Join this channel to get access to perks: / @untilwego Here is my reaction and commentary to German Comedy (ENG SUB): Loriot - The egg Got a request? Fill Out this Form: forms.gle/XTC3... Original Video : • German Comedy (ENG SUB...
That is why we invented a golden egg,a device you put into the water with your eggs,to tell you exactly when the eggs are soft,middle and hard,using music. And then you use Eierschalensollbruchstellenverursacher to open the egg.
Back then we spoke about that one in school and our teacher asked, why he would not kill her? Because of one word: tomorrow. That was a pretty deep thought which I remember still today.
Loriot, or Vicco von Bülow, which was his real Name, is still a legend in Germany, even amongst the "younger" Generations. Becaus he is (was) dangerously realistic xD Times Change, but People will stay pretty much the same XD Fun Fact: He was an actor before he became really famous. In 1962 he played the Character of a young german Officer in the Hollywood Movie "The longest Day". One of the all time classics of epic war movies!. The thing is, when Loriot was young, he actually WAS a Lieutenant in Normandy on D-Day! So he played his own character!
Loriot was a master of holding the society a mirror infront. The funny thing is, that he was born in a noble house and his real name was Bernhard-Viktor Christoph-Carl von Bülow. But instead being a typical arrogant noble, he loved to make cartoons
@@UntilWeGo they teach us, there are always 4 sides in every message and most of the time people argue bc they made a communication mistakes. Like husband says: there is something green in my soup. Wife: if you dont like what ive made, cook for yourself *hell breaks lose So, why does something like this happen? Its good to know such things.
Please don't speak the name Loriot German, speak it French. Bernhard-Viktor Christoph-Carl von Bülow, Loriots real name, is an offspring from a famous noble family in Germany, which has in its coat of arms an Eurosian golden oriol - a bird - which is in french called loriot, in German Pirol.