If you've been to the Ballermann or the carnival or the Reeperbahn, if you like places excited by music and alcohol, you might have met Marc Eggers.

Where women tend to wear less fabric and the revelers wave at him like old friends, he is out and about doing surveys.

Elena Witzeck

Editor in the Feuilleton.

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Eggers is a model and YouTuber, he asks women what men do wrong when having sex, what their favorite position is or how important size is to them in men.

This leads to funny misunderstandings.

Eggers always looks into the camera and laughs.

About who?

With who?

He doesn't give himself away.

Deep views plant thoughts

On the plus side, Eggers looks good and can look women deep in the eyes.

He approaches her with a camera and microphone, which gives greater meaning to his speech.

In any case, women are willing to talk to him.

They even seem to be having fun.

"Would I be ok in size?" "Yes, full." "Are you a model, Alina?" To a woman who is rather small and petite, Eggers says: "I can lift you up well."

Sometimes the conversation culminates in him jokingly suggesting that they meet up again in the evening for more fun.

And the women laugh because they think he's cute or drunk or taken by surprise or embarrassed in front of the camera.

Some also give cheeky answers.

Most people seem to like the thoughts he plants in their heads.

And the men in front of the computer like them too.

Knowledge is limited

This can be seen in the worship of his 500,000 subscribers on YouTube.

"We've been inside for almost three minutes and Marc has arranged to have sex with two women." When Marc Eggers gets into conversation with men during his surveys, they often talk about which scene from his videos they "laughed their heads off".

Or he encourages them to approach women.

So Eggers is a real winner, just like you want to be one yourself.

The entire success of his surveys is based on this principle of wrapping people around your finger and conveying the feeling of the greatest possible lightness.

The answers are then no longer so important: when getting to know men, they should also listen.

Don't just think about yourself in bed.

And when it comes to the question of what they need men for, most women can't think of much.

So knowledge is limited.

Who sows clichés

Marc Eggers is clever, he also speaks to older women, pensioners, fathers with their daughters.

He never touches the women inappropriately, at most he takes them by the arm.

Ask guys if they allow their girlfriends to post nude photos on the Onlyfans platform, just to emphasize at the next opportunity that women probably shouldn't be told what to do and what not to do.

He sows the clichés, and the respondents to his polls make them bloom.

His jokes are dirty, but not harassment.

The women are the game material, but they are laughing.

And those who don't find his sayings funny belong in the category of those who no longer wanted to hear the party song "Layla" because they considered it disrespectful and insulting or simply a particularly bad example of party songs, those who told men that want to ban flirting.

Spoilsport.

But if everyone agrees and has fun, if they feel entertained, can't there really be anything wrong with it?

We're not speculating about how many women we approached will dismiss Eggers' questions and move on.

We want to give him the right to target those who answer them with pleasure.

Beguiling is an ancient and coveted human discipline, and charm and humor are known to be debatable.

Back in the day, when drunken boys at college parties, inspired by the lore of the pickup artists of the '90s, unsuccessfully revealed their techniques, all you could do was shake your head in amazement.

But there is something that Marc Eggers has in common with the men who today refuse to recycle garbage, drive fast cars and report about their male competition for sex in front of millions of fans on the internet: their target group are men who just don't have arranged to have sex with two women three minutes down the street.

They present the opposite of what their followers know.

All tactics! they promise.

Marc Eggers knows that, it's smarter than he looks with his pink sweatband.

He hides the clichés behind his ability to strike up a conversation with everyone.

Thanks to him, people are more open, his fans think.

And when everyone is easy to get at the end, the bit of machismo is no longer so noticeable.