How sick can you get?
I guess we really need to stop asking that question because Germany seems to be taking it as a challenge, not as a warning!
Check out the latest ad just released AOK, a top (or some say the top) German health insurance company….
First I’ll show you the ad and then further down below I’ll break it all down and explain what the captions mean and everything else.
Watch as this perfectly lovely white-looking German couple is in bed having what looks like a lovely time and then……WHAT THE HECK?
A disgusting “Migrant” is in the bed with them!
Yeah, take a look for yourself here:
A német állami egészségbiztosító most dobta piacra ezt a reklámfilmet:
Egy német nő és egy német férfi szerepel benne, az ágyukban pedig egy harmadik férfi, valami migráns. És az egész egy fogamzásgátló reklám…
Úgy érzem hamarosan nálunk is jönnek majd hasonlók.
🇩🇪🏳️🌈🤮 pic.twitter.com/wA4Ri8N9vx
— Anna 🇭🇺 🍎👠 (@ABarta199511) April 24, 2026
TRANSLATED:
The German state health insurer has just released this ad film to the market:
It features a German woman and a German man, and in their bed, a third man, some migrant. And the whole thing is a contraceptive ad…
I feel like similar ones will be coming to us soon too.
🇩🇪🏳️🌈🤮
Backup here if needed:
Ok now let me break down exactly what you are seeing and what the captions mean:
Campaign Overview
The ad is a short (about 17-second) promotional video from AOK, one of Germany’s largest public statutory health insurance providers (Allgemeine Ortskrankenkasse). It promotes free contraception counseling and consultations available through AOK-insured gynecologists or doctors, framing it as a way to keep one’s “love life safe.”
Who Ran It?
AOK (a major German public health insurer) commissioned and ran the campaign. The creative agency behind it is the Hamburg-based Wynken Blynken & Nod. An exclusive pop song titled “Alles OK” by singer Elif was created specifically for the spot.
What the Captions/Text Say
The video uses a split-screen or sequential text overlay style with these exact questions appearing on screen:
“Mit ihr?” (“With her?”)
“Mit ihm?” (“With him?”)
ADVERTISEMENT“Mit beiden?” (“With both?”)
It ends with the hashtag #AllesOK followed by text along the lines of:
“Mit der AOK ist dein Liebesleben safe.” (“With AOK, your love life is safe.”)
The song lyrics reinforce the “Alles OK” pun (playing on the insurer’s name, the idea that “everything is okay,” and that AOK has your back for sexual health matters).
Visual Content and Scenario
It opens with a young white German couple (a blond man and a woman in black lingerie) in bed in a stylish apartment. The woman gets up and leaves the room (with a playful glance back). When she returns, a third man — described as having a Southern/Mediterranean or “migrant”-like appearance (dark curly hair, styled beard, chest tattoo) — is now in the bed with the blond man. The woman smiles, climbs back in, and the three settle into a cozy, affectionate threesome pose (with some bi/homoerotic elements shown between the two men). The tone is light, playful, and normalized.
What Is the Point of the Ad?
The core message is to encourage young people (especially those with diverse or non-monogamous sexual lifestyles) to use AOK’s covered free contraception counseling and services. By depicting a polyamorous/threesome scenario with questions about different partner combinations, it aims to signal that AOK is modern, non-judgmental, and supportive of all kinds of consensual “love lives” — as long as you protect yourself against unintended pregnancy or related health issues.
It ties into broader public health goals in Germany:
Reducing unplanned pregnancies.
Promoting safe sex.
Making preventive sexual health services (which AOK funds) feel accessible and stigma-free.
The “#AllesOK” branding reassures viewers that no matter their relationship style, AOK makes it “all okay” by covering the practical side.
The ad has sparked significant backlash online (especially in conservative or right-leaning European circles), with critics calling it tone-deaf, overly provocative, or reflective of cultural shifts around migration, family norms, and sexuality. AOK and supporters would likely defend it as inclusive health promotion. The spot appears to have been active around late 2025 into 2026 and spread virally via platforms like TikTok and X.
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By the way, the summary and explanation above was provided by Grok and it looks like Elon still has some work to do because Grok labels the “migrant” as a “Southern/Mediterranean”. Hilarious Grok!
What’s your view?



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