Yes, I have noticed some differences between  watching TV in Germany and the U.S.!
  Hey everyone! I'm Dana and you're watching Wanted Adventure Living Abroad.
  So in both Germany and the U.S. people do  watch TV!
  Hey look at that, starting off with a similarity.
  And in both the U.S. and Germany there are  restaurants where you can go and watch sports.
  But there are already some differences there.
  In the U.S. a common thing is the sports bar  and restaurant.
  This is a bar-restaurant where you can go  and watch sports on TV.
  And many of these places don't just have  1 or 2 or 5 or 6 six TVs.
  They have lots of TVs.
  Lots and lots and lots of TVs.
  Like not just a TV in every general direction  you look, but TVs on top of TVs on top of TVs.
  Not like on top of one another so that you  can't see the one behind it, but stacked
  on top of each other like this.
  I've even been to a place in the U.S.  that had little TVs mounted into the individual
  bathroom stalls. TVs installed on the inside of each stall door.
  I know I'm not a sports person but...really?
  Sometimes the TVs in the U.S. sports bar-restaurants  are actually showing the same game.
  So I have experienced it that I've gone  to a place that has 20 TVs and 18 of them
  are showing all the same thing.
  But then also a lot of times the places in  the U.S. show several different games and
  different kinds of sports on the different  TVs.
  And in the U.S. a lot of times you might go  to a sports bar-restaurant and not actually
  watch any sports.
  I know that I've gone to places in the U.S.  many times that show sports but I went there
  with my friends simply because I was craving  chicken wings or potato skins or whatever,
  not because we actually wanted to watch sports.
  We just wanted to go to that place because  they had good food and drinks.
  It wasn't about the sports.
  Okay, so now hop on over the ocean to Germany  where there are also restaurants where you
  can go and watch the game, but it's not super  common here to have so many TVs all over the
  place in the restaurant.
  Actually I myself have never seen a restaurant  in Germany with so many TVs like what I've
  seen in the U.S.
  And I've also never been to a restaurant  in Germany showing more than one game at a time.
  If a restaurant is showing a game here in  Germany it's usually soccer and then that
  is usually something that is advertised in  advance.
  Like it's a normal restaurant that all the  other days of the week is not actually a place
  for watching sports, it's just a normal restaurant.
  But then on this particular day of the week  at a particular time they will be showing
  a particular game.
  And pretty much everyone who goes there on  that day at that time is there to watch that game.
  Another difference I've noticed is commercial  breaks.
  But this one is a little bit tricky because  it also seems to differ by show,
  so what I'm actually watching.
  And advertising schedules do change over time,  so it definitely could be different now then
  when I first moved away from the U.S. 9 years  ago.
  But my overall feeling with this is that in  the U.S. there tend to be more frequent shorter
  commercial breaks, whereas in Germany it feels  like to me that the commercial breaks happen
  less frequently, but then when they do come  they seem to be longer.
  But I have not done any measurements or timing  on that.
  That's just my feeling of it.
  As far as the shows on TV go, a lot of the  kinds of shows being broadcast seem pretty
  similar in both countries to me.
  Although I do have three things that I would  like to mention here.
  Number one: in Germany there are a good number  of American TV shows and movies aired here,
  and most of the ones that I've seen are with  German dubbing.
  But I believe that I've also seen one or two  shows with just German subtitles instead.
  Number two: there is a crime drama show here  in Germany called "Tatort," which is really
  well known and while I must admit I have not  yet watched a single episode of it, I have
  heard a lot about it.
  And I learned that it's produced in a really  cool way.
  "Tatort" is filmed in a bunch of different  locations with different crews and actors
  in different cities in Germany, Austria and  Switzerland.
  So I think that's a really awesome concept  for a show.
  And number three: the time that prime time  actually begins is a little bit different.
  Where I grew up on the East Coast of the U.S.  prime time starts at 8 p.m., while in Germany
  it starts at 8:15. 8:15 why? Why 8:15?
  Because of the "Tagesschau," of course.
  The "Tagesschau" is a 15 minute news broadcast  that goes from 8:00 to 8:15 and has been airing
  like that since the 1950s.
  And thus in Germany most prime time shows  begin at 8:15.
  So my question for you is: Do you watch TV,  when and what kind of shows?
  And what TV watching differences have you  noticed in places around the world?
  Please let me know in the comments below. Thanks so much for watching.
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  Until next time, auf Wiedersehen!
  Thanks so much for watching. If you enjoyed this video...dance!
  And it's, it's...
  I haven't seen that here.
  Where there were TVs in each door stall...stall  door.
     
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