Pfannkuchen: Difference between revisions
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This is actually untrue. Literally, the word ''Pfannkuchen'' means ''[[pancake]]'', and is used as such in the majority of Germany, including Hamburg. It is only in select German locations like [[Berlin]] that ''Pfannkuchen'' is used to mean anything close to ''doughnut'', and even then it's only {{w|Berliner (doughnut)|a pastry vaguely resembling one in design}}. | This is actually untrue. Literally, the word ''Pfannkuchen'' means ''[[pancake]]'', and is used as such in the majority of Germany, including Hamburg. It is only in select German locations like [[Berlin]] that ''Pfannkuchen'' is used to mean anything close to ''doughnut'', and even then it's only {{w|Berliner (doughnut)|a pastry vaguely resembling one in design}}. | ||
{{restaurants}} | {{restaurants}} | ||
[[Category:German buildings]] | [[Category:German buildings]] | ||
[[Category:European restaurants]] | [[Category:European restaurants]] |
Revision as of 01:33, 4 September 2020
The Pfannkuchen was a club in Hamburg, Germany. Unbeknownst to Nyssa or the Fifth Doctor, though, the restaurant was in reality a disguise for its true form — the space-time vessel that brought the Common Men to Earth from Byulna. Technology within amplified the hysteria among the public for the 1960s pop group. Also included in the equipment onboard was the genetic modifier used to disguise them as humans.
The Doctor and Nyssa met Common Men Mark Carville and James O'Meara there in the 1950s. While attempting to prove to them that they weren't human, Lenny Kruger brought an army to that location, with high-technology weapons and space-time vessels. When the Doctor discovered its true form, though, he used it to escape to Liverpool. The Doctor later used the ship's genetic modifier to create a fake corpse of James to support rumours of his death at the hands of a certain Lenny Kruger.
According to Nyssa, reading the sign translated into English by the TARDIS translation circuit, the name came from the German word of doughnut. (AUDIO: 1963: Fanfare for the Common Men)
Behind the scenes
This is actually untrue. Literally, the word Pfannkuchen means pancake, and is used as such in the majority of Germany, including Hamburg. It is only in select German locations like Berlin that Pfannkuchen is used to mean anything close to doughnut, and even then it's only a pastry vaguely resembling one in design.