When SPANISH People visit GERMANY
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- Опубліковано 27 вер 2024
- Real life footage of a Spanish expat abroad in Germany.
WATCH MY OTHER VIDS OF THIS SERIES!
When DUTCH people visit GERMANY • When DUTCH people visi...
When INDIANS visit GERMANY • When people from INDIA...
Watch the inverse: • When people from GERMA...
Andy's channel: @AndyGMenBerlín
#spanish #germany #spain
¡Que pedo!
wait thats mexican spanish Lol
Great way to show why Germany is the country that it is and why other countries are the way that they are. Awearness it's very important. Thanks for this small details.
seria mejor estoy flipando en colores :V
Que pedo: ua-cam.com/video/TpVA5pVRfZA/v-deo.html 🍒
Don't mix my Mexican with Spaniards.
Love Spain.. but there is a difference!
Lol, It's so hilarious. You should also make a video "When Italian people visit Germany". They're not so different than Spanish people, but when it comes to food things get compelling.
Pizza Hawaii with pineapples for an italian ... :D
@@KitsuneHB yea best pizza
One doubt, Italians eat pizza always? Even I love pizzas. but we dont eat pizza daily. From different sources, I heard that pizzas are not healthy, eating more pizzas make you sick. What about you ppl. I am just curious. Do you people eat pizzas always? Does that make you overweight?
@@ab-nr9nw just once or twice a week, mostly with friends
@@capwillard9156 Okay. Thank you
As Spaniard, I can confirm that we carry our ham around all the time. It's easier than making sandwiches.
Spinnst du? Sag mal geht’s noch? Anda no inventes majo…
@@maikelon9169 i don’t know if you do this but that’s called J O K E
so definition of joke: a thing that someone says to cause amusement or laughter, especially a story with a funny punchline.
@@President_BarackObamaYou don’t need to be sarcastic. It could be maybe the fact that when you want to make a joke you have to know how to put it in place, especially when one write a joke down. So I maybe didn't get Alvaro's joke.
With regards to the story, it's the first time after years that I don't see anything funny in a radical living sketch because makes no sense at all the facts they are presenting. I almost never in my life saw in Spain any of the introduced situations. It could be that I have still not travelled enough across Spain like to see someone carrying a ham...
Anyway, thank you for dedicating your time to answer me and sorry if that bothered you. See you around!
@@maikelon9169 i travelled a lot across spain and of course didn’t see anyone carrying a ham on the street
alvaro was joking and wanted to say that he neither saw anyone carrying a ham on the street
so we agree that this joke was nonsense
Lol
Spanish ham IS absolutely incredible to be fair. I am from germany and was in madrid once when my sister spent a year there and we tried an iberico and it was absolutely fabulous
Thats not jamón , it is paleta.
Incredible that people love to cut pieces in legs of animals. So cruel and dirty. Reason why I will never go to Spain. The smell of dead animals in bars.Dripping above your head. Never understand why anyone can love that
@@adriancardador2039 no le líes encima al pobre jajajahahaha
@@adriancardador2039 Jamón and paleta are the different legs. Jamón is the rear leg and paleta is the forward leg. People believe that jamón is better than paleta, but in truth, 99% of the people wouldn't be able to distinguish one and the other when they come from the same animal.
Also, if you buy the whole leg, paleta will be cheaper because it's much smaller and the percentage of bone is higher.
That's why his poor reaction to such an expensive and delicious gift brought halfway across the continent by a friend is really outrageous. I would have kissed her feet for that amazing and thoughtful gift!
As a portuguese I can confirm.. 5:30 is indeed coffee time. Dinner is at 9 😂
I have dinner at 8, but yeah coffee time is 5
Are you kidding? I am not even Portuguese and I have my coffee time at 5:30. Dinner for me is when the sun begins to settle down.
Dinner in Portugal is between 7:00h and 8:00h PM! We work!
@@suevialania Those are the times I have dinner. That’s me. Yet again, I can adapt but I can’t help it if you are used to it.
Im english and 9 is not far from bedtime 😂
Como alemán que sabe español y que ha viajado mucho por España esto me encanta. Mi primera vez en España, fui a un restaurante a las 6pm a cenar y me miraron como si fuera un extraterrestre 😆
I can confirm we Latin-Americans got passed down the late dinner time as well. We usually eat dinner after 8 PM and even drink coffee afterwards, definitely not the best thing to do when you’re trying to get a good night’s rest. But hey, we manage just fine and so I guess it’s alright. 😂
@@Miguel.L A las 8 pm es muy pronto para un español en la gran mayoría de los casos
Tardamos mucho para todo aquí en España, jaja 🤣
Yo estoy deseando visitar Alemania 💜
¡Un saludo!
Curiosamente el origen de estos horarios, en parte está en el cambio que el gobierno de Franco hizo en 1940 para acomodar la hora a la de Berlín. La hora era distinta pero nosotros seguimos con nuestro reloj "biológico" por eso se comía usualmente a las 13:00. Y sí, luego la cosa ha ido degenerando cada vez más.
Es consabido que la impuntualidad destaca la cultura hispanoamericana.
I remember seeing the big hams at Spanish supermarket and thinking “Wtf is the deal with this? Are you supposed to buy the whole thing or is it like a deli where you ask someone to slice it?” I guess this video answers that question
In French Lidl grocery stores, they also sell big hams this way, but in a box. You can also have the equipment to cut it properly, sold in a bundle with the big ham 😮
Normally people buy sliced ham, you can ask for it and they cut the weight you want, but you can also buy the whole ham and slice it at home
Both
spaniard here. some people buy the whole thing but it's expensive, so you just go buy some slices every time you want some. I've never seen anyone taking a whole ham to the park though, that's a first for me XD
Yes you do xd and you cut it yourself with an special knive, it is way tastier that way. You can have it cutted by someone or in machine but it is actually cheaper when it is on machine cause the jamón serrano fibers deteriorate with the heat of the machine. Also eating it in the precise moment when you cut it is just another world in comparisson.
My favorite scene is when you cut to Andy cutting the "jamon" in the park. I wish she would wear the jacket from earlier in the park aswell. I was waiting for your reaktion when she arrives with the jacket.
was thinking the same thing while editing^^
@@RadicalLiving it is like that sometimes 😅
@@RadicalLiving hey mate, a video comparing Dutch vs German jajaaj
@@RadicalLiving love your videos!
Can you make a video about your process of making videos?
I'm making that video right now, anything you'd love to see in there? 😸
Esperaba un montón está colaboración, dos de los mejores, me encanta su carisma😂
Esto es tan Español que mi café se convirtió en una caña y mis galletas en un bocata de ibérico de pata negra con chorizo de pamplona
My only spanish:
DOS HOMBRES CON PISTOLAS!
@@gandalf_thegrey works tho, but ME and my brother, we speak spanish so good
I spent two years in Germany and now I'm in Spain...Really shocked by the late dinner time (my friends be eating at 10) and the jamon (have a whole leg in the kitchen currently).
When is the classic time of going to to sleep and wake up there?Ive been one semester in Madrid but there it seemed like ppl go to sleep around 12 and go to work around 7, which is like in Germany/Poland. My uni started at like 7 45 which is quite early,my uni at Prague starts at like 9 15/30 earliest :D In my country people in the countryside actually start the day earlier than in city
@@Aggoenix Yo soy profesora y comienzo a dar las clases a las 8 y media. Tengo que levantarme a las 7 de la mañana, por lo que a las once de la noche me voy a dormir.
Pues es que en España somos bastante anárquicos y nos gusta apurar los momentos buenos de la vida. No hay una hora para irse a la cama, porque después de un duro día de trabajo, la noche es nuestra. Madrugamos ( mi despertador suena a las 6 de la mañana, pero me levanto a las 6:30, porque esa media hora en la cama me sabe a gloria bendita) y nunca me acuesto antes de las 12 o 12:30. A las 9 es cuando se acuestan los niños.
Last month I visited Spain for the first time as a German and I definetely had a culture shock when I first entered the Metro and sooooo many people were talking/phoning so loud, not giving a single f*ck about others hearing their conversation. It was such a culture shock for me. 😅
VIDA.
Same but reverse. Taking a train in Stuttgart at 7am to go to work and everywhere there just silent looking at their phones was so shocking, not a single sound lmao
I think these are the perks of having a nice weather 😅🌡️ in the Americas is almost the same in Nicaragua (well we were also provinces of Spain ( states) at some point in the past.
Lo de ponerse la chaqueta que se encuentra en el jardín,no entiendo porqué,soy español y jamás he cogido ropa de la calle ni he visto a nadie hacerlo,donde de España se ponen ropa encontrada en un jardín??algún español hace esto??no lo creo,de donde sale esa idea??
Holy shit. Then it looks like here in America it's a mix of both. Sometimes a train is filled with people just looking at their phones and not making any sound. Other times it's people being loud as fuck. I hate it when it's dead silent...
100% real life footage.
Thanks for inviting me, I love the video 😊
Next we gotta do German in Spain😺 hope you're enjoying Korea!
Lol 🤣 100% same story in Greece...
I didn't know that Spanish culture is so similar to Geeek!
La letra "ñ" de nuestro abecedario es una herencia vuestra. Nuestro idioma es latino, pero tenemos mucho de grecia. Y por supuesto, el carácter mediterráneo que nos hace únicos.
@@elisanunezaguirre7944 No, la ñ no es griega. Es la abreviatura de la doble n del latín. Annus > Año, porque en el siglo XII se escribía una n pequeñita encima de la n grande, y con el tiempo la n pequeñita fue degenerando en la tilde ~ que siguió colocándose encima de la otra n.
Nope Spaniards are celts they share more of the culture & dna with the Scottish , people from wales , Ireland & Brit’s… they just share the ancient Latin language with the Italians & some customs with Greeks , but their dna is celt .
@@Rickky007 It's not that simple. It's like claiming Germans are still Germanic tribes. As with most Europeans, there were a lot of cultural exchanges and conquests. The Greeks were in Spain, too. Especially in coastal mediterranian areas, if I remember correctly. Basically every Spanish city that starts with an "Al" has a strong Arab influence, etc.. And equating your identity with DNA doesn't have a good track record. - a German
@@Rickky007 not exactly, celtic it is a culture athought our background is celtic + ibero , we are atlantic and mediterranean, South and West.
About DNA it is a bit complex to explain, I am 100% in my DNA results but outside of Spain the palce where I find more 4th cousins is in UK
I don’t think a Spanish woman would like to wear a jacket that is left on the street, but the rest was pretty accurate.
I can assure you ,that bothered me a lot
Im spanish thats so random. Just why? Xd
@@luisrabalperez7146 I’m Spanish too, guys also won’t do it right? Maybe he saw someone doing it? I don’t know 🤷🏻♀️
That was a big WTF… that’s supposed to define spaniards? Not accurate and not funny. Maybe we can go with the nazi thing… 😒
@Captain Planet that stereotype sounds exactly like the ones latinos get in america, and considering you colonized them.... yeah, maybe the stereotype is true.
As Italian, I love this format about cultural differences
Spanish are so similar to us 🤣
But in northern Italy we drink mulled wine, Vin Brulé
I love the different cultures! The culture shock is always amazing to experience and figure out. It's like a whole new world and you put a comedic spin on it. Thank you!
Just a little info people:
We latinos (people who speak as mother language: Spanish, French, Italian, Portuguese, etc) at least most of us, have 4 main meals at day, breakfast, lunch, "snack" (that's between 4 pm up to 7pm) and then dinner starting from 9 pm up to 11pm.
Yeah, we are crazy.
I think latinos are from latinoamerica while spanish-speakers include Spain and other countries and Ibero-America includes Spanish people (from Spain) and Portuguese-speakers.
Reminds me of the "Hobbits" from Lord of the Rings: "Yes we had first breakfast, but what about second breakfast?" :D
I may be wrong, but I think it's about warm vs cold countries overall. In warmer countries people prefer to be active and sociable later in the day (as well as eat), when it's not as hot outside. In colder countries not only it happens earlier, but basically you don't have to be sociable at all 😀
True👍, but it's latins, latinos is another thing
As a russian - we do that too, although we may skip the snack part
You forgot spreading olive oil on EVERYTHING 🤣
No, no a todo. Lo que no usaremos es mantequilla habiendo un buen aceite de oliva virgen extra.😂 Y por supuesto nuestro aperitivo, un platito con aceitunas y otro de tortilla de patata con una cerveza fresquita en una terracita a la fresca en verano, y si es posible, oliendo a jazmín o a azahar.
Roman saying: "where there is no olive oil and wine, there can be no civilization"
Well thats more Italian thing than Spanish
As a person who has lived in both countries and learned quite a lot about both cultures, this video seems extremely accurate and fun! And his face at 4:55 was hilarious :P
Loved it, guys!
As an spanish I confirm all of this xd and yeah jamón serrano tastes way better if you cut it yourself and if you eat it on that precise moment, also the middle part is the best one, taste varies a lot from the outermost part to the closer to the bone one.
What a good laugh. I'm an American living in Spain for 13 yrs. I watched the American in Germany and just finished the Spaniard in Germany. Excellent stereotypes. I enjoyed it a lot.
Amazing collaboration! I follow you guys since a while. Genial!
Awesome! Thank you!
As a Spanish living in Germany I can tell I'm having lots of culture shocks 😅
please elaborate
@@unlink1649 now I'm at school? 🥲
Claro. Te mudaste de un país super caluroso y con una cultura muy rica pero que padece de una burocracia incompetente a un país más rígido que se destaca por la eficaz con la cual se hace todo.. 😊
Let me tell you, boy. I'm spanish and I'd never take anything left in the street. And so many people I know too.
Pues si, a mi me ha molestado un poco la verdad...
No me ha gustado nada ese video... 😠
@@mariaforcen9598 , es supremacismo.
@@sar6400 , es insultante y lo peor es que seguro que ni se da cuenta.
@@mariaforcen9598 a mi también, da la impresión que piensa que somos unos ladrones. No sé de donde saca esas ideas, a no ser que sea puro racismo. Y por cierto, yo siempre llego a tiempo a mis citas, eso es otro estereotipo falso
Fun video. Just a couple of things: most people would also fold and place to one side a lost item of clothing they come across to make it easier for the owner to recover it and although we are not too fond of queuing up, our queues do exist. They are just "disperse" and not physically arranged in a line. In that sense, when you step into a shop in Spain and there are people waiting around the counter, always ask "¿Quién es el último? (who was last to arrive before me?), and that person is the reference you will need to know your turn to be served. And, no, sorry, nobody in their right mind would go somewhere simply because they are giving out whatever for free... We are not that needy or ggreedy, overall. Some people would do it; but most have better things to do. Finally, arriving half an hour later is definitely discourteous, especially if that person is waiting for you out in the street.10 or perhaps 15 minutes is the limit not to be frowned upon (at least in my circle of friends), unless they you have a good excuse. In any case, you would get a text message informing you of the delay. That is the norm now.
You missed the part where Germans enter in restaurants where there are hardly any people, while Spanish prefer those who have a single chair free. Otherwise, was hilariously accurate.
Oh and the inside joke from my Spanish friends 'in the transport is like in library - so quiet !'
Of course! A crowded restaurant usually means it's good 🤣
@@Jasandiz Not really.
Have you ever eaten at ANY tourist spot around the world?
They are always full to the brim, considerably more expensive that the one 2 streets away, with smaller portions and way overpriced.
Did you ever saw a restaurant of a michelin star (i dont ask if you were there eating, i wasnt either) cook?
They sell you half a tooths worth of food that often doesnt taste that different from a regular learned cook.
On the other side, if a restaurant is always empty its not good, very simple.
But just because its popular doesnt mean its good. Not even half the time
I mean... just look at Apple, they havent innivated since 2011 or so.
@@gandalf_thegrey We're Spaniards, we filter out tourist trap restaurants by default. Our brain don't proccess them.
Si hya mucha gente significa que la comida es buena. 😂
I won’t trust an empty (or almost empty) restaurant.
- Lets skip the que
- No no we're in Germany, germans don't do that
Meanwhile in Berghain que
I had the exact same expression when I met a Spanish person for the first time and they hugged and kissed me on both cheeks, that was definitely a surprise :D
If a beautiful spanish girl comes and kiss me like that, I will propose her. In our country, only lovers kiss each other
@@ab-nr9nw Are You from an arabic country or from India or east asia?
@@inotoni6148 in my country also only lovers kiss and parents may kiss their children... I live in Germany 💀
It is very common in the southern parts of Europe 🇪🇺, in Spain, Italy, Greece, we kiss each other on both cheeks when we meet.
@@haisheauspforte1632 Ok, but is it possible that you are confusing a kiss on the cheek with a kiss on the mouth? I didn't kiss my girlfriend on the cheek but on the mouth. Friends/family (female) kiss on the cheek and male friends/family shake hands. Grüße aus Deutschland
Aaah my two favourite youtubers zusammen!!! Andy tought me how to declinate and Radical Living how to make it to Berghain. Just the perfect balance
Jamón pata negra, el regalo más preciado que te puede hacer un español!!!
Me hace recordar un sobrino,que visito la primera vez a sus suegros en Transilvania.Les llevo un jamon de regalo pensando que alla no han visto eso. A cual su suegro le dio las gracias y bajo con el jamon a la cueva,colgandolo al lado de otros 4 JAMBONES que habia preparado el mismo,con la diferencia que alla estan sin pata,cortados desde la rodilla
Love you both, great to see you doing this together!
Italy here, and I have to say, except clothes stealing (it have no sense) we as Italian can have the same Spanish reactions.....
And in Spain we dont do that either, idk where that comes to
It isn’t stealing if it has no owner
My grandpa passed away a week ago and you keep me happy. also can you do a when canadians visit germany
The time deal got me. Spanish man here, with German wife. Punctuality and following rules are truly their strongest characteristics. That and their humble but fierce loyalty towards their loved ones. They seem dry and “frío”, but they aren’t.
Yo siempre he pensado que son muy apasionados...
Fun video! 😂
Living in Spain I want to defend them when it comes to respecting queues. Not sure they do it everywhere, but here people who waited less time at a bus station enter the bus last, they really care about it. Also, when they're opening another checkout in the supermarket you won't see people from behind moving past you without checking if it's okay for you🥹
Actually, I had a Spanish visitor bringing me one of those hams as a gift. I love them.
There simply can't be a better Spanish gift ^^
Una o dos botellas de buen vino también es un estupendo regalo por parte de un español.
Indeed. But I do love Spanish cuisine and culture anyway. So I would be happy about everything reminding me of that.
Hello, I am spanish and all scenes are accurate, but the gag of "Doesnt matter, its free!!" is so real it made me laughed so much xD.
Except the jacket gag. that was a bit weird.
I am from Portugal and I am dumbfounded by how much I related to this video 😂
why do I feel so Spanish suddenly, despite having no Spanish ancestry at all.
In summer we are all spanish!
The 30 minutes wait made me feel even more german than i already am
@@philipphogerl140 I'm not German but actually I'm usually more punctual than most Germans and if someone is late for 30 minutes without a valid reason, I don't think we will continue our relationships
@@philipphogerl140 Same but i'm italian.
@@alekseyromanov9593Same, I have ended friendships because the other person was 10 minutes late. I wouldn't wait 30 mins for anyone
Nice ! I’ve been following both of you guys for a while . Saludos!
You hit the nail on the head. I need to learn what I need in order to move into a flat in Germany. Not just what to have like you mentioned, but how to do it. Do I bow, do I bring my own house shoes? Do I bring a ham? How do I pay? Are there deposits and insurances that I need?
cant really tell if youre being serious or not but here goes: no, you do not bow. pre-covid you likely would have shook hands, now a verbal (formal) greeting will be completely fine (something like good afternoon).
you dont bring your house shoes, however you should ask if you shoud take off your shoes when you come to look at the flat (especially if someone still lives there when you look at it) and remember to wear socks in case they do ask you to take off your shoes.
its not custom to bring gifts.
unless specifically requested you wont pay anything in cash. there will be a deposit (which you will send the landlord via bank) that is usually the amount of 3 months rent. usually its paid in one go but sometimes there will be the offer to pay it in rates (in 2 halves, or even over three months)
i dont think any special insurance is needed (as far as im aware) but you may be asked to provide a document that you have health insurance (i think its rather unusual tho)
hope this helps :)
Don't bring a ham lol
Those videos are really well made and I enjoy them, since I live at the French/Spanish boarder (before at the French/Italian one), but I'm German. So I find a lot of points in these videos that refer to my every day experiences as a German dealing with different cultures.
I wasn't expecting this crossover AT ALL. I could relate soo much with those Spanish stereotypes, but taking the leg to the park... Andy, loca!. Greetings from another Spanish veggie :D
From Kenya with lot's of love really love your content, learning alot about your culture
The confused looking guy in the background during the ham in the park scene at 3:45 tickled me 😅😅
Another fabulous video👌
haha yeah he's like what the helllllll??
@@RadicalLiving he was confused but also curious 😄😅
As a German, I don't eat dinner at 5:30 p.m but it was fun to watch
I love these videos. Excellent work!
Thank you very much!
Being part German and part Spanish this strikes me very hard
Can you make a video when Mexicans come to Germany?
*putting it on the ToDo list" 😃
@@RadicalLiving pls do Brazil too I wanna know how Brazil and Germany react to each other in post 7-1 World
Or when Asians visit Germany! 😁✌👍
@@syed_ahmad_aljoofri There are too many types of Asians, you should be more specific.
Mexicans always making things about themselves, please don't...
Andy!!! I love her channel. Marvelous colaboration.
Well, it's always fun when two cultures meet. Espessialy Europeans. Yesterday I had a discussion with a Swedish guy in Sweden about swimming in the lake or sea. It is to cold for me. I seem in our sea in the summer when the temperature is above 22 C. And the girl here doesn't have any accent.
Maybe not the cliche accent you were expecting but still has it though
She speaks English like an American!
Putting Spanish ham in fridge is like ice cubes beer in Germany lol
Love germany from spain 🇪🇸❤🇩🇪
0:20 "The whole leg??" best scene haha :'D
No puedo creer que este crossover exista 😂 soy fan de Andy desde hace años y nunca pensé que fueran a hacer un video juntos!
I am in love with her style. so effortless pretty
hahaha great video again mate!! So accurate! So we don't steal clothes (most of the time😅) and we definitely don't be late never! We have 1hour spare to be late!! 😂
Great video and you both compliment each other. The cultural differences between countries is quite significant at times, I agree, and many times very funny results as each adopts the new customs. Well done.
My two favorite European countries
Thanks to your special guest!!
Ok, we do have jamon in Germany, we also drink normal wine in Germany and most of us have dinner at around 20:00 maybe even later
I am from northern Italy, so I usually have dinner at 7.30 PM. When I went to Madrid and my spanish boss told me no restaurants open before 8.30-9 PM, I said: "I'm going to starve!!" 😆 Indeed, having dinner at 5.30-6 PM is too early for us!
Pero siempre te puedes tomar una "tapa" con cerveza a cualquier hora, y es más barato...
Aquí cenamos entre las 9 y las 10 de la noche 😅
In Romania we go for really tight and uncomfortably long hugs! 😊
(sometimes with the double cheek kiss). In the older generation even men did the cheek kiss greeting, but nowadays it kinda went away, being replaced by a handshake. And a pat-on-the-back bro hug, of course.
Romania sucks that why every young Romanian live outside it... Unless you have ties with Putin life is difficult... 😉
The whole cheek and hugging thing is definitely a tradition i would not mind the death of
@@taisdoubt3045 With friends and loved one it`s fine. With strangers or more distant connections you don`t have to, nowadays. Kissing is optional, hugging is usually desired by both parties involved :D
@@dms-f16 i do not know about you but by my observation most people do not in fact desire to hug random strangers or even friends no matter what
I'm really happy this video was made to show the differences in the ways of thinking. I don't think that there's enough videos like this, because many people are now starting to think that it's just okay to go to a different country and do whatever you want without studying the customs and the culture and learning how to respect other people.
good to know our spanish neighbors aren't that different from us portuguese after all
Somos un 90 % iguales.
@@ellince7327en términos de genética, somos idénticos
As a Portuguese I can relate... with the Spanish girl, of course.
It seems like overall Spain and Germany have an incredible, sweet, vaguely co-dependent relationship :D
You saw nothing now the thing will start. 👌The gas deal... 😋
They give us job opportunities and we give them holiday resorts and post-retirement homes.
Not so bad I think.
Yes, Fascists Hitler and Franco destroyed the Basque Nation,( Guernica)!, etc Zpain 😈
@Mithra pues casi, a mi me han dado trabajo pero en uno de los países vecinos de Alemania.
Y sí, sé que la mayoría de los españoles se quedan en España, por eso España tiene la tasa de paro más alta de la UE junto a Grecia y uno de cada tres parados en toda la UE es español, porque el mercado laboral español está hecho girones y a pesar de ello, los españoles prefieren quedarse malviviendo en la precariedad o incluso viviendo de sus padres o abuelos en Españita (porque total, como tenemos solecito, playita y terracita...) antes que buscarse las castañas, aunque sea fuera.
Lo mismo ocurre en Portugal, Italia o algunos países del Este, tienen un mercado laboral en la miseria, como el español, pero a diferencia de los españoles que somos muy por tirar al conformismo, a los portugueses, italianos, polacos, etc. no se les caen los anillos por expandir sus horizontes y probar suerte fuera de sus países de origen. Por eso no tienen las tasas de paro tan disparadas que tiene España.
@Mithra qué acomplejado ni qué niño muerto? Si yo soy el primero que sabe que no todo fuera de España es perfecto, vivo aquí y tengo que lidiar con todas las cosas negativas, que no son pocas.
Pero que los españoles, por regla general, somos muy conformistas y queremos que nos pongan todo al lado de casa y muchos incluso ponen el ocio incluso por encima de una situación laboral estable, no se puede negar. Aquí estás tú, negando puntos no tan positivos de España por autocomplaciencia.
I was waiting for this colab!!!! LOVE IT
So glad! 😃
For any Americans watching this. Yes she is Spanish though her hair maybe bleached. Why isn't she 4 feet tall and brown? Well because she is not an indigenous Native American like the Spanish speaking people you are familiar with in the US. This woman is a mixture of real Europeans mixed with Arabs, Sephardic Jews, Gypsies , Pheonicians, some German from when the Vandals and Visigoths invaded Spain. She has a little African admixture from when the Spaniards brought African slaves back to Iberia.
I'm Spanish and I'm blond 😂
Ihr seid so witzig!!! Kompliment!
So great!
The Russian culture looks like a combination of both. There is ham as such and mulled wine as such :)
Yep. We often cook mulled wine on forest hikes, especially in winter :)
Lo del vino calentado me deja perplejo.
Podemos usar vino para hacer recetas de comidas, pero tomarlo caliente ni en broma.
Her visit to Ireland would pretty much be the same, except the leg of an animal would not make inside the house. She’d have to take her shoes off first too. But the Irish might queue up for free cheese though. Dinner at 17:00 would be normal, picking up lost property and placing it on the wall is essential.
I'm from spain, and when i visited prague and saw roasted ham and hot wine i almost had a heart attack, to this day, i'm still trying to get over that trauma
Everybody loves hot spicy wine when it's really cold
I'm from Sweden, where mulled wine has been a thing for centuries. I prefer room temperature whisky, cognac or armagnac on a cold winter day.
@@francisdec1615 lo que pasa es que te parecerá poco alcohol, si os tomáis whisky como quien bebé cerveza
I don't even realize why exactly, but she is so so cute
The dinner thing is so true... usually have dinner at 9:30-11:00
i think on average us germans like to go to bed earlier (except parties ect but on a regular workday) so you cant really eat till 11 if you want to go to bed by 10
I also lived in Catalonia for a few years and I was surprised by many things. As you say, people went to the restaurants between 9 and 11 pm. Also families with small children. The families on the way home stopped at the playground at 11:30 pm and the 4 year old child played a little. My brother, on the other hand, put his children to bed at 7 pm in Germany.
@@inotoni6148 Exactly, very different when it comes to bedtimes.
That was so funny!!! I already follow you both and this video makes me smile, thanks!’
Lol the skipping queue thing, i remember id always skip them and all the germans would be looking at me.
My friends would be telling me always broo we r not in albania here please dont 😂
Germans do it too, they just pretend. You should keep an eye on your place, if you don't want some yokel or grandma to go in front of you
We drink hot red wine in Chile as well! (In winter) It’s delicious! With spices and orange slices… Yum!!
Thank you! I'm actually watching these videos to prepare for German culture. However, maybe I should go to Spain.
If you love Jamon, Spain is heaven
Jamon, not so much, but I struggle with precise punctuality.
As a romanian i can see both sides, we drink mulled wine, the normal size for a beer is 500 ml, we like free stuff especially food we might just eat the whole plate of samples, we're usually late although preferably no more than 15 minutes, and dinner is somewhere between 5 pm and 2 am :))
She's right.17.30 is time for a coffee!Ask the greek people!
Even in Germany, 17:30 is like the earliest possible acceptable time for diner. Like 11:30 is for lunch. Among older generations it may be more common to have the meals that early. But usually that kind of thing is only done in special circumstances, like when there is an event with a tight schedule which includes the meal times.
I live in Ecuador and I really don't know how I discovered your channel maybe because I was watching videos about Deutschland hahaha The fact is I really have fun and enjoy all your videos hahahaha Ich möchte nach DE reisen :D
Awesome! Thank you! Germany will be waiting for you!^^
The same thing happened to me. I'm from Ecuador and I was watching videos about the band Rammstein and suddenly this guy was recommended to me. Since then I have not stopped laughing with his videos. The one he did with the guy from USA was very funny.
Spanish are really like Italians and Greeks. Love from Greece to Spain and Germany
New Video w/ Andy greaaaaaaat!✨🤩
Hahaha, glad both you Germans and us Americans can bond in our shared sensibility and rationality when watching these silly Iberians! I was laughing so damn hard I dropped my gun
... so what the Germans drop ?
@@rscaht their beer probably ..
Nalf is celebrating you
@@rscaht Their Luger
As a spanish, i dropped my ham leg
You couldn't be more acurate...spanish people look around and then just grab and go, I just returned from a trip to Berlin with 2 spanish friends and they nicked what they liked in the airbnb flat where we stayed 😢 I was shocked and disgusted🫣🤬💩
Best German Spanish unification would be for me
Living in Germany and supporting Real Madrid
As a Romanian I can relate with both cultures , we have smoked pig legs but also we drink hot whine on Christmas.
Ich liebe eure Videos. Beste👍🏻
As an Italian, I can relate to many of these episodes🤣
Wow, hilarious i started following you both time ago since i moved to berlin. Now you both on same video, so cool to see you!
Berlin so small, but yet i haven’t seen you on the streets. And yes i live on the east side.
I have a lot of respect for “German Time” 😊👍 🇩🇪
Most respect you can show is to get 5 minutes before you meet a friend. Germans love it 😘
@Hellequin Maskharat Most of Spaniards are punctual in formal occasions, but if we are going to meet our friends we can be around 15 to 25 minutes late.
@@Richardsoundso In our country, some people say that they will come at 10, but sometimes they reach by 11. 😂🤣Germans are so strict
@Hellequin Maskharat Then you must be having some indian ancestry🤣
@@ab-nr9nw In Germany its just showing your respect. My time has the same worth as yours. Very rude to let someone wait, especially if your friend is in time. At work, 3 times to late and you get kicked out.
But ja i have heard in some countries its rude to be in time cos it puts the other person under presure.
Hahahaha amazing😆😆👏👏👏 so funny! Andrea me hiciste matar de risa jajaj, thank you friends!
Im from spain and I have never seen or heared about somebody taking clothes from the street and taken it. Wtf 😂
I know that this video is more focused on spaniards but I kinda feel identified too being mexican. I'm going to be in Germany for 10 months and I'm super nervous on what I'm going to find there and the type of people that I'm going to meet. I know that germans are more introverted but I've have heard that they reach some extremes. I'll do my best to adapt there but I can already tell that is not going to be easy
Soy español y me encanta tus videos! Te conocí por un americano en Alemania. Un saludo desde España
As a Spaniard I fully confirm lmao
PD: As for meal schedules, 5:30 pm would be more of a "merienda" time (a usually light meal/snack between lunch and dinner), rather than dinner time 😂
Ha, so you also have "merenda" (as we Italians call it), even though we eat it earlier (3-4 PM) 👍
@@tyrantabyss good to know!
I love how this guy in the back is looking you like "wtf they're doin'?" 03:41
I know this is bit serious for a video like this, but I want to put a question out there. Do you think Germany's regulations on aquiring a house is a reason why the country faired better than Spain during the 2007-08 housing market crash and the recession that happened afterwards?
Yes. Absolutely