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Loriot, an icon of refined German humour († 2011) The German language's finesse offers a sort of unintentional humour through ambiguity: The sentence above is intended to mean: This area is under video surveillance by the police to prevent crimes but can also be understood as This area is under video surveillance to prevent crimes committed ...
Pages in category "German mimes" The following 5 pages are in this category, out of 5 total. ... About Wikipedia; Disclaimers; Contact Wikipedia; Code of Conduct ...
East German jokes, jibes popular in the former German Democratic Republic (GDR, also known as East Germany), reflected the concerns of East German citizens and residents between 1949 and 1990. Jokes frequently targeted political figures, such as Socialist Party General Secretary Erich Honecker or State Security Minister Erich Mielke , who ...
A German teenager named Darius S. recorded the song from a radio program on the North German public radio station Norddeutscher Rundfunk (NDR) in the 1980s. [1] [6] He recorded the song on a cassette tape and made a mixtape, which also included songs from XTC and The Cure. To get clean recordings of songs, Darius purposely removed dialogue from ...
Polandball (more commonly known as Countryballs) – A user-generated Internet meme which originated on the /int/ board of German imageboard Krautchan.net in the latter half of 2009. The meme is manifested in a large number of online comics, where countries are presented as spherical personas that interact in often broken English, poking fun at ...
[4] [6] [12] A man who appeared in the 2009 "Bodybuilding" broadcast of the German television show segment Raab in Gefahr [13] was taken to be Techno Viking in a YouTube upload. [14] In 2008, fans claimed MMA fighter Keith Jardine was Techno Viking. [ 15 ]
Still of the viral video. Angry German Kid (also known as Keyboard Crasher, Unreal Tournament Kid, AGK or PC Spielen) is a viral web video from 14 February 2006. The fictionalized persona in the viral video, played by German teenager Norman Kochanowski, tries to play Unreal Tournament on his PC, but faces problems with it, such as the game loading up slowly, which causes him to get enraged and ...
The theory proposes that the city of Bielefeld (population of 341,755 as of December 2021) [3] in the German state of North Rhine-Westphalia does not actually exist. Rather, its existence is merely propagated by an entity known only as SIE (German for "THEM"), which has conspired with the authorities to create the illusion of the city's existence.