And most times its not like that, even than its still a good way to save money. But, yesterday I got 3 pizzas and some Pizzabrötchen (was ist das auf englisch?!) for 4€, too. Problem is: you can't choose, what you get in the end. Mostly, i could one time in a Backwerk, because the worker had no time to prepare, so he simply let me take, what I want...
It's all about perspective. It's still more than you get in most other western and southern EU countries :) Germany always had ludicrously low food prices in comparison to everyone else around.
11:00 This is the car tower in Wolfsburg. It's a glass window tower from car manufacturer VW located in Wolfsburg. They put new cars in there fully automated from an underground system from the finished construction line. They are in there as show pieces and then people go there and collect their cars. Kind of a short term storage for finished cars before they are being collected by their owners. The system fully automatically retrieves the cars and brings it to the delivery hall where the owners will receive it.
I've been to Mumbai, India, and there was an actual parking garage that worked just like the one in the video. It's super efficient and saves a lot of space which isn't a bad thing at all in a city
Euros as a visiting fan have been great. As you see in the Saxophone video some scots joined the party as well and thats how it was almost everywhere with all nations. We (🇧🇪) didnt play well but we had a blast anyway 😂. Thank you Germany, we knew we could count on you to be the perfect host😊
mph = miles per hour = Meilen pro Stunde ("mp/h" is wrong, it's either "p" or "/", but then again "m/s" is typically meters per second, sometimes you see "mi/h" instead)
And that's why it would be better to use km/h at all, as faster something goes as less accurate it gets on mph on 2 ways, because: mps is a decinmal point number, 2d. and more importand, the fast it is the smaller the number, the harde to imagine the speed, the faster you unerestimate it.
It`s always nice to see what a great atmosphere there was at the European championships in Germany, and how all the European nations celebrated together.💜👍
These tree houses are actually part of a hotel/campground in Seelbach. They are like holidays homes you can rent. The hotel itself and the surrounding buildings are giant log homes and they have a great spa area ;-)
12:20 Too good to go is a system where baking shops and other shops can offer their unsold goods of the day. So they won't have to throw it away and people can buy it for a very little price! So, yes it is for real! :)
I thought the same. We have a bakery that puts products of the day before in one bag and sells it for a low price. Sometimes it is a lot inside the bag. Super Überraschungstüte 🤤
Yes, especially Chinese and Mongolians with a buffet. That makes sense. You have to have enough on the buffet to satisfy the customers so that there's always enough left over to make a few more people happy. Just not with as much choice. That way, as a restaurant, you still get about a third of the normal price instead of having to throw everything away.
Saxophonist is Andre Schnura and yea, he's gone viral with EM 2024. Also: Nördlingen is said to be actutally one of the inspirations for the anime 'Attack on Titan'.
@@emiliajojo5703it is, its the inspiration for shiganshina, they actually reused the tower there for example, you can see the almost exact same tower in the first season of aot while the battle in the city lasts
Hi Ryan Wass, the ballot you have seen was one election and you had to make one choice. It is a lot of work to learn about all options. Greetings Juy Juka
@@sarahmichael270244 For obvious reasons, it is forbidden to photograph a completed ballot paper in the polling station. The ballot paper itself is of course public.
12:07 "Too good to go" is a special program where supermarkets sell remaining food items at closing time - that would otherwise have to be thrown away - for a massive discount.
The differences between East and West Germany can be explained simply by the fact that both parts have followed different paths for 40 years. After reunification, a number of companies in East Germany closed. As a result, unemployment increased and workers' bargaining power decreased. This explains the different incomes. Cars were rare in East Germany. You had to wait years for the Trabbi. There was and is a much denser network of local public transport. You can also see in the west in the big cities that there are fewer cars per person, simply because you don't have to rely on them. In rural regions, however, there are many more cars. Since farms in the GDR were forced to form agricultural production cooperatives and there was a land reform, huge areas were available to increase the efficiency of these farms. In West Germany, on the other hand, in addition to large farmers, there are also medium-sized and small businesses that have been family-owned for generations. That's why the sizes of farms in the west are smaller. Turkish immigration can also be explained historically. After the founding of the Federal Republic in 1949, the so-called “economic miracle” occurred. The economy grew so quickly that there was a shortage of workers. That's why they recruited people from abroad. First from Italy, later from Turkey. And many of these people stayed there. In East Germany, however, this migration did not occur. The only large group of immigrants were Vietnamese. However, this group was very small compared to the migration in West Germany. Religion: In a socialist state like the GDR, problems arose if you were a member of a church. That could influence whether you get a certain job or something similar. There were churches in the GDR and even churches were built, but that was only for a small part of the population. In West Germany, on the other hand, there were no disadvantages from the state if you were a member of a church. Then there's the matter of the tennis courts. A tennis court like this is not cheap and was therefore an elite sport for a long time (similar to how golf is seen today). When larger settlements with single-family houses were built in the sixties and seventies, sports facilities were often built in the associated green spaces. Football pitches and sometimes tennis courts. Then there was an event that gave tennis another boost: On July 7, 1985, at the age of 17, he became the first unseeded player, the first German and the youngest male player to date to win the final of the Wimbledon Championships with 3-1 sets in the final against Kevin Curren. With this victory, Becker was also the youngest winner of a Grand Slam tournament to date. That was significant and ensured that people not only watched tennis on television, but also wanted to play tennis themselves. Tennis is no longer as popular, but the courts are still there
The Religion chart doesn't make sense, though. I travel alot and I know that there are quite some regions in east germany like Erzgebirge or Eichsfeld that have always been strongly rooted in religion. Doesn't make any sense that the chart is black.
11:08 it is Not a Parking Garage, it is in my hometown Wolfsburg. If Somebody Buy a VW and like to visit Autostadt, for a Hand over the new car. That is One of Two Iconic storages for this new Cars.
About the bakery stuff, a typical non trivial item is maybe 1.50€ so yeah, normally that wouldn't be 4€. I'd roughly estimate 20-30€. But ... Too good to go is an app where bakeries and grocercy shops etc. give away random assortments of leftover veggies and baking goods etc. before they close in the evening (or whenever they want really, typically an hour before they close or so). So getting a big random collection like that for 4€ is possible, but it's a first come first serve type of deal and especially in bigger cities you need to claim it almost instantly when they publish it, which might involve luck. There'll only be a handful of such bags. "Too good to go" is like a mix of "too good to be thrown out" and " to go". We've that a lot where we invent english the general public will intuitively understand the gist of, even if it's not actual english. There's a term for that, which i forgot.
The automatic parking garage is at the Volkswagen new car customer delivery center in Wolfsburg. There are similar others, mostly under ground, but they are rare.
4:56 no. It's true. I was in Nördlingen with my Geography-Class one time. It's literally sitting in a crater! It's so awesome! 10:05 ahh!! Krapfen! 🤤 11:20 it's not a parking garage per se. If I'm right that's the car tower in VW Wolfsburg. They storage brand new cars there. And sometimes of costumers come to VW HQ in Wolfsburg they pull out your new car from this tower. As far as I know only brand new VW are storaged there
Which is sad, because if VW is capable to do that: Why not other Companies and as Parking garage to boot? Underground, above ground, doesn't matter but it would safe SO MUCH SPACE... Thieving? Nearly impossible, too.
@@CamaroMann Puuuh, hab ein recht gutes Allgemeinwissen, aber wo genau das so gesagt wird, wüsste ich jetzt nicht aus dem Stand. ^^ Grob würde ich sagen: BW.
"crime scene" Tartort is a very ols and still running police procedural television series. From Wiki: continuously since 1970 with 30 feature-length episodes per year, making it the longest-running German TV drama.
9:16 that was the ballot paper for the European Parliament election in 2024. over thirty parties on the ballot - and yet most dissatisfied voters opted to tick the box of one of the worst parties imaginable which would harm these very voters if allowed to make decisions.
12:21 My guess is that this came from a day old bakery. When I lived in Germany many many years ago, we would go to a day old bakery and pay a third of the price for a good selection of breads, donuts, and rolls.
@@Restmoore Yeay! Lasst uns die Berliner/Krapfen/Kräpple/Pfannkuchen-Debatte starten! Und als nächstes diskutieren wir darüber ob es Semmel, Brötchen oder Schrippe heißt! 🥳
@@Restmoore War mir schon klar. Aber ich finde es einfach endlos amüsant das wir Kartoffeln so eine großartige Debattenkultur haben wenn es um Backwerk geht! Da wird es bei uns manchmal so hitzig wie bei den Amis nur im US-Wahlkampf...
What the guy meant with the "crime scene filter" (Tatortfilter) is the day for night film trick. The movie was clearly shot at day time but had been altered in a way to make it look like it has been filmed at night.
Ich kenne das beim Film als Amerikanische Nacht 😂 da ist dann auch immer Vollmond, weil es eigentlich die Sonne ist. Und man sieht auch immer Schatten. Besonders in alten Western
This parking tower is inside the VW factory in Woldsburg. Its for customers who have ordered a car to certain specs and then personally go there and pick it up. The car is stored in that tower until its handed over to them. That tower is probably a days amount of cars.
7:20 somehow I doubt that person posted that to brag about how cheap things are, rather it was posted to complain about how little stuff you get for 55 bucks these days. Although I bet the Avocado and the cheese(?) next to it probably contributed a whole bunch to the price.
8:19 I live 10mins away from those tree houses and If you want to know where they are, they are located in a village named "Seelbach" in Baden-Württemberg
ive read in the comments somewhere the saxophone player is a saxophone teacher without work bc no one wanted to learn it anymore so he went to public viewing and hyped people there to hype up people for learning a saxophone as well :D dude was playing everywhere xD
The seemingly stark difference in religiousness is because people don't understand statistics. It's a statistic not about religion but about people registered as a certain brand of religion. Under the communists, religion was not supported/actively suppressed. So while people in Western Germany had their religious affiliation registered and it continues automatically down the generations, in the East no such registration existed. Nobody bothered to do so after the reunification, especially because nowadays it's mostly for collecting church tax. However, people are still religious in the East, no matter what this statistic says.
9:32 You got it only partly right, although we had several elections at the same day, this is a ballot paper for only the European Parliament election with a decent amount of possible parties. You have to choose one out of them. Fun fact: "Choice" and "Election" is the same word in German. For reasons, because it is natural to us to have a real choice and not only two crappy options. 10:00 They have a lot of different names depending on the region where you live, we call them Berliner. They’re really good, filled with marmelade. I’m sorry that the person disliked it but it’s just stupid to outrage about, everyone has different preferences, and there is no point comparing them to american donuts since they clearly are something else but donuts, not even close, wtf??? 10:12 This is at carneval where a lot of floats with political statements are promenading.
Togoodtogo means that you buy the bread in the evening or the next day for half the price or even cheaper because it is not as fresh and maybe not as tasty as it was in the morning. You can still eat it and save a lot of money. My local supermarket does it as well. You get the fresh bread and rolls that they made in the afternoon (!) for 20 cents in the evening and it's all very good. With the German dark bread, pretzels and pretzels with cheese that is no problem. All of it stays fresh for more than one day. Unfortunately, the croissants still cost the same in the evening.
In Denmark if you turn up at 20.00 the bread will be cheap to buy in any supermarket as they make new stuff everyday so it has to be sold. I used to go and get cheap wienerbrød and cakes for nothing in the evenings and saved a lot of dough.
Yes, Germany has different minimum wage in different states. As far as I know the minimum wage depends on your cost of life and that changes with where you live.
No, ther eis no difference in minimum wage, it's the same in all of Germany. There are still a lot of "Tarifverträge" that might set different standards.
11:00 Yep, that is one of the socalled "Autotürme (singular: Autoturm)" or in english Cartower in Wolfsburg Germany, where Volkswagen (VW) is located at.
Not fully sure, but I think at around 11:20 , that´s the storage of a big car trader location. Can´t remember when and where, but sometime during the past 10 years, I remember that saw something like that, most likely during a vacation in East Germany around 5 years ago, where we visited 3 cities during a 5 days bus trip.
11:45 There is an organization called " TAFEL " where leftover food such as bread but also other products that have passed their expiration date are given away. Poor people can get a lot of food for 4 euros. As long as it isn't moldy or severely past its expiration date, people are thankfull for this option.
The Saxophonist was actually a guys who just got unemployed and had nothing else to do, so he went to a public viewing spot and started to become viral and iconic. Nearly everybody knows him here (I'm german)
Hi, as in other comments explained it s one of the delivery towers from vw in Wolfsburg near the factory. But these werent the first i think. At the time the SMART cars were introduced(?) the advice trick was also cars in towers but much more little as the cars were.
I've visited these houses as a day trip with my carpentry class. These houses are built on a concrete foundation and made to look like wood in the "basement" section. You go up a pretty small spiral staircase and then you enter a classic German wooden house, just built in the air. Even the joints were mostly wooden. The wood was sourced from the local forest. The owner of these houses runs a campsite with some pretty nice amenities right across the street, and the houses were crafted by local companies. It was really nice to get a bit of insight there.
Turkish immigration was mostly a thing of the 1950s and maybe 60s, so long before the reunification. They settled down in the areas where they went to work, obviously in West Germany/Berlin. Nowadays Turks aren't really immigrating to Germany much anymore. And the Turks who already were here had little to no reason to leave the West and go to the East. East Germany isn't particularly interesting for immigrants, as you can see from the other economical charts in that video.
The Parking "Storage" at 11:35 is used on big ships for example. You can take your car with you, and the car getting stored in such a large ship like that. It's called "car park automaton".
The sax is acoustic, but if you look closely you see a green light of a wireless microphone clipped to the horn part. He played over the original recordings (you can hear the drums and vocals)
10:07 it should be a crime to call those 'donuts'. just bc Americans decided that any type of circular fried batter with a filling is a donut... donuts btw were invented around 100 years later than the (Berliner) Pfannkuchen (which is what I'll call them for peace keeping purposes bc otherwise the German department of this comment section would have to get into the debate about what this is actually called and there would be so many wrong answers)
The Sax-Guy got famous during the European Championship, his Sax ist black. The Sax is being auctioned off for charity. Black saxes are the guys own brand named "Stalaxy"
9:43 I'm relieved that the ballot is a booklet in Switzerland. You can tear out the the one party you vote for. You can cross out a candidate and write someone else twice. You can cross out and add a person from a different party. You can even write your own list with candidates.
The " To Good To Go" movement specialises in taking in food, that normally would be thrown out and sell it. So, yes, the 4 € for all that bakery goods was true, but they were not fresh. Pretzels from the morning sold past 4 p.m. are neither fresh, nor good. But...dunk them once quickly in water, put them in a pre-heated oven on 350 F or 200+C and bake them for 3 Minutes. As good as new...or better, because still hot, so the butter you smear on melts. ^^ You can do the same thing with our Brötchen-buns. For the bread I recommend slicing it into smal cubes and freeze them. When you're in the mood for Bavarian Semmelknödle-bread dumpling-you have exactly what you need.
The car tower is propably in the Volkswagen headquaters in Wolfsburg. People can go there to get their new car. They even have a hotel and a giant museums compound where you can see all the old models of every car brand that VW owns. Its awsome if you are a car fan.
"to good to go" is really nice, because sometimes you get so much good stuff. While the bakery i have nearby doesn't have that, I still really enjoy the bread there. And to buy a large one I only need to pay about 2-3€
9:25 - these lists really tend to be crazy! We had 2 elections in the last 3 months (for my city we even had one who was a combined election with 4 different things to vote for (new major and city council among other things). We as poll clerks needed 2 days to finish this monster of an election
The 4€ huge bakery package is most likely real, but it was a bit lucky On toogoodtogo supermarkets, bakeries, restaurants, café's etc. sell the food they would not be able to sell the next day anymore. You get them at an extreme discount but you can only pick them up during a short timeframe, often in the early evening. But it is still fresh and most likely still good for a bit if stored correctly. I recently got like 3 kg's of vegetables, 12 different bakerie goods, salads etc.(in total like 5kg of food) from a popular supermarket for 5€. Everything was still absolutely fine and really good You can also get this at starbucks, dunkin donuts, all you can eat buffets(there you often get like 2 boxes and can simply take whatever you want from the rest of the buffet) etc.
I know I‘m late to the party but about Nördlingen and the meteor crater: Here we call it the „Rieskrater“ and when you go to Nördlingen there is the so called „Rieskrater-Museum“ where you can learn about the history of the crater and the region around it! Also Nördlingen is a very beautiful city!
9:42: this shows the political parties who were competing for the "Europa-Parlament", this was an EU-wide election. I don't remember having these many possibilities for an election of the "Bundestag" (German parliament)
Hi there, you'r Correct, at the last picture All these pretzels and breads are more expensive, 1 pretzel is about 90 cents, there were 3, the pretzels alone cost 2.70 euros together, not to mention the other baked goods. I estimate these to be about 15 euros
That 55€ basket was actually expensive. Grocerie prices went up like crazy in the last years here in germany. Only a few years ago, 55€ would fill your whole shopping cart to the brim. now, youll be lucky if you can fill the bottom of the cart, so you cant watch through, but dont hope of stacking anything... 😥
It's not a public garage... it's the final short-term storage from volkswagen, if you buy new you can see your car getting pulled out of there to be delivered to you.
Its only 4€ because its the stuff that wasnt sold on that day and would be thrown away or used as animal feed otherwise.. Its gonna be WAY more expensive if you bought it normaly
There used to be a large Tree-House, like these in Okinawa. It housed a restaurant but went bancrupt. So they had to demolish it. But it used to be the biggest tree house in the world
7:00 Tatort is a state sponsored crime series for the „öffies“ (öffentliche, short for public services; normally used for the public transport system but in this context used for the public television) that has one of the highest annual budget(it’s trash imbo(in my based opinion) They always use a special filter; that’s what the comment wanted to say
For the bakery at the end, its true, maybe in some places u can get that much, but brötchen where i live are like 48 cents and „pig ears“ (some thingy w chocolate) dw its not pig its just called like it- is 2 euros, so it depends what u buy
2:00 The electronic saxophones and other electronic instruments with sax fingering that I'm aware off look well different. They're smaller and lighter, too. That's part of the reason they exist. Also, most of them sound like crap (when trying to sound like an actual sax instead of just embracing being a synth). *Electric* saxophone would imply that it works like an electric guitar, i.e. it's just electrically amplified. That wouldn't make it quieter but louder ^^ (if you use an amp, otherwise there's no difference).
„Turkish immigration“ at i think 3:40, i can confirm 100%, im a german that lives in northern germany, and if i go to big cities, there are turks everywhere i look, left, right, behind, front. everywhere, literally- they mostly blast loud rap-music, and are usually harmless other than the kids who yell „why tf u looking at us?!“ when ur not even😭 but when im at my grannys house in east germany, there are soooooo less of them, unless i go to berlin😭 thats like the spawn point for them😭
3:34 most of the Turkish immigration happend after WW II as we're lacking a lot of labor force (don't ask why 🥲) So they migrated only to west Germany, as east Germany was basically closed for immigration
3:15 minimum wage isn't different, it's all the same. The graphic shows that the difference between before and after introducing the minimum wage was biggest in the east of Germany. Meaning people in the east of Germany did profit the most from the minimum wage introduction.
Most turks were invited as "guest workers" during the 60´s and 70s to west germany to help build up after the war, and many stayed, got kids, etc. East germany got guest workers from other socialist countries like Cúba or North vietnam, but they didn´t stay. Nördlingen is worth the visit! the crater museum as well as the medieval old town are super awesome.
To good to gos is an App where you can buy the "leftovers" of the day, so that are not thrown away for a lower price. Some restaurants join it, too - it's nice if you are on low income and you do something against food waste, too.
love the comment at the end saying "stupid germans they always have a response and a word for everything it's insane" and then the best answer to that: "We create words by combining them and I don't think there is really a limit" 😂😂
To the Statistics about East and West, it just perfectly portraits the disenfranchisement eastern germans experienced after both nations reunited. after that it was basically a wholesale for rich western germans,meaning 90% of the means of production belong to western germans, as you can also see an the amount of companies having their headquarters in the east. and for the voting paper, no, not mutiple elections, i think this was the one for the EU, it was 3 last time, all of them had a lot on it, not sure which was which anymore.
NASA even did send Apollo crews for geology training to the Nördlingen crater in preparation for upcoming moon missions. Among them Alan Shepard, the later commander of Apollo 14.
9:16 I had to fill out five of those bad boys. we have a lot of political parties in germany. I had one that was five time this size (on nice pink paper, cause ever different political institution has a different color so you can put the right paper in the right box) and I had 33 votes to give out for it. just this paper. the second biggest one was 24 votes. Voting in germany can be.... a one hour event XD I knew what I'm going to vote and it still took me 20mins...
0:15 As a German, I am mostly concerned with them STOPPING on the Autobahn. From the guard rail visible and the left solid line remaining in the corner between windshield and the dashboard, it looks like they are already in the right lane.
12:10 you are right, those are not 4€ in total, probably more like inbetween 10-16€ but in america to have one (1) prezel to be $4 is crazy man, and that probably ain't even the real price cuz you still have to add taxes so you pay more like $4.20-4.40 USD xDxDxDXD
To good to go is a movement against wasting food, 4€ is common in the evening. They cant store it to the next day and they will probably close at 6 pm maybe 8 pm, so 4€ is better than the trash can.
Bretzels in Germany are very cheap, only at events are they extremely expensive, the same thing is with beer as soon as something is being celebrated. Officially, a Betzel no longer costs 1.50 like from the bakery, but you pay 5 € directly that doesn't come from the bakery. It tastes great. Better and it's fresher or you can go to the supermarket and get 4 pieces for €3 to bake yourself ;D
Nördlingen is located at the center of an ancient impact crater site from a meteorite. It's true. That is why the entire area is as flat as a pancake for a certain amount of circle. ^^ Just like the circular city of Nördlingen. If you are having difficulties with the Umlaut ö, then just think of it as the sound you make for saying the word "nerd". How you pronounce the letter "e" there is ecdatly what an "ö" is supposed to be pronounced. So, Nerdlingen and you got it pretty much. ^^ You're welcome. ^^
The average salery map, you should check out the US. You can still kind of see who won the war of secession on the map. Despite the south having all the oil and refineries, the north is lit up bright.
Concerning the "electoral choices" ... we used to have a "beer drinker party" (for german elections, no idea if they also stand for EU elections like this one), which have promised to "throw a party with the state money you get for every vote you receive" (IIRC you get 5€ per vote ... if you get someone elected). I didnt check, but in a previous EU election there were FOUR DIFFERENT "animal rights parties", no idea how many were around this time.
to the last clip: i think it might very well be possible for all of that to just cost 4€. I'd just assume, that it isn't fresh (freshly baked) anymore. so they rather sell it for cheap than to throw it away.
"To Good To Go" is a food sharing company. Thats not the normal price. If food is not sold until evening you can purchase it for a reduced price.
but you could really make a lot of Knödels from this :o)
And most times its not like that, even than its still a good way to save money. But, yesterday I got 3 pizzas and some Pizzabrötchen (was ist das auf englisch?!) for 4€, too.
Problem is: you can't choose, what you get in the end. Mostly, i could one time in a Backwerk, because the worker had no time to prepare, so he simply let me take, what I want...
Danke habe davon noch nie gehört.
Habe ich mir direkt runtergeladen und hole später etwas ab.
@@crrnybestefilmserienmoment4269 Guten Appetit, hoffentlich bekommst du eine tolle erste Tüte!
ohhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh. that's fun
7:08 they aren't bragging how cheap that is. They are complaining how little they got for 55€, and I'm completely with them. That's crazy!
yes, that´s a joke for 55 bucks.
Apparently quite cheap for US standards 🤷♂️😂
It's all about perspective. It's still more than you get in most other western and southern EU countries :) Germany always had ludicrously low food prices in comparison to everyone else around.
@@samuelsamenstrang6069 It's 55€, not 55 bucks. It would be over $60.
@@bultvidxxxix9973no right no 1€ equals 1,09$ so 55€ are 59,99$ so not even over 60$
11:00 This is the car tower in Wolfsburg. It's a glass window tower from car manufacturer VW located in Wolfsburg. They put new cars in there fully automated from an underground system from the finished construction line. They are in there as show pieces and then people go there and collect their cars. Kind of a short term storage for finished cars before they are being collected by their owners. The system fully automatically retrieves the cars and brings it to the delivery hall where the owners will receive it.
It’s in a theme park run by VW called the Autostadt 😊
I've been to Mumbai, India, and there was an actual parking garage that worked just like the one in the video. It's super efficient and saves a lot of space which isn't a bad thing at all in a city
I picked up my car in the Autostadt. It was such a great experience! I was there a whole weekend.
That's it, very impressive!
Euros as a visiting fan have been great. As you see in the Saxophone video some scots joined the party as well and thats how it was almost everywhere with all nations. We (🇧🇪) didnt play well but we had a blast anyway 😂. Thank you Germany, we knew we could count on you to be the perfect host😊
European Friends are always welcome, especially if their beer tradition is even more complex than ours ☺️
Nice to hear you enjoyed your visit 🖖
It always makes me happy when visitors leave our country in a good mood and with the intention of coming back.
it just really showed what we missed with all the corruption giving the worlds and euros to russia, qatar, saudi arabia etc.
For those who are too lazy, 215km/h are 134mp/h
thank you, I was
Or stupid.
mph = miles per hour = Meilen pro Stunde
("mp/h" is wrong, it's either "p" or "/", but then again "m/s" is typically meters per second, sometimes you see "mi/h" instead)
@@berlindude75 I know
And that's why it would be better to use km/h at all, as faster something goes as less accurate it gets on mph on 2 ways, because: mps is a decinmal point number, 2d. and more importand, the fast it is the smaller the number, the harde to imagine the speed, the faster you unerestimate it.
It`s always nice to see what a great atmosphere there was at the European championships in Germany, and how all the European nations celebrated together.💜👍
These tree houses are actually part of a hotel/campground in Seelbach. They are like holidays homes you can rent. The hotel itself and the surrounding buildings are giant log homes and they have a great spa area ;-)
12:20 Too good to go is a system where baking shops and other shops can offer their unsold goods of the day. So they won't have to throw it away and people can buy it for a very little price! So, yes it is for real! :)
The 4€ Baked goods are things that are leftovers that would have been trashed orherwise but are "Too good to go"
TooGoodToGo is bakerys/markets giving away food that is still good for a much cheaper price instead of throwing it away
well its practical and logical in German mindsets - but US people would shoutout here are socialism-like- people orso xD
I thought the same. We have a bakery that puts products of the day before in one bag and sells it for a low price. Sometimes it is a lot inside the bag. Super Überraschungstüte 🤤
Also restaurants and hotels!
Yes, especially Chinese and Mongolians with a buffet.
That makes sense. You have to have enough on the buffet to satisfy the customers so that there's always enough left over to make a few more people happy. Just not with as much choice.
That way, as a restaurant, you still get about a third of the normal price instead of having to throw everything away.
Oder halt beim "Bäcker von gestern" (simplified: baker from yesterday) is the same.
Saxophonist is Andre Schnura and yea, he's gone viral with EM 2024.
Also: Nördlingen is said to be actutally one of the inspirations for the anime 'Attack on Titan'.
You are missing the "n" in Andre schnura 😀 at least if i believe in his insta account 😛
Especially since Schura is a town.if the attack of titan thing is true,awesome!!!
@@NeverMind439 Thanks for the info on the typo.
and he was fired before the EM started.
@@emiliajojo5703it is, its the inspiration for shiganshina, they actually reused the tower there for example, you can see the almost exact same tower in the first season of aot while the battle in the city lasts
Hi Ryan Wass,
the ballot you have seen was one election and you had to make one choice.
It is a lot of work to learn about all options.
Greetings
Juy Juka
and to make a photo there is illegal
@@sarahmichael270244 For obvious reasons, it is forbidden to photograph a completed ballot paper in the polling station. The ballot paper itself is of course public.
12:07 "Too good to go" is a special program where supermarkets sell remaining food items at closing time - that would otherwise have to be thrown away - for a massive discount.
Not just supermarkets! Restaurants, bakeries and Hotels, to. You can get the leftovers of hotel breakfast buffets.
The differences between East and West Germany can be explained simply by the fact that both parts have followed different paths for 40 years. After reunification, a number of companies in East Germany closed. As a result, unemployment increased and workers' bargaining power decreased. This explains the different incomes.
Cars were rare in East Germany. You had to wait years for the Trabbi. There was and is a much denser network of local public transport. You can also see in the west in the big cities that there are fewer cars per person, simply because you don't have to rely on them. In rural regions, however, there are many more cars.
Since farms in the GDR were forced to form agricultural production cooperatives and there was a land reform, huge areas were available to increase the efficiency of these farms. In West Germany, on the other hand, in addition to large farmers, there are also medium-sized and small businesses that have been family-owned for generations. That's why the sizes of farms in the west are smaller.
Turkish immigration can also be explained historically. After the founding of the Federal Republic in 1949, the so-called “economic miracle” occurred. The economy grew so quickly that there was a shortage of workers. That's why they recruited people from abroad. First from Italy, later from Turkey. And many of these people stayed there. In East Germany, however, this migration did not occur. The only large group of immigrants were Vietnamese. However, this group was very small compared to the migration in West Germany.
Religion: In a socialist state like the GDR, problems arose if you were a member of a church. That could influence whether you get a certain job or something similar. There were churches in the GDR and even churches were built, but that was only for a small part of the population. In West Germany, on the other hand, there were no disadvantages from the state if you were a member of a church.
Then there's the matter of the tennis courts. A tennis court like this is not cheap and was therefore an elite sport for a long time (similar to how golf is seen today). When larger settlements with single-family houses were built in the sixties and seventies, sports facilities were often built in the associated green spaces. Football pitches and sometimes tennis courts. Then there was an event that gave tennis another boost: On July 7, 1985, at the age of 17, he became the first unseeded player, the first German and the youngest male player to date to win the final of the Wimbledon Championships with 3-1 sets in the final against Kevin Curren. With this victory, Becker was also the youngest winner of a Grand Slam tournament to date. That was significant and ensured that people not only watched tennis on television, but also wanted to play tennis themselves. Tennis is no longer as popular, but the courts are still there
The Religion chart doesn't make sense, though.
I travel alot and I know that there are quite some regions in east germany like Erzgebirge or Eichsfeld that have always been strongly rooted in religion.
Doesn't make any sense that the chart is black.
also stuff like the tennis courts is not very meaningful since east germany is way less population dense than east and south germany
11:08 it is Not a Parking Garage, it is in my hometown Wolfsburg. If Somebody Buy a VW and like to visit Autostadt, for a Hand over the new car. That is One of Two Iconic storages for this new Cars.
This guy is playing the Saxophone in real. During the Euro 2024 he got really famous for his actions.
About the bakery stuff, a typical non trivial item is maybe 1.50€ so yeah, normally that wouldn't be 4€. I'd roughly estimate 20-30€.
But ... Too good to go is an app where bakeries and grocercy shops etc. give away random assortments of leftover veggies and baking goods etc. before they close in the evening (or whenever they want really, typically an hour before they close or so). So getting a big random collection like that for 4€ is possible, but it's a first come first serve type of deal and especially in bigger cities you need to claim it almost instantly when they publish it, which might involve luck. There'll only be a handful of such bags. "Too good to go" is like a mix of "too good to be thrown out" and " to go". We've that a lot where we invent english the general public will intuitively understand the gist of, even if it's not actual english. There's a term for that, which i forgot.
I love the way you see my country.
From my perspective as a local, I often overlook the beautiful things here.
Thanks for that!
D is excellent country... for young white MEN.
@@MiaMerkur hahah what a bullshi.
Germany got islamic the last few years
if you are white you will get eventually a knive in you from an Muslim
@@MiaMerkurWell, I am a middle age white woman and I still class Germany as an excellent country.
@@markstanway6370 so, woman, why do you name yourself MARK? To be taken more serious?
@@MiaMerkur The account is registered in my sons name. His name is Mark. My name is Susanne, born in 1975. Is that good enough for you?
The automatic parking garage is at the Volkswagen new car customer delivery center in Wolfsburg.
There are similar others, mostly under ground, but they are rare.
4:56 no. It's true. I was in Nördlingen with my Geography-Class one time. It's literally sitting in a crater! It's so awesome!
10:05 ahh!! Krapfen! 🤤
11:20 it's not a parking garage per se. If I'm right that's the car tower in VW Wolfsburg. They storage brand new cars there. And sometimes of costumers come to VW HQ in Wolfsburg they pull out your new car from this tower. As far as I know only brand new VW are storaged there
Which is sad, because if VW is capable to do that: Why not other Companies and as Parking garage to boot? Underground, above ground, doesn't matter but it would safe SO MUCH SPACE... Thieving? Nearly impossible, too.
Berliner! ;) ❤❤
Kräppel :)
@@CamaroMann Puuuh, hab ein recht gutes Allgemeinwissen, aber wo genau das so gesagt wird, wüsste ich jetzt nicht aus dem Stand. ^^
Grob würde ich sagen: BW.
@@FelixFuchsHase1105 BW vielleicht, in meinem Fall ist es (Ost)hessen.
"crime scene" Tartort is a very ols and still running police procedural television series.
From Wiki: continuously since 1970 with 30 feature-length episodes per year, making it the longest-running German TV drama.
9:16 that was the ballot paper for the European Parliament election in 2024. over thirty parties on the ballot - and yet most dissatisfied voters opted to tick the box of one of the worst parties imaginable which would harm these very voters if allowed to make decisions.
12:21 My guess is that this came from a day old bakery. When I lived in Germany many many years ago, we would go to a day old bakery and pay a third of the price for a good selection of breads, donuts, and rolls.
10:36 This is what Carnival in some parts of Germany looks like. It‘s very political and very creative.
10:07 thats not a donut, that is a "Berliner"
Krapfen...
@@NoName_.... Berliner aber Krapfen geht auch zumindest kein Pfannkuchen
@@Restmoore Yeay! Lasst uns die Berliner/Krapfen/Kräpple/Pfannkuchen-Debatte starten! Und als nächstes diskutieren wir darüber ob es Semmel, Brötchen oder Schrippe heißt! 🥳
@@lemcy1256 ich wollte das nur richtig stellen, dass es ein Berliner/Krapfen ist, da donut auf jeden fall falsch ist
@@Restmoore War mir schon klar. Aber ich finde es einfach endlos amüsant das wir Kartoffeln so eine großartige Debattenkultur haben wenn es um Backwerk geht! Da wird es bei uns manchmal so hitzig wie bei den Amis nur im US-Wahlkampf...
What the guy meant with the "crime scene filter" (Tatortfilter) is the day for night film trick. The movie was clearly shot at day time but had been altered in a way to make it look like it has been filmed at night.
Ich kenne das beim Film als Amerikanische Nacht 😂 da ist dann auch immer Vollmond, weil es eigentlich die Sonne ist. Und man sieht auch immer Schatten. Besonders in alten Western
2:00 that’s the song the meme about the astronaut dying in space was about
This parking tower is inside the VW factory in Woldsburg. Its for customers who have ordered a car to certain specs and then personally go there and pick it up. The car is stored in that tower until its handed over to them. That tower is probably a days amount of cars.
7:20 somehow I doubt that person posted that to brag about how cheap things are, rather it was posted to complain about how little stuff you get for 55 bucks these days. Although I bet the Avocado and the cheese(?) next to it probably contributed a whole bunch to the price.
8:19 I live 10mins away from those tree houses and If you want to know where they are, they are located in a village named "Seelbach" in Baden-Württemberg
cool thank you for the info :) Do you know what they are for? Can you stay in them or is it really just for play?
@@voyance4elleThey are near a campsite and you can rent them as holiday homes.
@@voyance4ellethey holiday homes you can rent.
Rumour has it that Tolkien took the pre-Alpine region of Southern Germany which he had visited as a template for Middle Earth.😁
ive read in the comments somewhere the saxophone player is a saxophone teacher without work bc no one wanted to learn it anymore so he went to public viewing and hyped people there to hype up people for learning a saxophone as well :D dude was playing everywhere xD
The seemingly stark difference in religiousness is because people don't understand statistics. It's a statistic not about religion but about people registered as a certain brand of religion.
Under the communists, religion was not supported/actively suppressed. So while people in Western Germany had their religious affiliation registered and it continues automatically down the generations, in the East no such registration existed.
Nobody bothered to do so after the reunification, especially because nowadays it's mostly for collecting church tax. However, people are still religious in the East, no matter what this statistic says.
9:32 You got it only partly right, although we had several elections at the same day, this is a ballot paper for only the European Parliament election with a decent amount of possible parties. You have to choose one out of them. Fun fact: "Choice" and "Election" is the same word in German. For reasons, because it is natural to us to have a real choice and not only two crappy options.
10:00 They have a lot of different names depending on the region where you live, we call them Berliner. They’re really good, filled with marmelade. I’m sorry that the person disliked it but it’s just stupid to outrage about, everyone has different preferences, and there is no point comparing them to american donuts since they clearly are something else but donuts, not even close, wtf???
10:12 This is at carneval where a lot of floats with political statements are promenading.
Togoodtogo means that you buy the bread in the evening or the next day for half the price or even cheaper because it is not as fresh and maybe not as tasty as it was in the morning. You can still eat it and save a lot of money. My local supermarket does it as well. You get the fresh bread and rolls that they made in the afternoon (!) for 20 cents in the evening and it's all very good. With the German dark bread, pretzels and pretzels with cheese that is no problem. All of it stays fresh for more than one day. Unfortunately, the croissants still cost the same in the evening.
In Denmark if you turn up at 20.00 the bread will be cheap to buy in any supermarket as they make new stuff everyday so it has to be sold. I used to go and get cheap wienerbrød and cakes for nothing in the evenings and saved a lot of dough.
Yes, Germany has different minimum wage in different states. As far as I know the minimum wage depends on your cost of life and that changes with where you live.
No, ther eis no difference in minimum wage, it's the same in all of Germany.
There are still a lot of "Tarifverträge" that might set different standards.
I have to admit, often your videos do make me feal a little happy. :)
This east/west comparison is indeed very interesting!!
11:00 Yep, that is one of the socalled "Autotürme (singular: Autoturm)" or in english Cartower in Wolfsburg Germany, where Volkswagen (VW) is located at.
Not fully sure, but I think at around 11:20 , that´s the storage of a big car trader location. Can´t remember when and where, but sometime during the past 10 years, I remember that saw something like that, most likely during a vacation in East Germany around 5 years ago, where we visited 3 cities during a 5 days bus trip.
that parking garage was in ine of the Mission Impossible movies
11:45 There is an organization called " TAFEL " where leftover food such as bread but also other products that have passed their expiration date are given away. Poor people can get a lot of food for 4 euros. As long as it isn't moldy or severely past its expiration date, people are thankfull for this option.
The Saxophonist was actually a guys who just got unemployed and had nothing else to do, so he went to a public viewing spot and started to become viral and iconic. Nearly everybody knows him here (I'm german)
Hi, as in other comments explained it s one of the delivery towers from vw in Wolfsburg near the factory. But these werent the first i think. At the time the SMART cars were introduced(?) the advice trick was also cars in towers but much more little as the cars were.
I've visited these houses as a day trip with my carpentry class. These houses are built on a concrete foundation and made to look like wood in the "basement" section. You go up a pretty small spiral staircase and then you enter a classic German wooden house, just built in the air. Even the joints were mostly wooden. The wood was sourced from the local forest. The owner of these houses runs a campsite with some pretty nice amenities right across the street, and the houses were crafted by local companies. It was really nice to get a bit of insight there.
Turkish immigration was mostly a thing of the 1950s and maybe 60s, so long before the reunification. They settled down in the areas where they went to work, obviously in West Germany/Berlin. Nowadays Turks aren't really immigrating to Germany much anymore. And the Turks who already were here had little to no reason to leave the West and go to the East. East Germany isn't particularly interesting for immigrants, as you can see from the other economical charts in that video.
The Parking "Storage" at 11:35 is used on big ships for example. You can take your car with you, and the car getting stored in such a large ship like that.
It's called "car park automaton".
The sax seems electric to me. And that second song is something i know from the 80s. Major Tom maybe ? 🤔
First song was Bellini - Samba de Janeiro, which was a huge hit in Europe in 1997.
The sax is acoustic, but if you look closely you see a green light of a wireless microphone clipped to the horn part. He played over the original recordings (you can hear the drums and vocals)
10:07 it should be a crime to call those 'donuts'. just bc Americans decided that any type of circular fried batter with a filling is a donut... donuts btw were invented around 100 years later than the (Berliner) Pfannkuchen (which is what I'll call them for peace keeping purposes bc otherwise the German department of this comment section would have to get into the debate about what this is actually called and there would be so many wrong answers)
The Sax-Guy got famous during the European Championship, his Sax ist black. The Sax is being auctioned off for charity. Black saxes are the guys own brand named "Stalaxy"
9:43 I'm relieved that the ballot is a booklet in Switzerland. You can tear out the the one party you vote for. You can cross out a candidate and write someone else twice. You can cross out and add a person from a different party. You can even write your own list with candidates.
We have that also for some other elections like Gemeinderat, Kreistag or Regionalversammlung but not for the EU elections
The " To Good To Go" movement specialises in taking in food, that normally would be thrown out and sell it.
So, yes, the 4 € for all that bakery goods was true, but they were not fresh. Pretzels from the morning sold past 4 p.m. are neither fresh, nor good.
But...dunk them once quickly in water, put them in a pre-heated oven on 350 F or 200+C and bake them for 3 Minutes.
As good as new...or better, because still hot, so the butter you smear on melts. ^^
You can do the same thing with our Brötchen-buns.
For the bread I recommend slicing it into smal cubes and freeze them.
When you're in the mood for Bavarian Semmelknödle-bread dumpling-you have exactly what you need.
The car tower is propably in the Volkswagen headquaters in Wolfsburg. People can go there to get their new car. They even have a hotel and a giant museums compound where you can see all the old models of every car brand that VW owns. Its awsome if you are a car fan.
"to good to go" is really nice, because sometimes you get so much good stuff.
While the bakery i have nearby doesn't have that, I still really enjoy the bread there. And to buy a large one I only need to pay about 2-3€
9:25 - these lists really tend to be crazy! We had 2 elections in the last 3 months (for my city we even had one who was a combined election with 4 different things to vote for (new major and city council among other things).
We as poll clerks needed 2 days to finish this monster of an election
The 4€ huge bakery package is most likely real, but it was a bit lucky
On toogoodtogo supermarkets, bakeries, restaurants, café's etc. sell the food they would not be able to sell the next day anymore. You get them at an extreme discount but you can only pick them up during a short timeframe, often in the early evening.
But it is still fresh and most likely still good for a bit if stored correctly.
I recently got like 3 kg's of vegetables, 12 different bakerie goods, salads etc.(in total like 5kg of food) from a popular supermarket for 5€. Everything was still absolutely fine and really good
You can also get this at starbucks, dunkin donuts, all you can eat buffets(there you often get like 2 boxes and can simply take whatever you want from the rest of the buffet) etc.
I know I‘m late to the party but about Nördlingen and the meteor crater: Here we call it the „Rieskrater“ and when you go to Nördlingen there is the so called „Rieskrater-Museum“ where you can learn about the history of the crater and the region around it! Also Nördlingen is a very beautiful city!
The tree houses are located next to a camp ground and they are used as remote work offices.
You can rent it on a daily basis.
The car elevator is in Wolfsburg at Volkswagen VW.
When you ordered a car and get there to get it this is how they give you the car. ^^
9:42: this shows the political parties who were competing for the "Europa-Parlament", this was an EU-wide election. I don't remember having these many possibilities for an election of the "Bundestag" (German parliament)
The car tower is in Wolfsburg at VW factory. If you get your car there, you have a Show to get your car and a look inside of VW.
Hi there, you'r Correct, at the last picture All these pretzels and breads are more expensive, 1 pretzel is about 90 cents, there were 3, the pretzels alone cost 2.70 euros together, not to mention the other baked goods. I estimate these to be about 15 euros
That 55€ basket was actually expensive. Grocerie prices went up like crazy in the last years here in germany. Only a few years ago, 55€ would fill your whole shopping cart to the brim. now, youll be lucky if you can fill the bottom of the cart, so you cant watch through, but dont hope of stacking anything... 😥
Greetings from Germany 😃
2:32 do you have a link for those charts? I´d love to have a look myself
hello :) greetings back from germany
Yep, that's a parking garage and it's a freakin cool one so advanced , it takes up less space than a traditional one
for the amount of cars it has !
It's not a public garage... it's the final short-term storage from volkswagen, if you buy new you can see your car getting pulled out of there to be delivered to you.
@@SuperUltimateLP Um ,yeah but I've seen garages like this around Munich and Munich airport so it's not just about buying a new car.
That 11 seconds video was not Bavaria, it was a new Skyrim 8K mod. ;)
Its only 4€ because its the stuff that wasnt sold on that day and would be thrown away or used as animal feed otherwise..
Its gonna be WAY more expensive if you bought it normaly
12:13 in german its a "Breze" and in the most stores it costs something between 80ct and 90ct
in the moment 1€ is 1,12$
There used to be a large Tree-House, like these in Okinawa. It housed a restaurant but went bancrupt. So they had to demolish it. But it used to be the biggest tree house in the world
7:00 Tatort is a state sponsored crime series for the „öffies“ (öffentliche, short for public services; normally used for the public transport system but in this context used for the public television) that has one of the highest annual budget(it’s trash imbo(in my based opinion)
They always use a special filter; that’s what the comment wanted to say
For the bakery at the end, its true, maybe in some places u can get that much, but brötchen where i live are like 48 cents and „pig ears“ (some thingy w chocolate) dw its not pig its just called like it- is 2 euros, so it depends what u buy
nördlingen is close to me, and they have a museum dedicated to the meteroite crate, its very impressive!
2:00 The electronic saxophones and other electronic instruments with sax fingering that I'm aware off look well different.
They're smaller and lighter, too. That's part of the reason they exist. Also, most of them sound like crap (when trying to sound like an actual sax instead of just embracing being a synth).
*Electric* saxophone would imply that it works like an electric guitar, i.e. it's just electrically amplified. That wouldn't make it quieter but louder ^^ (if you use an amp, otherwise there's no difference).
„Turkish immigration“ at i think 3:40, i can confirm 100%, im a german that lives in northern germany, and if i go to big cities, there are turks everywhere i look, left, right, behind, front. everywhere, literally- they mostly blast loud rap-music, and are usually harmless other than the kids who yell „why tf u looking at us?!“ when ur not even😭 but when im at my grannys house in east germany, there are soooooo less of them, unless i go to berlin😭 thats like the spawn point for them😭
"Tatort" means crime scene, but also a popular TVcrime series is called Tatort
3:34 most of the Turkish immigration happend after WW II as we're lacking a lot of labor force (don't ask why 🥲)
So they migrated only to west Germany, as east Germany was basically closed for immigration
I live near those three houses, they are in the village called Seelbach in Baden-Württemberg and you can rent them as holyday homes.
3:15 minimum wage isn't different, it's all the same. The graphic shows that the difference between before and after introducing the minimum wage was biggest in the east of Germany. Meaning people in the east of Germany did profit the most from the minimum wage introduction.
Most turks were invited as "guest workers" during the 60´s and 70s to west germany to help build up after the war, and many stayed, got kids, etc. East germany got guest workers from other socialist countries like Cúba or North vietnam, but they didn´t stay.
Nördlingen is worth the visit! the crater museum as well as the medieval old town are super awesome.
To good to gos is an App where you can buy the "leftovers" of the day, so that are not thrown away for a lower price. Some restaurants join it, too - it's nice if you are on low income and you do something against food waste, too.
love the comment at the end saying "stupid germans they always have a response and a word for everything it's insane" and then the best answer to that: "We create words by combining them and I don't think there is really a limit" 😂😂
To the Statistics about East and West, it just perfectly portraits the disenfranchisement eastern germans experienced after both nations reunited.
after that it was basically a wholesale for rich western germans,meaning 90% of the means of production belong to western germans, as you can also see an the amount of companies having their headquarters in the east.
and for the voting paper, no, not mutiple elections, i think this was the one for the EU, it was 3 last time, all of them had a lot on it, not sure which was which anymore.
NASA even did send Apollo crews for geology training to the Nördlingen crater in preparation for upcoming moon missions. Among them Alan Shepard, the later commander of Apollo 14.
"maybe I'm being stupid"
Yes you are. But it's funny as heck to watch this today. Love your content.
9:16 I had to fill out five of those bad boys. we have a lot of political parties in germany. I had one that was five time this size (on nice pink paper, cause ever different political institution has a different color so you can put the right paper in the right box) and I had 33 votes to give out for it. just this paper. the second biggest one was 24 votes. Voting in germany can be.... a one hour event XD I knew what I'm going to vote and it still took me 20mins...
0:15 As a German, I am mostly concerned with them STOPPING on the Autobahn.
From the guard rail visible and the left solid line remaining in the corner between windshield and the dashboard, it looks like they are already in the right lane.
12:10 you are right, those are not 4€ in total, probably more like inbetween 10-16€ but in america to have one (1) prezel to be $4 is crazy man, and that probably ain't even the real price cuz you still have to add taxes so you pay more like $4.20-4.40 USD xDxDxDXD
The car elevator belongs to VW in Wolfsburg , the home of VW. Here you can get your New car direct from the manufactory .
That guy has just his job as a professional musician
The Car-Elevator-Parkhouse is only for NEW cars to be picked up buy the Buyer at the VOLKSWAGEN-WERK in Woolfsburg
To good to go is a movement against wasting food, 4€ is common in the evening. They cant store it to the next day and they will probably close at 6 pm maybe 8 pm, so 4€ is better than the trash can.
Bretzels in Germany are very cheap, only at events are they extremely expensive, the same thing is with beer as soon as something is being celebrated. Officially, a Betzel no longer costs 1.50 like from the bakery, but you pay 5 € directly that doesn't come from the bakery. It tastes great. Better and it's fresher or you can go to the supermarket and get 4 pieces for €3 to bake yourself ;D
Nördlingen is located at the center of an ancient impact crater site from a meteorite.
It's true. That is why the entire area is as flat as a pancake for a certain amount of circle. ^^ Just like the circular city of Nördlingen.
If you are having difficulties with the Umlaut ö, then just think of it as the sound you make for saying the word "nerd". How you pronounce the letter "e" there is ecdatly what an "ö" is supposed to be pronounced. So, Nerdlingen and you got it pretty much. ^^
You're welcome. ^^
The average salery map, you should check out the US. You can still kind of see who won the war of secession on the map. Despite the south having all the oil and refineries, the north is lit up bright.
Concerning the "electoral choices" ... we used to have a "beer drinker party" (for german elections, no idea if they also stand for EU elections like this one), which have promised to "throw a party with the state money you get for every vote you receive" (IIRC you get 5€ per vote ... if you get someone elected).
I didnt check, but in a previous EU election there were FOUR DIFFERENT "animal rights parties", no idea how many were around this time.
to the last clip:
i think it might very well be possible for all of that to just cost 4€. I'd just assume, that it isn't fresh (freshly baked) anymore. so they rather sell it for cheap than to throw it away.
YOOO the buildings on the thumbnail are at the Schwarzwäder Hof campsite
me and my family went there very often