We need to talk about THIS German state!

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  • Опубликовано: 22 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 1,1 тыс.

  • @FelifromGermany
    @FelifromGermany  2 года назад +106

    What did you think of the episode? And who of you knew what Baden-Württemberg was before? 🙋‍♀😅
    Check out the rest of the web series here ▸bit.ly/THELAEND_FeliFromGermany and visit ▸www.thelaend.de/en/ for more information about Baden-Württemberg, career opportunities, and more! (German version under ▸www.thelaend.de)

    • @alroth6308
      @alroth6308 2 года назад +2

      very entertaining

    • @rickloveman1135
      @rickloveman1135 2 года назад +3

      This was excellent. I hope you are getting some money for this.

    • @techguy943
      @techguy943 2 года назад

      A few of those pics give me Pokémon game vibes and the Pokémon company might eventually make a region inspired by Germany
      The current generation Pokémon Scarlet and Violet are inspired by Spain
      Also I might have recently thought of a competing hardware and software based cloud storage business and I believe a domain name is available for it the last time I checked

    • @jancatperson8329
      @jancatperson8329 2 года назад +7

      I had definitely heard of Baden-Wurttemberg because my great-grandfather was born there. Doing genealogical research, I’ve seen birth, marriage, and death records going back into the 1700s and have checked out maps of the area to get a feel for where it was.
      My ancestors were from the Freiburg area, but in the 1870s moved across the river to Alsace-Lorraine after the French ceded that region to Germany as spoils of war. Then my immediate ancestors moved to the USA before the end of the century.
      Anyway, I’m very happy to see this little video on the land of my ancestors. Maybe some of the actors are my cousins!

    • @boballmendinger3799
      @boballmendinger3799 2 года назад +1

      I'm curious if Ohio's transition to being the new silicon valley will have any effect on their campaign. Where I grew up, in western PA, we lived near Fryburg, which was settled by German immigrants. St Michael's Roman Catholic church was modeled after the Freiburg cathedral, and was gifted a piece of stone from the cathedral, when it was remodeled.

  • @lisamirako1073
    @lisamirako1073 2 года назад +423

    The campaign "The Länd" does not refer to the general term "BundesLAND", but to the special Swabian-Alemannic pet name for Baden-Württemberg "Das Ländle". The idea of "The Länd" is to simultaneously tie in with this dialect designation and give it an international touch.

    • @haroldzentner2663
      @haroldzentner2663 Год назад +10

      Actually that is also a problem because it disregards the main part of the state - Baden. The Stuttgarter consider das Ländle to exist only in Württemberg

    • @Gadavillers-Panoir
      @Gadavillers-Panoir Год назад +2

      And why should we trust you over Felix?

    • @aphextwin5712
      @aphextwin5712 Год назад +7

      @@Gadavillers-PanoirVery likely because lisamirako is actually from Baden-Württemberg.

    • @michaeldautel7568
      @michaeldautel7568 Год назад +2

      @@aphextwin5712Wuertemberg was a state before it was combined with Baden. As late as 1967🤔

    • @alexanderschiller7720
      @alexanderschiller7720 Год назад +11

      @@michaeldautel7568 nice try, but Baden-Württemberg was formed in 1952 of the former states Württemberg, Baden and Württemberg-Hohenzollern.
      I wonder where you got the 1967 from.

  • @lewissanchez9884
    @lewissanchez9884 Час назад +1

    I was stationed in kornwestheim, and ludwigsburg Germany. Back in June of 1972 to March of 1974.it was in the state of baden wurttemburg.

  • @grappydingus
    @grappydingus Год назад +172

    A series on the German states from, Feli? Yes, please!

    • @MrJlin1982
      @MrJlin1982 Год назад +4

      @michaelrichmond, Germany is very diverse like France for example. The regions in bündeslander as the bündeslander itself. Some part of Germany is even part of Scandinavia. A lot of people even don't know this. Another thing. The are even ruined monastaries like in England or vulkanic soil and sleeping vulcans in the Eifel-region. The Eifel is in two bündeslander: Northrhineland-Westphalia and Rhineland-Palentine

    • @steveOCalley
      @steveOCalley Год назад +1

      Stir a little history into the pot! Have you seen “Goodbye Lenin?” It’s now 30 years old. Tell us about die Ossies und Wessis! Is it still so?

    • @donkeysaurusrex7881
      @donkeysaurusrex7881 Год назад

      @@MrJlin1982 Schleswig-Holstein?

    • @MrJlin1982
      @MrJlin1982 Год назад +3

      @@donkeysaurusrex7881 the Sleswig part is above the river Ejder part of Scandinavia

    • @YodasTinyLightsaber
      @YodasTinyLightsaber Год назад +1

      Oooo, that one could be a real hoot. Imagine a bunch of Yankees doing a video on Texans or the South.

  • @kimrothe
    @kimrothe Год назад +37

    When my husband was in the US Army, we were stationed in Germany twice. Our first time he was in Karlsruhe and we lived in Kieselbronn near Pfortzheim (I probably spelled that wrong), and we went to Stuttgart to the military base there for medical care and for shopping. We were there for 4 years, from 1985 until 1989. Our second time we were in Mannheim, and my younger daughter was born at the American hospital in Heidelberg. We lived there for 3 years, from 1994 until 1997. We loved our time in Germany, and spent time going on volksmarches and touring castles and ruins, and going to local festivals. We went camping at Berchtestgaden (spelling?), spent time sightseeing in Munich, and lots of smaller cities along the way. We have many fun memories from our time in Baden-Wurttemberg and Bavaria. Some day we hope to go back and visit again, maybe do a family vacation with our 3 adult children and show our daughter where she was born.

    • @Dadadin
      @Dadadin Год назад +1

      Karlsruhe here :) and my uncle was stationed here too, in the 70ies i think, then married my aunt and in the early 80ies they moved back to Michigan :)

  • @Cowboy-in-a-Pink-Stetson
    @Cowboy-in-a-Pink-Stetson 2 года назад +42

    06:14 "let's boil the ocean" ! German humor is soooo underrated. I have watched all the series of B, B, B-W and love them.
    You have to take the whole thing with a massive pinch of salt but the message is very clear.
    Your review of this 'informercial' is excellent, thanks Feli.

  • @vickieliupakka2975
    @vickieliupakka2975 2 года назад +86

    I have my youngest son in the Army in Vilsec for the past 3 years and he married a German girl a few months ago…we got to meet her when they came to visit this past summer and my youngest daughter has been there for a year at Ramstein AFB…she’s engages to a super sweet German Police officer. So I’m curious about your culture. I will be visiting in the summer meeting the in-laws ❤🇺🇸🇩🇪

    • @winterlinde5395
      @winterlinde5395 2 года назад +8

      Wow! You are a very international family, now! And Feli is one of the best RUclips people I know who can teach you about our culture.
      I hope you have a great summer ahead!!!

    • @deutschmitpurple2918
      @deutschmitpurple2918 2 года назад +3

      Great 😊😊😊

    • @korinasmith8602
      @korinasmith8602 Год назад +1

      I'm from Ramstein-Miesenbach
      You'll love it. Some amazing food and awesome people.

    • @Dark1984Knight
      @Dark1984Knight Год назад +1

      @Vickie Liupakka
      So you are coming next summer to my area ^^ One thing I can hint you at beforehand... summers got a little hotter over here due to global warming and keep in mind most places in germany dont have aircon. So if you react sensible to temperatures over 30 Celsius you should definitely talk with your son and develop a solution for your stay beforehand. Cause the heat CAN be a real kicker. I dont want to worry you with that, its just something to think about and find a solution beforehand so you dont suffer from the heat if its too warm for you. I am 38 years old and sometimes the summer heat feels really ugly for me and I wish I had an aircon.

    • @saudmubarak1876
      @saudmubarak1876 Год назад

      Americans are 10x worse then Germans. She is DUMM

  • @jffste6149
    @jffste6149 Год назад +4

    my family immigrated in the 1860s from Baden-Württemberg to Cincinnati. very cool, thank you.

    • @skizeey22
      @skizeey22 2 месяца назад

      @@jffste6149 maybe you should come back here?😏😂 jk but do you know from which city your family came?

  • @Axemantitan
    @Axemantitan Год назад +21

    I spent a month in Schwäbisch Hall studying at the Goethe Institut. It is a beautiful little town and very welcoming to foreigners.

  • @matthewpulliam7473
    @matthewpulliam7473 2 года назад +41

    I spent some time in Stuttgart when I worked for Bosch. I always felt welcome and would move there in a heartbeat if my family situation allowed for it. Thanks for a fun video!

  • @MahmoudHamdy-wc9pg
    @MahmoudHamdy-wc9pg Год назад +2

    I am really happy that I came across your video
    I am coming Baden württemberg soon for a master’s degree in the technology field and your video made me more excited

  • @YCWIT
    @YCWIT 2 года назад +115

    I‘m actually doing my masters degree in BW right now, enjoying it a lot! The Swabian dialect is definitely tough though! Certainly considering staying, the business opportunities are no joke. Plus, I’m hoping to be good enough in German to look at German jobs too!

    • @kilsestoffel3690
      @kilsestoffel3690 2 года назад +20

      The Swabian dialect is tough even for germans.

    • @deutschmitpurple2918
      @deutschmitpurple2918 2 года назад +1

      ❤️🥰❤️🥰

    • @dasmaurerle4347
      @dasmaurerle4347 2 года назад +1

      @@kilsestoffel3690 joo jetzt...😂👍

    •  2 года назад +3

      @@kilsestoffel3690 Nah, it's not that hard (depending on where in Swabia you are ;-)). Granted, I'm from "The Länd", but from the northern part of Baden (or rather, Kurpfalz, the Heidelberg/Mannheim region)

    • @GetRidOfCivilAssetForfeiture
      @GetRidOfCivilAssetForfeiture 2 года назад +5

      When I worked in Ueberlingen Am Bodensee, I found the dialect a bit hard at first but picked it up well enough that not only did Germans not believe me when I told them I was an American but a friend from Hamburg said that while my German was good he had a hard time understanding me due to my thick accent. Also, many of how they pronounced certain words was similar to Yiddish so that made it a little easier to pick up.
      Then I visited a friend in Bern and I was lost. So much French influence made their dialect difficult to understand.

  • @pigoff123
    @pigoff123 11 месяцев назад +2

    I flew into Stuttgart 1-3 times a year because my mother lived by Esslingen. I was raised in Hessen though.

  • @lelandunruh7896
    @lelandunruh7896 Год назад +11

    My wife is from a Swiss village about 27km (17 miles) from the border with Baden-Württemberg, and went to school a literal 10-minute walk from Konstanz. I've thus spent a lot of time in Baden-Württemberg, as groceries are WAY cheaper than in Switzerland, but also just visiting places and eating delicious kebabs. If any of y'all ever have a chance to visit Lake Constance/Bodensee and the area around Konstanz, do it!

    • @kathyannpardi9888
      @kathyannpardi9888 11 месяцев назад +1

      We went camping on Lake Constance (Swiss side) in 1969.

    • @kellbean89
      @kellbean89 9 месяцев назад +1

      I did a school exchange with someone from Konstanz and through the years we have met up again a few times - I was lucky enough to get an honorary sister for life :)
      The Bodensee is very picturesque, curiously we went over to get groceries from Switzerland as the family found it cheaper 😅

  • @vladtepes481
    @vladtepes481 Год назад +43

    My maternal grandmother was born in Württemberg before the present state was formed. She came to the US at the very beginning of the 20th century. I have photos of relatives in Imperial German Uniforms. (Württemberg regiments) My son spent a summer at the University of Freiburg and met my mother's cousin. He was the only one to return to his village from WWII. I have visited a number of cities in Baden-Württemberg as well. An Interesting presentation, indeed.

    • @kathyannpardi9888
      @kathyannpardi9888 11 месяцев назад

      My Great Grandfather came from Wurttemberg in 1850's .

  • @brianmccarthy5557
    @brianmccarthy5557 Год назад +7

    My great grandfather was sent with his brothers as teenagers to America from Stuttgart in the early 1890's to escape the anti-Catholic persecution of the Kulturkampf. He was very proud of being Schwabian. I've been lucky enough to have visited Baden-Wurtemmburg several times and picked up a little Swabisch dialect to supplement my German. It is both a beautiful and interesting area for tourists. After two world wars I have never been able to find any living relatives there..

  • @pillmuncher67
    @pillmuncher67 Год назад +89

    Fun Fact: The German name Horst comes from the Latin name Horestes, which in turn comes from the Greek name Orestes. He was the son of Agamemnon and Clytemnestra.

    • @pitpatify
      @pitpatify Год назад +3

      Wikipedia disagrees: "Der älteste Beleg für den Namen Horst stammt aus der niederdeutschen „Weltchronik“ des Dietrich Engelhus aus dem Jahr 1424;[1] dort wird der angelsächsische Heerführer Horsa so genannt. Ob es sich dabei um eine Angleichung an den Namen seines Bruders Hengist („Hengst“) handelt oder aber an das althochdeutsche hurst („Horst“ im Sinne von „Gebüsch, Gestrüpp, Hecke, Wald“), ist unklar."

    • @pillmuncher67
      @pillmuncher67 Год назад +1

      @@pitpatify I was raised Catholic, and in my family name days were as important as birthdays. St. Orestes died in 304 AD. His feastday is November 9th. There is also the legendary martyr St. Edistus, who was also known as Aristus, Orestes and Horestes. According to legend, he died in 64 AD under emperor Nero. His feastday is October 12th.
      It may very well be that the name Horst has different roots, or that ist was a genuine German name that was re-used in the Germanization of Horestes.

    • @neillbaxxter7640
      @neillbaxxter7640 Год назад +1

      Where's the fun part in your story?

    • @clarenceartman7487
      @clarenceartman7487 Год назад

      is there an english equivalent or did it not catch on in english speaking countries?

    • @tylersmith3139
      @tylersmith3139 2 месяца назад

      It means "Brushwood" or "forest" so someone what the last name Horst that was from the forest.

  • @sextond
    @sextond Год назад +58

    I used to work for Novartis in Basel, Switzerland and most of their German employees lived in Freiburg. It was a very easy border to cross so I often did on weekends. The joke in Basel is that you work in Switzerland, eat in France (all three boarders come together there), and shop in Germany.

    • @pitbullbg
      @pitbullbg Год назад +5

      I'm from Basel and that is very accurate lmaoo

    • @gargoyle7863
      @gargoyle7863 Год назад +1

      Are there any Bars, Clubs and Nightlife in Basel? I'm from Freiburg and Basel seems to me: here you go to work and for the museum but not to have fun. (Fair enough museum can be fun as well.)

    • @sextond
      @sextond Год назад

      @@gargoyle7863 cargo bar in Basel has excellent cocktails and is fun

    • @benjaminzuckschwerdt4779
      @benjaminzuckschwerdt4779 Год назад +2

      No No No......Work in Switzerland, live in france and buy food in Germany!

    • @sextond
      @sextond Год назад +4

      @@benjaminzuckschwerdt4779 true, but they will weigh your meat at the border. Not a gram over....😁

  • @samlogan8096
    @samlogan8096 Год назад +4

    I lived in Baden-Württemberg for 3 years in the 1990s. It really is beautiful, with lots of farmland and forest in addition to the cities and towns. One thing which sticks out to me --- the planned town development concept, where housing is built only in areas defined as towns and cities, and houses are not allowed to sprawl on the edges of urban areas. You can drive for several miles without seeing a house, then a village appears with housing distinctly ending at the village limits. Farmland is protected along with forested areas. This is so different from the US.

  • @ursularieger5092
    @ursularieger5092 2 года назад +13

    DANKE Feli für die Unterstützung der The Länd Kampagne - hoffe die lassen dich in Bayern noch rein nächstes Mal - folge dir und NALF aus dem Ländle, aus Böblingen!

  • @Razeel25
    @Razeel25 Год назад +4

    Freiburg... hit me RIGHT in the nostalgia! I went to school there.

  • @elhermeneutico
    @elhermeneutico Год назад +9

    The land I called home for 3 years and where my own idea of what Germany was formed. A unique place with a unique culture. I miss "Ländle" and would happily go again there over and over again

    • @Niklas_Fr_
      @Niklas_Fr_ Год назад +3

      das Ländle hat schon einfach besser gepasst

  • @deirdrevergados971
    @deirdrevergados971 Год назад +4

    Have spent a lot of time in Baden-Wuerttenberg, ParticularlyTuebingen and Stuttgart and Heidelberg. It is a place of fairy tale beauty yet totally in the 21st century. The residents are generous and helpful and largely cosmopolitan. Go there!

  • @bronco5644
    @bronco5644 2 года назад +6

    I lived near Heidelberg for a few years when I was in the Army. It was a great experience. Had a wonderful time visiting places in Baden-Wuertemberg on the weekends participating in Volkswanderungen!

  • @nicolas_-_-_
    @nicolas_-_-_ 11 месяцев назад +2

    Hallo! Ich bin Franzose 🇫🇷
    Baden-Württemberg ist das einzige Land, das ich in Deutschland besucht habe. Danke für dieses Video. Ich bin überrascht, dass Sie ein Video über Baden-Württemberg gemacht haben, aber ich danke Ihnen 🙂

  • @billschatz2340
    @billschatz2340 Год назад +5

    My family came from Baden Baden Germany in 1857. Into New Orleans, up the Mississippi River to st. Louis. Then headed west into Missouri 50 miles west of st. Louis. Every grandfather of mine since 1857 is in the same cemetery, 1miles from my house. The first one was Mathias Schatz.

  • @tobarstep
    @tobarstep 2 года назад +26

    The art director from Copenhagen had me cracking up. He had the look perfected.

  • @pijorgea
    @pijorgea Год назад +1

    Felí I’ve been following you some time ago, thanks a lot for this video, you make me cry.
    I live in Mexico, but my older sons are studying in the KIT in Karlsruhe, me third daughter is in Frankfurt. I don’t want them to return, I will love for them to stay there. The Länd videos are very inspirational for me, and I hope for them too.

  • @phawley01
    @phawley01 Год назад +3

    My sister and I were there in September. Our mother was born in Ludwigsburg. It is a beautiful part of Germany.

    • @boiler147
      @boiler147 Год назад

      I was born in Ludwigsburg as well. Still live there. The world is small. Enjoy New Year‘s!

  • @aum1083
    @aum1083 3 месяца назад +1

    03:02 I'm very surprised to see the Swiss Rheinfalls in a Baden-Würtemberg promotion video.

  • @tgmondalf_LTX
    @tgmondalf_LTX Год назад +11

    Thanks for showing us this Feli!! My great great grandfather is from Baden-Württemberg so I'm always curious to learn more about the region etc. Also, thanks to you I had to make gluehwein this holiday season too. I forgot how much I love it!! :)

    • @aleb2200
      @aleb2200 Год назад

      Oh but baden and Württemberg United only in 1957

  • @xyz-uw3ps
    @xyz-uw3ps Год назад +1

    I used to live and work in Karlsruhe, and this video brings back memories.

  • @001Cherith
    @001Cherith Год назад +2

    My son went to Heidelberg for his study abroad program and had a truly wonderful time there. It, however, unfortunately cut short by the pandemic. He went to all the cities you mentioned. Thanks for the information.

  • @terry2315
    @terry2315 Год назад +10

    I was an exchange student in Neckartinslingen. I loved that area. I would move there in a second. I found out the dishes my great-grandmother made for supper were German dishes. I thought they were just food Grandma Lena made.

    • @Coalgolem
      @Coalgolem 2 месяца назад

      Neckartenzlingen? That is right next to Pliezhausen, where I live :) Very nice to hear that you liked it here in the area!

  • @CJHump
    @CJHump Год назад +2

    Some of my ancestors immigrated with other Germans from the area around Heidelberg to the Colony of South Carolina in the 1760's. They were Lutherans and farmers and settled in an area close to what is now Columbia. If you like mustard-base BBQ sauce (aka Carolina Gold), your can thank these German settlers.

  • @Zaephrax
    @Zaephrax 2 года назад +7

    I am one of the many considering moving to Germany and, believe it or not, Baden-Württemberg is actually the state I was most interested in (for most of the reasons you mentioned in the intro) and to hear it is good for healthcare is a relief as I am a nurse so this is the sector I'd be getting a job in. My other reasons were that as a Scot, Baden-Württemberg is the closest state to the UK by road so it opens up better logistical avenues between myself and my family back in Scotland; and from what I have heard, the Swabian culture and mindset is rather similar to the Scottish one

    • @mascami
      @mascami 2 года назад +2

      Yes, we're the scots of germany! And we would love to have you here!

    • @Zaephrax
      @Zaephrax 2 года назад

      Scots, and the Scottish dialects resisted the great vowel shift more than many other parts of English, so my understanding is we're still more Germanic/European than the rest of the UK on a linguistic sense. There are a lot of similarities between Scots and Geordie though so I reckon it would be much the same. I think the quickest route for me would of been the ferry from Rosyth (Scotland) to Zeebrugge (Belgium), and then into Saarland, or Rhineland-Westphalia or something around there, but they did away with that ferry some years back now (but I think it might be back commercially because I have noticed a large increase in Dutch lorries around the area recently)

    • @Zaephrax
      @Zaephrax 2 года назад

      @@ThorackNT we would also use the planes mostly to be fair, I think the ferries (probably Dover-Calais) would just me made to get the heavier stuff across when moving in originally and then maybe for Christmas trips or something so we don't have to worry about baggage allowance

    • @joceery
      @joceery 11 месяцев назад

      that's cool! some tips I learned some would've liked ... decide what's important to you, know beforehand what your needs, wishes and priorities are. there is no city/place that has everything to offer. also we have big differences between cities and countryside, people I met tend to underestimate that. in BW less than in other states but still. then don't expect Freiburg or Stuttgart to be Hamburg or Munich, it's not at all. look at the flights beforehand if there is what you need, I mostly fly from Munich sadly ... as for nursing ... they are all searching for employees, you can choose almost where to work. there are MFAs, Krankenschwester und Pfleger. look at the wages and job description on the contract. there are lots of shady bosses in health care. if you have questions, don't hesitate to ask, greetings 🌼

  • @trumpet134
    @trumpet134 Год назад +1

    Proud Swabians here …..form the heart of Baden-Württemberg ….home town Herrenberg

  • @olecanole8596
    @olecanole8596 Год назад +4

    I am currently in Baden-Wurttemberg, Karlsruhe, precisley. I find the people warm and friendly, and the Christ Kindle market is fun. English is widely spoken and understood, but I do wish I could better speak German.

  • @kenreilly5308
    @kenreilly5308 Год назад +1

    I love your videos, I can relate to your advice about traveling to Germany. You remind me of my Daughter in law who is German born and raised. I have been twice to visit my Son and have seen and experienced first hand a lot of what you say. My Son lives in Baden-Wurttemburg, he was living in Kehl and has recently moved to Offenburg. I have been there twice and as recently as the first two weeks on December 2022. We went to the Christmas markets in Strausborg, Baden-Baden, Kehl and Offenburg along with a full day at Europark. We have been in the Black Forest, it is very beautiful.

  • @ericmuckensturm5664
    @ericmuckensturm5664 2 года назад +5

    My ancestors are from a town called Diersburg in Baden-Württemberg. I really want to go there someday to see if I have any relatives that still live there and experience the area.

    • @MichaelBurggraf-gm8vl
      @MichaelBurggraf-gm8vl 2 года назад +1

      There's a village or small town called Muggensturm in the Upper Rhine valley near Rastatt. Diersburg is a ruin of a castle located further south (south of Offenburg even).

    • @lisamirako1073
      @lisamirako1073 2 года назад +1

      Diersburg is a hamlet of the municipality of Hohberg near Offenburg with the ruins of a castle of the same name in the foothills of the Black Forest.

  • @Swimdeep
    @Swimdeep Год назад +1

    Excellent video. Living in Rhineland-Palatinate for six years, many places in B-W were consistent destinations. Love the whole state.

  • @lowellaguno
    @lowellaguno 2 года назад +60

    I lived and worked in Germany, near Kassel, in the 1990s. My two sons were born (1994 & 1996) and raised in the area of the city. They were raised "zweisrpachig" by their mom (eine Deutsche) and me (ein Ami).
    There are many differences in the work cultures in Germany and the U.S. For me one of the biggest things to worry about was in addressing the various individuals in the office -- "Sie" vs "Du". To be safe, I followed the German rule-of-thumb and used "Sie". However, if someone would address me in the "du" form, that's how I'd address that individual.
    Another thing I had to get used to in the office was "workplace banter", or the lack of it.
    We Amis (Americans) tend to be "chatty" at work. It's the jokes, sense of humour, and jovial approach to work which helps get most Amis through a tough work day with a smile on their face. But in Germany that's not a thing; work is work and unnecessary banter is avoided.
    Work colleagues may not engage in a lot of banter in the office. But come "Feierabend", watchout. Germans have a very social side that can be seen outside of a workplace setting.
    I still keep in touch with my former "Chef" who is now retired. He owned the small family business (im Bereich Druckvorstufe) I worked for.

    •  2 года назад +10

      The banter/no banter thing is also a question of company culture. Given your former boss is now retired, I suspect the company was more "old school". In more modern, (even just slightly) younger companies, it can and mostly will be a very different.

    • @edward_j_leblanc
      @edward_j_leblanc Год назад +2

      I agree with @Jürgen! My experience working in Germany (2001-2007, 2012-present) is also that most people are very friendly and not at all shy about banter at work. At all the places I have worked in Germany, there was only one person who insisted on being addressed formally with "Sie". (American living in Karlsruhe, Germany.)

  • @EddieReischl
    @EddieReischl 2 года назад +3

    I'm showing my age, but the name "Horst" made me think of Horst Buchholz, from the movie "The Magnificent Seven" which was a classic western made before even I was born. Great movie of that genre.

  • @picklesDaddy
    @picklesDaddy Год назад

    Ich komme aus Baden Soelligen. Ich bin Schwartzwalder. Ich bin Kanadier. I remember the coo coo clocks. My parents bought a grand father clock from House of 1000 clocks! I’m a military brat and Germany really had a profound impact on my life. Deutschland ist mein zweite heimat! ❤ thank you for making this video

  • @jima1135
    @jima1135 2 года назад +7

    I watched this after another RUclipsr, Steve Mould, plugged it at the end of his latest video. I watched the whole series in one sitting but wasn't sure if Baden-Württemberg was even a real place or just made up for the film because it looked so amazing there!

    • @arnodobler1096
      @arnodobler1096 2 года назад +1

      I live there (Lake Constance) and can say: it´s real

    • @jima1135
      @jima1135 2 года назад +1

      @@arnodobler1096 The Volcano company was shown in one of the episodes and at that point I searched to see if it was a real place because I know that company, but wasn't aware they were made in Germany. It is a beautiful portion of your country!

    • @MichaelBurggraf-gm8vl
      @MichaelBurggraf-gm8vl 2 года назад +1

      @@arnodobler1096 I'd confirm generally. However in winter we've got many days with foggy weather (could make people from London envious). But on bright sunny days it's really hard to beat it.

    • @mascami
      @mascami 2 года назад

      Yes, we're very real. I live near Stuttgart and from the north to the south, east to the west BW is a very beautiful state.

    • @timmyturner327
      @timmyturner327 Год назад +3

      @@arnodobler1096 Baden--Wurttemburg may be real, but Bielefield is fictional.

  • @georgegarcia1445
    @georgegarcia1445 3 месяца назад +1

    I was stationed at Heilbronn from 1979 to 1982. Years later I learned that my German ancestors immigrated from a town in Württemburg to Minnesota in the 1850s.

  • @BILLYMORGAN1971
    @BILLYMORGAN1971 Год назад +5

    I did researching my family tree(history). Although I think they were far far away from the industry the region is known for today. My 2nd great grandparents came to America in 1860 from Schonau which is near Heidelberg and some other towns they lived for a long long time(so far going back to the late 17th century so far). I looked at some of the historical building which are still standing that my 5th great grandparents would have seen. Makes sense that the area in the black forest was known for the cake of the same name, in America they were bakers. A lot of the towns are similar and I've spoken with other Europeans who have visited like Heidelberg and he agreed. You have these gingerbred like houses and always a town center with a fountain where people gather.

  • @dhall058
    @dhall058 Год назад +1

    I lived in Mannheim for three years, and loved this region! I used to hang out in Heidelberg on weekends, and the student pubs were the best.

  • @wrycoder
    @wrycoder 2 года назад +3

    Clever idea for a "chamber of commerce"-type web series. Thanks for the tip!

  • @miketickles4866
    @miketickles4866 Год назад

    Love the show, my ancestors immigrated from Schwatzwald, Wurttemberg in the 1750’s and I’m fascinated by the region.

  • @jasonkiefer1894
    @jasonkiefer1894 Год назад +3

    Awesome! Thank you for sharing more of Germany. Particularly since my paternal line is from Baden. Fridolin Kiefer was born in 1807 in Inzlingen, his (youngest child) son Francis was baptized (likely also born) in Friesenheim in 1844. Fridolin brought his 6 kids to Wisconsin in 1846. Just as he was old enough, Francis joined the Wisconsin regiment and fought in the Civil War, only one to do so. And my family enjoys having a cuckoo clock in the house. Got my own authentic imported Black Forest clock. :) Happy to see this about my ancestral family and will go check out the series.

  • @joannebarber4845
    @joannebarber4845 3 месяца назад +1

    The Video is an instant classic. The only reason I knew of Baden-Wurttenberg is because of a law book I once saw.

  • @davidschroeder3272
    @davidschroeder3272 Год назад +4

    This was a fascinating episode, covering a part of Germany I didn't know too much about. That part of Germany seems almost remote, being nestled in the southwest corner. It's one of the smaller states, but seems like a hidden gem that foreign tourists are probably not that familiar with. When I think of Germany I think of the northern part where the big cities of Bremen, Hamburg, and Berlin are. My own gr-grandpa came from a village called Ostereistedt about 25 miles east of Bremen. And being very interested in the history of science, the places where physicists like Werner Heisenberg, his mentors (Bohr, Born, others), colleagues and fellow physicists in England (Paul Dirac), Denmark ( Niels Bohr), Austria (Schroedinger), and many others, developed Quantum Mechanics. It's one thing to read the biographies of famous physicists, but to see the locations where they worked adds another dimension to the written narrative.

    • @gesundeshalbwissen
      @gesundeshalbwissen Год назад +4

      Baden-Württemberg is not one of the smaller states in Germany. It is third in both size and population.

    • @hansjanko7966
      @hansjanko7966 Год назад

      Bremen is a small city compared to Stuttgart. The big cities in Germany besides Hamburg/Berlin are Munich, Cologne, Frankfurt, Stuttgart (in roughly that order) Make a circle around Stuttgart with 25km radius, you will get 5 Landkreise (counties) and cover over 2.7Million people.
      Read carefully if you are interested in a high tech job:
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stuttgart_Region

    • @joceery
      @joceery 11 месяцев назад

      it is one of the biggest and oldest states of Germany and definitely known in lots of areas in the world and is one of the tourist spots 🤨 also if you love scientists, this is the state for you to go, we had and have lots of inventors. we're the land of poets and thinkers (that's a phrase 😅)

    • @davidschroeder3272
      @davidschroeder3272 11 месяцев назад

      @@joceery Thanks joceery, hansjanko, and gesundeshbwissen. I should have looked at a map of the German states and their popularity among tourists, along with city sizes, before making my comment. My late parents (in the 1970's) visited the town of Ostereistedt where my dad's grandfather emigrated from. I posted on a genealogy website my dad's info on his grandfather, and to my amazement a user in Germany linked Lutheran church records on our direct paternal Schroeder line, and other lines, going back to 1705! Thanks hansjanko for the info on high tech job possibilities in the Stuttgart region. I'm a retiree, so currently not looking for a job. But as kind of a 'job', I'm studying physics and astronomy, with special emphasis on unsolved mysteries in both fields. For example, in astronomy there is the mystery of both dark energy and dark matter. I'm personally in favor of a hypothesis called "MOND", developed by Israeli physicist Mordehai Milgrom, which dispenses with the need for dark matter. MOND currently doesn't have a mechanism to explain its acceleration scale of a0. I have a speculative idea of what might be behind this scale, that ties in with some equally speculative ideas in quantum mechanics.

  • @kjknoop8096
    @kjknoop8096 Год назад

    I was born in covington, Kentucky raised in Arizona. My mother was born in covington,my father was born in Cincinnati . My grandparents were born in Germany the same state you are from. They immigrated to USA AND SETTLED IN CINCINNATI . I LOVE ❤️ YOUR PROGRAM. YOU DO A WONDERFUL JOB THANK YOU
    KJK

  • @Meggo1963
    @Meggo1963 Год назад +8

    I just stumbled upon your channel. I'm learning so much. Thank you. I was wondering if you'd consider doing a program about the German pronunciation of last names. I am from Wisconsin- Milwaukee, in particular, which has a large German-American population. Oddly, the German pronunciation of our last names was lost over the generations. My family name is Schroeder, which we pronounce the "roe" as "ray, or "Schrader." Even my father, who spoke fluent German, didn't know the true pronunciation. I'd truly appreciate it if you could do a video clarifying this.

    • @alexanderlapp5048
      @alexanderlapp5048 Год назад

      The community I live in in rural Michigan has a very significant proportion of German -Americans. I had a Great Grandfather who didn't know English until he started school. My Grandmother and her siblings didn't know how to speak German. I think part of the reason is that being German wasn't popular during the World Wars so my Great Grandparents didn't teach German to their children. That's just a guess though. I wish I would have asked my Great Grandfather when he was alive. He died in the mid 80s and Great Grandmother a few years later.
      Now my Great Grandmother is the only remaining sibling and is hard of hearing and has a terrible memory. Plus everyone is worried about her catching COVID so they limit the people who visit her.
      Good luck in finding the German pronunciation of your family name. Possibly there may be more than one depending on the part of Germany. Possibly there are sounds that are not used in English.

    • @kraahk1928
      @kraahk1928 Год назад +2

      The "oe" in your family name is an "Umlaut" and has been an "ö" in it's original form. Schröder is an old german word that in most cases meant "tailor". The ö is pronounced like the "eu" in cordon bleu. Or like the u in turn, if you move your lower lip a bit more upwards and forward while saying it. Hope this helps. :)

    • @Meggo1963
      @Meggo1963 Год назад

      @@kraahk1928, danke. I'll have to pass that on to my siblings.

    • @Ian-dn6ld
      @Ian-dn6ld Год назад +1

      @@kraahk1928hat is false. The modern northern German accent was not in full use by all of Germans at the time. ALL forms of ö were and remain to be pronounced in common speech as -ay. Böblingen - Beblinge(n) for example goes all the way to the Middle Ages when the town was first mentioned. The way Germans now pronounce things when tied to book German is not the historical accurate pronunciation but is based off the northern accent as it is rooted in the theatre speech from around the region of Hannover (Bühnesprache) of the 18th century. “Schrayder” is historically accurate.

    • @Ian-dn6ld
      @Ian-dn6ld Год назад

      @@Meggo1963 The modern northern German accent was not in full use by all of Germans at the time. ALL forms of ö were and remain to be pronounced in common speech as -ay. Böblingen - Beblinge(n) for example goes all the way to the Middle Ages when the town was first mentioned. Ü (ue) making the long e sound goes all the way back as well to the Middle Ages at least but shows a connection to English words as well ie. grün - green The way Germans now pronounce things when tied to book German is not the historical accurate pronunciation but is based off the northern accent as it is rooted in the theatre speech (Bühnesprache) of the 18th century. “Schrayder” is historically accurate.

  • @gabrielaurbany1511
    @gabrielaurbany1511 Год назад +1

    Hi feli I was born in kunzelsau,came to p a 20yers ago loved you video ❤

  • @ContesHistoireEtLegendes
    @ContesHistoireEtLegendes 2 года назад +4

    Omg I live in Strasbourg and everyday when I go to the university I see that sticker about "the länd" and I was wondering to that day what that was about, now I know ! 😂

  • @Polditiv
    @Polditiv 4 месяца назад

    Thanks for presenting my Länd 🙂

  • @selfification
    @selfification 2 года назад +5

    I saw this the other day and as an Indian who is a software engineer, the part they had the Marathi guy endorse a Swabish Maultaschen and then later where they literally picked a recipe Maultaschen and started with dough and quickly skipped through the beef but kept all the spinach and onion and shaping parts. ruclips.net/video/5eoJpvFH6ho/видео.html . I hear you can make it vegetarian/vegan these days so whoever did that part of the ad was a genius.

  • @wmst5065
    @wmst5065 Год назад +2

    I was stationed in Heilbronn from '85 to '87 so I'm familiar with Baden Wurttemberg. Unfortunately, I didn't get to explore it as much as I would have liked to or should have.

  • @marquesgorham4226
    @marquesgorham4226 Год назад +4

    Damn man Germany is such a cool and beautiful looking country. I wanna visit there some day

  • @MarcusDude4179
    @MarcusDude4179 Год назад +1

    I am an American from Wisconsin, and have been researching my family ancestry for the past ten years. Of my four grandparents, 1 has all Dutch ancestors, 1 has all Belgian ancestors, and the other 2 have all German ancestors. My paternal grandmother's ancestors were from all over Germany. Two of her great grandparents left a town called Echterdingen, near Stuttgart in BW in 1855, and settled in Milwaukee, before moving further north in Wisconsin. Since you mention you are from Munich in Bavaria, my maternal grandfather's ancestors were from the Upper Palatinate of "Bayern". They were from the towns of Warzenried and Furth-im-Wald, and immigrated to Wisconsin between the 1850's and 1880's.

  • @daveschmarder-1950
    @daveschmarder-1950 Год назад +4

    I spent a couple months in B-W a long time ago. I liked it there. I visited Mannheim where in the old section, the streets didn't have any names but the buildings were A1, A2, A3, B1, B2 usw. Stuttgart was my favorite large city. Stuttgart ist ziemlich schön, gell?

  • @lloydster9000
    @lloydster9000 Год назад +2

    Some of my ancestors came from the little town of Gemmingen in Baden-Württemberg! 😁 I’d love to visit that part of Germany someday.

    • @matzeb6778
      @matzeb6778 3 месяца назад

      That is indeed a really small town with nothing special to see. But the surrounding area with all the vineyards is pretty nice. Also Tripsdrill (a fun little theme park) is pretty near.
      I live about 10 miles from there.
      The area around Ludwigsburg/Heilbronn is really worth a visit and France also isn't far away (about an hour drive).
      And also a fun fact about Gemmingen is that it is right at the language border. In the town Stetten which is 2km away we speak svabian and in Gemmingen they speak badisch. Two pretty different accents.

  • @Paul_Wetor
    @Paul_Wetor 2 года назад +6

    This is great! You can see all the nuances that we can't. The series looks really interesting, I've just watched episode 2. It's like a spoof of trying to sell technology but the scenery and settings don't look techy at all. A tough assignment. Now I'm hooked wondering if the photo team can do it. On to Episode 3.

  • @jamespletcher7574
    @jamespletcher7574 Год назад +1

    Hello Felicia. I lived in Baden-Württemberg (Mannheim) for two years while in the military and later worked for a company that was headquartered in Stuttgart, giving me the opportunity to visit again several times. I watched "The Land" when it first came out and loved it. Clever, and very effectively got the message out, in my opinion. I enjoyed your video and was particularly entertained by the various "closed caption" versions of "Baden-Württemberg" that RUclips's voice-to-text "English (auto-generated)" engine produced as you spoke.
    Some examples are: "badenburg", "Bun vivenbeck", "button weapon bag", "bitton bag", "Batman" (???), "Button Wittenburg", "pattern building bags" (another strange one), "ban and wooden back", "about Gutenberg", ... and on and on. I loved waiting for the next one to come up. This list only covers up to 7:29. Hilarious! Love your videos. Love Indianapolis but miss Mannheim.

  • @teriampuls9356
    @teriampuls9356 2 года назад +16

    Der Spot gefällt mir - besser als "wir können alles, außer Hochdeutsch" 😀
    Ich hoffe sehr, Du machst auch die anderen Teile der Serie!
    Viele Grüße aus Württemberg

    • @jochensch8821
      @jochensch8821 2 года назад +3

      Trigema hat T-Shirts und Sweatshirt etwas anders gemacht. Wir können alles, auch hochdeutsch. Mit The Länd kann ich gar nichts anfangen und es steht zu Recht in der Kritik. Der Spot dagegen ist gut.

    • @larienancalime3015
      @larienancalime3015 2 года назад +1

      Als Schwabe aus „The Länd“ liebte ich wie die meisten Schwaben die alte Marketingstrategie wirklich. Man konnte sich damit identifizieren. Aber diese 21 Mio für The Länd hätte „uns“ ggf besser unter einem gscheiden Namen gefallen. Kenne nur Menschen außerhalb vom Ländle, die The Länd mögen. Habe die Serie noch nicht angeschaut aber gebe ihr eine Chance besser zu sein.
      Wobei „Wenn aus Will Kommen, Will Bleiben wird“ fand ich wirklich nice ;)

    • @beerensaft413
      @beerensaft413 Год назад

      Spruch kam ja ursprünglich "Us dr Schwyz"

  • @musicofnote1
    @musicofnote1 2 года назад +2

    LOL - living in Switzerland, of COURSE I know of Baden-Württemberg. Lovely old cities with loads of Fachwerkhäuser.

  • @richardbeaulaurier6834
    @richardbeaulaurier6834 Год назад +3

    I like your videos, and am an American who has spent a lot of time in BW, mostly in the SW part. On thing that makes it great to visit, but maybe difficult for foreign professionals is that not much English is spoken there compared to other German states, particularly outside the big cities..

    • @joceery
      @joceery 11 месяцев назад

      there are so many scared to speak it, I don't know why 🙄 they definitely learned it in school ...

  • @joevolpe512
    @joevolpe512 Год назад +2

    Stuttgart is what I’m the most familiar with. We lived there for 3 years while my father was stationed at the hospital there.

  • @burkhardstackelberg1203
    @burkhardstackelberg1203 Год назад +3

    A fun fact: Some of you might know Gaisburger Marsch, a dish that is mostly served in southern Germany. But even I did not know or think about, that this is actually named after a place in Stuttgart: Gaisburg, where officer candidates from a neighbouring barack came to eat it in a restaurant. At some point, it snapped with me and I researched the story of that meal (you can find the story on Wikipedia, even in English).

  • @captainnathan3690
    @captainnathan3690 Год назад

    Loved that vid. Hilarious and you were correct that most would not expect a German ad would be that funny. BIG thumbs up!

  • @kenny408
    @kenny408 2 года назад +8

    That's a great video, like always. Such a cool idea to present something like this. I didn't even know that THE LÄND has these campaign and it could be interesting for so many people. It's an amazing bridge as a german expat to grab that topic for your channel for so many reasons. Thank you for your effort to entertain us. Seems so easy for you :)
    My sister is living in BaWü close to Karlsruhe and it's always like a culture shock when I'm there. I'm from the west, NRW, one of the ugliest Bundesland we have and it's hard to believe that these both are in the same country. Okay, hands down, BaWü is our most beautiful Ländle. Head to head race with Bavaria of course, but because of the dialect I feel more comfortable with BaWü 🙈 I know it's dangerous to say that loud, but it's possible because no one is armed here lol

  • @marka5478
    @marka5478 Год назад

    My ancestors were from Baden. I visited this region in 1998 to ride the Albtalbahn to Bad Herrenalb.

  • @1958zed
    @1958zed 2 года назад +5

    I saw NALF promote this series and it's hilarious (I watched the whole thing). My grandfather was born in Baden-Württemberg (Schöntal) and I still have family there and in Würzburg. It certainly is a beautiful part of Germany.

    • @affenaffe3277
      @affenaffe3277 2 года назад +1

      As I grew up just a few towns over from Schöntal, I have to say it's quite picturesque, although half a day is all you need to see everything (or to hike those beautiful forest trails)

    • @1958zed
      @1958zed 2 года назад

      @@affenaffe3277 I would agree. My grandfather was born in a house next to the Kloster, and there's not much in the area beyond it from what I saw on my brief visits.

  • @martinricardo4503
    @martinricardo4503 Год назад

    I lived in Heilbronn, Schwabisch Gmund, and Schwabisch Hall for a total of 10 years from the 60's through 1984. Good times.

  • @ESODaily
    @ESODaily 2 года назад +20

    I was in Stuttgart a few weeks ago, and will be calling it home in a few months. Baden Wüttemberg is the ancestral home of my family, and it is beautiful! If you're a person who enjoys diversity and a beautiful landscape, then you should definitely look for work there. Germany has great healthcare, you get weeks of vacation, and other perks as well. Oh, and the people are very pleasant
    P.S. the weather is much like Ohio and other parts of Central America

    • @Habakuk_
      @Habakuk_ Год назад +1

      except for the people it may be true there are countries where the people are friendlier.

    • @karinbirkenbihl2053
      @karinbirkenbihl2053 Год назад

      @@Habakuk_ but I guess even the Schwaben did improve..

    • @Habakuk_
      @Habakuk_ Год назад +1

      @@karinbirkenbihl2053 I wasn't just referring to Swabia

    • @MrJlin1982
      @MrJlin1982 Год назад +1

      Mistick, from Baden or Württemburg. They have a very different history. Baden was a grand duchy, Württemburg a kingdom, and some parts where part of Prussia, there hausburg was in Hohenzollern, where the last name came from, I speak about the Kaisers between 1871 and 1918 here

    • @ESODaily
      @ESODaily Год назад +1

      @@MrJlin1982 , I'm very aware, but I look forward to coming home soon. I wish my grandfather had lived to see how wonderful things turned out in Germany. I know he would have been proud to see a reunified Germany under democracy. You probably figured it out. Ich bin Hummel

  • @joyfulanomaly3984
    @joyfulanomaly3984 Год назад

    I knew about it! My great grandfather emigrated from there to the USA in 1858 and I lived in Bavaria from 1988-1991! Love both states!

  • @VanquishMediaDE
    @VanquishMediaDE 2 года назад +11

    I much prefer working in Germany compared to my homeland Poland. Not only are wages much higher, the benefits are superb. I have to give it to Germany, they really have the workers best interest at heart.
    The tax rate is a little higher but for I get in terms of Uni and healthcare, affordable housing I can not complain.

    • @wbader68
      @wbader68 2 года назад +3

      @Feli_from___germany This seems to be a fake account.

    • @VanquishMediaDE
      @VanquishMediaDE 2 года назад

      @@wbader68 It is

    • @Aiphares
      @Aiphares 2 года назад +2

      on the other side i say i love working with polish people. So far all polish people i've worked with were a lot more motivated to do their work properly compared to their german counterparts. Maybe it is because they appreciate the benefits more? Not sure

    • @VanquishMediaDE
      @VanquishMediaDE 2 года назад +2

      @@Aiphares We just want to succeed, we are new to these opportunity.

    • @Habakuk_
      @Habakuk_ 2 года назад

      @@Aiphares let me guess are you a pole yourself?

  • @stephenr3910
    @stephenr3910 7 месяцев назад

    I was in Stuttgart a couple of weeks ago. I'm watching these now since I have the luxury of time to learn.

  • @chitlitlah
    @chitlitlah 2 года назад +16

    I spent a week in the Mannheim area many years ago. Beautiful area. I've since gotten a career that involves working with industrial robots, so I feel like this was made just to entice me. The wife doesn't want to relocate though, so I may have to ditch her.

    • @3.k
      @3.k 2 года назад +2

      Good effort, bro! 😁

    • @McGhinch
      @McGhinch Год назад

      I reckon she's afraid that you spend too much time with her or at home when you work in Baden-Württemberg. E.g., a forty hour workweek (often less than that), five weeks or more of paid time off for personal reasons and recreation, "unlimited" sick leave if ordered by a doctor...
      On the other hand, if she just wants to stay in the US for dietary reasons, our food isn't as sweet as yours, but it still is nutritious enough to gain weight -- if you eat more than enough of it... 🙂
      There is only one argument supporting her: you have to learn two languages when you get to THE LÄND -- schwäbisch und deutsch (Swabian and German). the first you need to understand the local nationals and the latter to understand the rest of the Germans.

    • @donkeysaurusrex7881
      @donkeysaurusrex7881 Год назад

      Yes, sadly this is one of the main problems with women. I am amazed anyone managed to move anywhere in the past for this very reason.

  • @Charlemagne89
    @Charlemagne89 Год назад

    I'm from Cleveland and my best friend moved to Freiburg about 9 years ago. He loves it and he's not coming back!

  • @B.A.B.G.
    @B.A.B.G. 2 года назад +3

    Home, sweet home.

  • @brittibeeper
    @brittibeeper Год назад

    My ancestors on my mom’s dad’s side are from the Schwarzwald area. I love learning about Baden Wurttemberg

  • @richardtodd6843
    @richardtodd6843 2 года назад +3

    Up to now my knowledge of BW has been limited to having visited Heidelberg many years ago and hearing about the auto industry in Stuttgart from time to time. Hearing them talk about "Cyber-Valley" made me wonder if they have strong universities (they do). Since my degree is from the University of Cincinnati/CCM I doubt I'll be invited to design robots, but maybe if that film maker's head gets ripped off, I can take his job.

    • @JakobFischer60
      @JakobFischer60 Год назад +1

      A company from Stuttgart (Mackevision) did half of the visual affects in Game of thrones. You know, the dragons and such.

    • @Habakuk_
      @Habakuk_ Год назад +1

      If you have good qualifications and are looking for a company that will give you a kiss :) soon, some things will also be made easier for migrants who want to work and live in Germany

  • @GeographRick
    @GeographRick Год назад

    My great grandparents are from Baden-Württemberg. It's fun to see this.

  • @Luv2tickt
    @Luv2tickt 2 года назад +3

    One of my bosses last name is Horst. That you say Horst is somewhat of an equivalent to the American Karen, that makes complete and perfect sense!!!!

  • @jgm82br
    @jgm82br Год назад

    My grandfather was born in Karlsruhe… Beautiful place… Nice to see the introduction about the state…

  • @susi131
    @susi131 2 года назад +10

    I have never hated a place as much as Stuttgart. I moved there for my studies and let’s say I was very motivated to finish my studies in „Regelstudienzeit“ to be able to get away asap. 😅

    • @a.riddlemethis795
      @a.riddlemethis795 2 года назад +3

      Are you from Baden? 😅
      Many years ago my husband had a job offer in Stuttgart. Amazing pay, company car for private use, spacious company apartment... His answer was a big, fat "NO" because he's from Baden and hates Stuttgart. I, an immigrant, do not understand him at all 😏

    • @arnodobler1096
      @arnodobler1096 2 года назад +2

      @@a.riddlemethis795 It was the same with my brother and now with his two sons, they all came back to Baden. It's a cultural thing: Badeners and Württembergers are different.

    • @susi131
      @susi131 2 года назад +3

      @@a.riddlemethis795 No I'm originally from Bavaria but have been living in Berlin for a long time. I just couldn't cope with the "my family, my house, my car,..." culture in Stuttgart or Baden-Württemberg in general. Many people there were too obsessed with themselves and their belongings for my liking. And the city itself was just boring with not really anything to do. (You can hate me now BaWü people. :D)

    • @lisamirako1073
      @lisamirako1073 2 года назад

      @@susi131 Sounds like someone who left with the same prejudices they came with, because they didn't bother to really get to know the city and its people.

    • @susi131
      @susi131 2 года назад +1

      @@lisamirako1073 I actually came without prejudice and was excited for the time there but had been let down quite quickly.

  • @luispnrf
    @luispnrf Год назад

    I spent 3 weeks learning german (almost all forgotten now) at the Goethe-Institut at Schwäbisch Hall. Great memories. Hällisch gut.

  • @shadowban1909
    @shadowban1909 2 года назад +4

    The Länd! 😂 Die können einfach alles, außer Hochdeutsch!
    But ... where is NALF in the video? I need a "Mettbrötchen". 😋

  • @christianfischer9971
    @christianfischer9971 2 года назад

    My dads side of the family are from Baden-Württemberg. I haven’t visited Germany, but would love to in the near future. Thank you for sharing!

  • @jitterskater
    @jitterskater 2 года назад +5

    Germany is absolutely desperate for skilled workers ("Facharbeiter"), not just in "the Länd", but all over the country. There are millions of vacancies! If you have some skills, not just in engineering or IT, and can imagine to live and work in Germany, a country with very (very!) high living standards, a good work-life balance and generous social net, just apply for a job or even an internship.
    P.S.: The German "silicon valley" is actually located in the East, especially the area around Dresden ("Silicon Saxony").

    • @martinbruhn5274
      @martinbruhn5274 2 года назад

      Well, we do have companies like SAP, Teamviewer, Carl Zeiss, Trumpf,...

    • @jitterskater
      @jitterskater 2 года назад +3

      @@martinbruhn5274 Sure, Baden Württemberg is an industrial powerhouse. And one of Germany's biggest advantages is that it's not centralised, you have many centres of excellence all over the place.
      Generally speaking, Munich is the most important IT centre, while the East is especially strong in semiconductors (-> "Silicon Saxony") and Berlin is the hub for startups. But you can find all kinds of strong companies, especially SMEs ("Mittelstand"), basically everywhere.

    • @martinbruhn5274
      @martinbruhn5274 2 года назад +1

      @@jitterskater Exyte, the largest company in the industry of planning and building semiconductor factories is from Stuttgart, Bechtle, the second to SAP in Germany, is like SAP itself also from Baden-Württemberg and Bosch, which is also the country's largest semiconductor company is also based in Baden-Württemberg. Trumpf and Carl Zeiss are two of the most important companies in the german semiconductor industry. So, Saxony has nothing above Baden-Württemberg with the semiconductor industry, and Bavaria nothing over Baden-Württemberg in terms of the IT industry.

    • @pergamentrascheln
      @pergamentrascheln 2 года назад

      They do not even necessarily emphasise the German Silicon Valley in the video. What they’re referring to is the cyber valley which is currently being developed in Tübingen

    • @Habakuk_
      @Habakuk_ 2 года назад

      So if I were an American and would emigrate to Germany, I would emigrate to Bavaria or Bawu, there are most jobs but not exactly cheap in the area.

  • @bobverick
    @bobverick Год назад

    I lived in Baden-Wurttemberg for 4 years. in the city of Karsruhe. It was an amazing time in my life.

  • @mauriciorv228
    @mauriciorv228 Год назад

    Stuttgart is lit. I was there for almost a month visiting my extended fam.

  • @mnguardianfan7128
    @mnguardianfan7128 Год назад +1

    Turns out that both of my paternal grandparents are from Baden-Württemberg. Two small towns just north of Stuttgart.
    They actually gave me a coffee table book on Baden-Württemberg. Beautiful.
    BTW, I have a relative whose name is Horst. 😁

  • @atdynax
    @atdynax Год назад +1

    I am from Baden-Württemberg, Tauberbischofsheim, the Olympic fencing city where the current olympia president is coming from.

  • @neospoilershow2708
    @neospoilershow2708 2 года назад +1

    My great grandma(Spoke German growing up since her parents also grew up speaking German in Europe). Her family’s heritage is from Baden Württemberg

  • @MrPILOTSTEVE59
    @MrPILOTSTEVE59 Год назад

    I didn't even know I was in that state when I drove through it from Switzerland. I was just so excited to be there too.

  • @valeskarose2190
    @valeskarose2190 Год назад

    Wow, this is so cool. I actually discovered a while ago I have family that lives in Baden-Wuerttemberg. In a small town called Widdern, in the district of Heilbronn.