Montag, 25. Juli 2011

12th May - sometime in June: acting like a proper German.

Did you know that 31% of all blog posts ever begin with the phrase "I'm so terrible at keeping this up to date, but I guess when you lead such a busy life you never get time to write about it..." At this stage it's also relevant to mention the stat that 80% of all statistics are made up, but sometimes I (and I'm definitely not the only one) feel like a bit of a broken record going on about how tough it is writing and keeping up with a blog. Therefore I've decided to cut down a bit on the interesting anecdotes about Moldovan restaurant owners and avoiding the British at all costs, and will instead cut things down to a list of things wot I 'av dun an' if dey woz gud or not gud. Before I explain how I acted like a proper German, it's the....

BVB PARTY!!!!!!!

The more observant amongst you may have noticed that the football club here, Borussia Dortmund aka BVB (Ballsportverein Borussia if you ever wondered what that stands for) is quite a big deal here, and they won the Bundesliga which is also quite a big deal for Germans who like football. Unsurprisingly, the weekend of the last day of the season (14th-15th May) was more than a big deal.

Saturday was the day of the last match of the season, and on top of a final game in the Westfalenstadion for which so many people applied for tickets that they could have sold out the 82,000 seater stadium six times over, 30,000 or so spaces were made available in the arena nearby, for which we somehow made it through the crush to get in for. Despite the crazy beer prices the atmosphere was brilliant, helped no end by the constant singing of the 'wer ist deutscher Meister' (who are German champions), see right. Once the match was over we headed into town, where there was a relaxed party spirit that I don't think I've experienced anywhere before, everyone just out on the streets drinking together (another great thing about this country is that drinking in public is completely legal), live music on stages around the main square and generally enjoying the biggest party in Dortmund in 9 years (2002 was the last time they won the league...)




We headed to a local cocktail bar where the planned acoustic gig was turned into an impromptu BVB singalong, and my korean friend Hun-gu kept the fans happy by signing autographs as Shinji Kagawa (the japanese BVB player). After that we decided to spare some BVB love for the next day and headed to my American friend Emily's flat where we ended up improvising along to balkan beats with tuba, trombone, piano and guitar. Die Jungs would have been proud of us.

The next day was the big procession through the town with the trophy, for which the whole team (most noticeably the legend that is the manager Jürgen Klopp) was brilliantly drunk. Not being a real fan and feeling pretty rough from the night before, we waited for the team at the stadium and were treated to a performance of 99 Luftballons (99 red balloons to you English folks) by the actual Nena, and all the fans singing 3 Lions '98 (yeah, the one about when we lost to Germany on penalties in Euro '96 in England) whilst I lay weeping on the floor. All the team got another well-deserved huge round of applause and I promised myself to a reunion when they inevitably draw and embarrass an English team in the Champions League next season. At the end we bumped into Hun-gu, who hadn't managed to find us and had been adopted by another group of star-struck fans. Seriously, if he ever gets sick of industrial engineering he could make some very good money charging 1€ a go for official Kagawa BVB photographs.


So with all that nonsense over, it was time to find a new purpose in life. Together with Robert and my new friend Mareike (who I ironically met at the English 'tea party' and got to know through being the only person from the English party who bothered to come to the continuation of that - a weekly showing of The Apprentice at mine about which more will be spoken later) we formed a 'menage à trois' with the aim of helping me to spend my last months in Germany as germanly as possible. That's how I saw it anyway.

So the first idea was to put together a list of must-see German films, the most must-see of which is of course the world famous output of the erotic industry. Before anyone says anything, that's 'erotic films' and not pornos, the difference being that erotic films are much classier, have a sophisticated storyline and most definitely do not include any gratuitous sex - all the sex that there is is crucial to the plot-line and the film would make no sense (or should I say even less sense) without it.



Mareike
Robert
The central film to this evening was ‘Ach jodel mir noch einen – Stoßtrupp Venus bläst zum Angriff’ (in English something like 'ach yodel me another - Raiding Patrol Venus blows the alarm'), a Bavarian personal favourite of Mareike’s. The storyline revolved around a group of sexy aliens who needed to collect sperm in order to keep their ship running and who were therefore sent on a dangerous mission down to Bavaria to extract their fuel from the local men, and if you knew what the men in Bavaria are like then you’d understand how dangerous this mission really is. Central to the film was clever wordplay (the mission was coded 6666, which sounds remarkably like sex sex sex sex in German) and, er hot alien chicks having sex on top of hay bales. The three of us ate strawberries and drank sparkling wine (not typically German erotic, but never mind) and, well, that’s how lasting friendships are made.

Also more than willing to assist on my quest were the ever-friendly statistics students. After the success of the mulled wine drinking and karaoke on the last statistics trip, I headed with them to another family holiday park near Holland, where the mulled wine was replaced by unreasonable amounts of beer and grilled meat, and the singing was replaced by even more singing. So the old classics like 99 Red Balloons came out, we drank beer by the beach, played table tennis using the plastic outdoor tables and dinner plates and played volleyball using a washing line, a few towels and some trees. Anyone would think we weren’t staying in a fully kitted out holiday park. The favourite thing I saw there would have to be the blow-up beer crate which we tied to the back of our rubber dinghy in order to keep our beers cold on the journey out onto the lake. Why the hell have I never seen one of those before?
The cool crew

Improvising with dinner plates...
...and with washing-lines



Märchenhaft

Inspired by the success of the ‘geil’ decorating suits that we all wore one day to mark ourselves out and prove how truly cool we are, I decided to take part in the stat team’s dressing-up in the theme of fairytales for the Campus Lauf at the Uni, and was handed with the daunting task of being Hansel from Hansel and Gretel. To my utter joy I was showered with compliments for my look, the biggest of all being ‘you look like a proper little good well-behaved German boy’ as I ran gaily through the campus marking my path with breadcrumbs and singing German folk songs.

It was working! I was turning into a real German! You can imagine my excitement at this development – not since going to watch the national football team with a German flag draped across my back, a beer bottle in each pocket, a copy of Bild under my arm and a sausage in brötchen with mustard in my mouth had I felt such a sense of belonging here, and I wanted more.

My previous best in german-ness
After a slight setback in my mission at a poetry slam, where the hilarious stories about weed trips to Holland and a theory on how to win the German presidency went straight over my head, the chance to redeem myself came at the first of many Wohnheimsfeste, or ‘studenthallsfestivals’ to give it a clunky English translation, in Emil-Figge-Straße. This was the first of June, and with the start of unofficial summer comes the start of a wave of such 'Sommerfests', where a usually quiet and unassuming area of campus is taken over by either a subject or a one of the sets of people that run the student bars in the dorms, and chaos invariably ensues.


The fests usually involve one stage with a few bands, then club music is banged out until the wee hours. Alongside this is the tried-and-tested combination of dirt cheap beer served along damn good sausages, with cocktails offered too if the organisers felt like being a bit fancy. My group of German friends and a few hangers-on from around the world went to so many of things that a certain routine started to form:



Shaken in action

  • 'Vorsaufen' beginning at 9pm or so, which involved a combination of some or all of meatballs, mojitos, ring of fire (yes, I taught them well), 'shaken' to our favourite Shakelied (see above) and, err, lots of beer.
  • Head to the fest a bit later armed with spirits and beerkegs (the people here really don't give a shit about people bringing their own alcohol in) and doss around on the grass
  • Head to the fest if we manage to avoid being distracted by the various flat parties going on, dance around a lot, lose everyone, find everyone again, watch Hugo climb the marquee, blag free shots, invariably lose everyone again and head home with whoever is still hanging around at 2am or so.
  • Then go to bed and look forward to stories of Robert's drunk escapades. One one night he stole a beer crate from the stands, rode home in a shopping trolley, was then sick on his deskstool at home and out of his window, before attempting to wash his chair and breaking the back off it. 
Being such a waster has its advantages - he once almost managed to convince me and Mareike to walk half an hour to meet him at the local hypermarket and pay 50€ bail because he'd been taken there by the police for stealing a whole kebab on a spit (so like the huge pieces of meat they have spinning at the back of kebab shops). We believed him despite this information coming from him via facebook - an unlikely form of communication for a hostage. Now for something truly special:


MÄNNERTAG


The Figge-Fest was the night before the greatest excuse for a bank holiday I've ever heard. The 2nd of June is really the bank holiday to celebrate the ascension of Christ into heaven, but in modern times it's been also known as Vatertag, which the non-fatherly of us have generalised into Männertag - MAN DAY.


Katerfrühstück fit for a king
The concept behind this is simple - a day off for men to feel free to be as manly as possible. This shit really happens too. With this in mind, we set up a Katerfrühstück for me, Robert, Mareike and Brian, a friend of mine from my halls from Tennesse who is also very keen on being German. Being modern men, we prepared the breakfast for the good lady, which consisted of lots of freshly baked Brötchen, baked beans, scrambled eggs, sausage and many tasty fruits. Oh, and champagne and orange juice, which not all felt fit to drink, but which was necessary for the now must-see viewing of The Apprentice, complete with drinking game (the aerial shot rule is a particular killer).


Feeling that our manliness was well and truly fuelled, we set forth on a man mission. The tradition is for guys to take a trolley, fill it with beer, and parade their awesomeness around town. Imagine how messy that would get if it was in England. Lacking a trolley, we headed to a little music festival in a park, made some slightly inappropriate comments about ladies, drank a beer or two, ate steak and felt happy with how damn cool wee looked. The proof is below:


Rowan mit Steak

Moody Rowan mit Brian in background

Rowan und Brian mit Bier

Grrrrr

Robert - that's what you call gravitas



German enough for ya?

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