Video deep dive · travelNA · NA

I Won't Return To China's Strange German Town

The Brief

A German expat's visit to China's fake German town becomes an accidental meditation on why surface-level nostalgia doesn't work — and the comment section immediately knew it.

The top comment (257 likes) didn't engage with the video at all — it just redirected Ken to Taicang, and nearly half the audience (48.2% of comment clusters) piled on with the same correction.

The personal emotional framing — a genuinely homesick creator testing whether architecture alone can substitute for belonging — gave the disappointment arc real stakes that pure tourism content wouldn't have.

Watch outAlmost half the comment energy is pointing elsewhere; this video functions more as a launchpad for a Taicang follow-up than as a satisfying standalone destination.

If the audience has already pre-loaded the Taicang sequel with 600 comments of expectation, can that video possibly land the emotional payoff this one promised but couldn't deliver?

Summary

Ken, a German YouTuber who has lived abroad for over six years, visits Anting — a town near Shanghai built to resemble Germany — hoping that its architecture might ease his homesickness. He documents the journey from Shanghai by metro, explores the town on foot, attempts to visit a car museum, and searches for German food. He concludes that while the buildings look superficially German, the town lacks any authentic German presence, and that seeing familiar-looking architecture cannot substitute for the real experience of home.

  • ·Ken is German and has lived abroad since 2019, starting with an exchange semester in Bangkok where he also began his YouTube channel.
  • ·He has only returned to Germany twice in nearly six years (2022 and 2024) and says he has been feeling homesick lately.
  • ·His goals for the visit are: assess how German Anting actually is, find German food, and understand why the town was built.
  • ·Western media he found about Anting was mostly negative, describing it as an empty ghost town; he says he could find very little information about it.
  • ·He travels from central Shanghai to Anting via metro Line 11, a roughly 45-minute ride costing 6 yuan.
  • ·He notes practical navigation difficulties in China: Google Maps is unreliable, and the Chinese map app is hard to use without reading Chinese.
  • ·The Shanghai metro displays real-time occupancy percentages per car, which he finds useful.
  • ·The station nearest to Anting is called Shanghai Automobile City, named because Volkswagen's China headquarters is located in the area.
  • ·He attempts to visit a car/auto museum near the station but arrives after the entry cutoff time of 4:00 pm (closing 4:30 pm) and cannot get in.
  • ·He uses DiDi (a local ride-hailing app) to reach the German town area after failing to find a street taxi.
  • ·The town does feature recognizably German-style architecture: half-timbered facades, a central plaza, a church-like building with a statue.
  • ·Despite the visual resemblance, the town feels very quiet and largely empty of people.
  • ·He searches for German food in a local family mart/supermarket and finds no German beer — only Heineken, Corona, Asahi, and Budweiser.
  • ·He also finds no German sausages or German restaurant anywhere in the town.
  • ·He sees no foreigners or Germans during the entire visit.
  • ·He calls his mother from the town, sharing the moment with viewers.
  • ·His overall assessment: the town looks German on the surface but has no German substance — no food, no people, no culture beyond the building facades.
  • ·He reflects that you cannot cure homesickness simply by being surrounded by architecture that resembles home.
  • ·He says he is happy living in Southeast Asia and sees it as his long-term home, partly because his girlfriend is from Indonesia.
  • ·He closes by acknowledging that feeling homesick occasionally is a normal and acceptable part of living far from one's home country.
Views
127k
126,558 total
Likes
4.1k
3.25% like rate
Comments
599
0.47% comment rate
I Won't Return To China's Strange German Town
Comment deep diveExplore all 599 comments →filter by sentiment · theme · superfans · questions · what to fix
§01

Summary

Ken, a German YouTuber based in Southeast Asia, travels solo to Anting — a Shanghai suburb built to resemble a German town — hoping the visual familiarity might ease his homesickness after six years abroad. He navigates the metro, explores the streets and a family mart, fails to find German food, German beer, or a single German resident, and gets turned away from the Volkswagen automotive museum at closing time. By the end he concludes that German-looking buildings with no German people, food, or culture don't actually feel like home — and that homesickness is something you carry, not something you cure with architecture.

Content pillars
expat identityChina travelhomesicknesscultural facades
§02

Engagement vs the rest of the channel

How this video's like-and-comment rate compares to this channel's running average.

Engagement vs channel avg 3.72pp
3.72% this video
0.00% avg
Like rate
3.25%
of viewers tap like
Comment rate
0.47%
of viewers leave a comment
§03

The hook

medium

Opening 15 seconds — the bit that decides whether a viewer keeps watching.

[0:00] This is Anting, a small town in China built to look like Germany. I am from Germany and I have been living abroad for more than 6 years now. And to be honest, I have been missing home lately. So, I came here to see if being surrounded by something that looks like home can actually help me with that feeling.

Assessment

The German-visiting-fake-Germany premise is immediately character-rich and emotionally legible, giving the hook strong identity specificity. But the title pre-spoils the verdict ('Won't Return'), which kills curiosity before a single frame plays, and the hook spends its first 15 seconds on backstory rather than landing in the scene — a pattern Ken's street-interview hooks avoid.

Hook quality
medium
Call-to-action
present
Archetype
experimenter
Composite score
6.5/10
Hook score · 6 dimensions
character presence
8/10
clarity
8/10
curiosity
5/10
specificity
7/10
stakes
6/10
time to payoff
5/10
Anti-patterns detected
  • self intro
  • slow contextSpends the first seconds setting up context before delivering the actual hook.
§03b

Hook rewrites

Three alternative openings, each in a different archetype. Each is under 40 words — completable in 15 seconds.

Rewrite №1 · investigatortechnique: lead_with_outcome

I'm German. I haven't been home in 6 years. China has a town built to look exactly like Germany — so I came to find out if fake Germany can cure real homesickness.

WhyForegrounds the emotional experiment as a testable question rather than autobiography, pulling the viewer into the stakes in under 10 seconds.

Rewrite №2 · experimentertechnique: add_specificity

I spent a full day in China's replica German town — hunting for German food, German faces, anything real. Every building looks authentic. Nothing else does.

WhyThe contrast between 'looks authentic / nothing else does' creates micro-curiosity and lets the payoff land cold, without leaning on Ken's personal backstory.

Rewrite №3 · contrariantechnique: flip_declarative_to_stake

China built a perfect German town. Every rooftop, every facade — straight out of Bavaria. But there's no German beer, no German food, and not a single German person living here.

WhyMirrors exactly what the top comments debate (the hollowness beneath the surface), and the triple 'no' structure builds rhythmic tension that pushes viewers past the opening.

§03c

Title gap & rewrites

Gap 42 · undersell

The dominant comment thread — 12+ independent suggestions to visit Taicang — reveals that viewers latched onto the 'wrong town' angle far more than the 'strange' framing. The real story the audience surfaced is that Anting is a hollow themed district while 500 German companies and actual German residents exist 40km away; 'strange' undersells both the disappointment and the more interesting geographic irony.

What commenters actually quoted
  • · Taicang (12+ mentions across top comments)
  • · wrong German Town (wlee3400 top comment, echoed by RatFink, SlowtravellerDan, others)
  • · German beer / no German beer (referenced in video, echoed by lisawitowski, ogcali9291, Mznx123)
Anti-patterns in current title
  • vague identity
  • implied universal
Thumbnail recommendation

Ken standing in front of an obviously German-style facade (half-timbered building, steeple) with an expression of mild bewilderment or disappointment — the architectural authenticity contrasting with his body language tells the 'looks real, feels fake' story at a glance and matches the video's emotional through-line.

3 title rewrites
  1. 01 · China Built a German Town — But No Germans Live in It
    contrarian
    Captures the hollowness the top comment ('only the surface') and multiple viewers flagged, without spoiling the verdict before the video starts.
  2. 02 · I Tried to Cure Homesickness at China's Fake German Town
    specificity
    Makes the personal emotional experiment the hook rather than the destination, which is the angle that drove the most empathetic engagement ('can relate to missing home').
  3. 03 · The Real German Town in China Is 40km Away — Nobody Told Me
    curiosity gap
    Directly channels the dominant comment discovery (Taicang), turning viewer knowledge into a teased reveal and inviting the 'wrong town' commenters to feel seen.
§04

What viewers said

Explore all →

599 comments analysed and clustered into themes.

Sentiment breakdown

Mostly mixed

positive 44%neutral 51%negative 5%
Real breakdown over 423 of 474 root comments — every comment analysed, not sampled.

The personal homesickness narrative landed hardest — commenters didn't just sympathize, they extended it with their own 'I can relate, living far from home' stories. The call to his mom was called out unprompted as a highlight ('You called your mom. Wunderbar'). The absurdist detail that 'the birds sound German' generated genuine delight and was quoted back in multiple comments. Underlying all of it: Ken's transparency about disappointment ('I still miss Germany, this day didn't help') read as authentic, which is exactly what earned the affection.

Top comment themes

10 clusters surfaced

  1. 01
    Taicang (太仓) is the real German town — commenters redirect Ken there (~18 mentions)
  2. 02
    Qingdao as authentic German alternative — colonial history, Tsingtao beer, architecture (~9 mentions)
  3. 03
    General appreciation and travel inspiration — 'stumbling across your channel', bucket-list trigger (~12 mentions)
  4. 04
    Metro Line 11 confusion explained — commenters clarify the forking line, no transfer needed (~5 mentions)
  5. 05
    Navigation and China travel tips — Amap, Didi, roaming SIM for Google access (~6 mentions)
§04a

Audience pulse

How the audience feels — a Net Sentiment mood score, how split the room is, and an early churn signal. All from the comments, not YouTube analytics.

+39Positivemood · −100 to +100
Mood (raw)
+39
before channel-norm adjust
Polarization
0.78
0 = uniform, 1 = spread
Divisiveness
0.10
is the room split?
Warmth
22%
warm / emotional tone
Analysed
423
comments (confidence)
Churn signalnormal20 comments flagged dissatisfaction (4.7% — channel norm 4.0%)
Emotional tone breakdown
  1. Neutral
    48%
  2. Warm
    19%
  3. Funny
    13%
  4. Curious
    9%
  5. Sarcastic
    5%
  6. Excited
    2%
  7. Nostalgic
    2%
  8. Angry
    1%

Net Sentiment Score over 423 analysed comments; headline adjusted toward the channel norm (Bayesian, C=20). Polarization = normalised entropy. Comment-derived — not YouTube analytics.

§04a

Audience composition

algo-friendly · +39

Who actually showed up in the comments — psychographic, topical and language mix. Computed deterministically from 423 labeled root comments.

Identity signals

Who they are

  1. Devoted fan
    15%
  2. Sharing a story
    11%
  3. Relating personally
    4%
  4. Debating
    3%
Topic mix

What they talked about

  1. Travel
    46%
  2. Other
    22%
  3. Culture
    14%
  4. Food
    10%
  5. Language
    3%
  6. politics
    2%
  7. Identity
    1%
  8. Money
    1%
Language mix

In which languages

  1. English
    99%
  2. other
    1%
Algorithm signal · proxy

How YouTube’s satisfaction model likely reads this

algo-friendly · +39

YouTube’s 2025 discovery shift now weights satisfaction signals — comment sentiment, tone, and depth. We can’t see the model, but we can estimate its inputs. Directional only.

Positive ratio
44%
share of comments labelled positive
Curiosity share
31%
curious / nostalgic / warm tones
Critical share
5%
critical / sarcastic tones
Net satisfaction
+39
pos% − crit%, −100..+100
Regret detectorlow · 3 comments · 1%

A handful of comments suggested a title-vs-content gap

3 of 423 labelled comments were flagged as showing regret about the title/thumbnail promise vs. the actual content.

§04b

Moments that landed

Key transcript moments — tap a timestamp to jump to that point in the video.

0:00Ken frames the visit as a personal emotional experiment — not tourism — which sets the stakes and drives the video's entire engagement curve.1:13Google Maps frustration in China surfaces immediately; a relatable pain point for international viewers that primes the underdog narrative.5:47Extended backstory explains why Ken never returned to Germany — the confession of accidental permanence deepens viewer investment in whether this day helps.36:14The diagnosis lands: 'the city may look very German on the surface... but once you go a bit deeper, there's nothing German about this place' — the thesis stated plainly after 36 minutes of evidence.37:44The emotional punchline — 'you can't cure being homesick by just looking at buildings' — is the screenshot-worthy moment the whole video builds toward.38:00Ken pivots to contentment: girlfriend from Indonesia, sees himself in SE Asia for life, normalizes missing home without letting it destabilize — a tonal resolution that earns goodwill.
§04c

What viewers reacted to

Each comment theme mapped to the transcript moment that sparked it.

General appreciation and travel inspiration

Ken's personal backstory (left Germany in 2019, never returned) and his closing reflection on homesickness made the vlog feel personal rather than touristic, triggering both empathy and travel inspiration comments

6:0537:39
Recommendations for authentic German towns (Taicang, Qingdao)

Ken's explicit disappointment — no German beer, no German food, no Germans — at the ~36-37 minute mark was the trigger point that sent commenters into recommendation mode, filling the gap the video left open

36:0037:05
§05

Friction points

All criticism →

Severity × frequency — ranked. Each point has an evidence quote and a concrete before/after suggestion.

Wrong town — Anting is the famous fake one, Taicang is the real German town with 500+ German companies and actual Germans living theresev 5/5 · 14 mentions
Ken, you definitely went to the wrong German Town. You should have gone to TaiCang(太仓) located about 10km from AnTing where you went to.↗ view
FixPin a top-comment correction + add an on-screen card at minute 1: 'Heads up: there's a real Germans-live-there town called Taicang ~10km away — I filmed Anting on purpose to test the replica. Taicang video next.' Then actually do the Taicang follow-up.
Missed obvious alternative — Qingdao, an actually-German-colonial city with Tsingtao brewery, would have delivered what the video premise promisedsev 4/5 · 7 mentions
Qingdao is a german brewery town, lots of german food, lots of German beers, lots of german buildings↗ view
FixOpen the video by naming the three German-related places (Anting / Taicang / Qingdao) on a map and explaining why you picked the replica one. Pre-empts the entire comment thread.
Metro Line 11 confusion was a self-resolved misunderstanding (Y-fork, not a transfer) but the video presents it as a 30-second mysterysev 3/5 · 3 mentions
Shanghai Metro Line 11 has 2 directions, the train will literally go to each direction one by one... thus, you don't need to change the platform to wait for the right train (it simply comes next)↗ view
FixCut the 'I'm confused at the fork' beat to ~10s and add a corrective voiceover: 'Turns out Line 11 splits here — same platform, next train goes the other way.'
Car museum closure misread — viewers point out the door said 4:30 close, last entry 4:00, not arbitrary closuresev 3/5 · 3 mentions
The car museum closes at 4:30 pm while you cannot enter starting from 4pm↗ view
FixAdd a quick text overlay at the closed-door moment: 'Sign says open till 4:30 but last entry is 4:00 — my mistake, arrived 4:15.' Removes the 'China is closing on me' confusion.
No payoff on the food promise — video opens 'look for German food' and ends with viewer eating Chinese bread + coconut watersev 3/5 · 3 mentions
Wow German Town 😮😊 but sadly no German food or German people or German beer 😢. If you have found one, that would be the highlight 😊 of the vlog.↗ view
FixEither pre-scout one German restaurant in Shanghai proper (commenters name Paulaner, Schindlers Tankstelle, 1886 German Auto Restaurant, Zeitgeist) and include a 3-min food beat, or drop the food framing from the cold open.
Google Maps/navigation complaint is well-known to China viewers — no mention of Amap/Baidu Maps as the obvious solvesev 2/5 · 4 mentions
我們中國人在國內一般導航都用高德地圖或者百度地圖
Fix30s explainer once per China trip: 'Google Maps doesn't work here; locals use Amap/Baidu. I'm using both — switching in moments like this.'
Unidentified church statue — viewer left the museum + statue moments unresolved, comments had to fill in 'Mary holding Jesus'sev 2/5 · 2 mentions
32:40 mary holding jesus↗ view
FixAdd a post-production text card at 32:40: 'Madonna and Child — classic Catholic church statue.' Closes the open question on screen.
Title overpromise — 'Won't Return' framing reads to some as clickbait when the actual finding is 'looks German but isn't'sev 2/5 · 1 mentions
A bit of a boring video but u watched it anyway. Also Ken, always get some food in your video!↗ view
FixTry a title closer to the genuine punchline: 'I visited China's fake Germany to cure homesickness — it didn't work.'
Pacing — 39 minutes for a 'looked German, wasn't German' conclusion feels stretched; metro/taxi-hunting segments are longsev 2/5 · 1 mentions
I am really curious to know how many times the word German or Germany was used in this video... if you played a drinking game by around the 15 minute mark you would be legless↗ view
FixTighten metro + taxi-hunting to under 4 minutes combined; cut to the town arrival faster. Target 22–25 min.
Mini mislabeled as non-German — Mini is BMW-owned since 1996, commenters correctedsev 1/5 · 2 mentions
Mini's are German now, made by BMW.↗ view
FixOn-screen correction overlay where Mini is shown: 'Mini = BMW-owned since 1996, so technically German.'
No conversational Chinese / Chinese keyboard preparation — repeated 'all in Chinese, confusing' beatssev 2/5 · 1 mentions
Install Chinese soft keyboard at your phone... Learn a little bit conversational Chinese
FixPre-trip 60s prep montage: install Amap, add Chinese keyboard, learn 5 phrases. Then the on-trip confusion is funnier instead of repetitive.
Lack of locals interviewed — viewer wanted to know if residents even know they live in 'Germany'sev 2/5 · 1 mentions
I don't even think the people who live there even realize that they live in a German styled town.↗ view
FixAdd 2–3 short man-on-the-street interviews ('Do you know this town was built to look German?') — turns the quiet emptiness into content.
Quiet/empty visuals reinforce 'ghost town' criticism the host said he wanted to disprovesev 2/5 · 1 mentions
This town is a little strange since there are so few people outside or on the streets.↗ view
FixEither film on a weekend afternoon when there's foot traffic, or lean into the emptiness as the thesis (cold open: 'Western media calls it a ghost town. They're right.').
§Sp

Sponsor fit

Ready to pitch · 78/100

What a brand or agency would see evaluating this video — which sponsors to pitch, why, what to charge, and what's safe.

This is a high-trust travel audience that already responds to affiliate prompts — Ken's own pinned Holafly eSIM link is the 8th most-liked comment (37 likes), proving the audience accepts and engages with sponsored travel-tool drops. Roughly 48% of the 473 clustered comments are unprompted travel recommendations (Taicang, Qingdao, Shenyang, Yangshan, Tongji University), which is a strong purchase-research mindset; ad tolerance is high because Ken's narrative-first style means a sponsor slot reads as part of the trip, not an interruption.

Integration rate
$2,500–$3,800
60-90s mid-roll
Dedicated video
$4,000–$6,000
full sponsored video
Basis: 126,558 people watched this video, and at the standard sponsorship benchmark of about $25 for every 1,000 views (this is what brands typically pay for a 60-90 second mention inside a creator's video, well above raw YouTube ad rates because a creator endorsement converts much better than a banner ad), that's a $3,164 starting point. We then add roughly 20% because this is a loyal, comment-heavy travel audience (3.7% engagement, multiple commenters saying 'been following you for years') — brands pay more when viewers actually trust the host. Cross-border travelers watching China content are also a hard audience for travel sponsors to reach anywhere else, which holds the price up. A dedicated standalone video (the whole video about the sponsor) is worth about 60% more than a mid-roll mention because it's the entire 30+ minute video doing the selling.
Brands to pitch
HolaflyTravel eSIMAlready the active sponsor on this video — Ken's own Holafly link comment has 37 likes (top 10) and the video repeatedly shows him struggling with Chinese connectivity/Google Maps (1:13, 7:34), which is the literal use case
AiraloTravel eSIM#1 travel-creator sponsor globally; cross-border audience (commenters from Sri Lanka, Myanmar, Nepal, Malaysia, Canada, US) — a global eSIM has direct utility for everyone watching
SailyTravel eSIM (NordVPN-owned)Direct Holafly/Airalo competitor actively spending on the China-travel niche; Ken can run rotating eSIM sponsors since his Holafly placement already proved conversion
WiseMulti-currency money transferAudience is multi-country expats (commenter saying 'living in Asia for over 20 years', Bangkok price-comparison comment at top-comment #61 doing THB/USD math) — Wise is the default expat money tool and pays well in the travel vertical
BabbelLanguage learningRecurring pain point in the video itself — Ken can't read the Chinese map app (1:24), can't read menus (35:43); a top comment recommends learning conversational Chinese; language-app sponsors convert hard against travel friction stories
Surfshark / NordVPNVPNAudience is actively watching China content; commenter #10 explicitly recommends 'roaming SIM card so you can visit any western apps' — VPN is the native solve and a top-paying YouTube category
SafetyWing / GenkiNomad travel insuranceKen's narrative is 'left Germany in 2019, living in SE Asia full-time'; this is the literal SafetyWing target persona and many commenters self-identify as long-term expats
Trip.com / KlookTravel bookingPan-Asian audience (China, Japan, Korea, Thailand, Malaysia mentioned across comments); both brands sponsor heavily in the Asia-travel-vlog niche and would pay for this geo mix
Avoid
  • Geopolitically charged news/opinion apps (Ground News etc.)Comment 88 ('China is good at Propaganda') and Comment 101 (racial dog-whistle about 'Removed the Whites') show a small but visible politicized fringe — a politics-adjacent sponsor would get pulled into that fight
  • AlcoholAudience skews international/multi-faith (commenters from Myanmar, Sri Lanka, Nepal, Turkey, Malaysia) and includes likely-young viewers ('I really need to travel more!'); regional ad-law risk in several of those markets
  • Crypto / trading appsTravel/cultural-curiosity audience, no financial-speculation signal in comments; misalignment risks the trust score that makes this channel sponsorable
  • Dating appsKen openly mentions his Indonesian girlfriend (38:00) — a dating sponsor would feel off-brand and audience has no signal of being single-and-searching
How to integrate

Mid-roll dedicated read at ~7:00 (the 'why I left Germany' segment) — viewer is already in narrative-pause mode, and eSIM/VPN/language-app messaging maps directly onto the China-connectivity pain Ken has just demonstrated on screen.

Brand safety
Toxicity
Clean — out of 111 surfaced comments, only one ('Removed the Whites' #101) and one ('Left germany because its full of what people' #107) carry racial undertones; ~98% are constructive travel suggestions or warm engagement
Controversy
None detected — Ken discloses his Holafly affiliate in the pinned comment, has no political claims in the script, and the China-tourism framing is light-touch (homesick-German story, not geopolitics)
Audience conduct
On-topic ~96% — the two clustered themes (51.8% travel appreciation, 48.2% authentic-German-town recommendations) account for nearly all comments; troll/spam rate <2% (a few 'first/second' comments)
Sponsor evidence quotes
Anyone here who lives abroad too and can relate to the feeling of missing home sometimes? The Holafly eSIM I am using when traveling: [link] (5% discount)
Ken's own pinned comment got 37 likes — proves the audience clicks affiliate offers tied to lived travel pain↗ view
Use a roaming SIM card, when your phone is in roaming mode in China, you can visit any western apps at your phone
Audience is independently recommending eSIM/VPN solves — pre-sold for that category↗ view
Hi Ken. Several points in the video I would like to help you figure our as a Chinese... You may check Taicang
80 likes — audience treats Ken as a trusted travel decision-maker and adds operational tips, signaling high parasocial trust↗ view
Ken, I absolutely love your vlogs! ... You've officially put it at the top of my travel list
Direct purchase-intent: this viewer says Ken's content shifted their travel plans — exactly what travel sponsors pay for
I've been following you for yrs. Can't like your YT channel more. I've been working for German company for 10+ years... I will be more than happy to offer you a ride
Multi-year loyalty + willingness to host = deep parasocial bond, the variable that lifts sponsor rates above CPM math↗ view
Algorithm read · what to do next 14 days

Strong Performer · score 74/100

high
The next 14 days
  1. Day 1 (0-24h)
    Pin a community-response comment acknowledging Taicang + Qingdao and tease 'I'm going to the REAL German town next' — heart the top Taicang comments (#1, #2, #4, #5)
    48.2% of comments are unanimously pointing to Taicang/Qingdao; converting that energy into a sequel promise locks in the audience and signals responsiveness to YouTube
    WatchReplies-to-pinned-comment rate in 48h and whether 'next video' clicks rise in YT analytics traffic source 'External / Channel pages'
  2. Day 2-3
    Add chapter markers retroactively (Metro confusion / Car museum / Walking the town / Supermarket / Why I left Germany at 5:47 / Conclusion) and update the description with a 'Taicang sequel coming' line
    No chapters now; the 5:47–6:30 'why I left Germany' beat is the highest-emotion moment and a chapter would surface it to retention-driven viewers
    WatchAverage view duration over the next 7 days vs. the prior 7-day baseline
  3. Day 4-7
    Cut a 45-60s YouTube Short from the homesick mom-call moment + the 'birds sound German' joke (referenced in comments #9, #11, #94) — overlay 'why I left Germany 6 years ago'
    Comment #94 explicitly says 'made my day' about the bird joke; #9 has 36 likes — the emotional/humor beats are clearly the shareable atoms, and a Short funnels new subs to this long-form
    WatchShort → long-form CTR and net subscriber lift over the week
  4. Day 7-14
    Film and publish the Taicang follow-up; in the cold open directly thank the commenters who recommended it (call out @洪湖水浪打浪 and @ycd9491 by handle), and pre-book a German-restaurant scene so the food payoff this video lacked is delivered
    Sequel converts the dominant comment theme into the next title; named-commenter shoutouts trigger super-engagement from the exact viewers who drove THIS video's comments, and the food-payoff fixes the unresolved promise that capped this video's satisfaction at 74
    WatchComparison metrics on day 7 of the Taicang video vs day 7 of this video: views, CTR, like ratio, and whether 'Strong Performer' upgrades toward 'breakout'
Why it could lift
  • +3.7% engagement (599 comments / 126.5k views) — above the ~2% benchmark for 30+ min travel vlogs, signals strong viewer retention
  • +473 of the 599 comments cluster into just 2 coherent themes (52% appreciation, 48% Taicang/Qingdao recommendations) — high topical coherence is a relevance signal
  • +Top comment with 257 likes (Taicang tip) and a long tail of variations means the algorithm sees repeated 'comment + reply' engagement loops
  • +Curiosity tone dominates ('I never knew china had this', 'I really need to travel more') — viewers signal they want MORE from this niche, a session-time multiplier
  • +Cross-geography commenters (Sri Lanka, Myanmar, Nepal, Malaysia, US, Canada, China itself) signal the video is being recommended to multiple country audiences — international travel-niche videos often get a slow-burn long tail
Why it might stall
  • The video resolves on a downbeat ('didn't really help much', 'I still miss Germany') at 37:39 — closing satisfaction may drag retention curve down for the final 10%
  • Half the comment volume is corrective ('you went to the WRONG town') — algorithm reads sentiment as mixed; YouTube can interpret correction-comments as confusion signal
  • No payoff scenes for the German-food / German-people quest (35:50, 36:24) — viewers came for German-in-China and got 'nothing German' which may hurt likes-per-view
  • No chapters set on the video — reduces session-time per viewer and removes a known retention lever YouTube rewards
  • Title 'I Won't Return To China's Strange German Town' is mildly negative-framed — caps the click-through ceiling vs. a curiosity hook

Algorithm Signal is a proxy. YouTube’s satisfaction scores aren’t public. Directional, not predictive.

§05

The audience asked & asked for

All questions →

Unanswered questions and explicit requests from the comment thread — fuel for the next upload.

Questions

14 unanswered

  • ?Will Ken actually visit Taicang now? (~18 mentions implying the question)
  • ?Will Ken go to Qingdao for real German beer and colonial architecture? (~9 mentions)
  • ?When is Ken's next trip back to Germany — will he vlog it? (~4 mentions)
  • ?Does Aldi actually operate stores in China, or was it just an imported bag? (~2 mentions)
  • ?Why was the car museum listed as open until 4:30 but entry closed at 4:00? (~2 mentions)
  • ?Who exactly designed Anting — commenters reference 'Hitler's architect's son's firm'; is that documented?
  • ?Are there actual Germans living in Anting at all, or is it purely decorative?
  • ?Does Anting have an Oktoberfest or any seasonal German events?
  • ?Does the town have surveillance cameras like the rest of China?
  • ?What's the story behind Tongji University's German founding — is a campus video possible?
  • ?Will Ken visit Malaysia, given his girlfriend is from Indonesia / fans asking from Malaysia?
  • ?When will Ken visit Japan (Osaka/Kyoto), Canada, Australia, or New Zealand?
  • ?Is there a Dutch town in Shanghai too — is a 'replica towns' series possible?
  • ?What is the VW decline in China about — how does that affect Anting's relevance now?
Requests

13 explicit asks

  • askVisit Taicang (Jiangsu) — 500+ German companies, German residents, authentic food (~18 explicit requests)
  • askVisit Qingdao — German colonial architecture, Tsingtao brewery, German food (~9 explicit requests)
  • askReturn-to-Germany vlog — document the homecoming after 6 years away (~4 mentions)
  • askHaircut-in-every-city series — recurring format request (~3 mentions)
  • askReverse concept video: visit a Chinatown in Germany as a 'fake Chinese town' (~2 mentions)
  • askVisit Yangshuo or other Chinese scenic spots (~2 mentions)
  • askVisit Malaysia (~2 mentions)
  • askVisit Japan — Osaka/Kyoto (~2 mentions)
  • askVisit Australia / New Zealand (~2 mentions)
  • askVisit USA / South America (~2 mentions)
  • askTry German restaurants in Shanghai (Paulaner Bräuhaus, Schindler's Tankstelle, 1886) (~3 mentions)
  • askVisit Yangshan deep water port in Shanghai (~1 mention)
  • askVideo on Tongji University's German origins (~1 mention)
§06

What to make next

Three video ideas pulled directly from what the comments asked for.

01

Visit Taicang — the actual German town with 500+ German companies and real German residents

TitleChina's REAL German Town (500 German Companies, Actual Germans)
HookI went to China's German town and found zero Germans — so I went to the RIGHT one
Why now~18 top comments are literally a call-to-action; the audience has already written the premise for him and will return to see the payoff
02

Qingdao — German colonial city with original architecture, Tsingtao brewery, and actual German food

TitleThe Chinese City Germany Left Behind (Qingdao)
HookThis Chinese city was German for 17 years — and it still shows
Why nowNine separate commenters recommended it unprompted; colonial history gives it editorial depth beyond just 'replica town' and sets up a stronger contrast with Anting
03

Returning to Germany after 6 years — homecoming vlog with family, food, and the feeling of re-entry

TitleReturning To Germany After 6 Years Abroad
HookI left Germany 6 years ago. Today I'm going back.
Why nowKen telegraphed the trip in the video (sister's engagement, girlfriend Lisa joining); the audience already knows it's coming and several comments express anticipation explicitly
04

Reverse angle: visit a Chinatown in Germany and apply the same 'how Chinese is it really?' test

TitleGermany's 'Chinese Town' vs China's German Town
HookChina built a fake German town. Germany has a fake Chinese one. I went to both.
Why nowA top-25 comment explicitly proposed this concept and it got engagement; it closes a narrative loop the audience opened themselves
05

German restaurants hidden inside Shanghai — hunt for real schnitzel, sauerkraut, and beer in the city

TitleFinding REAL German Food in Shanghai
HookI couldn't find German food in China's German town — so I found it in Shanghai instead
Why nowThe Anting disappointment created a hunger for resolution; three commenters named specific restaurants (Paulaner, Schindler's, 1886) — the research is already crowd-sourced
06

China's other replica towns — Dutch town, Austrian Hallstatt copy, Venetian canals; one video, multiple locations

TitleChina's Fake European Towns (Germany, Austria, Netherlands)
HookChina didn't just copy Germany — it copied all of Europe
Why nowTwo commenters mentioned the Dutch town in Shanghai; the Anting video primed the audience for the broader pattern, making this a natural series extension
§07

Creator action items

Concrete, testable changes for the next upload. Each cites a timestamp, a comment quote, or a metric — and names what to watch.

Do 01

Greenlight a Taicang sequel as the very next China upload

Evidence10+ separate top comments (#1 257 likes, #2 175 likes, #5 69 likes, #12, #13 21 likes, #21, #26, #29, #38, #46, #87) all independently point to Taicang
Watch forDay-7 view count of the Taicang video exceeds this video's day-7 (use this video as benchmark)
Do 02

Also schedule a Qingdao episode focused on the German brewery heritage

EvidenceComments #14, #27, #32, #36, #44, #83 all push Qingdao — second most-recommended location after Taicang
Watch forWhether Qingdao video CTR beats channel-average (it has a built-in beer/brewery hook this Anting video lacked)
Do 03

Add chapter markers to THIS video retroactively (Metro / Car museum / Walking the town / Why I left Germany at 5:47 / Supermarket / Conclusion)

EvidenceNo chapters currently; the 5:47 mom-call/leaving-Germany beat is the emotional center but is unsearchable
Watch forAverage view duration in the next 7 days vs. prior 7-day baseline
Do 04

Pin a 'going to the REAL German town next — Taicang' comment immediately

Evidence48% of clustered comments are Taicang recommendations — converting that energy is a free retention/CTR boost on the sequel
Watch forPinned-comment likes >150 within 72h; channel-page traffic share rises in YT analytics
Do 05

Cut a 45-60s Short from the 'these birds sound German' moment plus the homesick mom-call beat

EvidenceComments #9 (36 likes), #11 (30 likes), #94 specifically call out the bird joke as the moment that 'made their day'
Watch forNet subscribers gained from Short within 7 days; Short-to-long-form CTR
Do 06

Pre-book at least one confirmed German restaurant scene in the Taicang sequel before flying

EvidenceComments #28 (Paulaner Bräuhaus Beijing), #48 (Paulaner Panyu), #52 (Zeitgeist Jingan), #73 (1886 Germany Car restaurant), #97 (three named restaurants) — the audience explicitly wants the food payoff this video failed to deliver
Watch forLike-ratio (likes/views) of Taicang video vs. this Anting video
Do 07

A/B test title framing toward curiosity-positive ('I Found the FAKE German Town in China') instead of negative-framed ('I Won't Return')

EvidenceCurrent title's negative frame caps CTR; comments #25 and #109 organically used 'fake' as the more memorable hook
Watch for30-day CTR on Taicang video vs. this video's CTR
Do 08

Stack the Holafly mid-roll closer to the 1:13 'Google Maps totally not reliable' beat in future China videos

EvidenceThe connectivity-pain demo IS the eSIM ad — currently it lives 6 minutes before the affiliate is mentioned in a pinned comment
Watch forHolafly affiliate click-through rate on next China upload vs. baseline
Do 09

Add a Chinese map-app subtitle/sponsor opportunity (Amap/Baidu Maps) in the Taicang video opening

EvidenceComments #93, #102, #104 spontaneously recommended Amap/Baidu Maps — three independent suggestions = real audience pain
Watch forWhether commenters again volunteer map-app fixes (a sign the issue is no longer the friction beat)
Do 10

Reply to top 25 comments (especially #1, #2, #4) within first 24h

EvidenceHeavy correction-comment volume is a known engagement loop — replies signal responsiveness to the algorithm
Watch forTotal comment count by day 3 vs. day-3 count of last 3 videos
Do 11

Use #38's Shenyang/sauerkraut tip as a third Germany-in-China episode

EvidenceCommenter named Shenyang specifically for sauerkraut — extends the 'German pockets in China' series into a 3-part arc
Watch forSeries watch-through rate (% of viewers from ep 1 watching ep 2 and ep 3)
Do 12

Pitch Wise as a recurring expat-money sponsor for upcoming Germany homecoming arc

EvidenceKen confirms he's going to Germany soon (top comment #18 references it); cross-currency send-home is a Wise core use case
Watch forSponsor revenue per video over the next 3 uploads
Do 13

Address the negative wrap-up ('didn't help much') in the Taicang opener — tee up the sequel as the redemption

EvidenceSentiment score 74 (not 85+) is capped by the disappointed ending; tying the next video to a resolved arc lifts both videos' watch-time
Watch forAudience retention curve on Taicang video — specifically the final 20%
Do 14

Run a 'name a commenter who taught me something' segment in the Taicang cold open

Evidence#4 (80 likes) and #1 (257 likes) are the kind of high-value tips that signal Ken treats his audience as collaborators — drives superfan loyalty
Watch for% of comments on Taicang video that reference being mentioned/named
Do 15

Build a 'haircut in every city' running gag as suggested by comment #7

EvidenceComments #3 (84 likes) and #7 (49 likes) and #17 are all about haircuts — organic hook the audience has handed Ken
Watch forWhether the running gag becomes top-3 commented theme in the next 5 videos
Do 16

Reach out to commenter #51 (Bill Zhao) who offered a ride at Yangshan deep water port

EvidenceMulti-year fan offering free local logistics for a guaranteed-curious story (the world's largest container port) = nearly-free content
Watch forIf video happens, compare its view count to channel median for China content
Do 17

Add a low-cost 'I'm going back to Germany — what should I film?' community post this week

EvidenceComments #18 (14 likes) and #99 explicitly celebrate the upcoming Germany visit — pre-feeds the Germany arc with ideas
Watch forCommunity-post engagement vs. last 5 community posts
Do 18

Compress the 'looking for the metro / looking for taxi' segments (1:08-2:50, 7:34-8:30) in future cuts

Evidence~3+ minutes of pure logistics with no payoff; comment #72 even points out the train explanation was unnecessary — viewers noticed the slack
Watch forFirst-quartile retention (% viewers reaching 25% of video) on the next China upload
Do 19

Convert the homesick framing into a recurring channel theme — 'Ken Misses Home' series

EvidenceBryan_aviation (#30): 'I got the same feeling in Koreatown LA' and #69 (#108) tie homesickness to broader audience — emotional resonance is the strongest signal in the comment set
Watch forSub conversion rate (subs per 1k views) on a homesick-themed video vs. a pure travel-info video
Do 20

Test Babbel/Pimsleur sponsor read tied to the menu/map-reading struggles

EvidenceComments #10 and #4 both surface the language barrier as the operational pain — language apps convert against demonstrated friction
Watch forSponsor CTR if Babbel/Pimsleur is read at the supermarket scene timestamp (35:43)
§R1

Reply queue

Who to reply to first — ranked by impact, with a ready-to-send draft in your voice.

@wlee3400 · high↗ view

Ken, you definitely went to the wrong German Town. You should have gone to TaiCang(太仓) located about 10km from AnTing where you went to. Though it situates in JiangSu Province but is so close to Shanghai. The TaiCang German Town is packed with German companies (over 500), entrepreneur, restaurant and bakery; architecture is also German inspired. You can simply take a Didi getting there, very affordable. And, this town is also well known in Germany. You can google.

Why: 175 likes, the most detailed actionable alternative destination in the thread — a pinned reply here becomes the de-facto community answer for everyone who watched and felt let down by Anting
Draft reply

Okay this genuinely makes me feel better about the whole trip — I had no idea Taicang existed before making this video. 500 German companies is wild. That is going on the list for the next China visit, for real.

@洪湖水浪打浪-y4h · high↗ view

Ken, you should go to Taicang, Jiangsu Province. That's where the Germans are.

Why: Top comment at 257 likes — replying here is the highest-visibility action in the whole thread, seen by anyone sorting by Top
Draft reply

Taicang is officially the next mission. The algorithm clearly sent me to the wrong German town this time — won't make the same mistake twice!

@ycd9491 · high↗ view

Hi Ken. Several points in the video I would like to help you figure our as a Chinese. 1: Shanghai Metro Line 11 has 2 directions, the train will literally go to each direction one by one, the first train you took was going to another direction, thus, you don't need to change the platform to wait for the right train (it simply comes next) 2: The car museum closes at 4:30 pm while you cannot enter starting from 4pm 3: You may check Taicang, it is just several kms away from Shanghai, it has a more authentic German town called Haiyundi.

Why: 80 likes, corrects three real on-screen confusions in detail — replying validates a knowledgeable local viewer and adds clarity for future viewers still confused by those moments
Draft reply

This explains so much — I was genuinely baffled standing on that platform wondering why two trains kept going the opposite direction. And the museum cutoff at 4pm, not 4:30, I completely missed that. Haiyundi is now on my radar, thank you!

@GreenWhaIe · high↗ view

Fun fact: this was built by Hitler's architect's son's firm

Why: 56 likes on a genuinely shocking historical detail Ken never covered — engaging here adds depth to the video story and will spark a reply thread
Draft reply

Wait, seriously?? That is one of the most unexpected things I have learned about this whole trip. Do you have a source for that — I would love to dig into it more.

@stephenalbertson9214 · high↗ view

You should get a haircut in each city you go to, as a souvenir

Why: 49 likes on a repeatable content format idea — the haircut bit was already running in other comments; acknowledging it publicly plants the seed for a series
Draft reply

This is actually a genius idea and I am surprised I have not done it already. A haircut in every city as a souvenir — that could genuinely become its own series.

@bryan_aviation · medium↗ view

Ken, I can relate to the feeling you got. I got the same feeling in Koreatown, Los Angeles, it reminded me of Korea and my family. Although there are much more Koreans living in Koreatown LA than there are Germans living there in China, it is still a very happy feeling.

Why: Exactly the kind of personal diaspora story Ken invited at the end of the video — replying here rewards the emotional thread that drove 51% of comments
Draft reply

Yes, this is exactly it — that bittersweet thing where the surface looks familiar but something is still missing. I think anyone who lives far from home can relate to that feeling. Glad Koreatown gives you that connection to Korea.

@ChuckNorrizzed · medium↗ view

When you go back to Germany, you should do a video of you roaming around your Chinatown and then label it the "Fake Chinese Town" 😂

Why: Funny, viral-potential content idea — acknowledging it publicly makes it more likely to happen and rewards the commenter with a creator shoutout
Draft reply

Haha okay this is actually a real video idea. The symmetry would be perfect. Next time I am in Germany this might actually happen.

@BluePigProductions · medium↗ view

We went to Paulaner Bräuhaus in Beijing a few months ago. Ate sauerkraut with German sausage. Food was great and the atmosphere was like in Germany.

Why: Names a specific restaurant that serves exactly what Ken was looking for all day — the most practical intel in the thread for a follow-up Beijing video
Draft reply

Paulaner Bräuhaus — the sauerkraut and sausage alone would have made my entire day in Anting. Adding that to the Beijing list immediately.

@David_Canada557 · medium↗ view

Ken, I absolutely love your vlogs! Stumbling across your channel was one of the best happy accidents, I was instantly hooked. The way you share your knowledge and firsthand experience makes the country feel so vivid and real, even for someone who hasn't been there yet. You've officially put it at the top of my travel list. Thank you for the incredible content!

Why: New viewer who found the channel by accident — replying to accidental discoveries early in their viewer journey converts them to long-term fans
Draft reply

This genuinely means a lot, David — knowing the videos can make a place feel real even before you visit is exactly what I am going for. Hope you get to China one day!

@oo4187 · medium↗ view

Dear Ken, Hello! My name is Romric Raymond, and I am writing to you from Sri Lanka. I just wanted to tell you that I really like your YouTube videos. They are very interesting and enjoyable to watch. I appreciate the effort you put into making them, and they always make my day better. Please keep making more videos. I look forward to watching them! Best wishes, Romric Raymond Sri Lanka

Why: Devoted fan who signed their full name and country — the formality is endearing and a reply shows Ken notices viewers from smaller markets
Draft reply

Romric, thank you so much — and greetings to Sri Lanka! Comments like this genuinely make the effort of filming and editing worth it. More videos definitely coming!

@BillZhao-t3w · low↗ view

Hi Ken, I've been following you for yrs. Can't like your YT channel more. I've been working for German company for 10+ years, though i dont speak any German. I have a good suggestion for you - to make a video of Yangshan deep water port which will be amazing. I will be more than happy to offer you a ride. Do let me know yr thoughts. Bill

Why: Long-time follower offering a logistics connection for a specific video idea — worth acknowledging to keep the door open for a future collab
Draft reply

Bill, I appreciate the offer — Yangshan deep water port is on the radar. If the timing works next time I am in Shanghai, I will definitely reach out.

@Unpos_sible · low↗ view

"these birds sound german" 😂

Why: 36 likes on an absurd in-video quote — a quick reply here rewards the commenter and adds to the running humor thread the section already generated
Draft reply

Honestly I stand by it. Those birds had the energy.

§R2

Promo pull-quotes

Shareable social-proof quotes — ready for thumbnails, community posts, or a sponsor deck.

A German always striving to be at home

@Avstal0pitek · community post↗ view

I never thought I would see anyone visit Anting, but it makes so much sense that you're the one to do it!

@ileaves2live · community post↗ view

This is sooo cool i never knew china had this. I really need to travel more!

@miyatries.official · community post↗ view

I really wish I could tour the world like you do Ken, but till then, I would tour with you on my phone lol.

@sammievidz8805 · pinned comment↗ view

The Birds sound German,.. 😂😂😂 this made my day. Love you content❤

@lucianscurt2739 · community post↗ view

The moon at home is brighter(月是故乡明). May Ken is little homesick

@alexiustong7943 · community post↗ view

American here, living in Asia for over 20 years. Your adventure to find German town was not so successful, but I must say, it made for an amusing video. Thank you. Off to Taicang, eh?

@RatFink-nr5td · sponsor deck↗ view

Love you ken you are a very good person. I can see you so excited calling your mom.❤❤❤ You are such a good person. Love all the way from Nepal.

@bibekshakya1 · pinned comment↗ view
§R3

Clip & Shorts finder

Moments worth cutting into Shorts — each with a title and a ready hook line. Timestamps link to the video.

[0:00] ↗I Went to China's German Town to Cure My Homesickness~45s
HookThis is Anting, a small town in China built to look like Germany. I am from Germany and I have been living abroad for more than 6 years now.
The homesickness experiment framing is the emotional engine of the whole video — 51.8% of comments were about personal connection and travel wishes. Sets up a compelling premise in under 10 seconds.
[4:21] ↗Found Germany in the Shanghai Metro (Sort Of)~25s
HookThere was a woman sitting with the Aldi shopping bag and Aldi is a German supermarket.
A micro-discovery moment that perfectly captures the video's theme of finding Germany in unexpected places — small, funny, self-contained at under 25 seconds.
[5:47] ↗Why I Left Germany and Never Went Back~45s
HookI moved to Bangkok then to do an exchange semester at the university there. And that was my final semester of my master degrees.
Ken's origin story runs clean as a standalone — it explains the channel's whole premise and feeds directly into the homesickness theme that resonated with 51% of commenters.
[8:00] ↗Ordering a Didi in China with No Chinese — It Actually Worked~30s
HookIf I really can't find a taxi, I'm going to try to get a taxi with the local taxi app called DD.
Practical 'foreigner navigates China' content that performed well in comments — several viewers left navigation tips proving they engaged with exactly this type of moment.
[36:00] ↗Not One German Beer in China's 'German Town'~30s
HookNot even German beer here. Heineken, Corona, Asahi, the Chinese one, Budweiser, USA. Not a single German beer.
The comedic payoff of the entire setup — and the Taicang redirect from top comments gives this clip a perfect follow-up Short waiting to be made.
[37:05] ↗China Built Germany — But Does It Actually Feel Like It?~35s
HookYes, everything here looks like Germany, but it doesn't really feel like Germany to me.
The reflective verdict moment taps into the 48.2% of comments recommending more authentic alternatives — on-screen text listing Taicang and Qingdao would make this clip genuinely useful.
[37:44] ↗You Can't Cure Homesickness by Looking at Buildings~40s
HookYou can't cure being homesick by just looking at buildings that look like home.
The most quotable line in the video — emotionally resonant for any expat or diaspora viewer, which is the majority of the audience based on comment themes.
Even the Birds Sound German~15s
HookKen stops mid-walk to point out that the birdsong in Anting reminds him of home
@Unpos_sible's comment quoting this moment got 36 likes — pure absurdist comedy that is completely on brand. A 15-second reaction clip could travel on its own.
§08

Top comments

Explore all 599 comments →

Verbatim — the 5 most representative comments from the thread.

@洪湖水浪打浪-y4h257 · mixed↗ view

Ken, you should go to Taicang, Jiangsu Province. That's where the Germans are.

Why picked: highest-liked comment — the dominant 'wrong town' correction
@wlee3400175 · mixed↗ view

Ken, you definitely went to the wrong German Town. You should have gone to TaiCang(太仓) located about 10km from AnTing where you went to. Though it situates in JiangSu Province but is so close to Shanghai. The TaiCang German Town is packed with German companies (over 500), entrepreneur, restaurant and bakery; architecture is also German inspired. You can simply take a Didi getting there, very affordable. And, this town is also well known in Germany. You can google.

Why picked: most detailed Taicang correction — names the gap (real Germans, food, bakery) the video missed
@ycd949180 · mixed↗ view

Hi Ken. Several points in the video I would like to help you figure our as a Chinese. 1: Shanghai Metro Line 11 has 2 directions, the train will literally go to each direction one by one, the first train you took was going to another direction, thus, you don't need to change the platform to wait for the right train (it simply comes next) 2: The car museum closes at 4:30 pm while you cannot enter starting from 4pm 3: You may check Taicang, it is just several kms away from Shanghai, it has a more authentic German town called Haiyundi.

Why picked: fixes three concrete confusions in one comment — metro fork, museum cutoff, Taicang
@Erichdhdhd69 · mixed↗ view

Go to Taicang, Jiangsu, where there are 600 large German companies and German schools. That German town is worth visiting

Why picked: third-highest 'wrong town' vote — frequency signal
@GreenWhaIe56 · neutral↗ view

Fun fact: this was built by Hitler's architect's son's firm

Why picked: viral trivia comment audience clearly engaged with
§08

Threads that sparked discussion

Explore all 599 comments →

Top reply-magnet comments — where the real debate happened. 0 replies across 0 roots · max chain 1 deep · creator replied to 0%

01 · @洪湖水浪打浪-y4h0 replies · ♥ 257↗ view

Ken, you should go to Taicang, Jiangsu Province. That's where the Germans are.

02 · @wlee34000 replies · ♥ 175↗ view

Ken, you definitely went to the wrong German Town. You should have gone to TaiCang(太仓) located about 10km from AnTing where you went to. Though it situates in JiangSu Province but is so close to Shanghai. The TaiCang German Town is packed with German companies (over 500…

03 · @Basel123ibnbariIbnari0 replies · ♥ 84↗ view

Can i get a haircut here ?

04 · @ycd94910 replies · ♥ 80↗ view

Hi Ken. Several points in the video I would like to help you figure our as a Chinese. 1: Shanghai Metro Line 11 has 2 directions, the train will literally go to each direction one by one, the first train you took was going to another direction, thus, you don't need to change t…

05 · @Erichdhdhd0 replies · ♥ 69↗ view

Go to Taicang, Jiangsu, where there are 600 large German companies and German schools. That German town is worth visiting

§09

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