5 Things Germans Do That Make Them TOTALLY DIFFERENT From What Americans Imagine…🇩🇪

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  • Опубликовано: 2 авг 2024
  • After moving to Germany and living in Germany, we discovered that Germans of course don't match up to general German stereotypes that Americans have. Instead, we discovered that Germans have very interesting stereotypes of their own of what is "Typisch Deutsch" and they also stereotypically do many things that Americans have no idea about. 😊
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    ❤️Aubrey was a Speech-Language Pathologist and Donnie was a graphic designer, but we both had a dream to #travel the world and experience cultures. After three years of being married and dreaming about if something like this great adventure would be possible, we decided to quit the rat race and take on the world. We sold everything we had, quit our jobs, and took off! After 9 months of aimless and nonstop travel, we now get to fulfill our dreams of #LivingAbroad as #expats as we move to #Germany!
    00:00 - Intro
    1:33 - Thing 1
    5:47 - Thing 2
    7:58 - Thing 3
    10:10 - Thing 4
    12:16 - Thing 5
    15:22 - Bloopers

Комментарии • 379

  • @PassportTwo
    @PassportTwo  Год назад +9

    Hope you enjoyed this video! 😃 If so, you might want to check out these others we’ve done:
    German Police vs American Police Culture Shocks! 🇩🇪 - ruclips.net/video/JSIZTaeHXvc/видео.html
    The Alarming Differences Between American vs German Christianity - ruclips.net/video/bpoH3XZXpfk/видео.html
    How talking with a German is TOTALLY Different than talking to an American - ruclips.net/video/pEtTk5wzL-w/видео.html
    5 Shocking Differences Between American and German Coffee Culture - ruclips.net/video/nz8aT_4Xrhc/видео.html

    • @Sir_Mike
      @Sir_Mike Год назад

      Fat , stupid and Gun maniacs . Typical stereotypes xD

    • @janpracht6662
      @janpracht6662 Год назад

      "Alman" comes from the Turkish language (means German) and expresses what the Turks think of the Germans: Humorless, unkind, pedantic.

    • @grandmak.
      @grandmak. Год назад

      @@janpracht6662 that's what I figured so it's not really nice to use that term.

    • @rembrandt2323
      @rembrandt2323 Год назад

      Allemagne is FRENSH, so in different Lnguages we are called... DIFFERENTLY....

    • @shadesmarerik4112
      @shadesmarerik4112 Год назад

      dafuq? Never heard of Alman. ow wait.. its pronounced more like ollum, kinda like Gollum, by Turkish immigrants... now i know what u talking of...

  • @hxxxkxxx1129
    @hxxxkxxx1129 Год назад +37

    I think, the most German drink is apfelschorle. It actually happened to me a few times that I ordered apple juice and sparkling water somewhere in the world so that I can mix it myself and the waiter grinned at me and said: Ah German.

    • @FrancisWilhelmBlank
      @FrancisWilhelmBlank Год назад +2

      & KiBa (KirschBananensaft) = cherry banana juice 😊

    • @wombataldebaran9686
      @wombataldebaran9686 Год назад

      sparkling water with fruit juice. Herrlich :)

    • @Barbarossa125
      @Barbarossa125 11 месяцев назад +1

      I always order unsparkling water. 🙃

    • @gehtdianschasau8372
      @gehtdianschasau8372 7 месяцев назад

      @@FrancisWilhelmBlank You made that up because it sounds funny. My Favorit juice is Nussgurkensaft (nut cucumber juice).

  • @sacerdor7467
    @sacerdor7467 Год назад +10

    No, 16 is the correct answer. While Mallorca is perceived as a German Bundesland, Bavaria is perceived to not be in germany. So it evens out.

  • @laylahall18
    @laylahall18 Год назад +13

    I think one of the main reasons Germans are often mistaken for being blunt or rude is because German uses an incredible number of modal particles that other languages don't have. So foreigners don‘t understand the different emotions they transport.
    Another polite form ist using the Konjunktiv II - another grammar construction that is not easy to learn.

    • @sisuguillam5109
      @sisuguillam5109 Год назад

      Ooohhh... you might be up to something there!

    • @brinkiTOgo
      @brinkiTOgo Год назад

      What do you mean with modal particles? Or do you mean modal verbs used in polite language? Like "Kannst du mir das Buch geben?"

    • @laylahall18
      @laylahall18 Год назад +6

      @@brinkiTOgo German modal particles are small words that modify the mood and tone of a sentence, expressing the speaker's attitude, emotions, and intentions.
      Words like doch, ja, mal, halt, eben and so on.
      The meaning and usage of modal particles is very subtle and context-dependent. Their appropriate use adds nuance and authenticity to spoken German but might be challenging for language learners to grasp fully, because they can’t be translated literally. Mastery of modal particles comes with exposure to native German speakers and continued practice in real-life conversations.

  • @MrLuddis
    @MrLuddis Год назад +10

    Mallorca got EVERYTHING: flat sandy beaches as well as small rocky bays, a beautiful european-style capital as well as little villages, a vivid night life as well as the calm of the countryside, a marina for millionaires as well as cheap hotels for minimum wagers, small shops and farmer's markets as well as huge shopping malls, a little train from the 19th century as well as highways. You can pick what you want in Mallorca. All social classes can spend their holidays in Mallorca . The biggest advantage of Mallorca: 2 hours flight and you are in summer whereas in Germany it might be could and rainy.

  • @deliatedeschi
    @deliatedeschi Год назад +34

    That expression 'Alman' is totally new to me as a german...I always called these guys "Karl-Heinz" 😉

    • @AmarthwenNarmacil
      @AmarthwenNarmacil Год назад +9

      Or "Spiesser", I think.
      In Switzerland, we call those people "Bünzli". 😊

    • @Dueruemtarget
      @Dueruemtarget Год назад +10

      Alman is actually a pretty new word. I actually heard this word the first around 6 years ago. It was a word that was used definitely only by the youth at that time.

    • @schindze4238
      @schindze4238 Год назад +16

      Der richtige Name ist "Horst", dachte ich 🙂

    • @reiner1682
      @reiner1682 Год назад

      @@schindze4238 Das denke ich auch. Alman ist lediglich so ein Kinderhype, der es irgendwie in die "sozialen Medien" geschafft hat, und nun denken manche, dass sei Standard...

    • @deliatedeschi
      @deliatedeschi Год назад +3

      @@schindze4238 Horst finde ich auch 👍🏻

  • @ItsMeTexx
    @ItsMeTexx Год назад +20

    Small side note: the term "Alman" comes from the old germanic tribe Alemannen (also Alamannen) which lived in region south-west Germany/Switzerland around 300AD and before.
    It was a very, or one of the most influencing group of germanic people. The tribe (and their culture) was so new and influential to the romans during this time, when they conquered to the north/north-west, that the romans spreaded the name of this germanic tribe through the whole roman empire.
    Thats the reason why germans, or Germany, is called Alemanha in portuguese, Allemagne in french, Alemania in spanish, Almanya in turkish, and also in other languages.

    • @mikeenders7613
      @mikeenders7613 Месяц назад

      I thank you. I have just done some Google-ing as a result of your informative comment. There is now a theory that the Krugan people from the Ukrainian steppes may have been the ones who brought the language to Alemani.

  • @reinerjung1613
    @reinerjung1613 Год назад +52

    The nordic hiking poles are a rather new thing. People didn't use them everywhere 20 years ago. In the past people only used them when hiking. Nowadays nordic walking is a form of exercise and people walk with sticks everywhere.

    • @uriulrich4918
      @uriulrich4918 Год назад +10

      My 87 year old grandma uses them as canes, but doesn't want to use a cane because she doesn't want to look old or sick.

    • @reinerjung1613
      @reinerjung1613 Год назад +4

      @@uriulrich4918 my mom did that too. They give automatically them a more active look. 👍

    • @grandmak.
      @grandmak. Год назад

      @@uriulrich4918 I can fully understand that. I tried it myself but they don't give me enough support as opposed to crutches.

    • @manub.3847
      @manub.3847 Год назад +1

      Currently, the sticks ensure that you use your arms correctly when "walking" ;)
      At the moment you can also see more and more people with small weight dumbbells "walking"

    • @MsAaannaaa
      @MsAaannaaa Год назад +4

      Oh they’ve been popular 20 years ago already :)

  • @michaausleipzig
    @michaausleipzig Год назад +28

    Mallorca is such a beautiful and very spanish/catalan island if you manage to steer clear of the tourist infested areas! I've been there in November once and it was great! Nice warm weather but since it was off season it was also very quiet. And I was stunned by the beautiful mountainous landscape of the island. It's so much more than binge drinking to horrible "music" and getting sunburns!
    Nope, no tattoos. And it's gonna stay that way.

  • @Kivas_Fajo
    @Kivas_Fajo Год назад +13

    Regarding Germans complaining there is a Swabian saying about it, which sums it up pretty perfectly. ^^
    "Ned g'motzd, isch g'nug g'lobd."
    "Nicht gemeckert, ist genug gelobt."
    "Not complained is enough encouragement."
    Your "Not bad!" and our "Nicht schlecht!" differ somehow...;-)

    • @Cornu341
      @Cornu341 Год назад +3

      In this case I would exchange encouragement with praise. Encouragement is more needed during the task, not after completion.

    • @Kivas_Fajo
      @Kivas_Fajo Год назад

      @@Cornu341 "Thank You, Dr. Nog!" 🙃

  • @JonathanMandrake
    @JonathanMandrake Год назад +13

    One small note on the word Allmann: It stems from the ancient tribe of the Allemannen, living mostly in Baden-Württemberg and the Elsass, and coining a lot of city names around where I live. For example, the name of the city I live in is derived from an ancient allemanic family, name which started the settlement.

    • @brigittelacour5055
      @brigittelacour5055 Год назад +2

      German, Germany translate as allemand, Allemagne in french, from the allemanic tribes

    • @manub.3847
      @manub.3847 Год назад +1

      @@brigittelacour5055 and for the Nordic countries it becomes "Tyskland",
      while pretty much every Baltic country and eastern country has its own name for Germany.;)

    • @fairphoneuser9009
      @fairphoneuser9009 Год назад +2

      Alemannen live in Switzerland and Vorarlberg as well!

  • @sandrat3690
    @sandrat3690 Год назад +7

    The complaining about the weather is our way to make small talk 😂 Try it! Works beautifully with elderly people at least!

  • @ctlspl
    @ctlspl Год назад +5

    I thought the most famous travel destination was Balkonien. 😂

  • @MichaEl-rh1kv
    @MichaEl-rh1kv Год назад +6

    The "Alman" is the title the children of immigrants gave the kind of person formerly known as "Spiessbürger" (originally referring to the member of a vigilante group in a smaller town), since the 19th century also abbreviated to "Spiesser". "Alman" is actually Turkish for "German". In some regions also "Kartoffel" is used for the same stereotype, and "Couch Kartoffel" for the variety sitting the whole day on the couch before the TV and lamenting about the degeneration of the world. By the way: a racial slur against "white Germans" by Turkish people would be rather backfiring, because they are exactly as "white" (and frequently exactly as "German" regarding order and tidiness) as (most) other Germans.

  • @michaelmedlinger6399
    @michaelmedlinger6399 Год назад +7

    No tattoos, never been to Mallorca (and no desire to go there).
    I started Nordic walking about a year ago. According to what I have read, it was initially developed as a way for cross-country skiers in Finland and Scandinavia to train when there was no snow. There is actually a proper technique to it that takes a little while to learn. It's not just plopping those sticks down in any old way (although you will certainly see plenty of people who obviously don't know how to do this).
    You think Germans complain? The French even complain that the French are always complaining! And are likely to go on strike to give more emphasis to their complaining.

  • @LJJ22
    @LJJ22 Год назад +4

    Coffee is not from Germany, while 100s of beer types are brewed in German since centuries, so it makes sense. But a big cake festival would make sense and probably attract many people too.

  • @eisikater1584
    @eisikater1584 Год назад +5

    Coffee really is a staple item. When I run out of beer, not funny, but not really a problem. Running out of coffee, however, I can barely walk on my feet, drag myself into the car and say "KITT! Drive me to the next supermarket!" (Oh no, that was Knight Rider. I wanted to say "Alexa! Order me some coffee!")

  • @tenbroeck1958
    @tenbroeck1958 Год назад +7

    As an American of Nortwest German descent, my stereotype is more about being efficient, what some call cold, analytical, and direct. I did grow up in a German-American neighborhood on the East Coast, and was exposed to the more typical "Bavarian". I do have a sentimental attachment to all of that, but always envisaged myself as more of a Vulcan however. As a kid, my best friend and I were trying get into the Guinessbook of World Records for sitting on a swing. My friend was like "this sucks, bugs are bitting", and I was like a vicious task master: " Stop crying - you are weak!" "Don't you want to win?" It was sad, looking back.

  • @Anson_AKB
    @Anson_AKB Год назад +11

    we were on mallorca once, and it is a really interesting and pretty island ...
    IF you avoid going to the ballermann.
    rent a car instead and drive all around and across the other parts of the island.

  • @Dahrenhorst
    @Dahrenhorst Год назад +4

    Actually, the region in the World where the most tea is consumed, is also in Germany - in Ostfriesland - the north-west corner of Germany adjacent to the North Sea. Those people consume more tea per head than any other region in the World, including Japan, China or UK.

  • @svenimeier1172
    @svenimeier1172 Год назад +7

    Malle(german short for Mallorca) is not only popular with Germans but also people from the uk

    • @herb6677
      @herb6677 Год назад

      The UK people go there to meet the Germans and drink German beer.

    • @Andreas_42
      @Andreas_42 Год назад

      ​@@herb6677 And catching real nasty sunburns 😂

  • @Kotoamatsukami55
    @Kotoamatsukami55 Год назад +9

    Alman is the turkish word for german, the turks living in germany made it very popular so even the germans use it to discribe a stereotypical german😂

  • @ankebosing1968
    @ankebosing1968 Год назад +2

    I was never in Mallorca, I drink tea instead of coffee, and I have my dogs with me on my walks, so no walking poles.
    No tattoos.

  • @haraberu
    @haraberu Год назад +3

    Years ago, I went to Mallorca with my parents. Mom made sure to avoid the stereotypical Alman destinations... and we ended up in the middle of what I'd dubbed the "British occupation zone". Everything was catered to the kind of English tourists who would go on vacation to a foreign country, and go out for Fish & Chips for lunch every single day to avoid broadening their horizons too much. It was quite a surprise to see how many of the "stereotypically German" behaviors apply to other countries as well to some degree.

    • @Llortnerof
      @Llortnerof Год назад

      British occupation zone probably took quite the hit after the UK's little oopsie.

  • @tjb62
    @tjb62 Год назад +1

    I've lived over 42 years in northern Germany - specifically Hamburg, Baltic Coast, and Berlin. I have never heard "Alman" ever... in any context

  • @FrancisWilhelmBlank
    @FrancisWilhelmBlank Год назад +1

    From my knowledge, the term almans, how it is used today, was used by the third generation of Turkish migrants, living in Germany. The term saw the broader light of day, when comedians with a Turkish background used it more frequently. I personally think it's great, to showcase some of the German flaws and having the opportunity to have a deeper look into the mirror. I think it helps that the communities grow together. It's fanatic!

  • @butenbremer1965
    @butenbremer1965 Год назад +3

    I`ve never been to Mallorca and I don`t think I ever will (I'm 58 and GER). When traveling a foreign country, I always get annoyed by other Germans around me. Hearing a single German word while vacationing immediately wakes my flight instinct! 😳
    In order to receive a decent amount of relief from these dreary and dark winter days, a daylight bulb really is worth the investment (6,000 to 10,000 kelvin).

  • @pfalzgraf7527
    @pfalzgraf7527 Год назад +8

    I am very much a German. However, I am old fashioned, so I rather like the "Deutsche Michel", not so much the "Alman" who is a very young phenomenon.
    I do use hiking poles at times, but not often.
    And I have never been to "Malle" - and if I ever went, I'd certainly not go to Ballermann. There is a whole sub-group of Germans who really avoid adhering to the cliché - thereby becoming just as much typical German (I realize) as the cliché-abiding person is. I count myself a member of this group. Also, the weather-talk does get on my nerves. And no, I don't have any tattoos, and I don't believe I ever will.

    • @indrahx5905
      @indrahx5905 Год назад

      Very German myself and I have never heard the word alman in my life. I suppose that means I'm old. Probably.

    • @SentecaMorvan
      @SentecaMorvan Год назад

      ​@@indrahx5905 it came up very recently, or better, it became popular very recently. Similar to how the word "boomer" is a much more common slur nowadays

  • @LythaWausW
    @LythaWausW Год назад +1

    Complaining about the weather is Germany's small talk.

  • @MeZuMix
    @MeZuMix Год назад +3

    Additional questions: "Does anyone have a Mallorca tattoo?

  • @lanamack1558
    @lanamack1558 Год назад +5

    Herr Almann must be fairly young. I've never heard of him, but then I haven't been there for the past 18 years.

    • @Funaru
      @Funaru Год назад +2

      Yes the Alman concept is perhaps 10 years old, at least regarding mainstream usage.

    • @naneneunmalklug4032
      @naneneunmalklug4032 Год назад +2

      its a word borrowed from Turkish and was used as a weak insult among teens before we just owned it ;-)
      it simply means German in turkish language.

    • @Melisendre
      @Melisendre Год назад +3

      @@Funaru This is when I feel old. I'm german and never heard about this.

    • @Funaru
      @Funaru Год назад

      @@Melisendre It's mostly youth slang and used much more by people with a
      migration background.

  • @thorstenkoethe
    @thorstenkoethe Год назад +4

    Mallorca? Oh no, never went there! When I hear the name I think of groups of young men who leave the airplane drunken already, when they arrive on Thursday, and they are still drunken - a bit more - when they leave on Sunday evening.🍹🍸🍺 Or the typical German family who know nothing about Spain and who would like their German food abroad either.🏖
    I went to Ibiza in my mid twenties. Ibiza was - and I think still is - more party for young single people (without parents and family for sure!).😇
    Later I learned to love Lanzarote, one of the Canarian Islands. Meanwhile I went there for about ten times.

  • @ulrichschluter9120
    @ulrichschluter9120 Год назад +1

    Here are some more unique customs which we don't have in the US: Kehrwoche, Treppendienst und Schrebergarten. Don't know whether those still exist in Germany.

  • @franz1102
    @franz1102 Год назад +1

    Hello to everybody. As a 73 year old German (Bavarian), I´ve never heard about this Alman type, maybe some "ALEMAN" types maybe. I think the Alman is from the "Alemannen" a German tribe that fought the Romans since the romans existted, and the term Allemania is used often to mean Germans

  • @martinmuller183
    @martinmuller183 Год назад +1

    I never heard the term Alman other than mainly from Turkish youngsters. I still refer to Horst and Heike when describing a certain kind of German behaviour

  • @kn9250
    @kn9250 Год назад +1

    With my old roommates we used to have a board for giving Alman points to everyone, so the more points you got the more Alman you were (I got the most by far). Here’s some examples of what makes one an Alman in our book: brushing your teeth only in the bathroom, having a laundry day every week, complaining about Christmas items showing up at the stores in August, not being on time but being there like half an hour early, correcting people’s grammar, wearing rubber boots, proverbs, preparing the packing up process at the grocery checkout like a pro, putting up a key hanger by the door, wearing your backpack in the front

    • @I-come-from-the-Future
      @I-come-from-the-Future Год назад +1

      Sorry, but except the packing organizing at checkout (which makes sense if you want to put your stuff immediately into a bag, because bags cost money in Germany and there are no employees packing) I have not heard of any of the stuff you are mentioning, either not as typical anymore, or as never having been typical at all ... 🤔

    • @kn9250
      @kn9250 Год назад

      @@I-come-from-the-Future Not that I mean every aspect as literally as the next but even rethinking it, everything I mentioned is indeed things that would be considered especially German (at least at the places where my roommates and I come from, and we’re all German potatoes). Also, obviously we collected these things as a joke so please don’t take it all too seriously but with a grain of salt.

  • @ichselbst880
    @ichselbst880 3 месяца назад

    My wife is French and speaks english, spanish, and, of course, german an french. She was once on Mallorca with a german friend. Even when she spoke spanish (surely with some french accent) they replied in german !! So she never went back lack of feeling "spanish".

  • @Jannisspeer
    @Jannisspeer Год назад +1

    Why Mallorca?
    Because it is the only place where you speak German and still feel the vibe of being in a different country.

  • @user-qs1xz2mx6f
    @user-qs1xz2mx6f Год назад +2

    I'm actually in my 60th and as long as I live in Germany (born and brought up in Bavaria) I've never heard about "Alman" as an stereotype in any way. We have the expression of "deutscher Michl" or "Lieschen Müller". Maybe it is different between South and North.

    • @susa5846
      @susa5846 Год назад +5

      Alman is just a younger stereotype.

    • @sessyfan791
      @sessyfan791 Год назад +1

      Alman is used since around 5-8 years =)

  • @tomate3391
    @tomate3391 Год назад +2

    Referring to Mallorca you have to dinstinct between the party tourism - mainly to El Arenal and around - and the normal tourism o Mallorca.
    What happen at Mallorcas "Ballermann" is often something to "fremdschämen", but apart of this Mallorca is a very pretty island.

  • @MindControlUltra
    @MindControlUltra Год назад +1

    The complaining about the weather is our smalltalk! So we love the smalltalk and you didn't realize the differnce between am. ST and german ST ;-)

  • @einhochaufdieneugier2275
    @einhochaufdieneugier2275 15 дней назад

    People in Saxony that particularly enjoy afternoon coffee and cake are referred to as 'Coffee Saxons' by their fellow Saxons.

  • @all_in_for_JESUS
    @all_in_for_JESUS Год назад +3

    I've been to Mallorca 7 times but I've been to Ibiza / Formentera 21 times. You need to check it out sometime.

    • @Miristzuheiss
      @Miristzuheiss Год назад

      Einmal Mallorca, nie wieder. Aber 17 mal auf Ibiza, immer wieder

  • @spfisterer3651
    @spfisterer3651 Год назад +2

    The whole Alman thing is new to me, never heard of that outside of history lessons at school. But then you talked about getting you info from tiktok and insta.. Well, that explains it then 😂

    • @johaquila
      @johaquila Год назад

      It's basically big city youth culture, although it's gradually spreading now.

  • @herbertgonswa3503
    @herbertgonswa3503 Год назад

    The thing with tatoos is, when you are twenty you can tatoo a proud frigate with blown up sails in the wind and when you get 70 it`s a wreck with rags and you are toxic waste in case of the ink.

  • @sakkra83
    @sakkra83 Год назад

    Fun Fact: Nordic Walkers have a nickname: "Stockenten". Stock := stick, Ente:= duck.

  • @peterdonecker6924
    @peterdonecker6924 Год назад +7

    Great Video, Donny. I was lmao, especially about lamenting/complaining. 😂 It's so true, we are the best in complaining on each and everything. If we don't, we are potentially sick😂 The typical "Alman" complains mostly about how bad living in Germany is although he knows that he lives in one of the best countries in earth. We call it lamenting on high level😅

    • @MarsOhr
      @MarsOhr Год назад

      Ich muß mich über Ihren Kommentar beschweren! Lesen Sie doch mal CJ Hopkins, Herr Donecker.

  • @mikeenders7613
    @mikeenders7613 Месяц назад

    Walking with sticks or poles gives the illusion shortening the distance that one is covering.

  • @Mamaki1987
    @Mamaki1987 Год назад +5

    Oh, Mallorca is a beautiful place as long as you don't go during June, July and August. I have been to Mallorca a few times since I have family there. If you like mountains and the sea, it is the right place for you. BUT is is not the 17th state ... yet. Still fighting the British for this island. 😛. No, I don't have any tatoos nor do I planning ever getting one.

    • @HalfEye79
      @HalfEye79 Год назад

      For most people Mallorca an excuse to get drunk for many days in a row. But I don't know for sure, as I never were there.

    • @Kokuswolf
      @Kokuswolf Год назад

      We went there in March, to the sunny island of Mallorca. We only had rain and storms. Our small hotel's solar panels couldn't get enough energy, causing blackouts. The evening news from Germany (Tagesschau) had reported about us as a top story and showed beautiful weather from home and how Mallorca was sinking. Only the second story was about the burning Notre-Dame. (This holiday it was like home, while home was not like home.)

  • @christinehorsley
    @christinehorsley Год назад +3

    Never ever heard the term “Alman” or “Allman” applied to a stereotypical German.
    Though I live in Swabia, where the Germanic tribes of the “Alemannen” were rampant in Roman times.
    Deutscher Michel however is a well known expression.
    I know many a “Karin”, most of them middle aged, it’s hasn’t been amongst the favorite girls names in the last decades - but I’ve never heard that it means a woman who yells for the manager 🤔
    Never been to Mallorca. Or anywhere south of the north Italian Lakes, except for the Côté d’Azur.
    No tattoos, never.

    • @karinland8533
      @karinland8533 Год назад

      The Karen is an US phenomenon

    • @christinehorsley
      @christinehorsley Год назад

      @@karinland8533
      Maybe this is also a somewhat recent phenomenon ? I left the USA end of 1989, and had never heard that, not during visits either, the last one which was in 2018.
      Maybe stemming from a TV show ?

    • @karinland8533
      @karinland8533 Год назад

      @@christinehorsley yes, very resent. I heard it the first time during covid and women denieing to wear masks. But probably ‘speaking to the manager‘ might have been earlier. You might be able to google about it

  • @knudsandbknielsen1612
    @knudsandbknielsen1612 Год назад

    Ever noticed that "times itself" is three syllables,
    and "to the power of X" is at least twice the number?

  • @supsup335
    @supsup335 Год назад +1

    Conceening mallorca: forvet the ballermann, visit the central island kr the north (the two places i've been to). Beautiful, calm, and a hiking paradise. Especially up in the coast mountains around alcudia.

  • @michaelkloters3454
    @michaelkloters3454 Год назад

    Thx Ronnie, You always Make me laughing about us! best regards tos the nice - and the short one

  • @gastonkawitzke3272
    @gastonkawitzke3272 Год назад

    There Was an old man, walking in a circle for hours and hours. What happened? He lost his second hiking pole😂😂😂😂

  • @hatvielehobbies
    @hatvielehobbies Год назад +2

    If Germans complain there is nothing wrong. You should be concerned when they stop complaining. We say barking dogs don't bite.

  • @MrTomTeachesAgain
    @MrTomTeachesAgain Год назад

    Random question: 7. Wolf and hawk on chest, circle/triangle upper ab, Celtic circle and chaos symbol on upper arms, dragon on 2/3 back, and wolf paw on hip!

  • @ramona146
    @ramona146 Год назад

    A biiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiig thank you ❤❤❤for exlaining that what most people think is germany culture actually is just bavarian culture. I'm from the North and we have a very different culture of which we are very proud of and for most of us it's so frustrating always to be referred to as bavarians.

  • @robfriedrich2822
    @robfriedrich2822 Год назад

    What kind of music may be at an coffee and cake October Festival?

  • @christianebehr138
    @christianebehr138 5 месяцев назад

    Love your Videos , I have been to Mallorca 1.😊

  • @hanna_ivanchenko
    @hanna_ivanchenko Год назад +2

    Well I'm Ukrainian living in Germany for not so long and I've never heard of Mayorka! I should derinitely add it to my list

    • @seanthiar
      @seanthiar Год назад

      That is maybe because it is spelled Mallorca and many pronounce it that way and not 'Mayorka' like they should. Often they just say 'Ich war auf Malle" o. 'Ich war in Palma' (main city on the island)

    • @sisuguillam5109
      @sisuguillam5109 Год назад

      Viel Spaß!

  • @helge.
    @helge. Год назад +2

    I would like to complain about the video but I have not enough time to do so, what is really dissatisfying to have to focus so much on ones daily chores so much. Then there is this dreadful weather outside that doesn’t help either and I really think there is no real summer anymore in our time… 😉

  • @RakkiOfficial
    @RakkiOfficial Год назад +1

    I bet Tchibo the coffee store you mean, so I'll recommend you the youtube video: "Tchibo, Geschichte einer Idee| Karambolage| Arte" you're welcome :)

  • @MyriamSchweingruber
    @MyriamSchweingruber Год назад +2

    "Alman" is not at all a racial slur but more the embodiment of the stereotypical German who is inflexible, rule-obsessed and basically incapable of adapting to changes. "Das haben wir immer so gemacht" is what you are very likely to hear from them, and "Wo kämen wir denn da hin". Inflexibility is the main problem Germany has when it comes to changes, and that can be attributed to the Almans.Did I mention the Alman is complaining about everything?
    My tattoo is on my right shoulder

  • @Maria-js9ou
    @Maria-js9ou Год назад +1

    I´ve been to Mallorca four times, the last and FINAL one in 2016. I´ll NEVER go back to Mallorca. Why ? Low cost destination, lots of sun and beer tourists, drunks from morning to night, overcrowded beaches, not a single cm2 without urbanization! And on top of the cake, the Mallorcans who work in hospitality, fed up with so much tourist, are rude and not at all hospitable!

  • @onceagainvideos
    @onceagainvideos Год назад

    No tattoos. Well I used to, but for 20 times the cost of getting them, I had them removed.

  • @AdZS848
    @AdZS848 Год назад

    Malle!! They even have Karneval songs that mention Mallorca.
    No tattoos

  • @thomasd5
    @thomasd5 11 месяцев назад

    I have been living in Germany for more than 67.5 years. And I never heard the word "Alman" all my life. What I know is the word "Alemania" which is Spanish for "Germany", since I spent a lot of summer vacations in Spain since my early childhood, or "Almanya", which is the same in the Turkish Language.
    The only thing I heard in German is "Alemannische Fasnacht", which is a traditional way of carnival only known in south-western areas of Germany like Schwaben and the Black Forrest.
    And btw: Though I'm German, I never drink beer or any other alcohol, and coffee only if I drive all day and in big parts of the night without any break, in order not to fall asleep, and it's not something I enjoy drinking. So I'm probably not a typical German.
    And though I do not regularly go to Mallorca, I can't count how often I was there. But I remember in 1972 or 73 I made friends with a boy from San Francisco there, and we became pen-pals for some years (there was no internet at that time), before the contact faded away.
    The funny thing is, if I look in my old address books, I often find people, which I can't remember, though the name sounds familiar. But the name and address of that boy, which I didn't write down, I still remember after 50 years.

  • @amandaziccatti6195
    @amandaziccatti6195 Год назад +7

    I have been to Mallorca twice, but not to the Ballermann. And it was really nice. The island has really beautiful beaches and nature and many cultural sites that are worth to explore. But I wouldn’t say that Mallorca is my favorite travel destination in Europe. Nonetheless it’s nice for a short holiday trip. 😄
    Germans don’t only complain about the weather, they also blame the weather for everything that went wrong in life. Like for example when you have a migraine people will tell you that you have that because of the bad weather and that it’ll get better once the weather changes. 😁

  • @meine-lieblinge
    @meine-lieblinge Год назад +2

    I never heard of "Alman", I hate Beer and Coffe (not just dislike it), have never been to Mallorca (nor do I want to) and I wouldn't use Nordic Walking Sticks, if I got payed for it. Also bin ich wohl keine typische Deutsche.
    Aber dafür habe ich ein Tattoo 😊

  • @Gleiswanderer
    @Gleiswanderer Год назад +1

    Maybe you should check out "Deutscher Michel" or "Michael the German" for more "internal" Stereotypes especially when it come to the relation germans and its politics. He even has its own wikipedia articel, as it is one of the most comon caricatures of "the" german.

    • @pandora2418
      @pandora2418 Год назад

      yup, second that. "Deutscher Michel" and Horst or Heinz are the more prevalent ones. Also see Karin Mustermann. But the Deutsche Michel is the most prevalent one.

  • @RitaS0831
    @RitaS0831 Год назад

    When I was studying German, Germans were always going on vacation in Mallorca in the lessons. Never heard of it before.

  • @uschil228
    @uschil228 Год назад +1

    Compared to my home Vienna Austria the german complaining looks like beginners :D. And about Mallorca. Many germans love it because of the "Ballermann" which is a party beach. It's like après ski on the beach. I went to Mallorca a few years ago, and let me tell you. If you avoid the ballermann, Mallorca is one of the most beautiful destinations I have ever been to (and I travel around the world a lot). So I say: go there and enjoy, but leave out the Ballermann beach.

    • @thatguy8869
      @thatguy8869 Год назад

      A stereotype I heard was in vogue prior to Wprld War 1 is, in Berlin everything is serious but nothing was hopeless. In Vienna nothing was serious and everything was hopeless. Did or does this have any truth?

  • @minas.831
    @minas.831 Год назад

    I’m German and I go by Mina instead of my long German name cause no one even bothers to try to sound out long German words. I’m Bayern And Asian so I feel like we get made fun of all the time but our culture it’s so beautiful. We have fika, trachten, and all the very stereotypical dresses, we make really good bread too. We also will never turn heat up in the house and like joking. At the same time we are loud. The Spanish word alemania I feel is more like a western image of Germany rather than an eastern German thing.

  • @birgitschuster3361
    @birgitschuster3361 Год назад

    No Tatoos. Apropos complaining about the weather: I once had a short-term job in the maintenace of park areas of our town. We had a very hot month of july in that year and of course everyone, including myself, complained about the heat for working all day under the blazing sun was really exhausting. Then the month of august came and the weather turned rainy and much cooler. Can't tell you how relieved I felt about that. But guess what? My colleagues almost immediately startet to complain about the weather again, now about the rain. This I really coudn't understand.

  • @lumina9995
    @lumina9995 Год назад +1

    Actually I would say that Alman is a pejorative or derisive name that Turks living in Germany have coined, similar to "Kartoffel". Germans using in are brown-nosers imho. And it is not used much at all.

  • @user-gk1gu2fs4p
    @user-gk1gu2fs4p Год назад

    Not only Germans spend their holidays on mediterranen beaches, all northerners do. So you will also find destinations where only Brits holiday, like Benidorm or Malia/Crete. Dutch are between ballermann 1 and 3. The French also go to beaches, but never leave their country and stay in their native Côte d’Azur.
    Have been to all balearic islands. Menorca is for families with samll kids, Ibiza for party- and disco-goers and Mallorca for all. Most popular destination is still tha adreatic coast of Italy, which is the nearest and conveniently reachable by car.

  • @martinbruhn5274
    @martinbruhn5274 Год назад

    Well, part of Rheinland-Pfalz used to be bavarian in the pre war time.

  • @picobello99
    @picobello99 Год назад

    Here in the Netherlands instead of the Alman we have the ANWB-koppel 😂
    Also, everybody goes to Ibiza rather than Mallorca.

  • @ebenerzdrache1584
    @ebenerzdrache1584 Год назад

    You can either look cool with socks and sandals, or you can look like your uncle with socks and sandals. It's up to you.

  • @MaiLie1962
    @MaiLie1962 Год назад

    i`m a german since 60 years and I never ever heard about the " Alman" before!

  • @tobimahoni218
    @tobimahoni218 Год назад

    How offen Mallorca? 15-20 times. Lived there for 3 Month Last year, too.

  • @martinbruhn5274
    @martinbruhn5274 Год назад

    I habe been to Mallorca, not a single time. I'm from the south west of Germany and here, we either go to the lake constance region as our go to destination, or we leave the state to drive just across the alps to go to lake Garda in Italy.

  • @wjhann4836
    @wjhann4836 Год назад

    Mallorca: Well in my youth I stood most summer holidays in Germany. In former times that was not nice since weather was bad during early summer.
    So people wanted to have sunny warm holidays - finding it in the Mediterranean.
    So Spain, Italy and Greek have been a long time favorite holiday destinations. Remember - also 1973 I got some 21 days of (as a young man).

  • @indrahx5905
    @indrahx5905 Год назад

    I'm German and never heard anyone say the word Alman before. Never. To my understanding there also is no equivalent to the American "Karen" - I simply use Karen as well, that's starting to get more common.

  • @bainwen6630
    @bainwen6630 Год назад

    German here, who wasn't ever in Mallorca, and doesn't drink beer or coffee.....i don't like outdoors. Perhaps I should move elsewere...but i am direct and punctual...so there is hope.

  • @neilfromcork
    @neilfromcork Год назад

    There's some great hiking in Mallorca. With or without nordic poles! 😊
    (No tattoos)

  • @kilikoe
    @kilikoe Год назад

    Two times nope: never been to Mallorca and no tattoo...I'm starting to feel a little bit like the odd one 😂

  • @Bioshyn
    @Bioshyn Год назад

    Mallorca is like Cancun or Daytona Beach during spring break

  • @JuttaandWolly
    @JuttaandWolly Год назад +3

    No tattoos - but the weather could be better 😅

  • @derlaurenz
    @derlaurenz Год назад +1

    I would even goes as far as saying that complaining is form of therapy ... it's good to sometimes just let it out, knowing you're not the only one having bad thoughts about things. And also, I personally wouldn't take a complaint tooo seriously, it's often a good conversation starter even XD XD XD I know, that sounds a little twisted, but I like my Germans a little grumpy

  • @mogon721
    @mogon721 Год назад +1

    You are absolutely right, Germany is diverse even within its own German ethnicities, not to speak of an overall diversity through migration, which by the way is nothing new for Germany and has been a thing for many centuries, even from Roman times on. Those who deny that do it on purpose and with an agenda. The influence through direct and indirect migration to and from our neighbors (and you probably know that even today, Germany is among the countries with the most neighbors, but the only one of them that is actually not huge like Russia or China) has been part of German identity since its ancient beginnings.
    I'm a native from Mainz. In my whole life, I've never drunk a beer. I even hate the smell. Same with coffee. I drink tea with cream. Occasionally, I drink a glass of wine, but that's it.
    I've also never been to Mallorca, and for me, the motivation to travel is NOT to experience the same as at home. Otherwise, I could just stay here.
    Complaining is the other side of perfectionism. If you are content with a glass half full, that'S fine, but if you don't see that it is half empty, where is the impulse to make it better, i.e. full?
    The thing with Mallorca is that when mass travel by air took off in the 70s, Mallorca was one of the closest and cheapest destinations for beach vacations. Thus, it also was labeled "Putzfraueninsel", island for the cleaning ladies, because it was flooded with lower class people who, for the first time, could afford a beach vacation. Later, this morphed into cheap binge drinking on the beach, an image Mallorca has tried to come away from for years. That's where the Ballermann thing originated from, derived from a beach section with a name that sounded like "Ballermann" for the Germans who didn't know Spanish. Would have to look up the actual name, but it really doesn't matter, does it...
    I've never heard of the term Alman, and while it may be a word used in some milieus, it's certainly not as widely used as others. There are better examples already named by other commenters, the most fitting one probably being "Spießer".
    Take care!

  • @gwahli9620
    @gwahli9620 Год назад +1

    Complaining is not only our national past time, I'd say it's the German version of small talk.

  • @sevenfifteen
    @sevenfifteen Год назад

    You obviously never where living for more than a few days in Norddeutschland. We not only don't complain about the weather, we actually say, "es gibt kein schlechtes Wetter, nur falsche Kleidung." xD

  • @LaureninGermany
    @LaureninGermany Год назад +3

    No, I don’t, cheeky! (But I am thinking about it…)
    I liked this a lot, Donnie! I had not heard of the Allman. I have always heard Deutsche Michel, or der Hausmeister, but I wonder if that’s different?
    I’m kind of on a mission to be an antidote to the meckern. We have soooo much to be grateful for here.
    Btw, my Northern Lights trip is looking good! Maybe even this year!

    • @shahlabadel8628
      @shahlabadel8628 Год назад +1

      no more videos of your own??what happened?

    • @LaureninGermany
      @LaureninGermany Год назад +1

      @@shahlabadel8628 editing right now! Next upload on Sunday. I was on tour, and then I was ill… but I‘m back now, thank you for asking!

    • @shahlabadel8628
      @shahlabadel8628 Год назад +1

      good! looking forward to Sunday'.hope you feel better.

    • @LaureninGermany
      @LaureninGermany Год назад +1

      @@shahlabadel8628 thank you so much! Yes, I´m well again, thank goodness! Loads to show you!

  • @MegaJK97
    @MegaJK97 Год назад +1

    I think the complaining has something to do with our devotion, our strive for efficiency and improvement. And if you complain, you often are critiquing something. You're pointing out the negatives so that they can be improved upon.
    Sure, some of us do complaining as a hobby, but one of the most German compliments is "Kann man nicht meckern" - can't complain.

  • @joligrunlaub3412
    @joligrunlaub3412 Год назад

    Mallorca wurde in den 60 er Jahren von den Deutschen als Urlaubsziel entdeckt. Genauso wie Italien in den 50ern. Es war relativ nah, sehr schön und vor allem extrem preiswert. Mallorca wurde daher auch als die Putzfraueninsel bezeichnet. Der langfristige Erfolg basierte auf der Schönheit und Vielfalt der Insel und den sehr gastfreundlichen Spaniern, die eine erstaunliche Sprachbegabung an den Tag legten. Deutsche konnten damals, genau wie viele andere Länder in Europa nur ihre eigene Sprache. Auf Mallorca kein Problem. Ich. glaube man kommt mit dem Flieger öfter am Tag nach Mallorca als in irgendein anderes Land.😊

  • @hertelantje
    @hertelantje Год назад

    No, I’ve not been to Mallorca. Not planning to either. There are so many places in the world that seem more appealing.

  • @SilverSmrfr
    @SilverSmrfr Год назад

    Have been to Mallorca over 20 times but never to the Ballermann or similar things. I fucking despise Schlager, but Mallorca has a lot more to offer. Good food, very nice people and a beautiful landscape, especially the North and East imo.

  • @ErikMuellerGermany
    @ErikMuellerGermany Год назад

    Complaining:
    Yes, I am German
    Complaining about the weather:
    We have here in Germany always TOO-Weather.
    It is too cold
    too hot
    too wet
    too dry
    too humid
    too windy
    too snummy
    Too snummy? What the heck is snummy? 😂🤣🙃
    Who cares, it is TOO(!) snummy!
    You have to have to complain about something! 😎😎
    I love this video!
    btw: I don't have any tattoos.

  • @franhunne8929
    @franhunne8929 Год назад

    No, I have not been to Mallorca.
    The only tattoo I have are my blood tattoos, when my tom(cat) scratches me, that little rascal (said in a very loving way) - and they are not permanent