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I'm a reporter, a writer. I try to answer questions, not unlike what you do, Stephen. Although our questions are sometimes a bit dumber. But sometimes they're not. Sometimes they're smart. That is PJ Vogt. He's been making podcasts for nearly as long as I have. His shows are often about life on the internet and how technology changes us.
So your current show, Search Engine, despite the name, isn't a show about life online for the most part, is it? No. The reason it's called Search Engine is because it's a show where it's a bit of a joke.
What a search engine is supposed to be is like, you ask it a question and very cheaply and very quickly a machine gives you an answer that might be pretty good. We're like a human-powered, bespoke, incredibly expensive to run, very slow search engine. It gives answers in layers and over time as opposed to bang, here it is. Yeah, yeah. Oftentimes the answer is who can say. But we give you like human-level complicated and complex answers.
Today on Freakonomics Radio, a bonus episode with PJ Vogt and Search Engine. It's sort of about economics, the economics of a famous nightclub in Berlin. I'd heard the basics. A decommissioned power plant turned into a multi-story nightclub. People talked about this place as a kind of grimy heaven. And like traditional heaven, grimy heaven was also supposedly very hard to get into.
One guiding principle of our show is that just about anything can be interesting if you are willing to look closely enough or from the right angle. In this case, the door policy at a Berlin nightclub is connected to municipal tax laws, the Cold War, and more. But also, the Freakonomics Radio crew doesn't get to go clubbing very often, like never. So thanks to Search Engine and PJ Vogt for letting us tag along.
This is Freakonomics Radio, the podcast that explores the hidden side of everything with your host, Stephen Dubner. So, PJ, give me the genesis of this episode of Search Engine we're about to hear. Each of your episodes is built around a single question. Where'd the question for this episode come from? Okay, so two friends of mine, lovely young men, both kind of
conscientious people, like straight-laced, buttoned up, home before midnight, hardworking professional guys. They said they had a question which had sprung from a vacation they had been on, and it was an unusual vacation. The two of them had flown eight hours from New York City to Germany to try to go to this techno club called Berghain. Are you familiar with Berghain? Before you and I started talking about this conversation that we're having now, I was not familiar with Berghain.
It used to be, before the fall of the Berlin Wall, it was a Soviet power plant in East Berlin, four stories tall, like a very imposing building. More recently, it has become a techno nightclub and supposedly the techno nightclub, like the most exclusive, fun, like everyone who loves this stuff wants to go to this place before they die, a kind of mecca. But the other thing about Berghain is that it has the most...
strict and scary door policy in the entire world. They love to reject rich and famous people. A lot of the people you think would be allowed into any room have not been allowed into this room. And if you want to try to get in, you have to wait in a line that on a good night, you'll stand in line for four hours. On a bad night, you might stand in line for eight hours.
So these guys had taken an eight-hour flight to Berlin to stand in a line for four to eight hours for the chance to maybe get into this nightclub.
They actually stood in line three separate times. Here are Chris and Dan describing to PJ how when you get to the front of the line, you encounter the selector, the guy who decides whether you will be admitted into Berghain. So you get up and then there's a number of calculations that are going on in your mind. Do you look at the bouncer in the eye? Do you look kind of at the ground? Do you smile? Do you keep a straight face? Do you say anything? Yeah.
And I think on this try, this was like our authentic friendly selves attempt. I smiled at the guy. He asked how many people were. I said two. I was friendly. I think I asked him how his night was going. Did he answer? No, of course not. One of my calculations was whether or not to look like I was having fun and into the music. So I kind of like was dancing a little bit. But, you know, very like minor movements. And I don't think that strategy worked.
It didn't. So you walk up, you say, like, how's your night? He says nothing. Is he just looking at you? Is he a he? It's a he. There's Sven, the main bouncer. If Berghain itself is the epitome of what you would think of East German old techno nightclub, then Sven is the epitome of what you would think of as the bouncer, the lead bouncer for that venue. What does he look like? A large man with a large number of tattoos and piercings on his face.
And there's two others. Apparently, there's some sort of communication between the two of them, some sort of silent communication. But it's not legible. There's only one amount of legible communication, and that's the decision. And how do they communicate it to you? It's always one person they pull up at a time or a small group. And sometimes they're immediately rejected. Like, they don't even get to say a word. The bouncer just...
puts his hand out, and they just keep walking. Very subtle. Yeah. And they just point towards the street. It's not so much a point as an open palm out the direction that you should be going. So the gesture you're doing is actually the gesture one used to be like, welcome to my home, but it's welcome to not my home. The arm goes out, the palm's outstretched. Like, look at this, you're not going to a nightclub. Yeah, it's like, you're welcome to go anywhere else in Berlin. Yeah.
You can probably tell from that part of the conversation how things went for Chris and Dan. Here's PJ again. They flew to Berlin. They tried three separate times across three separate days to get into this place. They were rejected each time. And there was just something about the draw of... These guys are not people who are like, if there's a red velvet rope, I gotta be on the other side of it. They're not sceney guys. It was like the fact that they were willing to spend their vacation just...
Standing in a line being told no made me very curious about them and this place. Okay, so that's what you need to know to get started. Here now from the Search Engine podcast is an episode called Why Didn't Chris and Dan Get Into Berghain? with PJ Vogt. When we started all this last July, all I really knew about Berghain was that it was a Berlin techno club and that it was very hard to get into. But I started researching.
The club itself maintains a very minimal footprint online. 200,000 people follow Berghain's Instagram account, but the club has only ever posted one photo in 2015, a picture of a sign that says, in all caps, TAKING PHOTOS IS NOT ALLOWED. The sign, presumably, from inside the club itself. Berghain, like Vegas, claims that what happens there stays there, except in Berghain, that seems to actually be true. Some information about the club nevertheless has circulated,
The story of Berghain, as I now understand it, begins 30 years ago. In the early 1990s, two Germans, Norbert Thormann and Michael Teufela, had begun hosting a men's-only gay fetish party, sometimes at an abandoned air raid shelter. After a few years, the party outgrew that bunker. The pair took over an abandoned railroad depot. At the railroad depot, they started a club called Ostgut.
Ostgut is legendary, open to people of all genders and sexualities, but still a space run by and largely for gay men. A den of hedonism where consenting adults supposedly engaged in all sorts of unusual behavior. Online, at least one video survives from inside the club. But the video is pretty tame.
It's from July 2000. Looks like camcorder footage. A grainily shot DJ hovers over a console, twiddling knobs, while nearby, a crowd of German shadows writhes under a strobe light. Ostgut may have lived forever, except the city wanted to build a big arena. So the railroad depot was knocked down in 2003. Berghain was its reincarnation.
the palace that replaced Osgoode. This time, too big to knock down. A thermal power plant, originally built by the Russians in the Soviet era. Four floors. On the very bottom floor, a dedicated basement gay club for men only. At the very top, a bar with big windows, opening onto a panoramic view of the city. On the floors in between, where the power turbines once sat, an enormous dark cavern, the main dance area.
The entire space governed by its own particular rules. Burghain is not a standard posh club with bottle service. They make you put a sticker over your phone, no pictures, they'll throw you the f*** out. There'd be a window where you could buy ice cream and you could order smoothies. It's open from Friday until Monday, and most people stay there for 12 hours, 24 hours, or more. Right now, it's 9 a.m. Burghain is best known for one weekly party, Klubnacht, Club Night. Club Night is a misnomer because...
While the party starts Saturday evening, it continues all the way until Monday morning without interruption. A few books document the history of the scene that birthed this party. I found Tobias Rapp's Lost and Sound to be particularly helpful. He writes about how when Berghain opened in 2004, the party was by and for Berliners, but word soon spread internationally.
A European budget airline called EasyJet had just opened a new hub in Berlin, and other Europeans started taking EasyJet flights to the city to come party. The legend kept growing. Eventually, it grew large enough to draw Chris and Dan, two of the many Americans who made the pilgrimage to techno-mecca. It was a marvel. A three-day party good enough to draw thousands of people every weekend, people who would fly to Germany without even a promise they would gain admittance.
That was Klubnacht at Berghain. Most of what people discuss online is not any of this. Instead, they talk about Sven, the intimidating bouncer who Chris and Dan encountered and then cowered in front of. Sven Markhardt. Sven Markhardt is a tall, imposing man in his early 60s with giant lip rings that look like silver fangs. His hair is slicked back and silver. Tattoos of thorns cover much of his face.
He looks like a bad guy in a John Wick movie, and he has played a bad guy in a John Wick movie. That was just a cameo one time, though. Sven has run security at Berghain since the club first opened 20 years ago. Sven's backstory: He grew up in East Berlin, the communist side of the wall, before it fell. There's this one documentary, Berlin Bouncer, that profiles Sven.
In one scene, he gives a talk in front of a crowd. He's wearing all black, tinted glasses. Sven discusses the early chapters of his life, how his teenage years were defined by the feeling of being stuck outside a much more significant kind of door. We actually just wanted to get out of here. Not actually away from home, but actually just to know...
Sven's saying, "We just wanted to see the other side of the wall. We didn't really want to leave home. We just wanted to find out. What were we being deprived of? What weren't we allowed to see?" Sven has said that as a young gay punk rocker, living in East Berlin was risky. He was frequently picked up by the secret police. He was devoted to his photography career, but after the wall fell, he chose to stay on the East Berlin side, and his art career stalled there. Sven's brother was a DJ, and Sven started working the door at his parties.
It turned out Sven's eye for people worked not just in photography, but also here. He had a talent for deciding who should be let in. He developed a reputation. That's why they chose him for Ausgut and later for Burghein. The fact that this much of Sven's biography exists in public, of course, goes entirely against Burghein's secretive ethos,
But Sven has continued to pursue his photography career. And so every few years when he has a new exhibition or a photo book, he talks to journalists. Questions about his photography, which he wants to discuss, and questions about how to get into Berghain, which he has to tolerate. Those are the terms under which the gatekeepers at places like the New York Times or GQ will allow Sven entry. And understanding the way of these things, he obliges. Sven, the man with the answer to our question.
What was the bouncer at Berghain scanning you for? I should say, I emailed Sven and requested an interview. I've never been less surprised to not get a reply. But in the documentary, there's this prickly moment where the interviewer seems to have directly asked Sven the rules of the door. Sven responds, not with helpful tips about what shade of black to wear. Instead, he says sternly,
we don't need to question the rules that are in place. He does allow that, as a selector, his responsibility is to only let people in who, once they join the party, won't impede the freedom and self-expression of the people who are already inside. It makes sense, but it does not provide clues. And in any situation in which official sources remain this tight-lipped, speculation will reign. And it does here, mostly on TikTok.
They're a cottage industry of people who claim to have gotten through the door, now style themselves as helpful experts. Explaining what exactly they believe Sven is scanning for when he looks at people like Chris and Dan. Trying to get inside the mind of a 62-year-old gay German ex-punk. Be really casual. Don't be flamboyant. Don't speak too much. Don't talk too loud in the queue.
and under no circumstances engage in lawter. Literally, just basically be as casual and bland as possible in order to get in. It's impossible to know if any of these people are actually telling the truth. Again, you can't record inside a Berghain, which means you just have to take their word for it. I promise. People say that you need to wear black to get in, but that's not true. It helps.
But it's not a must. I know a guy... Just be yourself, and if you get in, you get in. And if you don't, try again some other time or call it a wrap. The advice offered by these supposed gurus, frankly, does not feel all that usable. Try to get in, or maybe don't. Wear black, but you don't have to. And the other thing is, like, look...
My favorite artifact of all the online Berghain speculation is this website called berghaintrainer.com that will actually drop you into a surprisingly high-res simulation of the Berghain line. The site takes control of your webcam and then scans your face, analyzing your emotions through your expressions. How angry, sad, euphoric your face is, giving a virtual simulation of Sven's gaze.
And then the first person video virtually walks you step by step up to the doors of Berghain. The music gets louder as you get closer. The website warns you that Sven will ask you three questions. So I did it. When I arrived at the virtual door, a German man, presumably an actor playing Sven, asked, "Is this your first time here?"
I said yes. He asked, "Do you know who's DJing tonight?" I said yes. He asked whether I'd taken drugs. I said, "Nine." After a moment of scanning, the virtual bouncer told me, "Not good today." And then made the hand gesture toward the street, the same hand gesture Chris and Dan had gotten. To be honest with you, this rejection by a fake bouncer, it hurt my real feelings.
I'll tell you something about myself that won't surprise you. I've never been considered cool. I know cool people. I'm not against coolness. I just don't possess it. I'm uncool enough that I often ask the cool people I know to explain to me why certain things are cool right now. How did we decide big pants are back in style? If you have to ask, you're not cool. And I do have to ask, both professionally and just because of my personality. So I'm not cool, and I'm old enough to be okay with that. But this was a little different.
At Berghain, where Sven ruled, it seemed to me that the source of his power lay partly in his refusal to explain himself. My job as a journalist was the opposite, to understand and explain. And I just couldn't resist the challenge of trying to understand something that was designed to obscure itself. That was why, even after all this internet sleuthing and documentary watching, we would continue digging for the better part of a year.
We'd talk to lots of people. We'd read too many books devoted to the Talmudic study of German techno, its origins and subgenres. And in the end, we'd emerge with an answer. What was Berghain scanning for and why? How would a place like this come to be? PJ Vogt will keep looking for the answers to those questions after the break. I'm Stephen Dubner from Freakonomics Radio, and you were listening to a bonus feed drop from the Search Engine podcast.
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Starting this summer, Lufthansa Allegra will fly from Chicago and San Francisco. All other Lufthansa gateways will follow. Visit Lufthansa.com and search Allegra to learn more. Lufthansa Allegra. It's your journey. It all starts with a yes. Hey there, it's Stephen Dubner, and this is a bonus episode from the podcast Search Engine. The host is PJ Vogt. In America, in the circles I run in, people complain a lot about capitalism, but I'm
I don't think they're bothered by the exchange of goods and services. I think it's their shorthand way of saying, "Everything here is just too driven by profit." Even things that start out good can be squeezed to death by our ceaseless desire to bring out every possible dollar. In Berlin, a place where until recently capitalism and socialism both operated, in Berlin it feels like something else is going on. The nightlife industry there brings in one and a half billion tourism dollars a year,
But they're strange dollars. The crown jewel, Berghain, operates by turning away thousands of paying customers. And despite demand, it keeps its ticket prices pretty low. All while existing in a building that is 37,600 square feet in a very hip neighborhood. And not only does this all seem to work, it's worked for a long time. That doesn't happen in nightlife. Clubs don't stick around. Studio 54 was open for less than three years. Berghain is on its 20th.
And people attribute a lot of that success to Berghain's strict and strange door policy. You can tell the story of that door as a story about culture, about cool, but cool, we know, never explains itself. So let's get inside Berghain from a different direction. I'm going to tell you the story not about DJs and bouncers, but about lawyers and lobbyists, about the municipal regulation and policy that allows this club to exist the way it does.
A story that begins in 1949. Hi, can you hear me? Hey, I hear you well. How's it going over there? Well, well, well.
Lutz Leitzenring. I'd first heard about him from one of my best friends, Kay Burke, a nightclub founder herself. People in Berlin called Lutz the mayor of the city's nightlife. So did Kay explain, like, who I am and what we're up to over here? I think she might, but it was also quite some time ago, so maybe you can fill me in again. Yeah, so I have this podcast called Search Engine where we just try to answer people's questions, no matter how simple or complicated. We do, like,
really serious stuff. Like we just did something about fentanyl and the drug supply in America, but we also do really silly stuff and kind of like everything in between. And what level are we here in this conversation? We're closer to silly, I think. So we have these friends I want to talk about who just like didn't get into Berghain and are confused about it, but it's sort of an excuse to tell the larger story about nightlife. Like,
I think for people in the United States, it's a place you go and you spend $500 on champagne. And like, you know what I mean? It's like... Or $10 on a can of beer. Yes. Without a glass. Exactly. Germans like Lutz call this style of nightclub bottles and models, shorthand for the economic model that drives them. Clubs like these are what most Americans think of when you say nightclub. Spots that tend to make their money by enticing rich people to pay for tables and buy bottles of champagne so that they can feel important.
The clubs are like little status factories. In Berlin, though, that same word, nightclub, describes an entirely different operation fueled by a different economic model. And Lütz's job is to protect that status quo. He's nightlife's advocate in the offices of city bureaucrats, the spokesperson for Berlin's club commission. I wanted Lütz to tell me how Berlin's unusual nightlife scene had come to be,
And that story is the story of two arguments. The first argument takes place in the late 1940s. Argument one is about a very specific rule, curfew. In Berlin today, there is no curfew. Bars and clubs stay open as long as they want. And can you tell me the story of how Berlin came to be a city with no curfew? What is the origin story of that decision?
The decision is like almost 80 years old and it happened right after World War II. So 1949, you had already a divided city between the eastern sector and the western sector. The eastern sector controlled by the Russians and the western sector controlled by the British, the French and the Americans. And in the eastern part, there was a curfew at 10 p.m.
So all the restaurants, bars, hotel bars, cabaret bars, they had to close at 10 p.m. in the eastern part. In the western part, it was 9 p.m., so an hour earlier. And there was this, let's say, representative of the hotels and restaurants of Berlin. His name was Heinz Zellermeyer. Heinz Zellermeyer. There was no club commission back then. Heinz was instead the deputy director of the Guild of Berlin Hoteliers.
In photos, Heinz has an enormous smile and combed back hair. He looks like someone who held forth at a restaurant or two. Heinz did not like the curfew. He particularly did not like that his side of the city had an earlier curfew. The person to complain to was General Howley of the U.S. Army, the Americans' West Berlin commandant.
A meeting was set, and Heinz, supposedly, came prepared. The story is that he brought a bottle of whiskey to that meeting. So they met, and
And they were talking about it. And General Howley said, yeah, the British and the French, they're not really supporting any idea of losing this curfew. They say it's a security issue. So you have to give me an argument that I can give to French and the British. And the problem was that at that moment in the Western part, people had to go out of the bar. And then they went to the Eastern sector for another hour, which was also not really liked by the Americans. So he said, if you kick Germans who are
partying at a certain hour, you kick them out of the street, you're going to have a security issue. So you have to better find a solution for it. It was a well-reasoned argument. The Allies did not want drunk Westerners crossing East in search of a later last call. And worse, there'd been an emerging Cold War of curfews, with each side, the East and the West, repeatedly extending an hour past each other to try to capture all the income from drunk Berliners.
Eliminating curfew would solve the security issue and win the night war. General Howley was sold. He said, okay, let's try this out for two weeks. And since then, 1949, we have no curfew. Berlin, one of the rare cities that has no curfew at all. In 1949, when the city permanently deleted its curfew, obviously techno music did not exist. Raving was something people did in insane asylums. If anyone was listening to music in a club late at night, it was probably jazz.
But this decision set Berlin on a path. Nightlife is funded more than anything else via the sale of alcohol. A city without a curfew can have a legal party that runs through the night, even that runs multiple nights. Half a century-ish later, techno will hit Berlin. People will begin to throw raves in illegal spots without permits. This will happen in a lot of cities at the same time—Detroit, New York, London—
But what makes Berlin different from those places is that here, many of those raves can actually become legitimate businesses, can find permanent homes and clubs. General Halley's 1949 agreement is the first precondition for Klubnacht at Berghain. It sets the stage for a party that can last for three days. But years later, as the scene starts to mature, a second argument takes place, an argument which almost kills these nightclubs. Argument two is about taxes.
In the early 2000s, Berghain was a rising young club alongside already established spots like Tresor and the Kit Kat Club. And Berlin's tax authority started to take a closer look at these places. How much money were they bringing in? Shouldn't the city be getting a bigger cut? Government tax agents walk into Berghain, presumably without needing permission from Sven. They're there documenting everything they see, asking a question. From a tax perspective, what is happening in these rooms?
In Germany, if you pay money for a ticket and enter a venue where music is played, you may be having one of three different experiences. You might be experiencing high culture, like opera, in which case the city will barely tax the ticket. You might be at a concert, like the Rolling Stones, in which case the city will moderately tax the ticket. Or you might be experiencing entertainment. This happens in casinos, in porn theaters.
In that case, the city will take a big tax bite, almost 20%. Before the tax officials began to take a closer look at the club scene, these venues had been mostly taxed as concert venues. But now, in 2008, the city started to ask pointed questions. Was a DJ really a musician? Was a techno show really like a concert?
The perception that people in government had says a DJ is not a concert. People are going there to have sex or to drink or to whatever, but not because of the DJ. They even sent people to clubs and documented that people were not facing the artist. They were talking to each other. Oh my God. Stuff like that. Yeah, to kind of prove the point that this is not a concert.
Wow. I've been in concerts where people were not facing the artist and talking to each other. Exactly. But they said, clubs is different. People go there to meet people, not because of the artist. They don't even know who's playing. These kind of argumentations. Berghain was the club that actually took this case all the way to the high courts. Berghain I, the Berghain in the government's books, was cemented as a concert venue. A place where people went because they loved techno music.
Weirdly, this is one part of the answer to Chris and Dan's questions. What was the bouncer, Sven, scanning for at the door? He needed to ensure they were true techno heads, not people there simply for entertainment. That consideration, a funny side effect of the argument the club had had to make in court years ago. It may have been part of what filtered them out. Chris and Dan, not true techno heads.
Berghain's victory in court meant that any German nightclub that could prove it was meeting Berghain's cultural standards could be taxed like Berghain. Lower taxes meant they could keep their overhead low. The lower the overhead, the less pressure to make money. The less pressure to make money, the more they could continue to keep their nightclubs dedicated to preserving Berlin's counterculture.
We're going to come back to this strange court case and its consequences. But before I left Lutz, I wanted to ask him specifically about Chris and Dan.
What was it about them, the way they looked, the way they dressed, that had signaled they didn't belong at Berghain? Just to be clear, Lutz does not represent Berghain, but as spokesperson for the club commission and as a Berghain regular, I thought he might be able to help. Can I show you a couple of photographs and you tell me if the person seems like... I'm not a selector, so I can only give you my personal opinion. Yeah, is it okay to ask you your opinion on it? Yeah, sure, of course. Okay, this is one person. Um...
Well, very friendly, maybe queer person, very soft, happy. He's wearing some kind of top that doesn't really say anything. It's too generic of a top, the vest. I think it looks authentic to him, but this person looked very innocent. And you also want to save some people for, you know, to...
Getting into something that they maybe don't expect. Okay, so this is the person he went with. Yeah. I would probably send them to Schwitz. What's Schwitz? It's our oldest, best known gay club. And that's the perfect vibe for those two guys. Because they don't seem like techno guys to you. They seem like gay guys who are going out clubbing. They don't look like hard...
you know, like standing in the middle of a sweaty club and going for hours and enjoying this. And, you know, they're standing with like having a chat, you know, like, and that's okay to have some of those folks in the venue, but it's really about getting out of your inner self and showing your animalistic side of yourself. For very good reason, we don't celebrate the idea that you should judge people based on how they look on the outside. Those judgments often lead us astray.
And yet, Lutz, from a photo, could tell Chris and Dan were after respectful, healthy, wholesome partying. Not the sort of darkness that occurs in Berghain's techno dungeons. They didn't belong here. They belonged, he suspected, at another place called Schwitz. I wondered what Chris and Dan would make of that judgment. So later, I asked. Chris told me, Schwitz?
They loved Schwitz. It was the club they'd ended up at after being rejected from Berghain. Berlin, this magical city, had somehow sent them to the place where they really belonged. Lutz was not a selector, but he did seem to have a selector's eye. Your read is so good. Chris, who I know better, he's a lovely, he's one of my favorite people to spend time with. If I were having a party where it was really important that someone danced in the middle of the dance floor for eight hours, he would perhaps not make the cut for that party.
I think the first question you have to ask yourself, are you a participant or are you a visitor?
And it shouldn't sound sophisticated or arrogant. It's just like a club. The definition of club is being part of a club. If you're not part of the club, why should you be able to enter? I think the idea of just buying myself in is the opposite of a club, what it should actually be. A club should bring people together who have similar interests, similar preferences, and
A club should bring together people of similar interests. Absolutely. But what if you're someone who doesn't belong but still wants to just go check it out? Is there a way to sneak in? Is there some other way into Berghain that is not going through the bouncer? Lutz did have advice about this. My tip that I usually give is make a plan of exploring Berlin, maybe from the outskirts. Go to venues that are not very known. Go to places that are somehow...
interesting for you because you did your research and you saw some artists that you want to see and yet they're playing. So go there. And you get in very easy because venues that are not very known don't have this kind of level of selection. Usually there's not even a queue. And then you get friends with the bartenders, you make friends with the DJs there, and you have an amazing time in an unknown venue with
unknown artists, basically. And the next time you're coming, you're going to reach out to them. And because they like you or they connected to you, they will ask you to start in their home with dinner. Maybe you go to a bar, you make more friends. And even maybe they make sure that you get on a guest list of some venue that they're going at that night. But I think it's part of that journey that you also have to make to be part of the scene.
Lutz said the process he's describing, this is the real way into Klubnacht. Make yourself a part of the scene. That line outside Berghain, he said, that's for people who haven't been able to or who haven't known to try. While Lutz was saying this to me, I was nodding yes furiously, my noggin like a broken bobblehead. Of course it all made sense. And as a person obsessed with belonging and exclusion, I was lapping it all up. We finished our conversation.
We hung up, and then, not long after, this spell of Lütz's idea dissipated. What were we talking about? If you wanted to visit the most exclusive nightclub in the world, go to Germany and start methodically befriending Germans in the city's electronic music scene? Normally, that would have been the end of things. And perhaps it should have been the end of things?
Not long after this, a friend of mine, an American, asked me a question. They were celebrating a big milestone in their life, and they wanted to do it in Germany. In Berlin, actually. They wanted to spend some time there, perhaps even try to see some of the city's famous nightlife. That sound like fun? Could I make some time away from work? Yes, it did. No, I couldn't. I bought myself a plane ticket.
That, again, was PJ Vogt with the first part of a two-part story. To hear what happened after he got to Berlin, look for Search Engine in your podcast app. The second part of the story will be available there on June 26th. And I'll be talking to PJ a bit more after the break. T-Mobile has home internet on America's largest 5G network for 50 bucks per month. It's how I stream the game. Oh, yeah, that one's out there.
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The Berghain nightclub sits at the intersection of what used to be East and West Berlin. Its name comes from the two districts on either side, Kreuzberg in the West and Friedrichshain in the East. PJ Vogt's last name, which is spelled V-O-G-T, is also German. Vogt is referred to like...
some sort of feudal landowner, kind of the middle manager of whatever the feudal era. It was not a very high status position, but high status enough that people might not like you. Do you feel you have a little bit of ancestral, if only impressionistic connection to your German roots? I didn't think so until I went. And I was not expecting to feel anything at all. And I felt so much in a way that
Kind of shocked me, actually. When did you first go to Germany? I actually went on a reporting, well, a reporting trip for this story. This was the first time you'd been to Germany? I was there. Okay, that's not entirely true. I went once as a 17-year-old. You could do that Eurorail thing. And so I did that for a minute, but I didn't crack the surface of the city in any meaningful way. And this was the first time where I really felt like...
I don't know. I felt the weight of the history. I felt this feeling that Berlin is a place that is both like... I hate when people overgeneralize about places that they visit for a week. But I thought these are people who believe in order and following rules, sometimes to great historical tragedy, but who also... Everything always exists in balance. And it's also a place where people love to let loose and break rules. And I feel like I could feel both of those feelings.
forces in a way that felt very alive to me. Was it a place that you felt oddly at home, you're saying? A little bit, yeah. Which really surprised me because I tend to be skeptical about a lot of claims that our memories or our history are somehow encoded genetically. I just never experienced that feeling. And so when other people talked about it, I was like, oh, that's great for you, but I never expected to feel it. And I felt both
I felt, I got there and like, I'm not Jewish. My grandfather was Jewish and he converted, but I felt that stuff a little bit in a way that I wouldn't have thought. And then I also felt German stuff in a way that I wouldn't have thought. It was like someone having a mildly religious experience who is a pretty profound atheist. It really kind of wobbled me.
In retrospect, do you think one reason you chose to answer this question about Berghain was because it afforded you the opportunity to go to your ancestral homeland, as faint as the connection might have been? Yeah, although I would not have known that until you asked that question. Did you spend time inside Berghain? I did. Und?
I made a promise that I wouldn't talk about what I saw in detail, but I will say... Who did you promise? And do I care that you promised to them? I promised myself. I was like, I really... So it's funny. When I walked up to the club, I felt like such a schmuck, Stephen. So one of the things about Berlin that also I thought was really brilliant is that they do not allow cell phones in any of these spaces. They'll put a sticker over your camera. If you whip that thing out, you are out. You are out right away. And it really makes spaces feel different to have people not be on their phones. Yeah.
But Berghain, its roots are as a gay club and its real roots are as like a really profoundly dirty gay sex club. And I say dirty without judgment. Like there's one section that is still devoted to that that is easier to get into, but the dress code is...
for like a Friday night is socks. So I didn't go. But even the main club is like, it's really, it's like a space that's devoted to that. And so you already feel like an interloper and the rule is sort of like, this is a place where adults can do whatever they want and where they're guaranteed privacy and nobody talks about it. It's basically like German culture is realized they really don't like surveillance for very specific historical reasons. I found it to be like an entirely, all this just makes me sound like such a kook, but like,
I was like, this place is profound. Like, it feels profound to be in a place where, like, I don't know, really dedicated to complete...
self-expression where nothing that happens gets judged. I mean, I went on a Sunday afternoon. It was like 2 p.m. There were Berliners there who were just, that was their Sunday. That's what they always do. Those aren't people who wait in line. There were people who probably have been waiting for eight hours and just gotten in and were so excited. I saw more expression of ways a human body could look or be dressed than I've seen in
in my whole life. And there were things that were happening that were like very Burghiney. Like they have something called a dark room, which is a room you can go in that's very underlit where people can do what they want to do to each other, usually gay men. But there's also like, they have an ice cream parlor. I had a really nice sorbet and a cappuccino. Yeah.
So on Freakonomics Radio, we tend to talk to experts and academics, institutional people with credentials of one sort or another. What I love about your interviews is you will often interview people whose formal credentials may not be that impressive, but they know a lot. And you are really good at getting them to teach us things that we might not find out any other way. That's really nice of you to say. Yeah, I think we're good at like
Sometimes people might have a really specific experience that has given them a really specific education, and you just want to share that. And it's weird. This is not a thing I expected to be talking about today, but something that I got to interview the serial team when they were launching their new season, and I asked them a bunch of questions about their work, and I asked them the question I wanted to ask them, which was, do you ever grapple with just the, what are we doing here of this? Besides that it's interesting and fun,
why are we making this stuff every week? And they were like, we're doing journalism. It's very obviously important. It's in the public interest. How is this a question you have? And I was like, yeah, me too. But it's the thing I really, I'm really like, what is in a deeper way the point of this? And one of the answers I sometimes audition for myself is every one of us is going to die. Before we die, we're going to survive some things. And one of the things stories can be
are instruction maps and they're not perfect but it's sort of like here's how I got out of that place with my soul intact one of the things we do sometimes that I love when we get to do is like talk to somebody who just navigated something psychologically complex and learned a couple things about it but in a way where you really do feel it's not like drink water and exercise and be good to your spouse but more like no no here's how I got out of that like this I really figured something out let me tell you the trick
That, again, was PJ Vogt, host of the Search Engine podcast. I hope you like hearing a new show in our feed once in a while. Let me know. Our email is radio at Freakonomics.com. If you'd like to hear more Search Engine, you can get it on any podcast app. Some questions that PJ has recently asked there are, where did all the roaches go? And do political yard signs actually do anything?
We will be back right here very soon with a regular episode of Freakonomics Radio. Until then, take care of yourself and if you can, someone else too. Freakonomics Radio is produced by Stitcher and Renbud Radio. You can find our entire archive on any podcast app or at Freakonomics.com where we also publish transcripts and show notes.
For Search Engine, this episode was created by PJ Vogt and Shruthi Pinamaneni and produced by Garrett Graham and Noah John. Fact-checking this week by Claire Hyman, sound design and original composition by Armin Bizarian. For Freakonomics Radio, it was produced by Tao Jacobs with help from Daniel Moritz-Rabson.
Our staff also includes Augusta Chapman, Alina Kullman, Dalvin Aboagi, Eleanor Osborne, Elsa Hernandez, Gabriel Roth, Greg Rippin, Jasmine Klinger, Jeremy Johnston, Julie Canfor, Lyric Bowditch, Morgan Levy, Neil Carruth, Rebecca Lee Douglas, Sarah Lilly, and Zach Lipinski. Our theme song is Mr. Fortune by The Hitchhikers. Our composer is Luis Guerra. As always, thank you for listening.
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