American reacts to 'Peter Lustig - Löwenzahn'

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 1. 05. 2024
  • Thank you for watching me, a humble American, react to Peter Lustig - Löwenzahn
    Original video: • Best of Peter Lustig -...
    Thanks for subscribing for more German reactions every weekday!
    Join as a member to get the ridiculous emojis and badge!
    / @ryanwass
    Got a video request? You can fill out this form!
    forms.gle/gmHJZBJqHk8cagjSA
    Got a fun local news story? Submit it here!
    forms.gle/FvRA7JEF4aJewmMK6
    Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. ALL RIGHTS BELONG TO THEIR RESPECTIVE OWNERS

Komentáře • 807

  • @NijiGayCoyote
    @NijiGayCoyote Před 12 dny +735

    The fact that “Die Bild” a German “Newspaper and News Channel” ruined his life makes me feel sad for him, they once said that he hated children because he said that children shouldn’t be on a tv show just to keep them safe. After he passed away they said that he didn’t hate children but they made it seem as if THEY were the ones discovering that and helping to get his good status back, they just wanted to look like heroes. And you know why they did all of that? It’s because he was criticizing them for what they do (Ruining people’s life’s & telling fake stories) I really hope that they get banned one day because it should be in the interest of every News-channel to tell the truth and help people stay up to date with what’s happening in the world. “Die BILD” just wants money, it’s not in their interest to do good things for the people they are just avaricious and I hate that.

    • @EnraEnerato
      @EnraEnerato Před 12 dny +210

      Calling Bild a newspaper in firstplace should be a finable offense really!

    • @MiaMerkur
      @MiaMerkur Před 12 dny +58

      It german lessons about newspaper ( like media nowadays) 'Bild' was the example of very bad journalism, lies and exagerations.
      It is a simple, big lettern titles paper, mostly with half naked women on front page which is mostly read by less educated people looking for sensations.
      I never wanted to get friends with people reading that paper. It is notvthe type you can discuss engineering or philosophy with.

    • @stef987
      @stef987 Před 12 dny +37

      Maybe I didn't see/read much of the whole thing, but when I heard that Peter Lustig "hates children" (not sure at that point I heard it was something Bild said), I was like "yeah, right...". When I heard it was from Bild, I think I actually laughed. I mean, who even takes something from Bild serious (yeah, ok, I know, some people do)?😅 I didn't know it ruined him. If that's the case, it really is a shame. Löwenzahn with Peter Lustig really is one of the great classics of German kid's tv.

    • @frankie9373
      @frankie9373 Před 12 dny +6

      Jup, thats die bild for ya

    • @klarasee806
      @klarasee806 Před 12 dny +59

      Ironically, many of those who think fake news are everywhere read BILD on a daily basis 😂
      Kannste Dir nicht ausdenken.

  • @RozzmanLists
    @RozzmanLists Před 12 dny +490

    oh dear, the subtitles in the Löwenzahn clip are all wrong!
    In the song at 3:30, Peter is singing about a "Hebel", a lever in English and not "Nebel" (= fog).
    That's why he's demonstrating the use of a bottle opener, saying "when you understand leverage, you know how to use a lever effectively".
    And right at the beginning, Peter didn't build his "Küche" (= kitchen), but his "Klingel" (= doorbell).
    edit: The armchair farter however was a proper, verbatim translation.

    • @jackychamber534
      @jackychamber534 Před 12 dny +74

      Yes, and when they sing about the earth, and some vulcanos, I assume, it is not about "blood" not at all! 🙈
      In German it is the word "Glut",
      for that I found :
      embers, burning ash,
      fervour and ardour
      (online dictionary) 🙂

    • @Thor555555
      @Thor555555 Před 12 dny +34

      @@jackychamber534 das sind halt die kleinen missverständnisse, wenn der spracherkennungsalgorithmus aus glut blut macht.

    • @NineBerry
      @NineBerry Před 12 dny +45

      But funnily, the "armchair farter" one is correct. "Sesselfurzer" (armchair farter) is a German expression for people who only sit in offices but have no real-world experience.

    • @nephistar
      @nephistar Před 12 dny +18

      And when it says "funny", it's actually just Peter's last name "Lustig".

    • @HarveyHirdHarmonics
      @HarveyHirdHarmonics Před 12 dny +10

      It's weird that Google, one of the big players in the AI field still haven't got their speech recognition and translation right.

  • @martinhuhn7813
    @martinhuhn7813 Před 12 dny +378

    Dandelion = Dent de lion = lions tooth = Löwenzahn. Thats the name of the show and that is the "weed" growing out of the pavement in the intro.

    • @pehpunkthahpunkt4179
      @pehpunkthahpunkt4179 Před 12 dny +14

      Thank you, dear Sir. This is amazing to know! 🤩

    • @MiaMerkur
      @MiaMerkur Před 12 dny +4

      I call the buttercup a flower. 😀

    • @embreis2257
      @embreis2257 Před 12 dny +1

      1:23 certainly not a metaphorical image of a 'rose'. the name of the presenter 'Peter Lustig' probably is trying to play with connotations too. _lustig_ means funny, hilarious, merry, jolly

    • @marlinboudreau983
      @marlinboudreau983 Před 12 dny +8

      @@embreis2257
      You are slightly mistaken here.
      Your explanation of the word was correct, but the guy's name really was "Peter Fritz Willi Lustig". :)

    • @NRubric
      @NRubric Před 12 dny +3

      @@embreis2257 It's also his real name.

  • @spitefulwar
    @spitefulwar Před 12 dny +191

    While Die Maus was comical and informative, Peter Lustig added a subversive post hippie element that resonated so well with kids. Looking back he even was the german forerunner for tiny houses...
    Legend.

    • @kackerlakensalat
      @kackerlakensalat Před 12 dny +14

      Lustigerweise hat er auch bei der Maus kurze Zeit mitgemacht. Und ich bin so alt, dass ich Löwenzahn sogar noch als "Pusteblume" kenne ..😂

    • @kangel5543
      @kangel5543 Před 12 dny +2

      Genau, ursprünglich hieß die Sendung Pusteblume.

    • @CakePrincessCelestia
      @CakePrincessCelestia Před 12 dny

      Can't drop a like since the post already has 69 likes. Bummer! :D

    • @MrFrozenFrost
      @MrFrozenFrost Před 10 dny +4

      There is so much trivia about Peter Lustig.
      He was a sound engineer when Kennedy held his "I'm a Berliner" speech, he was married to the creator of Benjamin Blümchen and Bibi Blocksberg. Yes, he was very politically left and this influenced Löwenzahn.
      His employers weren't very happy about the command to switch the television off but he got away with it.

    • @claraf.6833
      @claraf.6833 Před 2 dny

      I loved him a lot. I loved the dynamic with his nosy neighbor too, and I remember his last episode and the "Goodbye" video he made for it.

  • @marlinboudreau983
    @marlinboudreau983 Před 12 dny +253

    The show is normally about 25 minutes long and this was a random compilation.
    It's got hundreds of episodes that all follow a specific theme through the episode.
    He always tells the children to switch off the TV, because they watched enough.

    • @jackychamber534
      @jackychamber534 Před 12 dny +5

      👍

    • @MiaMerkur
      @MiaMerkur Před 12 dny +24

      And in german 'abschalten' has two meanings.
      Switch off ( engine) and
      relax ( switch off the mind from hard thinking, learning).

    • @marrykurie48
      @marrykurie48 Před 12 dny +6

      To be correct: There are exacly 200 episodes of the old "Löwenzahn" with Peter Lustig. The new ones with his follower are still going on.

    • @stechuskaktus8318
      @stechuskaktus8318 Před 12 dny +17

      Yeah this irks me a lot. "This is the most random stuff, what am I even watching" is the only conclusion you can draw from watching a random compilation like this and not understanding the language, only going by poor subtitles. Not doing the show justice :/

    • @Wildcard71
      @Wildcard71 Před 12 dny +3

      Meistens habe ich mich geweigert, abzuschalten, weil danach oft noch eine Serie lief, die ich sehen wollte.
      Nach 40 Jahren weiß ich natürlich nicht mehr, welche das war.

  • @markusb.3364
    @markusb.3364 Před 12 dny +263

    Peter was a Sound technician in his first job for the public broadcast in Berlin. In this role he was responsible for kennedys Berlin speech.

    • @CrimsonSunrise93
      @CrimsonSunrise93 Před 12 dny +43

      And he married Elfie Donelly, creator of Benjamin Blümchen and Bibi Blocksberg. Their only son is named Momme. Are there already reactions to Benjamin Blümchen or Bibi Blocksberg outside of Germany? Bibi also as a horse rider series and a Manga

    • @s4ndwichMakeR
      @s4ndwichMakeR Před 12 dny +42

      He was not only a mere sound technician but more generally a certified electrical engineer with specialization for broadcast engineering who ended up on the ‘other side of the camera.’ It’s one example of these weird job career opportunities of the 60s and 70s. Just like Alfred Biolek who started to work as a lawyer for the broadcaster but ended up having multiple shows and becoming a celebrity (and introducing Monty Python to the German audience).

    • @ryanwass
      @ryanwass  Před 12 dny +41

      that's awesome!!!

  • @lizzysmart5458
    @lizzysmart5458 Před 12 dny +396

    Peter Lustig's show was the best and most informative children's show. I loved it. It still runs today with a different actor, but it's not the same. My children don't like the new ones either 🤭 only the ones with Peter.

    • @j.d.l._666
      @j.d.l._666 Před 12 dny +8

      It's always like that, i think! If you have years and years with one original character like Peter Lustig and they swap the actor for the main role out, it's like the soul of the show leaves. I only like the old ones with the original Peter Lustig too.

    • @MiaMerkur
      @MiaMerkur Před 12 dny +4

      The new ones are always younger and 'cooler' and more multiculti than the country ITSELF, so feels foreign for most kids and it does not help and amuse children
      like that FUNNY, old, GRANDPA-ISH nice Peter Lustig.

    • @j.d.l._666
      @j.d.l._666 Před 12 dny +9

      @@MiaMerkur it's not a bad thing to be multi cultural and inclusive and to go with time. But I think to swap out the main character never helps the show! That would be like swapping the main character of... Like idk "Sheldon" in the "big bang theory". If they had done that mid series I think I would have stoped watching. Because swapping the main actor is always a sh*t move! It's not about beeing more inclusive! You would not swap a male main character with a female and give them the same Name just to be inclusive. That would be wrong. But beeing incisive itself is not wrong.

    • @peterthill
      @peterthill Před 12 dny +4

      Every morning on ZDF Neo - A must! 👍
      Guido Hammesfahr takes over in 2006 and is still the new kid - and I agree: It ist still different that the originals with Peter

    • @aw3s0me12
      @aw3s0me12 Před 12 dny +2

      Yes and NO.
      • *"Es war einmal..."*
      Kids series, is THE best ever created informative kids/cartoon based series ever created imo.
      > My kids did & still watch it...and there is NOTHING compareable to it ;)

  • @yaheldickinson
    @yaheldickinson Před 12 dny +132

    I was a German Kid a long time ago. Peter Lustig, a orange Mouse and a blue Elephant explained me an many other Kids the World 😊

    • @tomphillippaugustin2861
      @tomphillippaugustin2861 Před 12 dny +4

      Genau so..und man war zufrieden damit..

    • @klarasimons5324
      @klarasimons5324 Před 4 dny +2

      Klar immer war man zufrieden wenn man Sonntags 12:00 die Maus geguckt hat. Zu meiner Zeit war Peter Lustig leider schon Rente 😢

  • @D4RKBRU73
    @D4RKBRU73 Před 12 dny +86

    Alright i will do it because i can't leave it like that, let's correct all the mistranslations:
    2:06 not "kitchen" -> Klingel = "doorbell"
    3:26 not "..there is physics at all ends.." -> ...sie hilft an allen Enden... = "..it helps at all fronts..."
    3:29 not "fog" -> Hebel = "lever" [...once you understood how a lever works...]
    4:32 - - - "armchair farter" is actually correct, it's a mocking phrase for white collar workers
    5:22 not "random place" -> ...ist ein ziemlich warmer Kloß... = "[...our good old earth...] is a pretty warm dumpling
    5:25 not "blood" -> ...voller Glut und Dampf und Feuer... = "full of embers und steam and fire"
    6:07 not "the boxes" -> ...als der Mensch den Auerochsen jagte... = "...as man was hunting aurochs/urus..."
    6:10 not "traffic light" (wtf?) -> ...Sauerampfer... = "...sorrel..."
    6:18 not "there find a poem" -> ...da fällt mir ein Gedicht ein... = "...now a poem comes to my mind..."
    6:23 not "i'll be there tomorrow" -> ...ich werde heute für euch Kochen... = "...today i will cook for you..."
    6:29 not "pants" -> Nudeln = "pasta"
    6:33 not "they're coming" -> ...ich koch jetzt ne Kartoffelsuppe... = "...i will now cook a potato soup..."
    6:40 not "love you all on money or in the salad" -> ...ich liebe euch alle ob Gelb oder Weiß im Topf seid ihr heiß... = "...i love you all no matter if yellow or white [the potatoes i assume] in the pot you are hot..."
    6:49 "...na Herr Lustig, was ist? Machen Sie wieder Wein? Pflaume oder Dattel? - Weder noch, Herr Paschulke, das ist Jauche und ich mach Gas draus..."
    -> "...what's up Mr Lustig? Are you making wine again? Plum or date? - Neither nor Mr Paschulke, this is swill and i turn it into gas..."
    I will stop here because this took me a lot of time and effort to make, gosh i hate google translate 😕

    • @GoodOlKuro
      @GoodOlKuro Před 12 dny

      einfach nur "neither". "neither nor" passt glaub ich nicht so gut.

    • @bultvidxxxix9973
      @bultvidxxxix9973 Před 12 dny +3

      Translation is usually fine, audio recognition is not. The video has no subtitles and so the speech has to converted to text first. There are the mistakes, so it may understand 'Nebel' instead of 'Hebel', or 'Blut' instead of 'Glut'. The translation to English afterwards is correct, but you know, garbage in, garbage out.

    • @StewO101
      @StewO101 Před 12 dny

      This is not translated with "Google Translate" but with the "automatic generated English subtitles" of CZcams.

    • @HenryLoenwind
      @HenryLoenwind Před 12 dny +1

      @@StewO101 Do you think Google uses a different translation engine for CZcams and Translate?

    • @D4RKBRU73
      @D4RKBRU73 Před 12 dny +1

      @@StewO101 i have news for you, CZcams is a Google company and the "automatic generated subtitles" are generated by google's engine. Did you really think Youtubge and Google are two separate things?

  • @v.brinkmann697
    @v.brinkmann697 Před 12 dny +38

    Löwenzahn was just aaaawesome. Peter taught me how sunscreen works, how to turn salt water into sweet water, which things in nature are edible, why beavers are important, how electricity works and so many other important things. And as it is still in my head after more than 35yrs, you can tell he did a pretty good job😁

  • @madhatter9322
    @madhatter9322 Před 12 dny +104

    One of the best children's shows there is. Peter Lustig shaped my childhood. Dear Peter, rest in peace.

  • @pahhw1533
    @pahhw1533 Před 12 dny +118

    at 2:00 he didnt build a kitchen he build a door bell
    the guitar is the bell

    • @sebahabu
      @sebahabu Před 12 dny +6

      i was terrible afraid of that Ukulele, it´s name: Klaus-Dieter

    • @RikThunder33
      @RikThunder33 Před 12 dny +2

      @@sebahabu me too...

  • @frey7631
    @frey7631 Před 12 dny +56

    The Dandelion (Löwenzahn "lions tooth") in the show is a symbol for the power of simple things and mother nature beeing present even in the grey and boring city, enriching it with creative splendour and joy by breaking free of the profane stone and dust. I even understood this intuitively as a child.

    • @derschmiddie
      @derschmiddie Před 8 dny +1

      French: Dent (tooth) de (of the) lion -> Dandelion

  • @sarderim
    @sarderim Před 12 dny +64

    As I grew up in Germany in the 80's and 90's, my complete knowledge is based on "Löwenzahn", "Die Sendung mit der Maus" and "Es war einmal..." (you should check that one out, too). Still to the day, I remember stuff I learned from these shows, when I see it in life.

    • @matthiasewert3587
      @matthiasewert3587 Před 12 dny +5

      In these old days tv, you learnt something as a child,not like today.

    • @pinkhope84
      @pinkhope84 Před 12 dny +2

      Loved those shows so much !!!

    • @vomm
      @vomm Před 12 dny +8

      But "Es war einmal" is French not German

    • @sarderim
      @sarderim Před 12 dny +1

      @@vommyou're right, that's true. But for me it's in the same line with the other shows, for educational reasons.

    • @veladarney
      @veladarney Před 11 dny +1

      Es war einmal ... der Mensch - oooooh, that INTRO!!!!! Unforgettable!

  • @SvenReinck
    @SvenReinck Před 12 dny +74

    The „BILD Zeitung“ once wrote „Peter Lustig hates kids“. But what he actually said was „It is difficult to film with kids because the get bored of repeating scenes very fast.“

    • @schnelma605
      @schnelma605 Před 12 dny +1

      BILD is known for hate and lies!

    • @YukiTheOkami
      @YukiTheOkami Před 12 dny +1

      They*

    • @YukiTheOkami
      @YukiTheOkami Před 12 dny

      ​@@schnelma605 fear hate tits and the forcast

    • @schwarzerritter5724
      @schwarzerritter5724 Před 12 dny +29

      Yes, it was BILD's revenge for the actor saying BILD makes people dumb.

    • @Murlo
      @Murlo Před 12 dny +16

      @@schwarzerritter5724 point proven

  • @mgnzmn9362
    @mgnzmn9362 Před 12 dny +25

    The music of Löwenzahn (Dandelion) is my ringtone which wakes me up in the morning, so my day starts good. And this compilation is not really showing why we all watched Löwenzahn. Peter Lustig explained a lot of stuff to us kids in a manner we understood. And at the end of each show he told us to switch off the TV (so we could go outside and discover nature)

  • @hw2508
    @hw2508 Před 12 dny +25

    Imagine a TV program that tells kids to switch the TV off at the end, so they would go play outside or do something else.

  • @PetstoUwU
    @PetstoUwU Před 12 dny +46

    Peter Lustig is a National Hero ^^

    • @thatredkite8310
      @thatredkite8310 Před 12 dny +3

      He got the Bundesverdienstkreuz after all

    • @CakePrincessCelestia
      @CakePrincessCelestia Před 12 dny +2

      He absolutely is what the youth would call an Absolute Unit Of A Gigachad these days.

    • @PetstoUwU
      @PetstoUwU Před 11 dny +2

      @@CakePrincessCelestia Hail princess Celestia!

  • @c.m.5781
    @c.m.5781 Před 12 dny +13

    And YES, Peter Lustig was his real name. In 2017 he received the Bundesverdienstkreuz. Its the heighest medal you can get in germany. At the award ceremony he wore black dungarees. The show explaind physical, chemical and natureevents for children.

  • @nelson3878
    @nelson3878 Před 12 dny +14

    Peter Lustig was married to Elfie Donnelly, der inventor of Bibi Blocksberg and Benjamin Blümchen. The Power Couple of my Childhood and the root of my Anarchy Youth ;)

    • @MiaMerkur
      @MiaMerkur Před 12 dny

      Thanks for the information.
      Sounds like heaven being their child.
      Very good spoken kids 'anarchy' 🤸👍😄

  • @pixelbartus
    @pixelbartus Před 12 dny +19

    The neighbour of Peter Lustig has been played by Helmuth Krauss. He is not only an actor, but also a voice actor. In dubbed movies, he has been the german voice of actors like Marlon Brando, John Goodman and Samuel E. Jackson. He even was the german voice of Mr. Ed

  • @MtheHell
    @MtheHell Před 12 dny +43

    You picked another gem of my childhood. In the early years, the show was called "Pusteblume" ("blowball") and showed the later state of the flower with the white fluffy seeds. They changed the name to "Löwenzahn" ("hawkbit/dandelion") with the yellow blossom.
    I think, it's important to provide an educational sense in childrens TV shows. Not a school-ish, boring one, but like those shows did, in an entertaining way. Children are much more capable of understanding complex things than many adults think. So just letting them watch Animes and entertaining-only cartoons, makes them quiet on Sunday mornings, but doesn't improve the brain.

    • @stechuskaktus8318
      @stechuskaktus8318 Před 12 dny +1

      Oh wow, I didn't even know it used to be Pusteblume once. I can see that though XD
      Maybe one reason they changed it was the second meaning of the word?

    • @MtheHell
      @MtheHell Před 12 dny +2

      @@stechuskaktus8318 I did a research, because I also didn't know the reason. But it was a name license problem: The first episodes of the show "Pusteblume" were produced by another production company (FiB = Fernsehen in Bayern/'=TV in Bavaria') then the later "Löwenzahn" Shows were produced by 'Studio.TV.Film' and they didn't pay for the name, they simply renamed the show. 🤗

    • @miggelie
      @miggelie Před 10 dny

      He also did the show "Mittendrin" in the late 80s, where he explained environmental topics to elder children. German Kids were teached by him from late 70s until 2005.

  • @voldavkuk
    @voldavkuk Před 12 dny +52

    That was one of the best Kids-show when I grew up - on the same level as the "Die Sendung mit der Maus", they dont exclude one another! If you and your parents liked "Löwenzahn" you and your parents probably liked "Die Sendung mit der Maus", they are, as we say in Germany "aus dem selben Holze geschnitzt" - they are two sides of the same gold medal of kids shows!
    "Die Sendung mit der Maus" was made by the WDR (Westdeutscher Rundfunk/west German Broadcast) as part of the ARD (Allgemeine Rundfunkanstalt Deutschland/Common Broadcast Association Germany), while "Löwenzahn" was produced by ZDF (Zweites Deutsches Fernsehen/Second German Television Channel).

  • @d.l.3807
    @d.l.3807 Před 12 dny +11

    Uff, a lot to mention here:
    - Löwenzahn is the name of the plant that is growing in the intro
    - He didn't build a kitchen but a doorbell
    - 3:30 he sings about how a lever works, not fog
    - armchair farter (Sesselfurzer) is like a couch potato
    - 4:55 not "a pretty random place" but a warm dumpling (warmer Kloß)
    - 4:56 not "full of blood" (Blut) but full of blaze (Glut)
    - 5:30 not "there's something going on among us" but in this case "there is something going on beneath us" (the German sentence can be translated the same)
    - 6:30 not "no pants" (Hose) but "no sauce" (Soße)
    - a Kartoffelsuppe (Potato soup) can actually be really delicious. You should try one.
    - 6:40 not "love you all on money.." but "I love you all, whether yellow, whether white. You're cold in the salad, hot in the pot"
    - His name is Peter Lustig. Lustig translates to funny, that explains the wrong translation there
    - Yes, "switch off" was always the ending of this show

    • @Wildcard71
      @Wildcard71 Před 12 dny +3

      After the credits, he reappeared, saying, you are still there?! I said "switch off!".

  • @HelgaJanso-mt1ex
    @HelgaJanso-mt1ex Před 12 dny +11

    Peter Lustig invented the first Tiny House😅

  • @Haveaniceday80
    @Haveaniceday80 Před 12 dny +15

    I m dutch and i always used to watch this show on the german channel, loved it

    • @MiaMerkur
      @MiaMerkur Před 12 dny

      Thank you. 😉

    • @MiaMerkur
      @MiaMerkur Před 12 dny

      I love series and as teenager always watched durch tv
      because they were english,
      not subdubbed and emissioned 1/2-1 year later than american emmission date.

  • @klarasee806
    @klarasee806 Před 12 dny +10

    The one and only Peter Lustig. He always met children at eye level, without seeing them as “little adults”. And it was clear that this wasn't just an act, but that he felt this way in his private life too.
    I loved this show when he was still a part of it. It‘s still good, because the concept is great, but I miss him.

    • @MiaMerkur
      @MiaMerkur Před 12 dny

      I do like him when speeking with kids and they love it. PL influenced me a lot.

  • @denise4954
    @denise4954 Před 12 dny +21

    The French animated series Once Upon a Time was also very important...
    ...the human being
    ...the space
    ...the life
    ...America
    ...discoverers and inventors
    ...the discovery of our world
    ...our earth
    ...adventure and explorer.
    A French animated series from 1978 - 2009.

    • @schwarzerritter5724
      @schwarzerritter5724 Před 12 dny +1

      ...the life predates Osmosis Jones and Cells at Work by decades.

    • @Vandar821
      @Vandar821 Před 12 dny +2

      And now i Have the theme from "Es war einmal das Leben" im Ohr :D

    • @Wildcard71
      @Wildcard71 Před 12 dny

      Thousand years are one day; that's only played in the German dub of Once upon a time... Man.

    • @CakePrincessCelestia
      @CakePrincessCelestia Před 12 dny

      @@Vandar821 "Schlurf! Schlurf! Schlurf! Schlurf! Schlurf!" XD

  • @pahhw1533
    @pahhw1533 Před 12 dny +39

    in the song they say "Glut" which translate to emper, its a reference to magma inside the earth
    "Blut" is "blood"

  • @karlnapp7564
    @karlnapp7564 Před 12 dny +23

    Peter Lustigs neighbor was Samuel Jacksons german voice.

    • @baerenonkel
      @baerenonkel Před 12 dny +4

      was. Sadly, Helmut Krauss died 3 years after Peter.

  • @imfine_ithink
    @imfine_ithink Před 12 dny +11

    fun fact: "dandelion" comes from the french "dent-des-lion" (lion´s tooth) which translates to the german "Löwenzahn"

  • @pahhw1533
    @pahhw1533 Před 12 dny +15

    the soup he is cooking tastes great,
    think about mashed potatos but as a soup with sausage slices inside
    maybe even more like a stew

    • @MiaMerkur
      @MiaMerkur Před 12 dny

      I love Irish stew. But for the real one you let it ( potatoes, beef meat, lamb meat, herbs) cook for hours.
      The potatoe soup with sausage is nearly as fast as spaghetti boulognese but healthier ( no gen manipulated wheat).

  • @SvenReinck
    @SvenReinck Před 12 dny +18

    So cool… I didn’t remember that he would tell the children to turn off the tv so they wouldn’t keep watching indefinitely… Such a nice detail.

  • @RoCkY-zk4dw
    @RoCkY-zk4dw Před 12 dny +7

    Peter lustig is a Legend! Rest in Peace my old friend!🙏🏻😞

  • @pahhw1533
    @pahhw1533 Před 12 dny +21

    during the song he explains how a lever works
    cnucking the nut or open the bottle uses the physic princaple of a lever

  • @buddyterrier
    @buddyterrier Před 12 dny +10

    Peter Lustig was the best teacher in my life! Immediately after primary school, take a look at "Löwenzahn" in peace and quiet. My homework was later.😅

    • @jensen7875
      @jensen7875 Před 11 dny +1

      I got good teachers, but none of dem got so much attention as Peter Lustig with his Löwenzahn did.

  • @Dalmen
    @Dalmen Před 12 dny +12

    Peter Lustig is the hero of my childhood. I loved also the sendung mit der maus, but Peter also build his own stuff. The compelation is more for people how know the show.

  • @winterlinde5395
    @winterlinde5395 Před 12 dny +28

    4:50
    Our good old earth
    Is a pretty warm dumpling
    Full of blaze (Glut, not Blut-blood) and steam and fire
    Yes underneath us there is something going on.
    Geologie🤗

    • @cl8733
      @cl8733 Před 12 dny +1

      The Vulcan episode is one of the best. Up there with Maulwurf, Ameise and Bridge. Even the songs in those are tolerable.

  • @Akasha92
    @Akasha92 Před 12 dny +10

    Peter Lustig is a legend. Everyone watched and loved the show. It is like teaching things with a short story and music. :)

  • @AriC114
    @AriC114 Před 12 dny +8

    He was my childhood hero. Last month, we visited his Bauwagen (trailer) in the Filmpark Babelsberg (movie park). Still sad for his passing, he was one of a kind. R.I.P. Peter.

  • @benxiro4293
    @benxiro4293 Před 12 dny +7

    The mistranslations do make it even funnier.... :-D

  • @anika9472
    @anika9472 Před 12 dny +6

    I recomend you to watch a whole show, instad of just a Compilation. Because itˋs realy cute. If you would have grown up in Germany you would have grown up with this show too.😊

  • @ginafromcologne9281
    @ginafromcologne9281 Před 12 dny +3

    Oh, I loved Löwenzahn, I still do! :D Great that you react to it! The reason why it's confusing is probably because it's a best-of. The concept is that Peter has to move out of his apartmen tand moves into an old trailer that stands on a meadow in the countryside. There he has his neighbour who he lovingly calls "armchair farter", some nice friends who come to visit and children who come over, asking him curious questions. Every show has a theme, from engineering to gardening or the wadden sea. The theme is introduced when Peter wonders how something works or why e.g. the tide changes or when another question comes up. E.g. in one show his bicycle has a flat tyre and while he's repairing it, he wonders how bicycles are made, visits a factory, goes on a bike tour, takes a look in the history of bicylces etc. It's very entertaining and fun, because the children can sense that he loves and respects them and their questions and takes them seriously.
    In one show e.g., he observes the armchair farter working in his garden and Peter ends up growing a giant pumpkin he competes with in a contest. Sometimes he travels, e.g. when a child asks him what the earth loks like inside, Peter travels with armchair farter to Lanzarote island, to learn about volcanos. In another episode he gets stranded on a little boat in the North Sea and learns about tides. :)

  • @RainOrigami
    @RainOrigami Před 12 dny +3

    Peter Lustig was an important person in my life because he lived so freely and if he needed something he'd build it himself out of all the junk he's got around. This show influenced me more than anything to create stuff, learn how to repair things. Truly one of the GOATs.

  • @robinheite7579
    @robinheite7579 Před 12 dny +3

    Peter Lustig is a Hero for us German's of 80er / 90er Era 😊😊😊😊😊😊

  • @paul-berlin
    @paul-berlin Před 12 dny +14

    uh, the translation is very bad. Many misunderstandings

  • @airenyah7243
    @airenyah7243 Před 12 dny +4

    5:15 they're dancing on a volcano, that's what they're doing :)
    this episode was called "Peter tanz auf dem Vulkan" (= peter dances on the volcano) and that was the episode where they taught you all about vulcanos. it ends with peter and his neighbor singing a song about how planet earth is hot on the inside and they dance to it (which is the clip you're watching there. iconic shit, really). as a child who spend a significant chunk of her life on/by an active volcano because my paternal family comes from a volcano, this was my absolute favorite episode of löwenzahn. i watched this particular episode hundreds of times

  • @svens.3839
    @svens.3839 Před 12 dny +2

    I loved watching this show when I was a child and I learned a lot from it.....R.i.P Peter Lustig 🙏🏻

  • @DMSG1981
    @DMSG1981 Před 12 dny +2

    He didn't say "Küche" (kitchen), he said "Klingel" (doorbell).
    He didn't say "Nebel" (fog), he said "Hebel" (leverage).
    "Sesselfurzer" (armchair farter) is a term used for people like Peggy Bundy.
    Also, they sing: "Unsere gute alte Erde ist ein ziemlich warmer Kloß, voller Glut und Dampf und Feuer. Ja, unter uns, da ist was los..."
    (Our good ol' earth is a pretty warm lump, full of embers and steam and fire. Well, between ourselves, there's a lot going on...)

  • @slowestpoke8962
    @slowestpoke8962 Před 12 dny +2

    Peter Lustig and Mr. Rodgers would probably become best friends on the spot.

  • @roseblue-castle2734
    @roseblue-castle2734 Před 12 dny +2

    Ich bin mit Löwenzahn, aber mit Fritz Fuchs aufgewachsen, habe es sooo geliebt 🥹

  • @pahhw1533
    @pahhw1533 Před 12 dny +40

    armchair farter is the literal translation
    americans would use pencel pusher

    • @winterlinde5395
      @winterlinde5395 Před 12 dny +8

      Or couch potato?

    • @Neonblue84
      @Neonblue84 Před 12 dny +6

      @@winterlinde5395 no couch potato has another meaning. An armchair farter/pencil pusher means a person who is good for nothing . Also called in german a "zero"

    • @s4ndwichMakeR
      @s4ndwichMakeR Před 12 dny +2

      @@Neonblue84 This is not quite right. ‘Sesselfurzer’ is, just like ‘couch potato,’ a term to describe a person who won’t get up to do something actively (and physically) but merely prefers to spend their time sitting on the couch (or the armchair), usually (but not exclusively) in front of the TV.

    • @EVPaddy
      @EVPaddy Před 12 dny +3

      @@s4ndwichMakeRbut couch potato wouldn‘t be used for a professional. He‘s talking about office workers here.

    • @Neonblue84
      @Neonblue84 Před 12 dny

      @@s4ndwichMakeR no that is not the definition of Sesselfurzer/armchair farter what you say. Sesselfurzer is an incompetent person (mostly in office and work).

  • @berlindude75
    @berlindude75 Před 12 dny +4

    Löwenzahn (lit. "lion tooth", dandelion) = LOEH-VEN-TSAHN (approx. pronunciation in English)
    Spezi (mix of orange soda and cola) = SHPAY-TSEE (approx. pronunciation in English)

  • @EVPaddy
    @EVPaddy Před 12 dny +5

    I remember when Löwenzahn was still called Pusteblume.

    • @jensen7875
      @jensen7875 Před 11 dny

      Me too. I guess we are old buddy!

    • @EVPaddy
      @EVPaddy Před 10 dny

      @@jensen7875 Sadly, yes.

  • @Moktar87
    @Moktar87 Před 12 dny +4

    Best thing was that this show ran on sundays just like "die Sendung mit der Maus" at 11 am Löwenzahn which lasted for 30 minutes and at 11:30 am "die Sendung mit der Maus". My sister and i always watched one after the other.

    • @MiaMerkur
      @MiaMerkur Před 12 dny

      Before big lunch.
      And when I was a kid 6pm on saturday after weekly bath we saw Daktari or Star Trek.

  • @Katniss0268
    @Katniss0268 Před 12 dny +2

    It was sort of funny to watch your confusion, Ryan! 😅 The scenes they put together were extremely random, I must say. Löwenzahn is, just like Die Sendung mit der Maus, a great show for kids (and grown- ups too) to learn about special things we use or that happen in everyday life. Very informative and educational. My kids loved it and I did too. The translations in the subtitles didn’t always match. For example, he did not sing about a „fog“ (would be „Nebel“) but about a „Hebel“ (which is a „lever“ and makes more sense, concerning opening a bottle). Love your videos, Continue learning about us crazy Germans! 👍

  • @hellhound78
    @hellhound78 Před 12 dny +10

    Ich lovedthat show, even had like six computer discs with games from the show

    • @heikeameis8122
      @heikeameis8122 Před 12 dny +1

      The best was Löwenzahn 5. I used to play it all the time while visiting my friend. We switched turns on how long someone can play,the other one just watches.

    • @hellhound78
      @hellhound78 Před 12 dny

      @@heikeameis8122 No idea which was which, but I liked the bridge-building and skeleton games the most

  • @BunjiKugashira42
    @BunjiKugashira42 Před 12 dny +3

    Fun fact: We have two different words for "dandelion" depending on which stage of it's growth it's in. There's "Löwenzahn" which can always be used, but there's also "Pusteblume" for when the seeds are ready. Pusteblume = blow-flower because you can pick them up and blow on them to make the seeds fly away.
    Most adults see dandelions as little more than annoying weeds that break stuff while children find joy in them either because they break up the otherwise grey and drab pavement or because they turn into blow-flowers. This divide was also the main theme of the show, with mr. Paschulke always being the "adult" and Peter Lustig exploring the topics with a more child-like mindset.
    Second fun fact: There was a precursor-series before Löwenzahn called Pusteblume.

    • @CakePrincessCelestia
      @CakePrincessCelestia Před 12 dny

      Another _fun_ fact: Lustig means funny in English, which he certainly is.

  • @Broetchen98
    @Broetchen98 Před 8 dny +1

    This Video is pure Nostalgia. peter Lustig was such a great person and Löwenzahn one of the best TV shows so far. I loved this show. What was also great was: Wissen macht ah (knowledge makes ah)

  • @SvenReinck
    @SvenReinck Před 12 dny +7

    „Blood“ was a mistranslation. The said „Glut“ which sounds similar to „Blut“.

    • @TF2CrunchyFrog
      @TF2CrunchyFrog Před 12 dny +1

      Yes, and the automated translation also confused "Hebel" (lever) for "Nebel" (fog).

  • @hamborger2200
    @hamborger2200 Před 12 dny +5

    My sunday morning as a kid: first "Siebenstein", then "Löwenzahn" then "Sendung mit der Maus", then lunch

  • @Stairwayicefall71
    @Stairwayicefall71 Před 12 dny +1

    This was a science program on TV for children. I loved it. One of my favourite shows when I was a kid.

  • @sebahabu
    @sebahabu Před 12 dny +2

    as this show was on public tv, even before the rise of private (4profite) channels, Peters last were "so, abschalten" - "enought TV today, switch off" ... unimaginable in a time where kids should be glued to the screen with any kind of bs to sell commercials.
    I remember that sundays we gone for a walk in the forest, or a bike tour.... When we came home we had a piece of cake, a cacao, parents coffee. You came together for the Löwenzahn Show. And that was all TV we had. We finished the day outside until bedtime....

    • @MiaMerkur
      @MiaMerkur Před 12 dny +2

      At my time there were only 3 public channels ARD, ZDF, NDR ( local).

  • @TheMeleas
    @TheMeleas Před 11 dny

    Löwenzahn with Peter Lustig was a basic part of my childhood. Rest in peace Peter 🙏🏻.
    I like so much his curiosity and will to experience and learn about the world. Seemingly to topic was unreachable for him, I adore that ❤️.
    This way of seeing the world inspired me to do the same, be curious, ask, make experiences, get to learn...

  • @Winona493
    @Winona493 Před 12 dny +2

    Ryan said "Lustig" instead of "Lastig"!!!!! He's ready to learn, I am enthusiastic!!!😂

  • @TyonKree
    @TyonKree Před 12 dny +1

    Löwenzahn comment sections are always so wholesome
    🌼

  • @jensen7875
    @jensen7875 Před 12 dny +2

    peter Lustig - hero of my childhood. Living in a crazy wagon with talking guitar... ^^
    "switch off" and go out was his message.

  • @MsBlackdeath13
    @MsBlackdeath13 Před 12 dny +3

    Grew up with Löwenzahn, Käptn Blaubär, Siebenstein, Der Sendung mit der Maus etc. There wasn’t really any children’s tv in danish tv in the 90s. Loved these shows. Even have a Rudy Raben plush from Siebenstein.

    • @CakePrincessCelestia
      @CakePrincessCelestia Před 12 dny

      We always went to Denmark for vacation, visiting a farmer's family, they had children in roughly the same age as we were. I can still remember that they used to watch a lot of German TV because of that, which helped them learn it even before they started learning it in school, starting in the 3rd grade IIRC. Our first foreign language was English, starting in the 5th...

  • @Hey.Joe.
    @Hey.Joe. Před 11 dny +1

    Yes, because of it's an compilation, it's out of context and only people who is growing up with that and remembering the whole show can relate to it and get some nostalgia.

  • @heikosale1027
    @heikosale1027 Před 9 dny

    Fun fact, Peter Lustig held a degree in electrical engineering and got his start in the broadcasting world as a sound engineer. He also used to be a lecturer in audio engineering at the German Film and Television Academy Berlin.
    He started his career as an actor/presenter by accident when a director spontaneously cast him as an extra because they needed a bald guy for a sketch.

  • @f.schiebenhover7713
    @f.schiebenhover7713 Před 12 dny +1

    try to watch one complete episode with Peter Lustig. This is much easier to understand than a wild montage.
    "Switch off" is the part where we were supposed to stop the tv and get out of the house to explore the world.

  • @BlauImHerzen
    @BlauImHerzen Před 12 dny +6

    What's the worst way to represent a legendary German children's show? Just like making a really bad compilation...

  • @CriticalPoliteness
    @CriticalPoliteness Před 12 dny +1

    Ryan: "This explains a lot." 😂❤

  • @thomaskurschner2949
    @thomaskurschner2949 Před 11 dny

    This is legendary ❤ A must see for children and i love it. He was so gentle, friendly and handsome. I was very sad when he dies. RiP ❤😊

  • @ShenLong991
    @ShenLong991 Před 12 dny +2

    Please dont mistake this "best of" to the real show... Peter Lustig, RIP btw, was a neat and humble man and in his show "Löwenzahn" (Dandelion) he taught as some basic science, how cheerfull and beatifull the earth can be and was sometimes funny (= lustig ;), although this old pun, it was his real name "Peter Fritz Willi Lustig")

  • @Danny30011980
    @Danny30011980 Před 11 dny

    I always loved Löwenzahn and still love watching the old episodes. It taught me so much. And yes , Löwenzahn means dandelion. The predecessor show was called "Pusteblume" - blowball, but after disputes with the production company the initial show as ended and turned into what we know today. IN the very first episode of Löwenzahn main protagonist Peter Lustig still lives in his little house of the predecessor show, but it was explained due to lots of noise from the near airport he wants to get out of there and contemplates several options where he could live. Eventually when his cousin picks him up they pass a building site where he sets his eye on a blue construction trailer and his cousin Trude offers him her garden to place it. During the episode he tries to accommodate all his furniture from the house into the small trailer and comes up with creative ideas to have dedicated areas for each purpose, inclusing an outside bath and a toilet in a wardrobe. Each of the following episodes is about a certain topic, how he has to get electricity and water, how people get coal and potatoes into the basement, how plants grow, in one he is trying to become an actor, in another an inventor, in yet another we can see him become a fireman or an artist, in another he is discovering an old castle on the Rhine river, or a volcano, lives like a person from stone age, then he wants to have his own animals for milk and eggs, builds gimmicks and machines, one is about recycling and packaging. Another much liked character is his narrow-minded moany neighbour Paschulke and they often get into funny competitions and feisty bets, nevertheless they are on somewhat friendly terms, despite addressing each other by their surnames only. Peter Lustig always portrayed an adult with the curiosity of a child that wants to find out things

  • @no-kk9gc
    @no-kk9gc Před 10 dny

    Peter Lustig was truly a funny guy (funny in german: LUSTIG😂❤). I loved watching Löwenzahn when growing up. RIP Peter 💙

  • @norrinradd2364
    @norrinradd2364 Před 12 dny +2

    5:27 It was lost in translation. They sang "Glut" which sounds nearly like "Blut" (Engl. blood) but means glow. Glow is not the right term when you want to talk about lava or magma but it rhymes better in this song.

  • @vibe3339
    @vibe3339 Před 8 dny +1

    At 2:05 min Peter said: "meine Klingel habe ich schnell noch gebaut", that means: "my ring I just finished" not a kitchen. ^^ I hope you recognize that this is a cut together from multipes episodes.

  • @maunz5791
    @maunz5791 Před 12 dny +1

    You defenetly have to watch a real episode of it. And the intro song! It's so iconic, the melody randomly pops up in head, even decades after I watched Löwenzahn for the last time!

  • @viomouse
    @viomouse Před 12 dny +1

    This is only so random, because you watched a compilation. It makes sense if you watch a whole episode. This (I'm in the middle of your video) are the ones about:
    - moving house \ furnishing
    - mechanics and levers
    - fertilizer and biogas
    - mountains
    - volcanoes
    Each episode is about half an hour long.

  • @LemmyD_from_Germany
    @LemmyD_from_Germany Před 8 dny

    Another German TV Show for and with kids from 1973 until 1984 was 'Die Rappelkiste' (the Rattlebox).
    The Rappelkiste is one of the classics of German children's television. Ratz and Rübe are cult figures and every child, big and small, still knows the counting rhyme “Ene Mene Miste, es rappelt in der Kiste”.
    Greetings from northern Germany ♥️🇩🇪

  • @janpracht6662
    @janpracht6662 Před 6 dny

    The combination of Peter Lustig's alternative way of life in a construction trailer and his great ability to make children the world understandable made this kids TV show to a legend. Some of Peter's experiments could be replicated at home, like growing crystals with alum salt.

  • @einfachdarkey8276
    @einfachdarkey8276 Před 12 dny +2

    I think I speak for a lotta folks when I say we need you to stream some of ur reactions, I think a chat who can give some extra insight and explain mistranslations or smth would be awesome

  • @lionmori
    @lionmori Před 11 dny +1

    You should watch a full episode to get the feeling for the show.

  • @anne9387
    @anne9387 Před 9 dny

    I loved that kind of show as a child. Löwenzahn, Die Sendung mit der Maus und Wissen mach Ah! It is perfect to satisfy a child's curiosity and teach them in a really fun way about day-to-day things and it is even fun to watch (and informative) as an adult, so the whole family can watch it together without getting bored.

  • @spring_in_paris
    @spring_in_paris Před 12 dny

    Thanks for the trip back to my childhood. Great show that explained the world to children.

  • @4Astaroth
    @4Astaroth Před 12 dny

    I agree with your Mr Rogers statement. Peter also never looked down on people and made everyone feel welcomed. The episodes can be found here on CZcams. He did many cool things and even had an electric car and a car that was fuled with wood when talking about how the oil won't last forever.

  • @ahausch1
    @ahausch1 Před 5 dny

    You were spot on about your Mr. Rogers comparison. I would say you can definitely say that Peter Lustig was Germanys own Mr. Rogers.

  • @user-cx6kt3ku2f
    @user-cx6kt3ku2f Před 12 dny +1

    I love how the small mistranslations turn this into absolute lunacy!

  • @Brazzelkanal
    @Brazzelkanal Před 12 dny +2

    He is a combination of Mr. Rogers and Bill Nye with an engineering degree from McGyver 😂

    • @MiaMerkur
      @MiaMerkur Před 12 dny

      Do not know them, except McGyver ( good point) but will look them up.
      Like Doctor Proton from TBBT?

    • @Brazzelkanal
      @Brazzelkanal Před 12 dny +1

      @MiaMerkur I don't know Doctor Proton, but Mr. Rogers always had helpful lessons for children about life, very empathic and Bill Nye is the american Harald Lesch

  • @volkerp.2262
    @volkerp.2262 Před 12 dny

    Peter Lustig was not a trained actor or host. He originally qualified as a broadcast engineer and an electronics engineer. Working for American Forces Network as a radio engineer in 1963, he was responsible for the recording of US President John F. Kennedy's speech "Ich bin ein Berliner" held in Berlin.
    He said that his mission in his TV show was to research things that he was personally interested in and explain this topic to his children audience. For example he did an experiment in his show how flies land over head on ceiling and build for this a combination of slow motion camera and a photoelectric barrier to start the camera to catch the moment when the flies land.

  • @stephaniepeters2590
    @stephaniepeters2590 Před 7 dny +1

    Following along made harder by the completely wrong subtitles in places. He wasn't finishing building his kitchen, but his door bell. (The ukulele/guitar thing) And others mostly already mentioned in comments. I loved this show as a kid, and it's hard to tell from those short snippets, but it was very educational. Even looking back. Right up there with "Die Maus". Usually it was a proper episode telling a little separate story each time.

  • @sorvahr8761
    @sorvahr8761 Před 12 dny +1

    The show was awesome but this compilation is like a fever dream xD

  • @magnusjahn5342
    @magnusjahn5342 Před 12 dny

    Peter Lustig is a very unique person. His vita is impressive and the true meaning of learning by doing

  • @holleholl3057
    @holleholl3057 Před 9 dny

    You need to see a whole episode, "Löwenzahn" is not as random as it seems in this "best of" compilation. Great to see Peter again, he passed away years ago...He sure was a very unique guy living life his very own special way.... Someone between an inventor and a curious guy interested in everything in nature , science and technique and how things work or are made...

  • @deliatedeschi
    @deliatedeschi Před 11 dny +1

    Poor Ryan- this must be overwhleming. And the subtitles do not help (and are wrong mostly). And yes, Peter Lustig is kind of the german version of Mr. Rogers. I grew up with this and I loved it! Peter created the first tiny house I ever saw.
    And the dandelion breaking through concrete stands for resilience. Reaching for knowledge and solutions. Switch off and go outside

  • @lucaswolf6319
    @lucaswolf6319 Před 11 dny

    Hello from Germany 🇩🇪 This was my Childhood ❤

  • @lutzwillek7914
    @lutzwillek7914 Před 12 dny

    "armchair farter": 🤣🤩🤣 literal correct translation of "Sesselfurzer". These days it would be taboo for a show made for kids to use words like that. However, absolutely correct in its day. I loved Löwenzahn so much in my childhood. Rest in peace Peter.

  • @dschanriihl9043
    @dschanriihl9043 Před 12 dny

    The trinity of german science kids shows:
    "Die Maus" (the mouse) with Armin
    "Löwnzahn" (dandelion) with Peter Lustig
    "Wissen macht Ah" with Shari & Ralf.
    Craft & culture,
    DIY infotainment,
    general science & science trivia.
    Peter was a great ingluence on upcycling, restoring and getting down to basics growing up.
    The Löwenzahn intro is what stuck most. In compairison Die Maus made MADE IN GERMANY relateable.
    It just feels different when the inventor of modern concrete dowels, shows how it is made by hand, and the show shows how it used to be.