconsin, next door to Minnesota, and I have always taken my shoes off while inside. But this is not the case with a lot of houses I go to.
@BulletRain100
@BulletRain100 2 жыл бұрын
If you start living in a desert where scorpions and other critters occasionally get into your house, you will quickly start wearing shoes or sandals.
@jeffjeziorowski8612
@jeffjeziorowski8612 Жыл бұрын
I was stationed in Würzburg and Stuttgart and was in Germany for most of the 80’s. I accidentally found your channel because I’m planning a trip back soon and I wanted to see what has changed in the 20 years since I was last there. When I was over there I totally got into the culture. All my years back in the states I’ve never felt at home. Germany became my home in my heart.
@michaelgro5474
@michaelgro5474 Жыл бұрын
Welcome back to Germany :-)
@lorwally13
@lorwally13 Жыл бұрын
Same I just left Germany this year feels like my heart has been ripped out of my chest 😂 I was stationed in Wiesbaden. I really miss Frankfurt.
@Tamar-sz8ox
@Tamar-sz8ox Жыл бұрын
I hear you . I’m from New York 🇺🇸. When we lived in Heidelberg, I had more in common w. Germany than I did with other states in the USA 🇺🇸 for example , the Southern part of the USA is very foreign to me
@barfuss2007
@barfuss2007 Жыл бұрын
@Jeff the reason is simple. Germany (and all european countries) have a long history and culture. The US "culture" is wearing guns, all is about to make a lot of money and Disneyland.
@Kidoss11
@Kidoss11 Жыл бұрын
You were there in the 80s, we have 2022.
@niklasneighbor6726
@niklasneighbor6726 Жыл бұрын
For number twelve: "Bei Risiken und Nebenwirkungen lesen sie die Packungsbeilage und fragen sie ihren Arzt oder Apotheker"
@chantaln6843
@chantaln6843 Жыл бұрын
For information & side effects….Google it! 😊
@xaverlustig3581
@xaverlustig3581 2 ай бұрын
Yes but any ads are for non-prescription products.
@peter2327
@peter2327 Жыл бұрын
When I was in western Ireland I could recognize and differentiate between Germans, Americans and Irish people very easy: - in the moist weather Germans and Americans wear functional jackets, the americans wore predominantly HH, the Germans JW and GT - Americans tend to grab more space, the ellbows are more outwards - Americans drive on the right side, when the correct side in Ireland is the left lane, especially after left turns. - all Americans seem to have visited the orthodontist often - if someone walks calmly through the rain without jacket but with cigarette, he is Irish
@petermewes4552
@petermewes4552 8 ай бұрын
You haven't met much of the northern German folks then. ;)
@SeldimSeen1
@SeldimSeen1 2 жыл бұрын
We lived one year in Switzerland with my husbands work. My son was 5 years old. My son and I discovered a McDonalds in Basel and we went in and sat down for a meal. Of course even though there were many people, it was very quiet. Suddenly a group came in talking very loudly while ordering their food. My son asked, "Mommy, who are those really loud people?" I answered, "They are Americans." He looked shocked and then confused and asked me, "Mom, aren't we Americans?"
@richardpetek712
@richardpetek712 Жыл бұрын
Cute :)
@brianpinion5844
@brianpinion5844 Жыл бұрын
thats why i hate restaurants , my nerves are shot ! anxiety problems ! im the one that stands Up hollers shut the fuk up and then gets punched took to jail and then anger management classes, or in the hospital hooked up to EKG thinking im having heart attack, born and raised in US but why are we so damn loud, people tell me everyday ' you need speak up !just shake my head walk off
@groovinhooves
@groovinhooves Жыл бұрын
There is indeed a tendency in Americans to loudly fill all spaces entered. An ingrained urge or affectation to greater importance than warranted through any actual merit in most cases. Occasionally it is merely very subconscious and only shows forth in music mixing levels and voice EQing that is a bit too live and high-pass (great presentation otherwise - very good copy and reading).
@Altonahh10
@Altonahh10 Жыл бұрын
In my experience, all people who have English as their mother tongue are very loud. British, Australian, it doesn't matter. People laugh too loudly (annoying!), speak too loudly and their voices just can't and won't get any quieter.
@Dude_Slick
@Dude_Slick Жыл бұрын
@@Altonahh10 The loudest people in America are those who's native tongue is Spanish. Fact.
@spiritualanarchist8162
@spiritualanarchist8162 2 жыл бұрын
I remember going on a vacation in Miami .When I ordered two beers , i had to show ID, and they refused to serve me . I was so confused, and kept saying 'wait, wait..There must be some mistake i'm 20 !' 😅
@man8785
@man8785 2 жыл бұрын
The most epic was when the Americans refused to accept my passport (I was over 21) because it wasn't an American driver's licence. I asked them how foreigners were supposed to buy alcohol in their country and they told me to apply for a green card.
@spiritualanarchist8162
@spiritualanarchist8162 2 жыл бұрын
@@man8785 That's even worse ! lol
@hlessiavedon
@hlessiavedon Жыл бұрын
@@man8785 that bartender was just a xenophobic prick. In most bars you can use your passport as it is considered legal ID.
@mxplzr1418
@mxplzr1418 Жыл бұрын
@@man8785 Had something similar in a Walmart in Seattle... I was 22, showed them my ID, my drivers licence, my international drivers license AND my passport. Still refused to sell me a beer. Went to the liqor store next to wallmart and got something over there.
@martinjunghofer3391
@martinjunghofer3391 Жыл бұрын
@@man8785 Wo ist denn da die immer wieder übertrieben gelobte amerikanische Höflichkeit???
@oldfrittenfett1276
@oldfrittenfett1276 Жыл бұрын
I grew up in the eighties in Germany and the only automatic car I knew of was that of our nextdoor neighbour because he lost a leg in WWII. For those who do not know: To drive a manual, you need two functioning legs.
@followp
@followp 9 ай бұрын
You have the best username out of all people who lived in Germany in the eighties bro/sis.
@oldfrittenfett1276
@oldfrittenfett1276 9 ай бұрын
@@followp hehe, thank you. I used to read a lot of Karl May.
@Bananenbereiniger
@Bananenbereiniger 9 ай бұрын
not true actually lol. I am only missing my left under-leg. But, even if my knee was also gone, I could still drive manual easily. As a personal drummer I can confirm: it's more about the feeling and timing, less about the stimulated vibration in the foot lol, does not even matter a bit, I've also been driving with some Mercedes Oldtimers and Trucks. Edit: The only thing that does not work is driving motorbikes manual, as I am not able to move my foot and hence, move the clutch. Sucks pretty much as I have not found any driving school offering driving license with automatic motorbikes, they'll rather be like: Get one of your own before doing your license here.
@gro967
@gro967 9 ай бұрын
I'm glad that even in Germany, manual cars are dying out these days.
@FRITZI999
@FRITZI999 8 ай бұрын
@@gro967 klar …... the more Automatic Cars on the Roads, the more Idiots too ....
@eefaaf
@eefaaf Жыл бұрын
In the Netherlands it's not only that you as an employee can claim a minimum of a certain number of days off a year, you are obliged to take up at least a single consecutive period of two weeks each year. As you can also save up part of the time, a colleague of mine this year was away for a mont and a half to the walk through northern Spain of the pilgrim route to Santiago de Compostella.
@PeterLE2
@PeterLE2 9 ай бұрын
It is the same in Germany. You must have period off of 2 weeks in a row
@janishenkel6451
@janishenkel6451 3 ай бұрын
Yes, in Germany you (with a few exceptions) cant pay out vacation. You have to take the time off
@tomservo5347
@tomservo5347 Жыл бұрын
Having a German mom because of my former GI dad, I grew up with German family visiting us in rural Missouri. (One of mom's brothers came over, stayed, and lived the American Dream.) They're amazed at how isolated we are with neighbors a mile away and nearest town being 10 miles away. We always take them out target shooting which they always seem to enjoy as it's something they cannot do in Germany. They in turn once bought out the entire supply of Budweiser and Bud Light from my small town after going through about 40 cases in 2 weeks. Our diet beer simply has no effect on them as they would point to the 'Rice' ingredient and laugh. My Dad and his old Army buddy said that they had to take a break after about a week of drinking beer with them. They play hard, but they also work hard. When you find yourself with a group of them in full party mode it's some of the most fun you'll ever have.
@takaetono6773
@takaetono6773 Жыл бұрын
...... wtf? of course we can do target shooting in germany. you just cant do it at random places but you ll go to a shooting-range where you can chose from a limited variety of guns.
@tomservo5347
@tomservo5347 Жыл бұрын
@@takaetono6773 Just saying I can go out to the family farm and shoot anywhere, with anything I'm allowed to own.
@Markus-yz5io
@Markus-yz5io Жыл бұрын
American "Beer" is like Water to us in south Germany :)
@tomservo5347
@tomservo5347 Жыл бұрын
@@Markus-yz5io My Opa worked for Römer brewery for years and retired from there. I think he was one of the board members. Funny because it was one of my favorite beers when I was stationed there and didn't know this. My German family calls US beer 'diet beer'. Even Jever Fun puts it to shame. One thing I really liked that I can't get here is Karamalz and your sprüdel is excellent.
@andreasarnoalthofsobottka2928
@andreasarnoalthofsobottka2928 Жыл бұрын
What's the difference between sex on the beach and Budweiser light? None, both is fuckin' close to water.
@GermanBeardGuy
@GermanBeardGuy 2 жыл бұрын
Now it's the complete Video! I did like the 18 second version too ;-) As a German living in Seattle, my wife is making fun of me when I change from sweat pants to Jeans just to walk down the street to pick up the mail.
@NALFVLOGS
@NALFVLOGS 2 жыл бұрын
The 18 second one was a bit more streamlined 😂
@franhunne8929
@franhunne8929 2 жыл бұрын
@@NALFVLOGS Slightly, hardly recognizable.
@LaureninGermany
@LaureninGermany 2 жыл бұрын
I used to think why bother when my husband changed when we just walk the dogs (we live in the countryside), but I actually really appreciate it now. It’s a good habit.
@IIIJG52
@IIIJG52 2 жыл бұрын
Sweat Pants are for chilling at home or for working out. They are not outside pants. Unfortunately the "young people" dont hold themselves tothat standard anymore. Turns out im not even 30 yet but im already old :D .
@7shinta7
@7shinta7 2 жыл бұрын
@@IIIJG52 If that's what beeing old means, then I gladly join the old brigade. I'm also only slightly (cough) above 30 but I still think that you own it to yourself to at least put on some proper pants (= at least jeans) when leaving the house. But yeah, appearantly nowadays it too much to ask of the younger population (but also people older than me) to NOT walk around outside like they're still in their pyjamas.
@pontil5569
@pontil5569 9 ай бұрын
Just discovered your channel, and happy to have. One comment to shoes at home: Grown up as a Turkish guy in Germany in the 70s/80s, I experienced that Germans wore more often shoes at home than you stated, but maybe I perceived this as such a significant habit, because in Turkish households street shoes are absolutely forbidden, just like in Japan!
@schnorpel
@schnorpel 8 ай бұрын
I like the Celsius scale, because you can categorize them more or less roughly in steps of 10. 0°C = Water freezes, 0-10°C = cold, 10-19°C = ok, 20-29°C = warm, 30-39°C = very warm, >40°C = hot
@pixelmaster98
@pixelmaster98 Ай бұрын
I would change 30-39 to "hot" and 40+ to "suffering", though
@brunoliddle
@brunoliddle Жыл бұрын
I remember learning a short poem when I was younger to help when thinking about temperatures in Celsius. "30° is hot, 20° is nice. 10° is cool, 0° is ice" While 20° being a 'nice' temperature is debatable (I'd prefer 23-24° myself) it was a good rhyme to use.
@jazsnydam389
@jazsnydam389 Жыл бұрын
catchy and helpful
@suserman7775
@suserman7775 Жыл бұрын
Hey that's actually pretty useful. I set my air conditioner to 71F at night which is 21.7 C.
@Keeping_It_Kyle
@Keeping_It_Kyle Жыл бұрын
As someone from Scotland 14 degrees is hot. Then I moved to america and suddenly 28 was cold lmao
@TMD3453
@TMD3453 Жыл бұрын
Will remember that, thanks!
@charlynegezze8536
@charlynegezze8536 Жыл бұрын
All Americans have difficulty ¨feeling¨ celcius no matter how long we live abroad. After 35 years in Spain, I still convert.
@tamliode4421
@tamliode4421 2 жыл бұрын
I always thought the Hausschuh-Issue is due to the driving-everywhere thing.. If I only walked on my 3m concrete way to my car and then on your 4m of concrete, I probably wouldn´t take off my shoes sometimes either.. but after walking 20min thru Berlin streets? hell no, thank you, i´ll be on my socks in your flat
@cazwalt9013
@cazwalt9013 Жыл бұрын
I remember one time me and my sister were buying clothes at an H&M and it was so peaceful and quite there and suddenly there's a noise coming from another place I turned and it was a group of Americans who were taking so loudly that me and my sister just looked at each other with shock But at the same time I really love how warm and friendly Americans are
@hardwirecars
@hardwirecars Жыл бұрын
good with the bad
@spikefivefivefive
@spikefivefivefive Жыл бұрын
* "My sister and I ..."
@daftfreak13
@daftfreak13 10 ай бұрын
I lived in the northern US for some years and when I moved back to the South I was very annoyed by how loud and obnoxious Southerners are in public. It's not all Americans, just depends on where you're at in the USA.
@wohniamkotti
@wohniamkotti 10 ай бұрын
The warmth and friendliness is just superficial. Don't be fooled by that. All a bunch of actors and wannabe-leaders.
@TheMcKnights.
@TheMcKnights. 10 ай бұрын
As a German living in the US currently I found myself nodding along and I loved how you described everything without making either side sound or seem weird. Fun too that you are with the Unicorns, I myself am a Frankfurt Galaxy Gal, where people do tailgate btw. But that could be a thing people do at American sports played in Germany to somewhat honor the process and live the entire experience which I respect. German football / soccer fans usually find a bar or kiosk to pregame and / or drink on their way to the game, since thats legal.
@ramonaljensen
@ramonaljensen Жыл бұрын
I think the "loud" aspect of being an American can greatly depend on where you were brought up. I was raised right off of the Navajo reservation in New Mexico and have been accused of being VERY quiet after I moved to California. That was until I took my husband home for the first time. He tried to order at a Burger King and was like "It's not just you...It seems like everyone around here whispers".
@charcat1571
@charcat1571 Жыл бұрын
Agreed. My exposure to indigenous culture is that being loud is to intrude upon others, so speaking softly is to show respect. I have to agree this is the more considerate way to be.
@jdmitaine
@jdmitaine Жыл бұрын
BTW the vast majority of the US population are from German descent.... just saying
@markmcgoveran6811
@markmcgoveran6811 Жыл бұрын
I think this is another geographic error. How loud are your surroundings? That's how loud you are.
@Jpeg13759
@Jpeg13759 Жыл бұрын
@@nuenne2002 Awfull English, but yes
@Jpeg13759
@Jpeg13759 Жыл бұрын
@@nuenne2002 Macht doch nichts....Jeder, wie er eben kann. Um die Worte gehts eh nicht...
@shadowfox009x
@shadowfox009x 2 жыл бұрын
This theory with larger personal bubble of Americans is a bit weird. When I was working in the US, a lot of Americans wanted to hug me (mostly female coworkers) and not the polite, lean in, air kisses kind of way found in Germany, but a real hug. That was way too much physical contact for this German girl. Okay, I also hate hand-shakes and air kisses, unless it's really close friends. Drinking age is also an interesting thing. Because the high age kind of hypes up being legal to drink? I found that so odd when I was watching another youtuber and she really went on and on about turning twenty-one soon and being able to drink. And on the day of her birthday, she went out to party and got really drunk with a bunch of cocktails. And cocktails are dangerous because they often contain a lot of hard alcohol but taste like fruit drinks. Even if you're used to harder stuff it's easy to misjudge them. And of course at twenty-one all of them already have a driver's license so drinking and driving is an issue, while Germans at sixteen don't. When my friends and I wanted to get drunk we met for a party with sleep-over. And often our parents bought the alcohol and laughed at us when we came home with a hang-over. Public transport with a hang-over is also fun.
@51tomtomtom
@51tomtomtom 2 жыл бұрын
Surely a point ! I was in party in Paris and a girl said " I knew it right away that you're not French: you didn't kiss " I answered "I usually select whom I kiss " and she was extremely pissed .....
@JurgenErhard
@JurgenErhard 2 жыл бұрын
"about turning twenty-one soon and being able to drink." Yeah, as if she never drank a drop of alcohol before that. I mean, possible, but also quite unlikely. There is a veritable industry for fake ID. And I guess it's not even hard to do, given that any "valid" driver's license would be excepted… so a bouncer or a bartender in CA would/should accept an driver's license from ME. But would she actually know how a driver's license from ME looks like? And yes, the "personal space" thing and the "oh, lemme hug you" (often without even asking, IIRC) is truly one of these strange contradictions. The US has many of those (but then, every nation has such contradictions).
@ThePixel1983
@ThePixel1983 2 жыл бұрын
I recently took the Paris metro on the evening of some big football (soccer) match. Two 50ish guys, could hardly stand, then one station one leaves the train in the very last second and shoots for the garbage can. No idea if the other one realised it. Or cared.
@JMM33RanMA
@JMM33RanMA 2 жыл бұрын
The real reason for the 21 age restriction is the propaganda* of "Mothers Against Drunk Driving." To be fair, when I was in college the age was still 19, but I didn't want to drink because there was alcoholism in and around my family. *Such political pressure groups are not entirely absent in Europe [for example "Reformhaus"], and at least this one was rational because of skyrocketing alcohol-related driving deaths. Guess what happened on weekends when drinking was OK for 18-19 year-olds with drivers licences in one state, when the next state had a 20-21 age limit! This kind of group, combined with religious extremism was responsible for the Prohibition of alcohol 1920-1933. Prohibition was a great benefit to organized crime, and caused more criminality, death, illness and destruction with increased alcoholism than previously. Talk about unintended consequences!!!
@daniellewhite168
@daniellewhite168 2 жыл бұрын
I think its also an East coast vs. West coast thing. I would never hug my coworkers and when I worked on the West coast everyone hugged me and it was unnerving and seemed inauthentic.
@lilleth666
@lilleth666 Жыл бұрын
I think the thing with the personal bubble depends on where you are in Germany. I'm from northern Germany and we need more personal space here. We don't like when people get so close. I think it also depends on whether you are in a crowded city or in the countryside.
@cykanic
@cykanic Жыл бұрын
Same here, and if you're on a train or bus and sit next to someone you don't know without asking, its like sin.
@kevincarlson4562
@kevincarlson4562 Жыл бұрын
Similarly,I was born Danish but grew up partly in Flensburg.My personal space would dwarf Elon Musk's ego.Living in the US now,I've probably offended many by instinctually backing away.
@hochhoch-pu2gd
@hochhoch-pu2gd 11 ай бұрын
I really enjoyed watching this video! Buillding a bridge over different cultures is (for me) an always welcomed icebreaker! Being myself a „naive“ Englisch/American (speaker), but native German, the basic message for me is: Openly talk to each other! And both nationals will. I‘m sure! If you do, both sides will learn a lot about each other and each other‘s culture! …and, most likely, will have a lot to lough about. …I missed the prejudice of wearing a Jeans trousers only once ;-) Great job! Cheers
@JackieBaisa
@JackieBaisa 2 жыл бұрын
As someone who lived in Germany for 4 years (and Belgium for 1), this is spot on. One thing I had to learn right away is that when it's your birthday in Germany, YOU buy the drinks for everyone. 😂 Also, I find Germans to be super loud when they are vacationing as tourists. But you're right, they are quiet at home. You can hear a pin drop on the Munich subway...
@lactera9247
@lactera9247 2 жыл бұрын
Beer is quite cheap in germany a case of beer (20*0,5l or 24*0,33l) will cost you 10-15€uro. Even hard alcohol will only cost 10-15€ per bottle, you even can buy cheap hard alcohol for ~6€ per bottle.
@FLicht-ng8dh
@FLicht-ng8dh 2 жыл бұрын
1. Holiday is the time to let it all out and watch a little less about your manners and 2. most germans tend to be hyped so the´ll automatically will be a bit louder 3. most poeple like to enjoy (rather early) drinks. so while the clock turns one looses its patient and calm manners :D germans are humans not more not less
@maryjackson1194
@maryjackson1194 2 жыл бұрын
@@lactera9247 My mother's family was German: air-kisses for greetings, but the thought of pressing your chest against someone socially feels inappropriate.
@johnalden5821
@johnalden5821 2 жыл бұрын
BTW/you can also hear a pin drop on the DC Metro. It's only the tourists who are talking to each other. Everyone else just wants to be at home. I suspect that is the origin of a lot of the "Americans are loud" stereotypes. American tourists in Europe may be in a group, they are stoked to be there, having a good time or outright partying. Everyone around them is having the normal, bland day or awkward date, etc. So of course the Americans are louder and attract unwanted attention.
@shotbytim9624
@shotbytim9624 2 жыл бұрын
I don't know what Germans are like at home, but as tourists, they and Italians are as loud as Americans are reputed to be. I also ran into some VERY loud Spanish speaking tourists. I don't know what country they were from; their accent wasn't familiar to me. The best way I can explain it is that it sounded like Spanish being spoken with a Russian accent.
@josh33172
@josh33172 Жыл бұрын
I live in Belgium, also lived here previously for work and lived in Germany as well. On the manual car, there are just so many subconscious and conscious benefits to driving a manual. 1) You are more innately aware of your speed because you have to change gear to change speed. 2) You have to be more preoccupied with the current driving situation: oncoming traffic, intersections w/ right-of-ways, pedestrians....all of which force you to be mindful of what gear you're in and how fast you're going 3) Far more control over speed in braking and cornering by holding gears (gear braking). 4) Safety as you stated! With tailgating, here in the EU parking lots are not typically public space. Space is a premium, and if it is public space, it will be a park or a garden. Most cities, towns, villages you go in the EU, finding parking will usually be at least somewhat of a challenge, and not meant to be "hang-out" space because space is tight and usually not where you want to be. For instance, like I said I live in Belgium which is approx. 1/5th the size of the state of Georgia with 11.5M people (slightly more than the state of Georgia)...and much like Georgia, there's countryside and farming but the majority of people live in cities. To put it into perspective, just on a quick G search. Atlanta in size is 353 KM^2 and population of just under half a million. Brussels Belgium has just over 2 million people squeezed into 32 KM^2....basically 1/10th the size with 4 times the population. Not a whole lot of room for parking lots to tailgate, and you don't need to know the metric system to understand the difference between 353 and 32 in terms of size.
@markmcgoveran6811
@markmcgoveran6811 Жыл бұрын
In a place that densely populated compared to the United States there's a lot of public transportation and it rolls pretty frequently. In America public transportation is based on riding back and forth to work. Public transportation is extremely awkward to use in America because 99% of the people using it are riding the same route over and over. On the weekends in the city very few buses run if you were going to do your shopping you could ride to one place shop and it would eat up most of the day.
@daftfreak13
@daftfreak13 10 ай бұрын
I'm American and drive a manual and I agree with you on your points. It does make pay WAY more attention to your driving. That being said, automatics are definitely the future. If I didn't have a rally/race car, I'd definitely drive automatic lol. It is SO much more convenient.
@josh33172
@josh33172 10 ай бұрын
@@daftfreak13 thats the problem with America, "convenience" is the reason so many things are the way they are and frustrating, and it's made nearly everyone lazy, or removes responsibility/accountability. People will literally sit in a loading/unloading zone, take a handicap parking spot or drive around in circles in a parking lot rather than park and walk an extra 20 seconds. It's incredible the lengths people will go to not so something.
@daftfreak13
@daftfreak13 10 ай бұрын
@@josh33172 I mean "convenience" is the reason we have almost all the technology that we have now. Including this computer/phone that you're on lol.
@avior2951
@avior2951 9 ай бұрын
I need to correct you on the numbers because you're not using the same numbers for the same thing. The surface area you used for Brussels is only for the municpiality - which has 188,737 inhabitants per 2022 (not 2 million) - whereas the population figure you used was rounded up for the metropolitan region that even much exceeds what's just the urban area. Brussels agglomeration has 1,844,931 inhabitants (2022) on 820.3 km² which gives a density of 2,241.1 inh./km². Brussels municipality reaches 5,787.7. The numbers you used for Brussels would give a density of 62,500 inh./km², that equals urban quarters in Hongkong. The most urban parts of european cities don't even reach half that. Now consequently you have to use Atlantas agglomeration figures as well (consisting of Cobb, Fulton, DeKalb, Gwinnett, Forsyth, Paulding, Douglas, Cherokee, Fayette, Henry, Rockdale counties combined), making up 5,220,953 people(census 2020) on 9,086 km² (compare the Flemish Community: 13,522) which gives a desnity of 574.6 inh./km². That's similar to the density of the provinces of West Flanders and Flemish Brabant. Anyway, that's why Google sucks for these things. The numbers it gives are often unclear and they often vastly differ from the numbers of the actual urban areas. Cheers
@ratk8654
@ratk8654 9 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for this video! I learned a lot and your way of talking is really agreable.
@clemenswalter8006
@clemenswalter8006 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the video and thank you for being so gentle with us!
@The2ndFirst
@The2ndFirst Жыл бұрын
When I went to Germany in the Army I had a super great experience. I think it's funny the military adopted the metric system. I still estimate range in meters. I never had an issue with chips. Usually there was so much potatoes and gravy there was no room for chips. I ate chips when I was on base. I absolutely agree on manual VS auto. manual you are in control of the driving experience. I taught my 2nd ex wife how to drive manual and she really enjoyed it. Germans don't really have that personal bubble at all. lol Hans, my ambulance driver when I was stationed at Graf thought showering was optional.
@christopherlynch3314
@christopherlynch3314 Жыл бұрын
Same, I spent a great tour in Germany in the late 90's. Yes, metric system for the military. Range in meters, distance in KMs or 'clicks', size of calibers in mm's. I still do temps in Fahrenheit though.
@be6715
@be6715 Жыл бұрын
Gosh, I remember my father used to drive my teachers crazy because he would use military time, rather than the 12 hour clock to let them know when I needed to leave school for a doctors appt. I think he was probably being a bit of a d***, but that was my father for you. Miss that man like crazy!
@mccarterw
@mccarterw Жыл бұрын
Come on army guy, you weren't on a base, you were on a post.
@everettfryman1024
@everettfryman1024 Жыл бұрын
@@be6715 Still use a twenty-four hour clock to this day, thirty-two years later. IMO, your father wasn't being a d**k, he was just like the rest of the world. Bless Him!
@annamc3947
@annamc3947 2 жыл бұрын
The 21 drinking age thing is relatively recent, at least for this 60-year-old. States used to have different drinking ages and many were 18, especially on the East Coast. The federal government basically forced them all to go to 21 in the 1980’s by linking highway funds to the 21 drinking age. It did reduce drunk driving deaths. Probably in Germany there are more public transportation options so drunk driving isn’t as much of a concern.
@DarkDodger
@DarkDodger 2 жыл бұрын
I didn't know that, and it actually kind of makes sense! I'll add this to the pile of things that are different between US and DE because of how we handle transportation.
@nehemiahwashingtoniii748
@nehemiahwashingtoniii748 2 жыл бұрын
Heck, I was buying beer, wine and Champale at the age of 13 in South Carolina in 1977. I was 19 when the age limit first came out set at 18. Being sent to Germany in the Army was a drinking paradise at 19 years old.
@danielstorm6419
@danielstorm6419 2 жыл бұрын
What did I read a few years ago about the US? They allow to go to war and kill enemies at a young age but do not allow to drink a beer.
@gruffelo6945
@gruffelo6945 2 жыл бұрын
The big difference is - Germans learn how to DRINK before they learn how to DRIVE! The Yanks have their priorities wrong...again...
@palmercolson7037
@palmercolson7037 2 жыл бұрын
I remember things the same way--the big concern was drunk driving by teenagers. The federal government forced all the states to have 21 be the drinking age. So much for all that talk about local control and freedom and taking responsibility for your actions.
@daviszach43
@daviszach43 Жыл бұрын
When it comes to shoes indoors for Americans, it varies from place to place and household to household, but generally speaking, most people I've known didn't wear shoes indoors. However, I do feel that when it comes to visiting a house, there's kind of an "unspoken rule" to not take your shoes off if you're just an acquaintance/worker or are only going to be there for a few minutes. Taking off your shoes at a stranger's house is kinda considered rude because you're "making yourself at home" so to speak. Maybe this is just a California thing
@lwalls
@lwalls Жыл бұрын
I grew up in the midwest where most people had Northern European roots. This was absolutely the case. It would have presumptuous and rude to take your shoes off in someone else's home. Our homemaker mothers (including my German mother) would have rather swept and mopped a second time that day than request that guests remove their shoes and inadvertantly encourage someone to overstay their welcome (The old saying: "Here's your coat--what's your hurry?" as they're pushed out the door? I'm pretty sure is an expression created by a Northern European living in America. Lol). The sense I got when I was in Germany is that people just KNEW not to overstay their welcome, so they took off their shoes as a courtesy to the person who worked so hard to clean the floor.
@bibbicus3942
@bibbicus3942 Жыл бұрын
Lived in Germany for enough years to know that removal of shoes in a dwelling is NOT a cultural thing, but rather an individual thing. The anal retentive, control freaks are usually the ones that require it. Your nasty feet are dirtier than my shoes. It is a pain in the ass to be invited into a home with the caveat of removing your foot protectors. It has always struck me as a bit ironic when people try to protect their carpet. It's as if they don't know that carpet is the filthiest thing in your home...no matter how white and plush it may seem. I want my guests to be comfortable. Shoes on....shoes off....up to you. Personally, I am almost never barefoot.
@parkerhanson4009
@parkerhanson4009 Жыл бұрын
I think you're right it's a California thing. Y'all have a lot of tile. In the north it's all carpet
@itstrinick
@itstrinick Жыл бұрын
Californian here, I generally look at the other's feet in the house when I enter, and if they're not wearing "outside" shoes I'll ask if I should take my shoes off. Generally the answer depends on if they have tile, hardwood or carpet in the common areas. I could see it as presumptuous if you kicked off your shoes, but generally taking them off and placing them by the doorway is considered respectful in my expereience. I've done it and been told, "You don't have to do that! But thank you."
@markmcgoveran6811
@markmcgoveran6811 Жыл бұрын
You're right it is a California thing. In agricultural areas no matter who you are or who I am there's a good chance somebody stepped in something.
@phoebebiketravel
@phoebebiketravel 11 ай бұрын
This was interesting😊thank you for enlightening me:)
@23Domo
@23Domo 2 жыл бұрын
So ive watched some of your videos here and there and notice that you and other american KZfaqrs who living in germany focus a lot on the diffrences between america and germany/europe. Sure the small and big diffrences are interessting and I enjoy learning more about them, but did you consider to do once a video about what both countrys have in common? The influence of germany on america and visa versa? Maybe you did such video already and Ive missed it? For example: When I as a german grow up, american cartoons and sitcoms became more and more popular over here. And often you seen like a "Hallowen Special" episode in these. And I think because of these cartoons and sitcoms Hallowen in general become more and more popular in germany. Sure its not as big here as its in america (yet), but from my experiance it became bigger and bigger every year. Anyways, I better stop here now because my english isnt the best, but I hope you dont mind my small video suggestion and wish you a happy weekend and furthermore a lot of fun and succes with your videos. Greetings from Niederrhein
@DarkHarlequin
@DarkHarlequin 2 жыл бұрын
Yes. Please! We have a lot in common and sometime we overemphasize differences 😊
@sonjagatto9981
@sonjagatto9981 2 жыл бұрын
Hi Domo...your English is very good. May I suggest to write and speak anyway without the s at the ending. It sounds cheap. I used to do that in the beginning (living in Toronto, Canada) and someone corrected me. I married a Canadian many years ago. I miss my German lifestyle and I can say our lifestyle to America is very different. I love the cartoons as well. I could go on and on but better not because of my English. Please don't be upset with me...es war gut gemeint (nicht Besserwisser). LG nach Niederrhein in die unsere Heimat. Take good care of yourself. 🌍💚🥐☕🤍🌼
@roncenti
@roncenti 2 жыл бұрын
​@@sonjagatto9981 HA! Lets be fully German here and correct ourselves. Anyways is a word. Not in the perfect grammatical sense but its in the dictionary. Grammar and correctness is not as important in (American) English as it is in German. @Domo did write perfectly fine English except for a few tiny mistakes that have no influence on what he (she?) wanted to say. I am in the US for 25 years now and I made the same mistake to apologize for my English - And it was never bad - until enough people told me to stop that. It is a very German thing to hate bad German language. I am one of those. I find it torture to have a conversation with somebody who tries and is not good at it and I assumed it was the same for other languages but it is not. Every German intern who came over for a few month was quiet and I had to open them up by hammering it into them that NOBODY cares how good or bad the language skills are. And I am not really correcting you but psychologically, to correct somebody who is unsure or afraid to speak English without that person asking to be corrected does a lot of damage. It does the opposite and makes people more afraid to just speak the next time. Even if you say you mean well... And I know you do. Damage is already done in that persons head. Trust me. I have been training (German) interns for a long time and its always the same.
@JMM33RanMA
@JMM33RanMA 2 жыл бұрын
​@@roncenti The most usual mistake that both German and English speakers make is that the grammar of simple past and present perfect are switched. For example, I have eaten seems to be Ich Habe gegessen but it isn't and even Google translates it thus. [I think, but I may be confused as this confuses me as well.] Of course I learned German long ago, from an old teacher with even older books containing useful phrases like "Guten morgen gnädiges Fräulein," when it should be "Grüß Gott gnädiges Fräulein," I guess!
@DJ_BROBOT
@DJ_BROBOT 2 жыл бұрын
To be honest..there are already alot of these 'similarity between US and Germany' videos out there
@boulbon08
@boulbon08 2 жыл бұрын
Beer consumption and age: the most weird thing happened to me when I was in new York some years ago. Among food for dinner, I wanted to buy two cans of beer in a supermarket. At the checkout, the cashier asked me to show her my passport. Upon my question why, she explained that for buying alcohol I had to proof to be 21 years old. Strange thing is that I had just turned 50 (f-I-f-t-y)! 🤣 I had left my passport in my holiday apartment, thus she refused to sell me the beer. It was absolutely ridiculous - it was more than obvious that I had passed my 21st year on this planet decades ago. I asked her to call her manager, who after a short examining look at me, gave his ok. I’m still shaking my head in disbelieve whenever this incident comes to my mind.
@sanjivjhangiani3243
@sanjivjhangiani3243 2 жыл бұрын
Maybe being European, you were fitter and younger-looking than an American your age :).
@krisvires
@krisvires 2 жыл бұрын
Many of my European friends have dealt with this, the explanation is: in the US the law is that unless you obviously appear over the age of 35- they must ask for your ID. The reason why many businesses always ask for ID is that the penalty for not asking is a fine for the business, and if they are found to have sold to underage people, the business can loose its license to sell alcohol.
@spondoolie6450
@spondoolie6450 Жыл бұрын
Being a cashier in America does not require an aptitude for critical thought. In fact, the dumber you are the more likely you'll get the job.
@drewmc2001
@drewmc2001 Жыл бұрын
The reason is, if they are caught selling alcohol to a minor, they may lose their liquor license - The Right to sell alcohol. That can destroy a business. To reduce this risk as close to 0 as possible, many companies require their employees "card" everyone, without exception. It didn't used to be this bad where I live. But over the past decade, it's gotten much worse, with every place you go to, carding you regardless of how old you are.
@francisdec1615
@francisdec1615 Жыл бұрын
@@spondoolie6450 Nah, I have been asked if I was younger than 20 in a Swedish alcohol store when I was 46. Rules. But yes, it's probably not the brightest people working there neither in Europe nor in America.
@seven471
@seven471 Жыл бұрын
I'm American and I'm not loud at all and you scare the hell out of me whenever you start your videos. I lived in Germany for 3 years in the late seventies and we were the only Americans in a German village. Pretty awesome experience
@feg3akatrey144
@feg3akatrey144 Жыл бұрын
Re: shoes inside… i built my first new house ~30yrs ago, and other than marble & stone in baths, all other floors were mahogany or oak. I did not have a house “rule” to remove shoes, but after some friends visited I noticed in the reflection of light on the wood floors that there were all these round scrapes, like from sandpaper. I finally determined that someone’s shoes had grit from outside stuck on the bottom, so every time they turned on their heel, it put a bunch of scratches in the wood. NO MORE SHOES! Only exception is a formal or cocktail party, where shoes are likely part of the outfit. And when i go to people’s homes, I ALWAYS ask, “shoes on or off?”
@libby9433
@libby9433 2 жыл бұрын
Utterly shocked & devastated that the prevalence of AC everywhere in the US didn’t make your list ! Should we be highly concerned now about the traditional rant video for this coming summer ? ;-)😉🥵
@51tomtomtom
@51tomtomtom 2 жыл бұрын
Especially under the recent impact of increasing energy-prices........welcome to the world ! And Putin's help !
@Anon54387
@Anon54387 2 жыл бұрын
There's nothing wrong with wanting to keep your house at a comfortable temperature. And parts of the USA are HOT, so much so that it is very uncomfortable without AC. It is hot enough to be difficult to focus on something complex like calculus if one isn't in an air conditioned environment. It's why I studied at a public library when in school because my family couldn't afford AC. The heat is hot enough to be dangerous in the southwest USA particularly for the elderly.
@XxtherealnussbaumxX
@XxtherealnussbaumxX 2 жыл бұрын
@@Anon54387 The heat in summer here is also a hazard to vulnerable people. And a lot of places with higher average temperatures than those in the US don’t use AC outside of tourist accommodation or malls. It’s more about energy prices and importance of easy self-comfort in the US. Rather than structuring the life around the challenge of heat (e.g siesta in Hispanic countries) it’s more common in the US to try to bend it to their life, like with widespread AC.
@chucku00
@chucku00 2 жыл бұрын
Since efficient reversible heat pumps are getting more common in Europe due to environmental concern, AC will be way more common in Europe in less than 20 years.
@51tomtomtom
@51tomtomtom 2 жыл бұрын
@@chucku00 Hmmmmh .......is the pope catholic ? We hope ! And : where is Europe ? There are several ones : one geographical , one political (without GB) , one econimal (without GB) , one "colder one (no real need for AC's) , one warmer one (maybe not the most efficient countries and maybe slow)........ I lived 70 years almost without AC (just using it in India with temp. 46-54°C) and ....I survived strange wise.
@Maderyne
@Maderyne 2 жыл бұрын
I grew up on a farm, (my father was a farmer) so whenever I came indoors, I always took off my shoes. It was the house rule my mother insisted on because of the cattle lot, hog lot, and other areas that we would tend to walk in with shoes or boots on. It kept the house cleaner, and the shoes and boots contained in the entryway. If you saw what my boots looked like, you would do the same. Thats country life!
@moss8448
@moss8448 2 жыл бұрын
yeah most here in the States don't even wipe their feet off before entering a house, that's the least you can do imo.
@reynardfoxx6753
@reynardfoxx6753 Жыл бұрын
I live in, and grew up in, the Big City (NYC). We ALWAYS take our shoes off indoors. Farm dirt is _clean_ dirt. City dirt is nasty, _real_ dirt. (Spit,shit, who knows).
@gillianbergh7002
@gillianbergh7002 Жыл бұрын
@@reynardfoxx6753 Imagine if in the days before motorized vehicles - most carts or wagons were pulled by oxen. Ox dung from a farm is clean while that from the city is nasty real dirt? Sounds a load of bulls**t !
@charcat1571
@charcat1571 Жыл бұрын
My Dutch American father and my Norwegian American mother were raised this way and I am the same. Why create the chore of sweeping and vacuuming when you just keep all your shoes by the door and put on your clean house shoes? And now with all the pollution outside on the ground that can be tracked indoors it's just a better choice for health.
@larsedik
@larsedik Жыл бұрын
I grew up on a farm, and I had different shoes that I would wear outdoors from the shoes that I would wear indoors, but I always wore shoes indoors, and this was in Texas, where it was hot most of the time. I hated going outdoors, and I would also take a bath and change clothes after visiting the barns.
@hildegardkhelfa5358
@hildegardkhelfa5358 Жыл бұрын
No idea, why I found your channel today on my page, but I enjoyed watching this and was really laughing (in a friendly way) about "freaking out because there were no chips". May you and your fellow landsmen and -women always find them everywhere 😁😂. I made a mental note, when an old friend from USA plans to visit me next year. Greetings from German, Bavaria.
@sleipnir7124
@sleipnir7124 10 ай бұрын
This is a great video imo that touches on numerous cultural differences well. Thanks you!
@Malzanar2010
@Malzanar2010 Жыл бұрын
I lived in Germany for 13 years, it was culture shock coming back to the US haha. This makes me want to go back
@tubeTreasurer
@tubeTreasurer Жыл бұрын
Yeah the 24 days of leave really makes you more productive. I have worked for about 9 years with my current company and my leave started at 24 and is at 29 days now. When I filed the "leave request" for 3 weeks in the summer I still had enough left for another 2 weeks(I think I'll take them over christmas). This made my whole week. These happy feelings carry you over many bad things that happen at work through out the year.
@tremoniarules
@tremoniarules Жыл бұрын
SPOT ON
@thorstensaccount1565
@thorstensaccount1565 Жыл бұрын
There actually is a sensible reason why quoted prices in the U.S. don’t usually include sales tax. If sales tax were included, it basically would be impossible for businesses operating in multiple states to advertise. E.g., Subway couldn’t really advertise its signature “$5 foot-long sandwich” in the Portland, Oregon TV market, because the $5 sandwich sold on the Oregon side (where there is no sales tax) would cost $5.45 (or so) just across the river in Washington state, after figuring its 9% sales tax. In general, I agree that not knowing the final price sucks for the consumer.
@dannynone2784
@dannynone2784 Жыл бұрын
Adding sales tax at the register also allows us in the US to see how much we are paying in sales tax- usually 5-9% A 20% VAT added to at the register would be shocking.
@sebrastian
@sebrastian Жыл бұрын
@@dannynone2784 I'm pretty certain that all of the EU has a mandate for businesses to print the amount payed in sales tax (as well as the tax rate) on the bill. In Austria for example thats 20% on most things.
@willbelokur5621
@willbelokur5621 Жыл бұрын
The reason the USA doesn’t put the tax on Stamp is because the tax is different for almost every county
@Rodzilla5332
@Rodzilla5332 2 жыл бұрын
Here in the US my parents taught me to drive on a stick. That way I would always be able to drive any car in case of emergency. They also started teaching me when I was in 5th grade. By the time I was in 7th grade they let me drive alone to the dump and to the store to pick up packs of smokes for them. Of course we lived in a super small town that only had one yellow light.
@shaydowsith348
@shaydowsith348 Жыл бұрын
I learned to drive on an automatic, but I taught myself with help from my mother to drive stick back in the 1980s when I was in my 20s. My parents grew up in the 1930s so both naturally knew stick. My older sister, who was born in 1951, never learned to drive stick. I prefer stick because I think it is easier to control. But, unfortunately, I did have a car stolen that was Stick - a Hyundai. It was while I was living in the Bronx back in the 1980s, and cars were mostly stolen for parts.
@Rodzilla5332
@Rodzilla5332 Жыл бұрын
@@shaydowsith348 we are roughly the same age then. I think back to being 12-13 years old and driving myself up to the one gas station in town to buy a pack of smokes for my dad and having the person working at the store asking “These are for your parents right?”. Not “Why are you driving a car?” or “Why does you dad want Marlboro today when he always buys Parliament ?”. Of course they were about $1.25 a pack with my dad swearing that if they ever get up to $2 he’s quitting!
@HappyBeezerStudios
@HappyBeezerStudios Жыл бұрын
In 5th grade I was just starting with my 2nd language (english in that case), funny how different parts of the world are.
@gregorrom4405
@gregorrom4405 2 жыл бұрын
Ich finde tatsächlich neben dem Kennenlernen anderer Länder und Kulturen das Beste am Reisen ist das Kennenlernen seines eigenen Landes. Man bekommt ein Blick auf Dinge, die man sonst nicht wirklich wahrnimmt, weil sie vollkommen normal sind. Das gilt für Positives, wie für Negatives. Ich bin jedes Mal wieder überrascht.
@Rockmaster867
@Rockmaster867 2 жыл бұрын
Dem kann ich nicht genug zustimmen.
@NoNameYTofficial
@NoNameYTofficial 2 жыл бұрын
Das würde einigen leuten sehr gut tun , so wie wir uns manchmal selbst betrachten
@timesthree5757
@timesthree5757 2 жыл бұрын
Yea I think that's BS. I don't have to go anywhere to know my State ect.
@gregorrom4405
@gregorrom4405 2 жыл бұрын
@@timesthree5757, naja, sind wir doch mal ehrlich. Der wirkliche Denker und Intellektuelle bist Du ja nun ganz sicher nicht, als dass man erwarten könnte, dir ginge es darum, auch nur irgendwas zu verstehen.
@timesthree5757
@timesthree5757 2 жыл бұрын
@@gregorrom4405 Google translate is shit but I got the jest of it. So which is better. The person that has to travel the world to appreciate his/her country, Or the person that already appreciates his/her country but travels to enjoy another culture?
@ulalaFrugilega
@ulalaFrugilega 9 ай бұрын
Totally get the tailgating! Lovely custom!😂
@johnswoboda9809
@johnswoboda9809 9 ай бұрын
Really cool video, I'll have to send a link to your channel to my cousin; he lived and worked in Görlitz, which is on the Polish border, for about five years in the early 2000s and absolutely loved it! One of his favorite things was that being Polish/Ukrainian on our side (his mom/my aunt is my dad's older sister) and German on his dad's side, he could literally stroll from his office near the Untermarkt (Lower Market Square) and over a pedestrian bridge in a park, cross the Lusatian branch of the Niesse River, and have lunch in Zgorzelec, Poland, directly across the river. No checkpoints, no passports, no border control. Just a nice ten minutes' walk into an entire other country. Apparently, it was pretty common amongst his colleagues when discussing lunch plans to just very casually be like, "Oh, let's go to Poland and get some pierogi" like us Yanks would talk about going to Taco Bell. I am surprised however that you didn't bring up how different German beer is. When my cousin came back for a visit while living in Görlitz and brought his German girlfriend - a surgeon from one of the local hospitals who was an absolute blast and just so much fun to talk to - she was flabbergasted by the concept of "light beer" and commented that she wished they had something like that (not sure if they do now since this was 20 years ago) since it "goes down so easy, like beer-flavored water".
@charlesclark7350
@charlesclark7350 Жыл бұрын
I was an army brat in Germany in mid 1960s and had a beer delivery account which was great I could call Kurts beer delivery and have couple cases of good German beer in liter bottles and heavy wooden cases delivered even though I was 12 years old. I could get a swig of beer but never got drunk. When I returned from Vietnam, I didnt have a drivers license and went to dry county in Arkansas to visit family and on way home I asked my mother to stop at a liquor store for a six pack of beer. I went in alone and clerk demanded I show id. The only id I had was military and I was nineteen so the cashier told me to get the fuck out before he called police on me (drinking age was 21). Humiliated and thoroughly pissed I got my mother to buy beer. I was naive enough to buy beer cuz a week before I was in a bunker with m-60 belt fed machine gun and I could buy all liquor I wanted not to mention heroin, opium,pharmacutical amphetamines, seconal, and dew (marijuana) I wanted. To be fair I still looked about 15 years old, but it still pisses me off.
@canale_schlande
@canale_schlande Жыл бұрын
Liter bottles of beer are very rare in Germany, which brand are you speaking of?
@charlesclark7350
@charlesclark7350 Жыл бұрын
In 1965 liter bottles of beer with ceramic stoppers in wire bail were all I saw. Hofbrau was one brand of beer.
@HappyBeezerStudios
@HappyBeezerStudios Жыл бұрын
@@charlesclark7350 Sounds like something very regional bavarian. They do that stuff down there. Most bottles are half a liter or 1/3 of a liter. (with the smaller bottles actually on the rise=
@tonyhickq
@tonyhickq Жыл бұрын
Old enough to fight for your country, but to young to drink a beer.
@fraenkiboii
@fraenkiboii 2 жыл бұрын
German here. 1.) Oh boy I've been in the "I've got a fiver to spend, let's grab a drink real quick, suddenly it's 5+ including taxes" situation. At the register I was so sure to get some change. I was standing there, basically holding my hand out, waiting for some coins to fall down. "Sir, it's five-twenty-three" - "What???". I was confused AF. 2.) I adopted the "sandwich with side chips" thing and I love it! I totally get it! If you're having a nice juicy sandwich, you need some crunchy texture as a complement. One day, I really went out there and put some chips ON my sandwich. It felt so ... adventurous :D
@kaanpai4319
@kaanpai4319 2 жыл бұрын
Probier mal Döner mit ein paar Pommes drin. Hat einen ähnlichen Effekt.
@gmoo84
@gmoo84 2 жыл бұрын
Chip sandwiches were a common fun food at school when I was a kid growing up in NZ. The crunch in the soft bread was great. Marmite and chips even better.
@HappyBeezerStudios
@HappyBeezerStudios Жыл бұрын
@@kaanpai4319 Time for a pommdöner
@pixelmaster98
@pixelmaster98 Ай бұрын
@@kaanpai4319 problem is, if you don't eat it fast enough, it just gets soggy and disgusting
@LA-cj5jq
@LA-cj5jq Жыл бұрын
The pharmaceutical commercials hit me hard when we did watch TV the one night we stayed in when we went to Hawaii. Almost every ad after the pharmaceutical ad was one from a personal injury lawyer telling you to contact them if you have been injured by the proceeding drug advertised. It was so weird. We don't have prescription drug ads here and ambulance chaser lawyers are also banned.
@hholden401
@hholden401 3 ай бұрын
I _love_ you saying "Thank you" pretty oftenly !!! *THANK YOU SO MUCH for doing so !!* ... Since -- I somehow "hate" (young) people forgetting how to say "Thank you" ..... !
@fedupnow61859
@fedupnow61859 2 жыл бұрын
I am an American that learned to drive a stick shift vw in the states. When I had kids I did the perverbiale Family car that was automatic. I still love a stick though and my Peugeot here in Germany has lasted me 17 years. Also short story that Germans can be loud too. I was coming back home from the USA a couple of weeks ago and waiting for my train to go back home when I heard a big commotion. There were 7 drunk guys and the groom (I think) had a pink tutu and a phallic hat on. It was loud but it did make my day
@tomatentomGames
@tomatentomGames 2 жыл бұрын
I think drunk people being loud is something that happens everywhere alcohol is legal.
@BLNMotoCity
@BLNMotoCity 2 жыл бұрын
The fact that you called it a phallic hat lmao
@martink3494
@martink3494 2 жыл бұрын
Hmm several drunk man? And a guy in an pink Tutu with a phallic hat on? Sounds like the one with the hat and so will be in a marriage soon. It's an old tradition in Germany called "Junggesellenabschied". A Husband to be has one night planed by his friends partiing all night Long with his friends before marriage.
@kosmodome47
@kosmodome47 2 жыл бұрын
@@martink3494 that's not just a German tradition, a bunch of other cultures do the same thing, americans aswell
@mescko
@mescko Жыл бұрын
@@martink3494 A little immorality then you're going to behave for the next 40 years? Right.
@jabreck1934
@jabreck1934 2 жыл бұрын
In college, my German friend didn’t understand why we didn’t put a crutch on the end of our joint. Nor did we know how to properly smoke a hash and tobacco cone joint. Played soccer, had many German friends Great times!
@rjohnson1690
@rjohnson1690 2 жыл бұрын
Yeah the Euros used to gag me out with their tobacco laden weed.
@Gebirge1946
@Gebirge1946 Жыл бұрын
You played football
@beakittelscherz5419
@beakittelscherz5419 Жыл бұрын
Nalf! Long time no see😀 I hope you are OK and not inflicted with Covid and still enjoy your Bavarian Prezels😁 Greetings from Oldenburg and the northern part of Germany.
@Couple-Bridging-Cultures
@Couple-Bridging-Cultures Жыл бұрын
Your videos are great! I am from Seattle now living in Hamburg and played football at Redlands in California. Lived in the Portland area for 2.5 years. My girlfriend and I are thinking of firing up similar content so this is good inspiration and I find it quite funny. So accurate as well. Would love to connect!
@smudolinithegreatdragobear2433
@smudolinithegreatdragobear2433 2 жыл бұрын
That bubble thing with the talking louder makes sense. That is why it is harder to make friends in germany cause our personal bubble is smaller so you come closer so it takes longer to trust you enough...
@identitymatrix
@identitymatrix Жыл бұрын
4:00 Totally true, I also feel that way. Driving manual gives you an understanding of how the car works and why gears are actually neccessary. But for me it even goes beyond that. I cannot have fun driving an automatic, for me it's just too boring. Switching gears myself, using the clutch and so on is a very important part of driving most people miss nowadays. This is why I learned driving manual since the beginning and this is why I will never stop doing that.
@voxveritas333
@voxveritas333 Жыл бұрын
that's just crazy to me.
@reinerhoch1357
@reinerhoch1357 Жыл бұрын
Another important aspect that barely gets any attention is that repairs on manual cars are cheaper and the manual car needs less repairs in their complete lifespan. They are less subsceptible to mechanical damage or technical failure.
@rscaht
@rscaht Жыл бұрын
My manual Megane consumption Is 4 L/100Km or 1.7gallons/100miles Impossible for an automatic .
@youmean4221
@youmean4221 Жыл бұрын
Try electric and then shutup
@identitymatrix
@identitymatrix Жыл бұрын
@@youmean4221 Electric is gay (no offense to gay people).
@schunkelperser1794
@schunkelperser1794 Жыл бұрын
Great video 👍👏
@fightingstudent2363
@fightingstudent2363 Жыл бұрын
I like this channel, thank you!
@pebear
@pebear 2 жыл бұрын
I'm loud because I was the 3rd of 6 siblings. Getting stuck in the middle, you just had to be loud. I'm loud even by American standards. I went to Austria for my honeymoon 32 years ago and the Austrians are very reserved and friendly. They are very diplomatic. Then I went to Munich and Munich was just like going home to New England, it was loud, fun, and the Germans all had opinions on everything and they loved to debate politics. I had a great time. I took German in High School and college and it was all coming back to me. My wife had a bunch of German relatives that debated politics in German and all of that brought back some memories for my wife. She told me, if I wanted to hear drunk Germans debating and yelling politics at each other in German I would have just stayed home. Well this Anglo/Irish/Jewish kid was enjoying yelling at Germans and being yelled at and of course drinking up copious amounts of German beer.
@sineamhac
@sineamhac 2 жыл бұрын
The vacation (holidays, sorry can't help myself) days one is interesting because I think it ties into the myth of the hardworking American and the lazy European. I work for a tech company that has both Irish and American offices. Ireland has 20 days per year min holidays. Ireland (generally) has a better work life balance than America too in my experience. The guys in the American offices often make jokes at us leaving early on a Friday or taking a couple weeks off to go on holidays etc. They also tend to stay at work way way way later than us (we leave at 5 unless its an emergency, American's are supposed to do the same but usually stay until 7 at least). And despite all of this, Irish projects are handed in (fully complete) way sooner than the American projects. Not always obviously, but much more often. I've noticed a similar trend when we work with other American companies and other European companies too, American teams just seem to spend more time doing less than we do. It goes without saying, that's not a comment on their competence (they're are every bit as capable as we are) but from what I can tell its all about being seen to be working as opposed to actually doing all that much. Which is infuriating to me, why would you be there wasting your life for nothing when you could be out doing something you actually care about. Really strange. Anyone else have similar (or opposing) experiences?
@corienb7947
@corienb7947 2 жыл бұрын
Similar experiences here. The focus on (appearing to) work in the US is very high. Overall, inEurope it's about effectiveness and efficiency so you finish on time and can (try to) enjoy life. We work to live and I'm very happy that we have set the right priorities.
@GetRidOfCivilAssetForfeiture
@GetRidOfCivilAssetForfeiture 2 жыл бұрын
California has the “radical” guarantee of 3 PTO days per year.
@sineamhac
@sineamhac 2 жыл бұрын
@@GetRidOfCivilAssetForfeiture that's bleak
@nunnayrbznz3576
@nunnayrbznz3576 2 жыл бұрын
So jealous! Sometimes we work so much that figuring an hourly wage is incredibly low. It won't change. Folks don't get a living wage, servers have to rely on customer generosity, and vacation ... Well, worker mental health is not a corporate priority over their space travel I guess. Perhaps if there is a lesser efficiency it means we take our vacation time in little bites during the work day to keep going. The European models for vacations, education and health care are great models.
@GetRidOfCivilAssetForfeiture
@GetRidOfCivilAssetForfeiture 2 жыл бұрын
@@sineamhac 3 days ain’t much but at least that is in addition to the vacation days I get at my job. I get 10 days per year in addition so in total I have 13 per year, which sadly puts me ahead of most Americans.
@psyckwhoever4197
@psyckwhoever4197 8 ай бұрын
As a german I have to admit that "party at the parking lot" looks awesome and should become a german tradition right now 😁
@lillischerber6830
@lillischerber6830 Жыл бұрын
I love your Videos - but had to hop on here to tell you that I am as a German from Dresden, Saxony Was also taught to be super polite and say thank you quiet often - especially in a store. My friend from Brandenburg was at first anoid about that, but living for quiet some time or working together with me, she started saying thank you more often too.... Maybe you should do a Trip to Saxony and find out for yourself...
@paulkocyla1343
@paulkocyla1343 Жыл бұрын
This explained a few weird encounters, thanx. I got two more that explicitely hit me: The politeness of Americans. It´s such a big difference to Germany, especially the very west Germany, where people are comparably rude. I had to assume it´s fake and people just culturally are used to be that polite, but I don´t really get it. It feels good, though. It feels better than usual interactions in Germany. And even when I try to keep up, I still think I´m kind of cold and rude when beeing in the US. But a part of me thinks this is only a mask. And then there is the thing when you meet a stranger, and then they suddenly start to talk with you like you´re an old friend. I love it! I was extremely shy, but this actually helped me out of some uncomfortable situations and made me more open. Especially in airports or bars. Someone comes around, and you chat about stuff for an hour, drink beer, goof around or whatever. Very, very uncommon in Germany with strangers. What I also heard many times was "Hey, nice shirt!".
@HappyBeezerStudios
@HappyBeezerStudios Жыл бұрын
A good example is when you stand on the sidewalk with a map. In the US you would get asked if you need help, while in Germany you are expected to ask for help. We just don't talk to random strangers if we have no business with them.
@bowlsallbroken
@bowlsallbroken 2 жыл бұрын
"Why don't Americans use the Metric system?" Oh, but we do - in *addition* to SAE/Imperial, depending on what we're doing.
@stevenserna910
@stevenserna910 Жыл бұрын
Yup, 2 liter Coke bottles.
@donaldauguston9740
@donaldauguston9740 Жыл бұрын
This was fun. Thank you. DA
@MrMitchyJ
@MrMitchyJ Жыл бұрын
I'm from the Buffalo, NY area. So funny to hear a Bills reference in a video about Germany haha. Love it.
@karmaoutlaw
@karmaoutlaw 2 жыл бұрын
😹 Missed Mikey’s lovely interpretation of your outro…🎼
@ttintagel
@ttintagel Жыл бұрын
I started school in the US during the push toward metric conversion. Then one fall, I started class and suddenly everything was all inches and pints. Add to this that I lived near the US/Canada border, watching mostly Canadian TV, and to this day I get horribly confused. Like, just hearing the temperature doesn't tell me whether it's going to be hot or cold outside. I always have to look it up.
@HappyBeezerStudios
@HappyBeezerStudios Жыл бұрын
The only thing I can do is feet and inches, and that only because there is some practical use when watching non-metric content. Oh and yards, which is like roughly 90 cm, but if that goes like beyond 100m/110yd I have no idea. And I know that 50 miles are around 80 km, because that is what the USAF considers space. For temperatures I have no idea, but every time I look it up, both make kind of sense.
@J0HN_D03
@J0HN_D03 7 ай бұрын
*14:00** That's how a $30 price becomes a $32,57 price... impossible to give the change!* 🤦🏼‍♂🤣
@richardmycroft5336
@richardmycroft5336 Жыл бұрын
As an Englishman I find the continued use of the Imperial measurement system in the Us very annoying. When I do carpentry I nearly always use my metric tape measure as it is just so much easier to work with. On the other hand in the UK speed limits are still in MPH, perhaps that is part of the 'freedom' we got by leaving the EU.
@marionsollbach9299
@marionsollbach9299 Жыл бұрын
And you are driving on the wrong side of the road🤣.
@sambac2053
@sambac2053 Жыл бұрын
US doesn't use the imperial system, we use US Customary system
@alanmawson9601
@alanmawson9601 Жыл бұрын
What are you talking about, we had MPH before joining the EU and continued whilst being members? (typical remoners)
@stubstoo6331
@stubstoo6331 Жыл бұрын
Canada the U.S , and believe Australia use imperial for construction it's easier.
@sambac2053
@sambac2053 Жыл бұрын
@@stubstoo6331 US does not use imperial measures, we use US Customary Units of Measure
@newrivervalleywellnessdotc1260
@newrivervalleywellnessdotc1260 2 жыл бұрын
I think the major difference with the drinking age is, it’s about around whom you are gaining your initial drinking experiences around. When you’re 16 some sort of moderation naturally has to be learned because you have to go home to your parents at the end of the night. and also still function represent yourself as a decent member of your own community. People you’ll have to see every day people go to school with people you’ve grown up with chances are more family members, getting trashed in front of them is probably not gonna happen all the time like it wouldn’t college because you have a higher respect for them and also they’ll have a higher respect for you and not encourage you to drink as much as you can as fast you can. But off in college usually when everybody starts drinking you’re surrounded by nothing but 18 to 22 year olds that are just encouraging each other to drink more and more faster and faster all out of sight of the people they love and respect most and that love and respect them most. There are plenty of dumb and disrespectful things I did under the influence of alcohol at college that I would not have done if we were to get around town to my grandmother or something
@martinbinder2534
@martinbinder2534 2 жыл бұрын
When I was in the USA (New York) for the first time, I got a water from the refrigerator in a small store. When the cashier told me a higher price than indicated, I said, "but it only costs xxx". And for that price he actually gave it to me. At that time I didn't know about this tax.
@CampLJNC
@CampLJNC 2 жыл бұрын
I guess they didn't feel like arguing with you.
@agentorange1291
@agentorange1291 9 ай бұрын
In Switzerland, we also used to say thank you multiple times like you described in the video and we also used to say "bye" mutliple times at the end of a phone call :D
@nohrt4me
@nohrt4me Жыл бұрын
Dude, I married a German. On the down side is warm pop, rigidity about cleanliness and order, volksmusik, and shushing people. On the up side is good beer and chocolate, love of art, rationality, the ability to have a decent conversation, and general gemutlichkeit (just make sure you take your damn shoes off before you come in).
@ratk8654
@ratk8654 9 ай бұрын
In Germany we have Volksmusik, in the U. S. there Country Music.
@crownofhair
@crownofhair Жыл бұрын
My mother taught me how to drive stick shift in a large Ford pickup in our high school parking lot while no one was there. I have never struggled to drive any stick shift vehicle since, and I have thanked her for teaching me many useful things while I was young. When people are surprised I can drive stick like a boss it actually surprises ME! I never knew it was such a special skill here 😂
@brianpinion5844
@brianpinion5844 Жыл бұрын
we lazy !! what it boils down to ! wont be long there will be an app on phone that will let people use to drive there cars , if there isnt already! all i knew growing up my mom and stepdad never had automatic car till i was 25 or so i guess ,few of us out there that can push a pedal down and pull that shifter ! sad but true , i did gut his 3 speed on Colum but that was training , lol
@imnotabotrlyimnot
@imnotabotrlyimnot Жыл бұрын
@@brianpinion5844 Three on the tree and manual everything. Driving used to be work.
@andreaseufinger4422
@andreaseufinger4422 2 жыл бұрын
We discussed with american about the drinking age. We agreed that it is bad to handle weapons when you are drunk. So in Europe, it is forbidden to have weapons, in the US it is forbidden to drink, so both are kind of safe ;). The idea behind the drinking age of 16 is to avoid that you start drinking hard alcohol when you first are allowed to drink alkohol. Hard drinks are allowed from 18 !
@christophersmirnoff5222
@christophersmirnoff5222 2 жыл бұрын
Short answer you probably shouldn't drink at all let alone before the age of roughly 25 because you are still developing up into your mid 20's. Drugs and alcohol stunt growth overall.
@Niveaufriedhofchef
@Niveaufriedhofchef 9 ай бұрын
Spot on! Having lived in the US but being born in Germany this is such a comprehensive list WITH good explanations of why things are that way!
@Jeff.Wilson
@Jeff.Wilson 8 ай бұрын
Regarding the pre-party - I once was on the concert in the States and there was a big pre-concert party on the parking lot, similar to what is shown here in the video. People were drinking, listening to music, playing games, basically having a lot of fun. Very interesting experience indeed, it felt like you're on some big music festival with camping.
@chuw9325
@chuw9325 2 жыл бұрын
One of the popular quotes from our great Karl Lagerfeld was: «Wer eine Jogginghose trägt, hat die Kontrolle über sein Leben verloren» (The one wearing sweatpants lost control of his life) and many Germans probably agree here.
@wolfgangkranek376
@wolfgangkranek376 2 жыл бұрын
And isn't it said. how many people have lost the control over their lives. 😉
@chucku00
@chucku00 2 жыл бұрын
I wonder what this dear Karl would say about Adele weight loss, since he has been quite rude with her...
@Jim-the-Engineer
@Jim-the-Engineer 2 жыл бұрын
Odd that a man whose entire life was enriched by high fashion would denigrate people who don't buy into that industry! Well, maybe not so odd after all!
@greenknitter
@greenknitter 2 жыл бұрын
@@Jim-the-Engineer Maybe it was more that he was speaking out against slovenliness and not caring about your appearance rather than an advertisement for his business. After all he knew only a relatively small percentage of the population even in Germany could afford Chanel.
@VCRider
@VCRider 2 жыл бұрын
How ironic, I own a pair of sweatpants branded Karl Lagefeld
@LaureninGermany
@LaureninGermany 2 жыл бұрын
I am so with you on number 8. I‘m Welsh, which makes me more outgoingly friendly than English people. I meet with distrust all the time, and it’s a bit depressing to be honest. Learn to take enthusiasm on the chin, Deutschland! It’s not the end of the world to be happy and grateful when nice things happen and you enjoy those. It doesn’t jinx it.
@mojojim6458
@mojojim6458 2 жыл бұрын
16. Don't be ashamed of being friendly to strangers. ;)
@DarkHarlequin
@DarkHarlequin 2 жыл бұрын
If it's any consolation: as an outgoing German who lived abroad I am also sometimes real tired of my fellow Germans passive agressive grumpiness as a default mode 😄 Tiny story: When I returned after a year in New Zealand I returned to Frankfurt Airport and (out of habit from NZ) smiled at the customs agents while I walked by, at which point I was promtly stopped and had ALL my bags searched because I was 'acting suspiciously' 🙄 Welcome back to Germany!
@mojojim6458
@mojojim6458 2 жыл бұрын
@@DarkHarlequin Passive aggressive grumpiness. Well said.
@sisuguillam5109
@sisuguillam5109 2 жыл бұрын
@@DarkHarlequin people at customs and passport control in Germany are always under stress. And smiling at them is a strategy people try to use to throw them off... so you walked right into that one with being genuily nice to them.
@LaureninGermany
@LaureninGermany 2 жыл бұрын
@@DarkHarlequin oh nooooo! I honestly hold back with the friendliness because I feel sometimes so stupid, but your story tops the lot.
@maxpower1293
@maxpower1293 9 ай бұрын
For me as german it is very interesting to see me from your pov and to hear what you think is common in germany and what not. Also in reverse, it was really interesting and entertaining to see what americans are shocked about germans. Nice videos. Thx alot. 👍🏻😊
@Paul_Halicki
@Paul_Halicki Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the shout out to Bills Mafia 😁
@alestev24
@alestev24 2 жыл бұрын
I have family in the US, and I have been there a few times. I also follow US sports a lot. I understand the talking louder part a bit, because of the personal space bubble. But I don't understand the hollering and yelling, whenever something quite normal happens, like while watching or even playing Golf. I also like comfortable clothes, but I don't understand the obsession with shorts, especially the combination of shorts and really warm sweaters or jackets Americans often seem to wear.
@mats7492
@mats7492 2 жыл бұрын
And it’s always college sweatshirts
@yannikakapralli
@yannikakapralli 2 жыл бұрын
I'm German and i wear Short with a Hoodie like almost every Day. To feel the Air on the Legs is just great.
@alestev24
@alestev24 2 жыл бұрын
@@yannikakapralli Early April at the Grand Canyon in a snowstorm? I am talking about anoraks on top and shorts below!
@ericminch
@ericminch 2 жыл бұрын
If you keep your core temperature up then you can leave your head and legs and arms bare, it's how the circulatory system works. So that's why you can wear shorts, short sleeves, and no hat or scarf, so long as you have a woolen sweater and a windbreaker on.
@alestev24
@alestev24 2 жыл бұрын
@@ericminch Yeah, that's the theory. But even if you can do it, it still doesn't mean you HAVE to wear shorts, just because it's "leisure time".
@jimmyhuesandthehouserocker1069
@jimmyhuesandthehouserocker1069 Жыл бұрын
There's something to be said about not going to college. My parents, especially my dad, did not want me to go to college, he wanted me to work for a living, so I was an electrician/mechanic, also known as maintenance, and with plenty of overtime and a union, I averaged around $100 K a year. But I have always have missed the nice college girls and spring break, though. I speak and understand a little German. I could have learned the fluent language from my grandparents, but when I was a kid, that was the old country 'n I didn't care.
@thelittlepodperson5722
@thelittlepodperson5722 Жыл бұрын
While Germans think it odd how quick Americans are to talk to each other, we were surprised at the way German restaurateurs would seat strangers at our table when all tables were occupied. This is how we met a man (back in the 80's) who had been a German prisoner of war in Idaho. He said he had the time of his life, that he never ate better in his life and spent the whole war listening to American records and playing baseball all day. Said he fell in love with America and Americans in the prisoner of war camp. Asked to stay, but they made him go back. He got a job which allowed him to travel on business to the USA and he did, as often as he could.
@martinhotmann7868
@martinhotmann7868 Жыл бұрын
Schwäbisch Hall xD Lol you guys chillin' here around the corner :)
@FreakShowKirby
@FreakShowKirby 2 жыл бұрын
Always love seeing a new video from you :) They are interesting, funny and always well made. ( I never comment but seeing only comments by some dumbass trolls in the first few minutes definately made me write what i usually just think :D )
@Brantoc
@Brantoc Жыл бұрын
Sales tax is shown separate for a few reasons. But my favorite is that you get to see how much you pay in taxes. It's not some hidden VAT that is hard to define, and changes for different products.
@HappyBeezerStudios
@HappyBeezerStudios Жыл бұрын
If you can add the tax rate with some mental math, you can take it away the same way. But good that VAT is the same rate for everything, no matter where in the country.
@lesterthompson6671
@lesterthompson6671 Жыл бұрын
But doing so would require that you know the sales tax rate. In many US jurisdictions the sales tax rate may vary on different sides of a street. Some states have hundreds of different rates for the scores of local counties, police juries, schools, fire protection districts, recreation districts , etc​@@HappyBeezerStudios
@three2267
@three2267 3 ай бұрын
I learned to drive on manual stick shift and even had a column manual shift truck. I really miss it. I have a '93 Dodge Viper which is stick but I don't drive it very often..but it's my fave manual non-smart tech, no computer vehicle to drive. ❤
@tlsmith4605
@tlsmith4605 Жыл бұрын
Taxes vary from state to state. So the Tips in the US: FWIW there are many servers that live a nice middle class live style due to tipping. It would actually reduce most server income if we went to a "minimum wage" for servers. It incentivizes good service.
@kerry4385
@kerry4385 2 жыл бұрын
The chips in the side is a thing in Belgium too. I appreciated it. I had no idea you went to filmschool 🤣😉 Glad we help you to come out of the debt.😎🍻
@NALFVLOGS
@NALFVLOGS 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks, Kerry! And did I mention I went to film school? ;)
@kerry4385
@kerry4385 2 жыл бұрын
@@NALFVLOGS WHAT?! You? You went to filmschool?! OMG! I think i am unable to talk to you again. Wow. Next you tell me that you are a professional Footballplayer from America playing for the Schwäbisch Hall unicorns. Come on sweety, that's hilarius! 😉
@thebigfs2330
@thebigfs2330 2 жыл бұрын
#nodaysoff gets even better-Some companies in the US (I’m familiar specifically with tech companies, but I’d be willing to bet it’s a growing trend with some other fields) are now marketing themselves to prospective employees as having unlimited sick/vacation days. Sounds great! Until you get into the job and see that the competitiveness with your coworkers/teammates and pressure from those above you means taking time off hurts your career and affects how your coworkers interact with you. Not to mention there’s also an increasing trend of the unspoken, but heavily felt more-than-eight-hours work day. But hey, they officially allow unlimited time off!
@annamc3947
@annamc3947 2 жыл бұрын
We did this at my firm. Its mainly to prevent people from gaming the system and recording work hours when they are really on vacation. Then the firm has to pay them for all the vacation time they banked when they leave, which could be a lot of money.
@JMM33RanMA
@JMM33RanMA 2 жыл бұрын
One company I worked for, decades ago, allowed lots of time off if you paid the substitute worker, essentially splitting your salary but keeping your benefits. We really need to implement a more European system here!
@BP-or2iu
@BP-or2iu 2 жыл бұрын
Law firms are notorious for this. Sure, you can take off whenever you want. As long as nothing important is going on. So… never?
@noahremnek3615
@noahremnek3615 2 жыл бұрын
No unlimited vacation means the company trusts you to take a reasonably amount of time off. It doesn’t mean you get to take a 6 months vacation. Usually 3-4 weeks is fine.
@thebigfs2330
@thebigfs2330 2 жыл бұрын
@@noahremnek3615 Thats one way to put it anyway.
@fabianschulz5252
@fabianschulz5252 10 ай бұрын
thx for the viedeo
@adrianhiguera5487
@adrianhiguera5487 Жыл бұрын
Great football explanation!
@oldb-1kenobi363
@oldb-1kenobi363 2 жыл бұрын
100% true! My wife is Deutsche, we stayed in Germany after I retired from the military in 2013. The hardest things to get used to, for me, was the no yard work /no noise on Sunday rule, no built in closets and you need a heavy duty industrial strength drill to hang a light from a typical German ceiling. American tourists are louder, I have seen it first hand on the trains. Americans are usually accompanied by the spouse, 4 kids, 3 dogs and 15 peices of luggage everywhere they go.
@laurac1902
@laurac1902 Жыл бұрын
That’s horribly accurate. We PCS’d here last year with our 3 kids, 2 dogs and about 12 pieces of luggage. In my slight defense, I did not know how long it would take for our HHG to arrive. 😂 We do try to not be loud, though. 😬
@LucasBenderChannel
@LucasBenderChannel 2 жыл бұрын
nonsense take on some of these 1. The Imperial system is bonkers. How do you calculate with that? 😳 2. Chips on the side? Really good, but not essential. 👌 3. While manual cars are fun, automatic cars are great as well! Thankfully, Germans are opening up to automatic ones. 🙏 6. I feel, Germans go for neither comfort nor fashion. They do everything practically... which is almost a seperate category? I'd like for us to be more stylish. Other European countries value good dress much more than we do. 👔 8. Polite is good. If it's genuine, I appreciate it each and every time. 😊 9. Yeah, true. By the age of 20, many Germans are already through their worst escapades. 😅 10. Grimey outdoor shoes in the house are a crime. 🥾
@LaureninGermany
@LaureninGermany 2 жыл бұрын
Oh dear. I don’t find your answers to be nonsense. Im Gegenteil. What does this say about me??
@Fast_Ultralight
@Fast_Ultralight 2 жыл бұрын
@@LaureninGermany Gut eingelebt😁
@sisuguillam5109
@sisuguillam5109 2 жыл бұрын
@@LaureninGermany that you are a smart girl? But we knew that already!
@Sat-Man-Alpha
@Sat-Man-Alpha 2 жыл бұрын
Obviously you never had that feeling driving the Autobahn and pushing your car to the limits like 220 or 240 km/h by pushing the gear knob further an further and feeling the speed with your full body...that's like starting a rocket......
@juilescieg
@juilescieg 2 жыл бұрын
@@Sat-Man-Alpha problem ist, dass jederzeit jemand unangekündigt (ohne blinken) plötzlich auf die überholspur wechseln könnte (was viele auch tun) oder, nachts, verdammt viele Rehe in der Nähe rumstehen. Zumindest wenn man durch Brandenburg fährt. Bin selbst nie so schnell gefahren, aber aber auch bei "normalen" geschwindigkeiten könnte ich das nicht genießen, weil ich das verhalten der anderen (oder von tieren) nicht abschätzen kann. Man müsste schon eine Zeit finden, zu der kaum jemand unterwegs ist.
@Fruechtchen
@Fruechtchen 11 ай бұрын
I didn't even know you eat sandwich with chips! 😂 what a great idea!!! I will try that!!! 😃
@henryfleischer565
@henryfleischer565 Жыл бұрын
Dankeschön for the interesting video. Maybe you could explain "tipping" in detail. Because, the whole process is so complicated. I remember the first lunch in US with tipping at the end ...it was a nightmare. I had no glue, what I have to do. In Germany I say take x ...in US I firstly get a bill... than I have to write down the tipp ...new card transaction ...and yes... there are tipp suggestions on the bill - absolutely confusing. Cheers from München!
@dummyload7803
@dummyload7803 10 ай бұрын
since i am not responsible for their working conditions why should i pay for fixing that by giving tips ? Then again ... in a country with too many guns who knows what some underpaid and overworked person is able to do ?
@LeeFKoch
@LeeFKoch Жыл бұрын
As an American living in Germany, my theory on why we talk so loudly is that we are just so amazed at how nice (and how old) everything is, that we're like, "Oh, my God, Janet, look at that cathedral/half-timbered house/castle/etc!" Plus, we automatically assume that everybody else wants to know what we're talking about. I miss tailgating before games! Go Unicorns!
@rebeccaschwarz5345
@rebeccaschwarz5345 2 жыл бұрын
Great video! 👏👏 I'm from a little German village but live now in Barcelona. Although the city is very fashionable you can go out in sweatpants or yoga pants without any problem - and I love it (to go grocery shopping or to take the trash out). 😅😅
@DjTinnio
@DjTinnio Жыл бұрын
Thank thank thank you very much. Highly appreciated. Honestly. Tnx a lot. A ton. Preeche man :-p .
@techman2553
@techman2553 Жыл бұрын
I grew up in the Chicago suburbs and shoes were typically worn in the house. I think there are a few things that might contribute to that trend: We had a cement floor basement and cement floor attached garage. Both were visited daily if not hourly to store and retrieve items. We had 3 living levels - the bedrooms upstairs, kitchen mid level, and family room downstairs, then the basement below ground. Now add in central air-conditioning, and the bottom levels were considerably colder than the upper levels, and the cement and tile floors were freezing to bare feet. There are slippers obviously for cold feet, but having 3 kids constantly running in and out of the house, in and out of the basement and garage, and watching TV in the cold downstairs family room, it was just not convenient to take shoes on and off constantly. Shoes were only removed if they were wet or muddy. As an adult, my house now is a live-in workshop. My floors throughout the house are as likely to be covered in sawdust and metal chips as any dirt from outside. The only time I walk around in my own house barefoot is when I'm getting ready for bed, or waking up in the morning. I do have separate house and outdoor shoes, but I'm not really picky out go outside to grab something in my house shoes so long as the ground is dry.
@dubravkojanusic6996
@dubravkojanusic6996 Жыл бұрын
Cement? You mean concrete? I dont understand. Here in Europe (I'm in Croatia), it's a matter of hygiene. You can't wear the same shoes outside, in the dirt, and around the house, no matter what. And all new houses have underfloor heating. And quite a few older ones too.
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