No, you need 6 persons to change the light bulbs. One who holds the bulb in his hand. The other fife lift him up and turn him around until the bulb is inside.
Efficient my ass, your bureaucracy is one of the world wonders, man I never saw slower and dumber then your government, love Germany tho, nice people just not efficient
@Skeptical Slim we have. Just take a look at Claudia Roth or Angela Merkel - after years of selective breeding, German scientists finally made some overly engineered humorous hardware that is unmatched. Quite a struggle to maintain them, but totally worth it. They're like Trumps with tits.
Oh too true! Lol! 😂4:15 - "If Germans had ruled the world a million years ago our health and safety commission would have prevented the discovery of fire."
Have you ever been to the UK tho? Their health&safety rules are even worse than germany's. I just couldn't belive that you have to be 21 and get your id checked to buy scissors there but it's true. Like you can drive a car, have an appartment but you can't buy scissors.. 😂
I have observed: The corner of my mouth was angled upwards twice (by 3-4 millimeters) and once downwards (by 2-3 millimeters). So that must have been a good comedian!
Couldn't stop laughing. And I'm a German, too. "They don't care, but they do ask." Lovely. You just forgot to mention that a gun ban in America would be like a general speed limit in Germany. It's like slaughtering holy cows.
Ruediger Podlaha I just drove through Germany with my mother and we got a ticket (or whatever you call it) 🧐 seriously, 100km/h speed limit??? Insanity
LaughingForNoReason XD Well theres rules. Some parts of the Autobahn have a speed limit for example to quiet down the noises for neighboring cities. You gotta know when its fine to drive 250mph and when its not, after all it is Germany!
QuantumBullet ✔️ Because the insurance is not mandatory and it doesn’t help in this case. It only works when you can’t go/have to return because of personal reasons like sickness, death of a family member etc. Thomas Cook being bankrupt is not a personal reason of the vacationer.
@@ducklingscap897 Both of you mix stuff up. Thomas Cook Pauschalreisen were covered by the general insurance for then up to a specified amount which does not suffice. Reiserücktrittsversicherung coveres the traveler for his failings and not the other way around
"Things that never happened". I'm german and no german would ever asked such thing. Not because it's an uncomfortable question, but because it's a stupid question. The person on the table wasn't there, nor their parents or grandparents.
@@n3ff848 Actually we do. Not necessarily that question in particular, but uncomfortably political questions, absolutely. Smalltalk with my British friend: issues with past British colonialism and how it links to Brexit. Smalltalk with my American family: why blackface is or isn't offensive.
I’m American and refuse to use, “How are you?” as a greeting, and if someone says it to me, they will absolutely get an overview of my recent medical history.
I remember a German comic at a standup club introducing his act by disputing the stereotype of a German lack of sense of humor and their obsession with analytical thinking and mathematical precision. He said the Germans were as spontaneous as anyone. Then he said: "Und now, joke number one."
It's funny how even Germans watching this tent to find it funny, listening to a guy stating nothing but clear facts. Talking about the "travel cancellation insurance", Vince forgot to mention the hardest part of negotiating it, that is to define the exact terms of the Reiserücktrittsversicherungsausschlussklauseln (the travel cancellation insurances' exclusion clauses); the mere thought of having spent time, effort and money, for something like an insurance and then not beinig able to benefit from it because some details had been overseen is sheer horror to Germans and something they fear more the death !
Meanwhile the American citizens - and business owners - brood over their health insurance plans, try to find the least shitty one (they are getting ripped off left, right and center. As a nation they spend double per person compared to most other wealthy countries). Companies that MUST offer a plan, change the plans (coverage) all the time. They are often forced to, if the insurance does not think the client (company) is profitable they raise premiums, co-pays, deductibles until the company gives up (the insurance companies intends to "fire" the company, but they cannot openly send them a letter that they want them to get lost because one employee (or a family member) happens to have a costly or ongoing treatment. Might be against the law, and would be so bad PR that politicians might be needed to react. 8I heard that from Wendell Potter, whistleblower on the industry). So every year (or inbetween even, the insurers and employers can make those changes as they want) American citizens have to reassess which doctors are in the "network" which their insurance plans - currently - covers. Not conscious after an accident and the "wrong" ambulance got you in the "wrong" hospital ? There comes the suprise bill, never mind that you "had insurance". Can be a few thousand dollars for smaller medical inervention. X-rays, fixing a broken bone A cesarian costs around 10,000 USD in a first world nation, and 30,000 in the U.S. (on average). Well it does not "cost" 30,000 USD (running a hospital in Japan, Frane or the U.S. cannot be that different, not how they organize it and not the budgets they need), but that is what is BILLED. Bill over USD 800 for use of the wrong ambulance company would not be extraordinary. Another story that Wendell Potter mentioned. A woman fell into a gap at the underground or she stumbled. She hurt her leg badly she had a cut on her leg from some sharp metal. The bone showed, so quite severe. She cried out of pain, while other people tried to help her - and begged them to NOT call an ambulance, because she could not afford the costs.
I'd take the booking of travel cancellation insurance every day over handling U.S. health insurance (even more security for the consumer, for a voluntary ! planned contract for a luxury product). The travel agencies tend to offer it as a given for higher priced contracts: It is a little more revenue for them AND the customers will not mind paying, but will be thankful that the agency nudged them to book it, IF they need it. That is a win / win for the industry. And if the travel is not costly but the person just about can afford it (the big once a year joy) - then it also makes sense to secure your position so to speak. Germans have the reputation of travelling a lot, and if you spend some money on the contract, and the insurance (if you cannot fulfill the contract does not cost that much) - Why not ? Americans are coaxed to insure their expensive smartphones (especially lower income people use that). Sure they lose a few hundred bucks if they drop it and it breaks beyond repair, but the insurance seems to be quite expensive (considering the maximum damage / cost of insurance ratio). Booking travel cancellation insurance for a planned pricey vacation is a good problem (expenditure) to have.
Haha I'm American, and I always answer the question of "how are you" with variations of "I'm alive." "Well, I woke up today..." and just staring at them. lol.
As a German,.... You can’t really be proud about it If Germans start to become patriotic, the world gets nervous The last two times didn’t pan out that well
The smoking areas on train station platforms are actually more helping to concentrate the cigarette waste in one place so it's easier to clean, that's why I like this system. It's meant to keep smoke from non-smokers but whatever... It has working benefits.
I am very sensitive to the smoke of cigarettes and those smoking areas are very helpful for someone like me (in bus stops, where there aren't any, it can be a nightmare).
I'm proud to know tons of cool long german compound words to describe things. We are a great nation, we Germans. There are just some...who don't count as they are doing all in their power to destroy it and Europe while blaming us for their own actions, us, the loving caring harmless people.
I'm curious where the stereotype of the humourless german even comes from because in my experience Germans are some of the most fun people to be around and they laugh probably the most.
Ben Schmie. Might be because we don’t over exaggerate when laughing like most Americans tend to do (which is kind of normal for them, I guess). If it’s not funny, we‘re not going to laugh; if it‘s only slightly amusing, you better believe we‘re not gonna burst out in laughter either (well, most of us, I presume). But ultimately your guess is as good as mine!
My (german) dad has his own theory on the humorless german sterotype. He grew up in the seventies in a town where there was a british barracks and tells the story that the british soldiers were often looking for trouble, beating up locals and stuff like this. So there was no reason for him to have fun or laugh around these soldiers and when they came home they told everyone "hey, these germans don't have humor, I never saw them laugh". He was visiting scotland a few years ago and a scottish guy wanted to tell them a joke about germans that never smile. My father just asked if he was a soldier in germany (he was) and told him exactly this story. That guy didn't tell the joke.
@@Luke0193 Das ist übrigens einer der Gründe, warum man im Ausland glaubt Deutsche hätten kein Humor. Jemand erzählt einen Witz und der andere Antwortet mit völlig überflüssiger Information, die die Pointe des Witzes überkompliziert oder zerstört, indem man einfach daran vorbeigeht. Mal abgesehen davon, dass viele Deutsche in englischen Threads einfach in deutsch antworten.
Ich kenne den anders: Ein Mann fliegt zu einer Präsentation des neuen Porsche nach Amerika. An der Grenze fragt ihn der Beamte warum er nach Amerika will. Seine Antwort: "I'm here for the new 911".
@@aGentleUser I think there are actually two kinds of germans; The ones who invent all the rules and registrations and the others, wich wonder who the hell thought newborns need a "Steueridentifikationsnummer" in the first week of their live.
@@walterwhite415 Look - we Germans are actually very very light hearted and spontanous people. It's just that this light-heartedness and spontanity has to be orderly, well documented and thoroughly planned. Edit: And keep in mind, that humour is not a laughing matter.
@@donatera6445 he´s not the best comedian ever...not even the best german comedian but he´s also not unfunny af. If you´re able to do so please... do it better.
My family lived in Germany for three years. Being American, the driving shocked me! They drive faster than me!! My husband is now retired from the Airforce. We loved Germany and want to live there again! Just for a few years. This comic was awesome ❣❣❣ Grace
That’s not true, I’m Germany we also say “wie läufts” or “wie gehts” just as a greeting, and in France they say “ca va” as a greeting. The only thing weird about the American way is that it’s this whole ritual of “how are you? I’m fine thanks how are you? I’m good thanks!” Where as in Germany we just say “Hey how are you?” And the answer is just “Hi!” Or whatever. There’s not this codified series of phrases. But other than that it’s the same. Like if someone in Germany tells me their life story when we just greeted each other that would be weird as well.
The one about "how are you" is also relatable for me as a Russian. In Russia, we too ask others how are they doing, and they, of course, may reply with "I'm doing fine, thanks", but it would be considered impolite if the one who asked is your close friend or a relative. Because if you don't tell them, like, a whole bunch of stuff that happened to you in the near past, that would mean you don't trust that person, you don't want to talk to them and don't want to share your news with them. So, when asked "how are you doing?", we tend to *actually* reply by telling the one who asked about our life, our work, our family, our plans etc. P.S.: of course it doesn't work for everyone, it's not a rule. Just a tendency I noticed.
Edison didn't invent the lightbulb, he invented a copper coating for the lightbulb filament that made it last longer, making it viable for commercial use.
Diddle Skittles *me as a german with german accent“ i think its like the worst thing in this world, i really hate my accent xD it sound kinda weird for me xD
@@paulapierrot9542 Because the very existence of your accent is an offense to the entire culture of foreign languages and also blow your cover as an secret agent, jk :D
It's not so much a lisp and more having problems to pronounce the th and voiced consonants in general, especially if they aren't followed by a vowel. It's mainly the older Germans though, generation 50+, who still have that thick cliche accent replacing the th by a straight on s without noticing it. Germans who started learning English already as as children in school usually have a less prominent accent and can pronounce a th.
As a US passport holder who has lived in 6 countries, I am convinced that Germans are more intelligent on their worst day than we (Americans) could ever hope to be on our best day. This does not mean that they have more common sense and flexibility in problem-solving, but they are literally like a different species when it comes to intelligence of any kind. After living here for the past two plus years, I think part of this is due to the fact that Germans are actual grownups. America just cannot seem to grow out of its adolescence, and the culture and people in that country really do reflect this.
I loved Germany. Loved it. Wished I lived there except I don't feel smart enough or fit enough. Germany has high standards in almost everything. But it was incredible to me and changed me for the better. I'll never forget it.
My brother actually did that once. I made a terrible joke and he was like. No that's not funny. Just so I would feel bad, than he went to the toilet and laughed 😂 he told me a day later
dont underestimate this persons talent of explaining uninteresting things in an interesting way. this guy’s book was the fist book i read to the end. it was about general science and physics. now im studying engineering
I was in Rio de Janeiro during the World Cup Final, watching it on the beach, and while the Argentinians were having a meltdown the Germans gave a simple clap at their amazing win and retreated without much fanfare. They are unfazed 😂
I am German, but I've spent years carefully smoothing out my accent to obtain a nice British tone - gotta admit, his accent hurts my heart. 😂😂 Haven't heard one that bad since high school, I think.
Dann hör dir erstmal Ansagen von doro an. Oder die Willkommensreden von Thomas auf Wacken🙈🙈😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂 Solchen Leuten sollte es verboten werden Englisch zu sprechen!
My English Teacher had me prepare an entire page for a month to get the Austrian English pronunciation (take Bavarian, add a few words pronounced in a slavic fashion and imagine pronouncing English) out of me. Guess I don't need to feel so bad about it anymore.
American: my Glass is still half full! Brit: Well, your Glass seems to me half empty.. German : That glass contains 250ml of wheat beer. Brit: Huh? get him out of our sketch!
Naturwissenschaften und Kabarett harmonieren wahrscheinlich deshalb so gut, weil die Natur in sich ein riesengroßer Scherzkeks ist. C-SPAN: Joe Wong at RTCA Dinner: ua-cam.com/video/buSv1jjAels/v-deo.html
I'm mixed and I do a lot of things "Germans " do but I would only joke that it's because I have a significant amount of German DNA on my mother's side.
You can avoid Smokers better, when they are concentrated into one area instead of all over the place. While writing this i realized that this is propably the most german way to Comment on this joke
I remember Vince from WAY back in the day. He's a genius, no question. But also a tragic figure to me. Because I just can't forget how he told on a talk show one time, that his parents or some relatives of his got kidnapped and killed by some terrorists or criminals on their holidays... That does something with your mind...
2 Germans in a bar in London:
- 2 Martinis, please.
- Dry?
- NEIN!! ZWEI!!
😂
Der ist gut 😁
XD
fuck xD
Machte meinen Tag! Heil Merkel!
Video with the word „German“ in the title:
Germans: *Zugriff!*
True tho 😂😂😂😂
Explain please
@@iLuvHinata360 Zugriff means something like attack
@@iLuvHinata360 It means Access, but in the same context as SWAT would enter a building
*Einsatz*
Best German answer to "How are you?" will always be "Oh, you know, one lives."
"And you so?" "Yes it has to"
Best german answer to "How are you?" actually is: "I am 27"
I guess I get that from my German dna... People I ask and I say something along those lines usually.
@@Sirvaria So true omg lol
Ja muss ja, nech
German humour is serious business. It's no laughing matter.
Womble!
Nah! Germans only laugh when the joke is told in german.
@@Pluneto Soviet
Just to be clear: we love humor and we have crazy german names for people who lack humor.
#whoooosh #yepIknow
I'm German...but what is humor?
I expected the conversation to be:
Border agent: Occupation?
German: No, just visiting.
Yeah, very funny.
Very good
Best joke I have ever heard :D
It's actually a Russian joke..
Yeah... He's not boarding France.
I don't get why the audience is laughing, he's just stating facts.
kokopelli0815 Because sometimes even facts can be funny if said the right way. Most comedians work that way.
Point of view 😉
To quote Dr. Sheldon Cooper: "It is funny because it's true."
The best comedians tell the truth
German comedy: Stating facts that are so true (sometimes) it's hilarious.
Volker Pispers is also quite good. No, one of the best.
I'd laugh at this, but I'm German and we don't laugh
HAHAHHAHAHA LMAOO
You do a lot
Ich gehe zum Lachen in den Keller...
Out loud, scared the dog.
After watching Vince I can see why.
Genug gelacht.
Nun zurück an die Arbeit!
😂😂😂
@Damn Immer diese Animeprofilbilder, die nicht arbeiten gehen. Alles faule Säcke!
So, genug Schabernack!
@@cancanoo2678 quality reference ;DDD
Perfekter Kommentar
as a german i breathed out hardly at every joke
Lülülü
Ju cannot schdreaem in mei schdreem
Meddle guys
Guy i can hear you not
Gib a ruh!
The best reply you can get from a german to the question "How are you doing?" is: "I can't complain..."
You're lucky when you get that answer tho 😂
Right, and the regular answer is: "Must" 😁😁😁
both can be translated to "sucks but i have no choice"
Heinz Erhardt, german Comedian (RIP) "Couldn't complain better"( "Könnt nicht besser klagen!" )
That's a VERY common response in Britain.
reminds me of this one:
How many Germans does it take to change a light bulb?
One. We are efficient and don't have humour.
Das ist lustig, weil es stimmt. 😁
No, you need 6 persons to change the light bulbs. One who holds the bulb in his hand. The other fife lift him up and turn him around until the bulb is inside.
@@evelyngiselahunsicker9861 no funny.
@@fleischliebe430 Take it easy. That's German humour.
Efficient my ass, your bureaucracy is one of the world wonders, man I never saw slower and dumber then your government, love Germany tho, nice people just not efficient
**slightly laughing in German**
*exhaling through the nose stronger than usual*
@@DuesseldorferJung1 but only in ze Keller, because ze neighbors could hear it.
@Skeptical Slim we have. Just take a look at Claudia Roth or Angela Merkel - after years of selective breeding, German scientists finally made some overly engineered humorous hardware that is unmatched. Quite a struggle to maintain them, but totally worth it. They're like Trumps with tits.
@Skeptical Slim ja.
hellau mai tscherman frend!
We Germans don‘t get depressed, because what‘s the point?
If you don't get your Reiserücktrittversicherung
😆😆😆😆😆😆
Also ich schon
johnburgh hahahahaha!!
No no no.. you ask that, then get depressed
I did not know that the germans have humor
*laughs in austrian*
They dont you can see it in the background, looks like a cellar.
There's no thing as Austrian that could laugh in unless there's a special way only Austrians laugh in.Its like saying *laughs in Prussian*.
@ ok boomer...
That's a freakin meme, of you dont get it than dont respond to it!
we don't, we are just funny by nature
:- D *laughs in cangaroo*
A German compliment sounds like this (and I quote my brother): "You look fat in that dress, but great dress!!!"
Only if you dont wanna continue living
Well that´s nice too. :)
I do in fact look fat in that dress. Liegst richtig
How i tell my brother i love him : hey fatty just wanted to remind you you are fat :)
Right, and another one is this: "Your dress looks disgusting, but it suits you well" 😁
"It's a Porsche!"
"Which model?"
"911"
That's how you close a comedy show in Murica!
With a blast
Mhm...
It's funny within the context of the joke but not when you randomly post it in the comments looking for likes.
Whatever you do, don't imply Mossad had something to do with that... Stick to the official story. The Arabs did it.
Fun fact the porsche 911 is actually fkin nuts. Best Porsche there is. Fite me.
Oh too true! Lol! 😂4:15 - "If Germans had ruled the world a million years ago our health and safety commission would have prevented the discovery of fire."
Have you ever been to the UK tho? Their health&safety rules are even worse than germany's. I just couldn't belive that you have to be 21 and get your id checked to buy scissors there but it's true. Like you can drive a car, have an appartment but you can't buy scissors.. 😂
@@eleasar2181 Really? Yeah, that does sound crazy. Lol! 😂
So until the age of 21 you can just get blunt tip kiddie scissors? 😂
That was the best line of the set
Omg I laughed so hard at this. Thank you.
Brandschutzvorschriften, amirite?
Germany - The only country to have a science comedian.
Actually we have more than one...
Found the German!
@@burtturdison4445 not that difficult if i talk about we in reference to Germany. ;)
Actually... we even have sience slams. It's a thing.
Physicist comedian is also a thing...
It's so weird, it's hilarious but also completely accurate
Humor is always exaggerated truth :)
There’s a reason for the saying “It’s funny because it’s true”
thats the best kind of humor.
Things not to say in america: "I flew into NY"
Mabus things* flew*
@@Ggggggggg631 thx
But still you didn't correct to *things:)
Volker Wendt correct the* things
@@Ggggggggg631 I hope we are good now.
I have observed: The corner of my mouth was angled upwards twice
(by 3-4 millimeters) and once downwards (by 2-3 millimeters).
So that must have been a good comedian!
Are you a german 😁
@@thedailychailatte Nah, I think he's russian! Those germans are STILL trying to screw in that lightbulb!
Couldn't stop laughing. And I'm a German, too.
"They don't care, but they do ask." Lovely.
You just forgot to mention that a gun ban in America would be like a general speed limit in Germany. It's like slaughtering holy cows.
Ruediger Podlaha I just drove through Germany with my mother and we got a ticket (or whatever you call it) 🧐 seriously, 100km/h speed limit??? Insanity
LaughingForNoReason XD Well theres rules. Some parts of the Autobahn have a speed limit for example to quiet down the noises for neighboring cities. You gotta know when its fine to drive 250mph and when its not, after all it is Germany!
@@ja_u 402 km/h? You should pay attention to more than just the speed limit if you want to go that fast
First I read gang bang instead of gun ban ... :-)
Yes well... holy cows make the BEST hamburgers!!!
"Reiserücktrittsversicherung" is not bad when you booked your Holiday Trip one year before!😆
Klara P. still German population had to pay millions after the Thomas Cook fail.
QuantumBullet ✔️ Because the insurance is not mandatory and it doesn’t help in this case. It only works when you can’t go/have to return because of personal reasons like sickness, death of a family member etc.
Thomas Cook being bankrupt is not a personal reason of the vacationer.
@@ducklingscap897 Both of you mix stuff up. Thomas Cook Pauschalreisen were covered by the general insurance for then up to a specified amount which does not suffice. Reiserücktrittsversicherung coveres the traveler for his failings and not the other way around
xcver What do you mean other way around? I said it only covers the traveller if it is a personal failing.
A word that long is bad to my eyes.
"What the hell were you thinking killing all of the Native Americans"
"Things that never happened". I'm german and no german would ever asked such thing. Not because it's an uncomfortable question, but because it's a stupid question. The person on the table wasn't there, nor their parents or grandparents.
@@thebeatcreeper …and n3ff is the stereotypical, humorless German. And probably proud of it.
@@thebeatcreeper True. :)
@@n3ff848 I'm German and I did ask that question. On Thanksgiving. Lol.
@@n3ff848 Actually we do. Not necessarily that question in particular, but uncomfortably political questions, absolutely.
Smalltalk with my British friend: issues with past British colonialism and how it links to Brexit.
Smalltalk with my American family: why blackface is or isn't offensive.
I’m American and refuse to use, “How are you?” as a greeting, and if someone says it to me, they will absolutely get an overview of my recent medical history.
I, German, approve of your attitude. Upvoted!
Looks like you have german ancestors ^^ :D
The only other options are "I cant complain" or "well,it has to go one" .
German spy detected.
Germans go into the cellar to laugh. Austrians go into the cellar... for other stuff.
HA! Unterbewertet
ui. Der war böse, gut und traf zielsicher.
Galador I see what you did there
Wie hoch ist eigentlich die Gas rechnung?
#toosoon
I remember a German comic at a standup club introducing his act by disputing the stereotype of a German lack of sense of humor and their obsession with analytical thinking and mathematical precision. He said the Germans were as spontaneous as anyone. Then he said: "Und now, joke number one."
Henning Wenn has a similar start to his comedy routine, as he says "off we go", setting off a stop watch.
It's funny how even Germans watching this tent to find it funny, listening to a guy stating nothing but clear facts.
Talking about the "travel cancellation insurance", Vince forgot to mention the hardest part of negotiating it, that is to define the exact terms of the Reiserücktrittsversicherungsausschlussklauseln (the travel cancellation insurances' exclusion clauses); the mere thought of having spent time, effort and money, for something like an insurance and then not beinig able to benefit from it because some details had been overseen is sheer horror to Germans and something they fear more the death !
Meanwhile the American citizens - and business owners - brood over their health insurance plans, try to find the least shitty one (they are getting ripped off left, right and center. As a nation they spend double per person compared to most other wealthy countries).
Companies that MUST offer a plan, change the plans (coverage) all the time.
They are often forced to, if the insurance does not think the client (company) is profitable they raise premiums, co-pays, deductibles until the company gives up (the insurance companies intends to "fire" the company, but they cannot openly send them a letter that they want them to get lost because one employee (or a family member) happens to have a costly or ongoing treatment.
Might be against the law, and would be so bad PR that politicians might be needed to react. 8I heard that from Wendell Potter, whistleblower on the industry).
So every year (or inbetween even, the insurers and employers can make those changes as they want) American citizens have to reassess which doctors are in the "network" which their insurance plans - currently - covers.
Not conscious after an accident and the "wrong" ambulance got you in the "wrong" hospital ? There comes the suprise bill, never mind that you "had insurance".
Can be a few thousand dollars for smaller medical inervention. X-rays, fixing a broken bone
A cesarian costs around 10,000 USD in a first world nation, and 30,000 in the U.S. (on average). Well it does not "cost" 30,000 USD (running a hospital in Japan, Frane or the U.S. cannot be that different, not how they organize it and not the budgets they need), but that is what is BILLED.
Bill over USD 800 for use of the wrong ambulance company would not be extraordinary.
Another story that Wendell Potter mentioned. A woman fell into a gap at the underground or she stumbled. She hurt her leg badly she had a cut on her leg from some sharp metal. The bone showed, so quite severe. She cried out of pain, while other people tried to help her - and begged them to NOT call an ambulance, because she could not afford the costs.
I'd take the booking of travel cancellation insurance every day over handling U.S. health insurance (even more security for the consumer, for a voluntary ! planned contract for a luxury product).
The travel agencies tend to offer it as a given for higher priced contracts:
It is a little more revenue for them AND the customers will not mind paying, but will be thankful that the agency nudged them to book it, IF they need it. That is a win / win for the industry.
And if the travel is not costly but the person just about can afford it (the big once a year joy) - then it also makes sense to secure your position so to speak.
Germans have the reputation of travelling a lot, and if you spend some money on the contract, and the insurance (if you cannot fulfill the contract does not cost that much) - Why not ?
Americans are coaxed to insure their expensive smartphones (especially lower income people use that). Sure they lose a few hundred bucks if they drop it and it breaks beyond repair, but the insurance seems to be quite expensive (considering the maximum damage / cost of insurance ratio).
Booking travel cancellation insurance for a planned pricey vacation is a good problem (expenditure) to have.
😂😂😂
@@xyzsame4081 you must be German, too, since you have absolutely no sense of humor 😂
@@hands-to-work1601 No, worse! An american democrat! At least Germans are good people and fun to be around!
"It's our constitutional right to go on a family trip in a Volkswagen with the speed of a cruise missile"😂
Haha I'm American, and I always answer the question of "how are you" with variations of "I'm alive." "Well, I woke up today..." and just staring at them. lol.
I always say "Still above ground, so I'm counting that as a win"
Volker Pispers ( German hard Comedy ) - The history of USA and Terrorism😇😅
ua-cam.com/video/MCToMDEaefo/v-deo.html
"Are you alright?"
"What must, that must."
Oder für die Mundfaulen Schwaben wie mich..... "muss"
muss muss waa
Wat mutt, dat mutt.
My husband who is German ( I am an American born and raised in Kentucky ) Tell the truth we are both just laughing like crazy.!!
UA-cam video title: "German humor." German commentators: "Allow us to introduce ourselves."
As a German,....
You can’t really be proud about it
If Germans start to become patriotic, the world gets nervous
The last two times didn’t pan out that well
third time's the charm
Having a shitty history doesn't stop Americans being proud to be an American.
@@poppers7317 I mean, the last reich to fail was the third...
like usa since ww2
The smoking areas on train station platforms are actually more helping to concentrate the cigarette waste in one place so it's easier to clean, that's why I like this system. It's meant to keep smoke from non-smokers but whatever... It has working benefits.
Stations (as well as the trains, of course) are completely non-smoking in Japan. That's the way it should be.
@phoo4402 german science! Great and all until it breaks down and repair is expensive.
I am very sensitive to the smoke of cigarettes and those smoking areas are very helpful for someone like me (in bus stops, where there aren't any, it can be a nightmare).
Germans have so many words for complex actions/feelings around actions
@David Cieplik schon alleine das wort "doch" ist so ein Luxus
I'm proud to know tons of cool long german compound words to describe things. We are a great nation, we Germans. There are just some...who don't count as they are doing all in their power to destroy it and Europe while blaming us for their own actions, us, the loving caring harmless people.
Video about germans
*Germans:* Das ist jetzt meins!
It’s free Grundbesitz
Ist wirklich wine schreckliche Angewohnheit 🤣
...a Porsche...
...what model...?
...911...! (ooops...! ;-)
That's a very clever joke. ; )
My word...that was a great dark humour! Roared laughing that i am.
Model neinteewonn wonn
Tschechisches Streichholzschächtelchen 😁
Wow that german skills
@@marga9296
Kein Wunder....ich lebe in Deutschland 😉
Ich bin Deutscher und kann das nicht sagen.
@@jochenstacker7448
Seien Sie froh!
Einen guten Rutsch ins neue Jahr wünsche ich Ihnen 🍾🥂
das klingt wie etwas das Pavlic und Pavlic bei der Bully Parade gesagt haben :D
Portugal: we have the same issues on "how are you" and "travel insurance" as the germans! :D
I'm curious where the stereotype of the humourless german even comes from because in my experience Germans are some of the most fun people to be around and they laugh probably the most.
Ben Schmie. Might be because we don’t over exaggerate when laughing like most Americans tend to do (which is kind of normal for them, I guess). If it’s not funny, we‘re not going to laugh; if it‘s only slightly amusing, you better believe we‘re not gonna burst out in laughter either (well, most of us, I presume). But ultimately your guess is as good as mine!
well germans have the best type of Humor, Galgenhumor. Nothing beats galgenhumor
XDrake 3107 and schadenfreude
My goodness I live on laughter! Makes life easier! Meine Güte, ich lebe zu lachen, es macht das Leben einfacher! Hahahaha
My (german) dad has his own theory on the humorless german sterotype. He grew up in the seventies in a town where there was a british barracks and tells the story that the british soldiers were often looking for trouble, beating up locals and stuff like this. So there was no reason for him to have fun or laugh around these soldiers and when they came home they told everyone "hey, these germans don't have humor, I never saw them laugh". He was visiting scotland a few years ago and a scottish guy wanted to tell them a joke about germans that never smile. My father just asked if he was a soldier in germany (he was) and told him exactly this story. That guy didn't tell the joke.
Lier! It is the Auslandskrankenversicherung, because otherwise you will not have a Auslandskrankenschein!
True
hahahahhah goes it any more german ? Ich denke nicht hahahah
As long as there is a Rinderkennzeichnungsfleischetikettierungsüberwachungsaufgabenübertragungsgesetz. Take that Wales!!!
Geht ja nicht um im Ausland krank sein, geht nur ums Geld zurückkriegen fürs zurückfliegen und das hat mit Auslandskrankenversicherung nichts zu tun
@@Luke0193 Das ist übrigens einer der Gründe, warum man im Ausland glaubt Deutsche hätten kein Humor. Jemand erzählt einen Witz und der andere Antwortet mit völlig überflüssiger Information, die die Pointe des Witzes überkompliziert oder zerstört, indem man einfach daran vorbeigeht. Mal abgesehen davon, dass viele Deutsche in englischen Threads einfach in deutsch antworten.
Ich kenne den anders: Ein Mann fliegt zu einer Präsentation des neuen Porsche nach Amerika. An der Grenze fragt ihn der Beamte warum er nach Amerika will. Seine Antwort: "I'm here for the new 911".
The 911 2012
ja kam so 1:1 im diktator vor. hast du gut kopiert
@@IknillU100x Hat irgendwer bei Nightwash erzählt.
Yeah but that's corny and not funny. THats why Vince is the professional comedian and you're not.
... and they all pulled out their guns and sent him to Gitmo!
Before mum and dad is tax registration number...
So true
My daughter was born 20 days ago and she allready got her SteuerID.
I have two kids they got it within the same week they were born...
@@aGentleUser I think there are actually two kinds of germans; The ones who invent all the rules and registrations and the others, wich wonder who the hell thought newborns need a "Steueridentifikationsnummer" in the first week of their live.
@@walterwhite415 Look - we Germans are actually very very light hearted and spontanous people. It's just that this light-heartedness and spontanity has to be orderly, well documented and thoroughly planned.
Edit: And keep in mind, that humour is not a laughing matter.
I love the Germans. They're really funny, too, but you have to know the right approach.
Reminds me, how I'm a German AND an introvert. I'm basically a rubiks cube to people. That's why I have no friends. :(
@@steffen5121 - Do some sports, join a Verein. I played Wasserball and that got me on the inside. Viel Glueck, Mensch!
@@steffen5121 nah its your looks
@@adim341 Exactly
Ich bin aus Rusland, and Ich liebe Ihren Humor, Herr Ebert!
German Humor is No Joke!
I know, they take their humor VERY seriously, hihi. :)
thats not "german humour" what he does here is just unfunny af. not a good comedian.
@@donatera6445 he´s not the best comedian ever...not even the best german comedian but he´s also not unfunny af. If you´re able to do so please... do it better.
@@ticki23 you don't have to be better to complain.
Well Humor is a serious topic
When a video has something to do with german ->
Germans: Hippity Hoppity this comment section is now my property
When I saw the title started with ´´German Humor´´ I understood immediately it was fake news.
You should see Brazilians
Ein Volk, ein Reich, ein Kommentarbereich
ES MUSS FÜR DEUTSCHLANDS LEBENSRAUM
Insert "It's free real estate" meme!
My family lived in Germany for three years. Being American, the driving shocked me! They drive faster than me!! My husband is now retired from the Airforce. We loved Germany and want to live there again! Just for a few years. This comic was awesome ❣❣❣ Grace
“How are you” from strangers is the most irritating question. In continental Europe you only ask it from acquaintances
true i once was in canada and the store assistant asked that, i was so confused that i couldn’t answer 😂
in germany we say "muss, muss waa"
That’s not true, I’m Germany we also say “wie läufts” or “wie gehts” just as a greeting, and in France they say “ca va” as a greeting.
The only thing weird about the American way is that it’s this whole ritual of “how are you? I’m fine thanks how are you? I’m good thanks!”
Where as in Germany we just say “Hey how are you?” And the answer is just “Hi!” Or whatever. There’s not this codified series of phrases.
But other than that it’s the same. Like if someone in Germany tells me their life story when we just greeted each other that would be weird as well.
As the daughter of German parents, I think I just found my new mentor for life decisions.
Danke Schone
The one about "how are you" is also relatable for me as a Russian. In Russia, we too ask others how are they doing, and they, of course, may reply with "I'm doing fine, thanks", but it would be considered impolite if the one who asked is your close friend or a relative. Because if you don't tell them, like, a whole bunch of stuff that happened to you in the near past, that would mean you don't trust that person, you don't want to talk to them and don't want to share your news with them. So, when asked "how are you doing?", we tend to *actually* reply by telling the one who asked about our life, our work, our family, our plans etc.
P.S.: of course it doesn't work for everyone, it's not a rule. Just a tendency I noticed.
Yeah that sounds also right for Germany
the light bulb joke squeezed the dirtiest laugh out of me, lol
Edison didn't invent the lightbulb, he invented a copper coating for the lightbulb filament that made it last longer, making it viable for commercial use.
@Alexander Büch it's German, with a capital G.
@@sineme lmao perfect addition
@@alexahelmich Dankeschön!
@@sineme Kein Ding b ✨
And after that companies invented a way for them to break faster, keeping them viable for commercial use.
English: Very nice, i am very amused.
Deutsch: Sehr schön, hat mich sehr amüsiert.
I like the German accent in English because there is always a lisp and I think it's cute
Diddle Skittles *me as a german with german accent“ i think its like the worst thing in this world, i really hate my accent xD it sound kinda weird for me xD
German accent sounds cool in English; however, the German language is horrendous.
People of other nations are proud of their accent or at least they don't hate it. But no German ever likes the German accent.
@@paulapierrot9542 Because the very existence of your accent is an offense to the entire culture of foreign languages and also blow your cover as an secret agent, jk :D
It's not so much a lisp and more having problems to pronounce the th and voiced consonants in general, especially if they aren't followed by a vowel. It's mainly the older Germans though, generation 50+, who still have that thick cliche accent replacing the th by a straight on s without noticing it. Germans who started learning English already as as children in school usually have a less prominent accent and can pronounce a th.
I'm just getting home after reading Faust in school and wanna relax watching UA-cam and what is he talking about?- Faust by Goethe
GÖthe
@@daeboilyoverhorse9026
Wrong. The spelling is "Goethe".
Ist ja auch ein gutes Buch ;-) Nichts besser als das, um Jugendlichen in eine existenzielle Krise zu stürzen...
@@anjakeller6612 du sagst es
@@daeboilyoverhorse9026 so sportsfreund geht das aber nicht!
The lightbulb/quantum physics comparison had me in stitches.
I can just picture it "I don't care, just invent me a lightbulb! Now dammit!"
"Sorry but I don't work here" :D
As a US passport holder who has lived in 6 countries, I am convinced that Germans are more intelligent on their worst day than we (Americans) could ever hope to be on our best day. This does not mean that they have more common sense and flexibility in problem-solving, but they are literally like a different species when it comes to intelligence of any kind. After living here for the past two plus years, I think part of this is due to the fact that Germans are actual grownups. America just cannot seem to grow out of its adolescence, and the culture and people in that country really do reflect this.
Klasse!!!! Ich hab das Video meinen Freunden geschickt, die kein Deutsch können... damit sie verstehen, warum ich ein Fan bin. :-p
As a German, I am ver offe- yeah, no, he's actually right. We do all of that...
I loved Germany. Loved it. Wished I lived there except I don't feel smart enough or fit enough. Germany has high standards in almost everything. But it was incredible to me and changed me for the better. I'll never forget it.
you welcome with that attitude and if everyone would have that attitude we would have far less immigrant.^^
@@Larrypint Bro WTF
@@jannix7262?
German humor aptly described?
It clearly shows the stage design:
"Go to the basement to laugh"
My brother actually did that once. I made a terrible joke and he was like. No that's not funny. Just so I would feel bad, than he went to the toilet and laughed 😂 he told me a day later
As a Swede we share the germanic approach😂
dont underestimate this persons talent of explaining uninteresting things in an interesting way. this guy’s book was the fist book i read to the end. it was about general science and physics. now im studying engineering
Wow. Good tip. I Will look for it.
I was in Rio de Janeiro during the World Cup Final, watching it on the beach, and while the Argentinians were having a meltdown the Germans gave a simple clap at their amazing win and retreated without much fanfare. They are unfazed 😂
Well I watch some German fan culture videos in football stadiums.
They go crazy for 90 minutes
“I flew into NY”
Wait
That’s illegal
Who says "fly into "? As far as I know, no English dialect does this, and naive Germans would say "I flew after NY"
Absolutely stellar!
Wie soll man denn auch humorvoll sein, wenn das Benzin immer teurer wird. Aber es ist alles gut, solange das Bier nicht teurer wird.
Oktoberfest 2019, wo ein maß 11Euro oder so kostete
@@XDrake3107 Scheiße, ja! Ich weiß!
Du kannst das nur ertragen, wenn du süffst. Was willst du sonst machen?
@@steffen5121 Da hast Du recht! In diesem Sinne...Prost!
Manke Derkel.
I am German, but I've spent years carefully smoothing out my accent to obtain a nice British tone - gotta admit, his accent hurts my heart. 😂😂
Haven't heard one that bad since high school, I think.
Dann hör dir erstmal Ansagen von doro an. Oder die Willkommensreden von Thomas auf Wacken🙈🙈😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
Solchen Leuten sollte es verboten werden Englisch zu sprechen!
Hast du schon mal den badenwürtembergischen Minister gehört?
My English Teacher had me prepare an entire page for a month to get the Austrian English pronunciation (take Bavarian, add a few words pronounced in a slavic fashion and imagine pronouncing English) out of me. Guess I don't need to feel so bad about it anymore.
Dschörmäny
Ist doch n schöner und eigener Akzent, warum klingen wollen wie andere, solang man die Sprache beherrscht ist doch alles gut.
Excellent video, thanks.
American: my Glass is still half full!
Brit: Well, your Glass seems to me half empty..
German : That glass contains 250ml of wheat beer.
Brit: Huh? get him out of our sketch!
That last joke absolutely killed me
Naturwissenschaften und Kabarett harmonieren wahrscheinlich deshalb so gut, weil die Natur in sich ein riesengroßer Scherzkeks ist. C-SPAN: Joe Wong at RTCA Dinner: ua-cam.com/video/buSv1jjAels/v-deo.html
This is bloody brilliant
I searched German comedian and there are only 2 results.
I can confidently say this is the second funniest German comedian on UA-cam.
LMAO! Germans are about as funny as a tax audit!
The thing about the lack of small talk is too real and it's probably my favorite thing about the country
Omg I’m an american who dated germans and this is spot on
I'm mixed and I do a lot of things "Germans " do but I would only joke that it's because I have a significant amount of German DNA on my mother's side.
Nah its not, this only fits for old people
Great set!!
Great video! I'm English , grew up in West Germany , and live in America. Wish I found the video 5 years ago !
As a German I approve of this message:)
EU representing!
To my fellow Europeans with love, from Croatia.
Kako si brate moi
Sta radis?
6:06 “Last year I flew into New York” hahahha Aha my favorite
Vince, du hast richtig! I lived in Frankfurt/M for nine years, and what you describe is right on the mark. Prima!
Hilarious! A wonderful look at us Americans from another perspective. Thanks!
You can avoid Smokers better, when they are concentrated into one area instead of all over the place.
While writing this i realized that this is propably the most german way to Comment on this joke
Der erste deutsche komiker der nach langer zeit wiedermal lustig ist.
Nicht schlecht herr specht 🥸👍
the part with the „Reiserücktrittsversicherung“ got me 😂😂 so true
Wusste nicht mal das es sowas gibt 😂
Hammergeil!
More I want MORE!!!
“Science comedian.”
Already better than most. Go, GO, *GO* !
Love the set! LOL!
Be careful, dont tell the officer:" I want to visit LA for the new 911" if you want to see the new Porsche at the automobil show
I'd like to have a facebook-rücktrittsversicherung.
Rogue Buddha 🤣
Vince is the best!
Super Auftritt! Great Performance!
I remember Vince from WAY back in the day. He's a genius, no question. But also a tragic figure to me. Because I just can't forget how he told on a talk show one time, that his parents or some relatives of his got kidnapped and killed by some terrorists or criminals on their holidays... That does something with your mind...
Wow for real? That's so sad...
As a german I gotta say: fire is dangerous 😐
The Reiserücktrittversicherung, are you mad? The most important thing is the Reisekrankenversicherung!!!
German compliment:
Ah, you got a new haircut.
Even commenting and happy intonation means it looks good.