How Did The Belts Of The USA Get Their Names?

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  • Опубликовано: 1 окт 2024

Комментарии • 1,8 тыс.

  • @NameExplain
    @NameExplain  5 лет назад +357

    What belt are you watching from?

  • @thorpizzle
    @thorpizzle 5 лет назад +1094

    I know "belt" isn't in its name, but I think Tornado Alley should count.

  • @ManateeOnRye
    @ManateeOnRye 5 лет назад +534

    Just a heads up Americans divide their fruit preserves into categories. You've got Jelly which is made with just the juices from the fruit and you've got Jam which is made with the juice and flesh of the fruit. Then you got marmelade and just plain preserves. And while jell-o is a catch all much like kleenex for gelatin desserts you can hear gelatin being used aswell.

    • @NameExplain
      @NameExplain  5 лет назад +109

      DeepScorn interesting. I can see a whole jam video coming in the future.

    • @docquanta6869
      @docquanta6869 5 лет назад +20

      Thank you, I was checking to see if anyone else had commented on this yet. Excellently done.

    • @rowynnecrowley1689
      @rowynnecrowley1689 5 лет назад +21

      Nah, we only say "gelatin" when we're talking gelatinous deserts in a public forum and don't want to advertise for a specific company. Or get sued. You will never hear anyone saying, "Man, I could go for some gelatin right now."

    • @uekiguy5886
      @uekiguy5886 5 лет назад +20

      I think of gelatin as only referring to unflavored., but I might be wrong.

    • @piperdragon3200
      @piperdragon3200 5 лет назад +4

      @@uekiguy5886 nope that's about right, especially if you cook. The one is a product in a recipe, the other is a quick treat.

  • @user-ct7ys5ld6s
    @user-ct7ys5ld6s 5 лет назад +167

    Stroke Belt is also the Waffle House Belt. Seriously look it up the location of Waffle Houses and the highest stroke and heart attacks.

    • @ttortilla
      @ttortilla 5 лет назад +4

      Yummy ima have some- has a stroke.
      Dies

    • @LisaBowers
      @LisaBowers 5 лет назад +17

      Yep, Waffle House food can be hazardous to your health. But, since they're open 24/7, did you know the federal government uses their ability to stay open as a way to determine the scale of a natural disaster?
      *From Wikipedia:*
      "The Waffle House Index is an informal metric used by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) to determine the effect of a storm and the likely scale of assistance required for disaster recovery."
      _"If you get there and the Waffle House is closed? That's really bad..."_
      "If a Waffle House store is open and offering a full menu, the index is green. If it is open but serving from a limited menu, it’s yellow. When the location has been forced to close, the index is red. Because Waffle House is well-prepared for disasters… it’s rare for the index to hit red."
      So, other than offering yummy scattered, smothered, covered, and chunked hash browns, the Waffle House does sorta come in handy.

    • @garretphegley8796
      @garretphegley8796 5 лет назад +4

      I live in Indiana and their are literally no Waffle Houses...

    • @aliviatevis1581
      @aliviatevis1581 4 года назад +2

      They’re most common on highways for me, almost every single exit that has a town in it has a waffle house

    • @DisgruntledFun
      @DisgruntledFun 4 года назад +5

      @@LisaBowers I once went to a waffle house after digging my self out of a 3 foot snow storm and sure enough they were open and I had breakfast lol

  • @TotoDG
    @TotoDG 5 лет назад +311

    Please somebody donate $1000 so that we can see the states video!

    • @petercarioscia9189
      @petercarioscia9189 5 лет назад +5

      He's over 600 already, so if 20 people did $20/m we'd be there.

    • @NameExplain
      @NameExplain  5 лет назад +11

      it's ok to smirk or it would take just 400 of the people who watch my videos donating just $1 :)

    • @jasonbailey9139
      @jasonbailey9139 5 лет назад +9

      Or he could take it one state at a time and just have a year of the US. The extra two weeks could be soent on DC or the US outlying areas. :) can’t believe he’d try to tackle all 50 in one go.

    • @loriannblack6626
      @loriannblack6626 5 лет назад +6

      @@petercarioscia9189 at one time he was over 800 sadly I've watched in horror as the ticker has moved in the wrong direction. If I had the money I would give

    • @ryan_n05
      @ryan_n05 5 лет назад

      wait this dude posts stuff on the onion and is communist!?!? THIS IS ASKING FOR MEMEZ!!!!!

  • @bogdanflagshoes9413
    @bogdanflagshoes9413 5 лет назад +279

    Forgot the coal belt, Eastern Kentucky through West Virginia, southwest Virginia, and central Pennsylvania

    • @charliemcgee9803
      @charliemcgee9803 5 лет назад +1

      I live in the coal belt

    • @Rosymaple
      @Rosymaple 4 года назад +13

      Where lots of coal is grown

    • @arthas640
      @arthas640 3 года назад +5

      @@Rosymaple coal isn't grown you idiot, everyone knows its formed deep beneath the ground in Santas workshop where its distributed to bad girls and boys. The stuff they find in Pennsylvania and the rest of the coal belt is just the stuff ancient naughty kids buried in an attempt to hide their shame.

    • @angelsanchez-qg1we
      @angelsanchez-qg1we 3 года назад +1

      TAAAAKE MEEE HOOOOME

    • @seville76.
      @seville76. 3 года назад +2

      @@arthas640 its was a joke idiot

  • @YT-Observer
    @YT-Observer 5 лет назад +68

    in the USA
    Jelly is made from only juices
    Jam is made with parts of fruit remaining in it.
    gelatin is the general term for
    Jell-o the brand name of a product

  • @glasswhisperer
    @glasswhisperer 5 лет назад +353

    I live in the Bible belt, can confirm a church on every corner.

    • @Udontkno7
      @Udontkno7 5 лет назад +29

      With the cryptic sayings on their signs too. And the hella large crosses that just sit in random fields ominously.
      You comin' over for the cookout?/

    • @brantleyhester6641
      @brantleyhester6641 5 лет назад +9

      Tim Forston yes more than one but WTF I didn't know I lived in the stroke belt! Never heard that before

    • @rickdevault2535
      @rickdevault2535 5 лет назад +12

      A church on one corner and a bar on the next corner to stumble out of Sunday morning.

    • @FreakAboutSims3
      @FreakAboutSims3 5 лет назад +2

      Tim Forston You poor bastard.

    • @willcrago4463
      @willcrago4463 5 лет назад +9

      aroace the crosses aren’t random. They are markers of places where people have died. That’s why you see them near sharp curves, cliffs, narrow roads, busy roads, battlefields. I want to say it’s mostly a Baptist or Pentecostal thing.

  • @modmaker7617
    @modmaker7617 5 лет назад +313

    Top 3 countries on Earth (in 2019)
    By land area
    1: Russia
    2: Canada
    3: China or USA (Tied)
    By population
    1: China
    2: India
    3: USA
    By GDP
    1: USA
    2: China
    3: Japan
    Wow. All that Anime/Manga and videogames have worked in Japan's favour.

    • @calvincoolidgesimp4380
      @calvincoolidgesimp4380 5 лет назад +18

      By land it’s
      Russia
      China
      USA
      Canada only beats the us if inland water is included, which it usually is, in that case it’s
      Russia
      Canada
      China

    • @modmaker7617
      @modmaker7617 5 лет назад +30

      @@calvincoolidgesimp4380 USA and China are tied because people don't know if to include or exclude Pacific island territories for the USA and the disputed territories of China.

    • @calvincoolidgesimp4380
      @calvincoolidgesimp4380 5 лет назад +6

      Mod Maker well even then, Canada is still in fourth by land area, and the measurements I used for China excluded all disputed territory and having all territories for both countries and the standing are still right, like China beats out the us by 200,000 km

    • @modmaker7617
      @modmaker7617 5 лет назад +1

      @@calvincoolidgesimp4380 Okay I just thought it was funny that Canada is ranked higher by land area most of the time. Everybody knows how the Americans always want to be the best but specifically compared against the Canadians but I agree why do they count the the waters for Canada?

    • @calvincoolidgesimp4380
      @calvincoolidgesimp4380 5 лет назад +1

      Mod Maker Canada has less land, but if you count inland water, that belong to Canada ie, Hudson Bay then Canada has more, usually inland water would be counted like the Great Lakes(atleast the parts that belong to the us) are usually counted for the area of the us. It just that you said Canada has more *land* area.

  • @damontolhurst
    @damontolhurst 5 лет назад +68

    It seems worth mentioning that:
    1) Jell-O is a brand name. The generalized term would be (sweetened/flavoured) gelatin.
    2) Jelly, jam, and preserves are three different types of processed fruit spreads in the US.

    • @sjakierulez
      @sjakierulez 5 лет назад +4

      Can have more kinds of processed fruit spreads, but can't use metric system

    • @Jessie_Helms
      @Jessie_Helms 4 года назад +1

      Yes but is there anywhere gelatin is colloquially used?
      I’ve never heard someone say “let’s get some gelatin” before and I know a lot of people who like it.

    • @Fennalope
      @Fennalope 3 года назад +2

      @@Jessie_Helms its a situation where the brand name has become more popular and used than the actual name of the product like "Band-aid"

  • @oilchange6542
    @oilchange6542 5 лет назад +173

    12:23 it's because of the food we eat down here. Southern food/ Soul food isn't really the healthiest.
    But it's the most delicious!

    • @rodrikforrester6989
      @rodrikforrester6989 5 лет назад +27

      Deepfry everything!

    • @jsiolkowski
      @jsiolkowski 5 лет назад +3

      I tried Popeye's once and I spat it out.

    • @jsiolkowski
      @jsiolkowski 5 лет назад +2

      @@ericolens3 Oily food (deep-fried even more so) extremely irritates my digestive system

    • @mrbrainbob5320
      @mrbrainbob5320 5 лет назад +2

      @@jsiolkowski you should get that checked out

    • @DISTurbedwaffle918
      @DISTurbedwaffle918 5 лет назад +7

      It's not good for your heart, it's good for your soul
      I'll take Southern food over some of the shit New Englanders pass off as "food" any day. Ever see what they consider "barbecue?" It's an aberration against food, like fuckin grilled pork chop with pickle 🤢

  • @Nimmo1492
    @Nimmo1492 5 лет назад +72

    The word "belt" has lost all meaning to me now.

  • @laakkonen6847
    @laakkonen6847 5 лет назад +66

    "The exact reason strokes are more present here isn't exactly known"
    *Stares in Paula Deen*

    • @downsjmmyjones101
      @downsjmmyjones101 4 года назад +2

      "I'll take 'Lard' for $800, Alex"

    • @Jessie_Helms
      @Jessie_Helms 4 года назад +1

      Also heat stroke probably counts too.
      We get extremely hot BUT also extremely humid so while we don’t match Arizona on temp, our stroke conditions are much.... well I don’t wanna day better but maybe, more conducive?
      Pair that with the smoking and obesity, along with the “Oh naw I’m a country boy I don’t need no docter ma’am I’ll just walk it off y’all” attitude.

  • @StudioUAC
    @StudioUAC 5 лет назад +160

    I live in the Rust Belt! It's so depressing here! there's nothing fun here to do!

    • @NITROIRL40420
      @NITROIRL40420 5 лет назад +17

      I live in the Rust Belt too. In a few years; we're planning to move to somewhere in either the Bible Belt or the Sun Belt.

    • @jodinha4225
      @jodinha4225 5 лет назад +28

      Jesse Weaver seems like a downgrade if you move to the Bible belt

    • @NITROIRL40420
      @NITROIRL40420 5 лет назад +8

      @@jodinha4225 Well; if we're gonna move, we need to move somewhere that won't break the bank. Unless I could make a decent amount of money of my own; like if more people would buy a game I released not long ago called "The Kingly Tales" now available on GameJolt for $5!

    • @NITROIRL40420
      @NITROIRL40420 5 лет назад +2

      @@ericolens3 Maybe if it weren't so damn expensive!

    • @TheBaegislash
      @TheBaegislash 5 лет назад +17

      Sadly I live in the worst-affected part of the Rust Belt, Detroit. But we're making a comeback don't worry

  • @kyletarrao5303
    @kyletarrao5303 5 лет назад +59

    I think that bible belt and rust belt are definitely the most common; the rest are quite obscure.

    • @garretphegley8796
      @garretphegley8796 5 лет назад +13

      Wtf the Corn Belt and the Wheat Belt are pretty fucking well known about.

    • @a-drewg1716
      @a-drewg1716 4 года назад +6

      I would say the bible belt, rust belt, and even sun belt are the most commonly known. With the Rust and Bible belts both being talked about in politics as they include most of the swing states while the Sun belt has also been talked about recently as it has the 3 most populated states (California, Texas, and Florida) and is even home to 1/3rd of the US population (makes since as it is the largest belt), and is also the region which in recent years has been experiencing a population boom with states in this area being some of the fastest growing. The Sun belt has also become the economic power of the country with the region having some of the most migration, fasted growing populations, and numerous tech companies coming/starting here ( this is pretty much solely concentrated in Florida, Texas, California, and Arizona)

    • @a-drewg1716
      @a-drewg1716 4 года назад

      @@autumnleaving nope, Florida has a population of 21 million while New York has a population of 19 million

    • @downsjmmyjones101
      @downsjmmyjones101 4 года назад +3

      Those are certainly the most well known but there are several others that aren't too obscure. I live in the Snow Belt and I've heard of the Sun Belt, Corn Belt, and Wheat Belt.

    • @prettyskies4164
      @prettyskies4164 7 месяцев назад

      Don't forget the sun belt

  • @FabsterCola
    @FabsterCola 5 лет назад +110

    We have our own bible belt in the Netherlands

    • @doctorpicardnononono7469
      @doctorpicardnononono7469 5 лет назад

      zwaar gereformeerde klojos stuk voor stuk.

    • @jodinha4225
      @jodinha4225 5 лет назад +8

      I imagine they’re all Protestant tho

    • @aymarafan7669
      @aymarafan7669 5 лет назад +5

      @Not Gay Actually my cousin I believe said it’s predominantly Catholic.

    • @Ivyonblond
      @Ivyonblond 5 лет назад

      Yeah In the south

    • @Ivyonblond
      @Ivyonblond 5 лет назад +5

      Aymara Fan Germany and Netherlands both became mostly catholic
      Yes i know Netherlands is 51% athiest

  • @hmmm6317
    @hmmm6317 5 лет назад +63

    Can you make a video about the name Caledonia? I know of three ,the old name of Scotland,new Caledonia, and a
    Small region in the island of Crete, what is the etymology,and how do they connect?

    • @loriannblack6626
      @loriannblack6626 5 лет назад +3

      We have a Caledonia here in PA, USA

    • @DISTurbedwaffle918
      @DISTurbedwaffle918 5 лет назад

      If I recall, the UK controlled Crete for a while. All places are probably currently or formerly UK-ruled, like how there's New Ireland in Indonesia.

    • @hmmm6317
      @hmmm6317 5 лет назад

      @@DISTurbedwaffle918 no crete was never colonized or settled by thd brits, the longest time it was kind of but not really is in ww2 for some months as a member of the allies before the german occupation, maybe you mean Cyprus?

    • @seanshure
      @seanshure 5 лет назад

      Caledonia Is Latin for scotland new caledonia I would assume is named after scotland ask for crete I would assume it goes back to the original meaning of the word which I think was like a edge of the world or something

    • @stephenroney3630
      @stephenroney3630 4 года назад

      @@seanshure Most countries and regions in Eueope were named by the Roman's. Caledonia = Land of the Caladons,
      Britannia = Land of the Britons, Hibernia = Land of Winter. Germanica= Land of the Germans, Scandanavia = Land of the Scandis, Hellenia = Lamd of Helen (of Troy), (Greece).

  • @daniellanctot6548
    @daniellanctot6548 5 лет назад +45

    3:01... I just chuckle every time you make a pro-wrestling reference. Thumbs up to that! lol!

    • @Delgen1951
      @Delgen1951 5 лет назад

      The school of bad acting?

  • @thomasturner6980
    @thomasturner6980 5 лет назад +96

    I'm interested in the cowgirl's belts tbh

  • @alexiswelsh5821
    @alexiswelsh5821 5 лет назад +37

    I'm from the Frost Belt! And yes the winters can get brutal, especially when there's a polar vortex. Although summer can be quite nice, sometimes. Usually it’s too hot to do things outside unless you have access to a pool.

    • @thegoodlydragon7452
      @thegoodlydragon7452 5 лет назад +6

      Polar vortexes suck. Sometimes during them you can see the northern US colder than or similar to parts of the Arctic. But then we also get these random warm spells that seem almost like mid-spring.

    • @alexiswelsh5821
      @alexiswelsh5821 5 лет назад +3

      The Goodly Dragon IKR! The weather is very strange. Last year I wore two pairs of pants, and my legs were still freezing. And the summer and late spring, it can feel the complete opposite of a frost belt.

    • @antiheroes7972
      @antiheroes7972 5 лет назад

      Does it get above 85f in the frost belt?

    • @thegoodlydragon7452
      @thegoodlydragon7452 5 лет назад

      @@antiheroes7972 Yes.

    • @alexiswelsh5821
      @alexiswelsh5821 5 лет назад

      acr in the summer and late spring, hell yeah. Two weeks ago it stayed well above that.

  • @sarreqteryx
    @sarreqteryx 5 лет назад +15

    I had thought "belt" was a form of "veldt"
    11:02 American jelly ≠ british jam. American jelly is fruit juice thickened with pectin, it more resembles Jello, but is more substantial. American jam is whole fruit jammed (nyuk nyuk) through a food mill, and thickened with pectin. Preserves is like jam, but with larger chunks, and marmalade is universal. the picture you used there looks more like preserves to me.

  • @TotoDG
    @TotoDG 5 лет назад +80

    To alcohol! The cause of, and solution to, all of life’s problems!

  • @thegoodlydragon7452
    @thegoodlydragon7452 5 лет назад +14

    Quick tip: In American speak South = South East and Midwest = Northern Mid-East. The confusing terms reflect a time when our country hadn't yet been settled from coast to coast.

    • @nachtegaelw5389
      @nachtegaelw5389 5 лет назад +2

      Kind of? I wouldn’t call Minnesota or Wisconsin North East, and I wouldn’t call Texas South East.
      But your point about nomenclature being relative to the borders at the time the regions were defined is a good one.

  • @keizervanenerc5180
    @keizervanenerc5180 5 лет назад +32

    Here in the Netherlands the only belt we really talk about us our own version of the bible-belt (bijbelbelt in Dutch) that runs through the country from Zeeland in the southwest through the middle of the country in Utrecht and Gelderland to the border with Germany where Overijssel an Drenthe meet. It is to be noticed that this belt specificly refers to the places were people are still higly religious compaired to the rest of the country, and follow mostly protestant/reformed branched of christianity. The belt does not include the southern provinces of Noord-Brabant and Limburg, due to this area being more catholic than protestant.
    Eventhough the belt is still inportant today, it is becomming less so, as a few years back it was announced that for the first time in history a majority of Dutch citizens are now non-religious.

    • @charleswillams9501
      @charleswillams9501 2 года назад

      That's sad. What that means is less stability

    • @Jayden3649
      @Jayden3649 2 года назад

      @@charleswillams9501 I really can't tell if this is sarcasm or not

  • @SleeplessStreams
    @SleeplessStreams 5 лет назад +17

    Jell-O is a popular brand of gelatin in the US that's become synonymous with the food itself, but outside of that we call it gelatin.

  • @thebigdawgj
    @thebigdawgj 5 лет назад +13

    Jelly and jam are different, and Jell-O is a brand of gelatin product. Someone who specializes in names like you should know this.

  • @Layman33
    @Layman33 5 лет назад +29

    Would Tornado Alley be considered a belt due to weather?

    • @LedosKell
      @LedosKell 4 года назад

      I don't belive it will ever be called the 'Tornado Belt' but Tornado Alley is definitely a belt.

  • @TheGurumash
    @TheGurumash 5 лет назад +24

    As an American, I learned the difference between Jam and Jelly was that Jam had remaining fruit flesh in the jar, while Jelly was filtered Jam or otherwise clear jam. Grew up in Florida so I don't speak for all the people of America, but I thought I'd contribute.

    • @willywonka3050
      @willywonka3050 3 года назад

      As a Californian, jam=more flavor/runny/little pulp, jelly=less flavor/set with pectin/no pulp, preserves=basically jam but more pulp/seeds. I tend to use “preserves” the most, even if it’s technically jam/jelly/marmalade.

    • @samurailevi49
      @samurailevi49 3 года назад +2

      As from a north eastern state, we call it jelly, but nobody would look twice if you did call it jam.

    • @sharkwaffle1582
      @sharkwaffle1582 2 года назад +1

      I’m not sure about the rest of the Treasure Valley (Boise metropolitan area for non-locals) but I always understood the differences between jam, jelly and preserves in pretty much the same way as you: jelly is the pure stuff, jam, has fruit bits in it, and preserves is mostly fruit bits

    • @paplomkalula9964
      @paplomkalula9964 Год назад

      Wow! I used to think jam and jelly were same thing..just that the Americans said Jelly and Australian/British referred to it as Jam..
      #PapuaNewGuinean 🇵🇬

  • @umbrastar
    @umbrastar 5 лет назад +24

    I’m from the “unchurched belt.” I’ve never heard that term before but it doesn’t surprise me.

    • @allanrichardson1468
      @allanrichardson1468 5 лет назад +3

      Back in the early 1970s, the company I worked for in Jacksonville, Florida, sent me to a newly acquired sister company in Oakland, California, for a few months, to learn the differences in the IT systems used by the two companies. Ten years later, the parent corporation decided to rush through a merger; I had moved on into different industries and locations in the meantime, and they looked me up to rehire me, as most of the IT staff and the director were moving from Oakland to Jacksonville to push through a hasty IT merger. But that’s another story.
      In greeting my California friends, I told them they were moving from the “Buddha Belt” to the Bible Belt.
      I don’t know why Name Explain didn’t include California in the Unchurched, or Buddha Belt.

    • @rowynnecrowley1689
      @rowynnecrowley1689 5 лет назад +1

      Sounds to me like a bunch free-thinking people who don't need a piece of literature about a mythical being who gives cancer to babies to tell them it's not ok to kill people and steal their shit after banging their wife.

    • @umbrastar
      @umbrastar 5 лет назад

      @@ericolens3 I go to church.

    • @a-drewg1716
      @a-drewg1716 4 года назад +1

      ​@@rowynnecrowley1689 wow mate way to be an ass. First off while I personally think anyone who takes the words of the Bible as this ultimate truth as an idiot. The thing has been translated through numerous languages numerous times. Was hand printed for hundreds of years (meaning what was in the book was really up to the whims of who ever was writing it), hell it wasn't even written by god or Jesus but by people way after just collecting stories, or way before. I mean hell the old testament was written a ~1000 years before Christ was born. Still though do not just say god is some mythical being. Billions of people believe in some kind of god and that belief is what makes them "alive", what makes them exist. As long as there is people to believe in them they do exist. Its just that simple. This is the reason Greek and roman and Egyptian gods/pantheons are considered myths now because no one believes in them any more. The same too can be said about anything and everything. Such as money. All money is, is paper that we believe has value. Its not backed by any valuable such as gold or silver, but is simply backed by beliefs. Because of that belief $1 USD is worth $1 USD. Of-course though you don't believe in any god so that means you know so much more then everyone else right. They are the idiots for believing in something.

  • @danieltsiprun8080
    @danieltsiprun8080 5 лет назад +30

    "Leave a comment" i supported this channel now, am i a good boy?

    • @Zachyshows
      @Zachyshows 5 лет назад +4

      i liked, replied (that counts) and subbed to patrick

    • @danieltsiprun8080
      @danieltsiprun8080 5 лет назад +3

      @@ericolens3 i don't celebrate Christmas so this won't effect me.

  • @12tone
    @12tone 5 лет назад +24

    Watching this from the California belt because the state's so big it deserves its own.

    • @nathanides7584
      @nathanides7584 3 года назад +3

      What about an Alaskan belt, and a Texas belt even?

    • @Jivvi
      @Jivvi 3 года назад +2

      Earthquake belt?

    • @willywonka3050
      @willywonka3050 3 года назад +1

      @@Jivvi that’s basically any state on the pacific coast. Especially Alaska.

  • @glasswhisperer
    @glasswhisperer 5 лет назад +16

    Jelly and jam are two separate things here. What you pictured would be jam here.

    • @Affixton96
      @Affixton96 5 лет назад +6

      Yes. Jelly has fruit juice as an ingredient, and jam has crushed fruit as an ingredient.

    • @Affixton96
      @Affixton96 5 лет назад +2

      @Transpecies Grolar Bear Isn't that term only for those that are made with citrus fruits?

  • @Retromags_Brian
    @Retromags_Brian 5 лет назад +20

    Jelly and jam are different. Jam is made from fruit and has fruit pieces in it, and you spread it about your toast and enjoy it. Jelly is made from fruit juice and has no fruit pieces in it. It's clear and smooth and more stiff than jam. You also spread is on toast and enjoy it. Neither have any relation to Jell-O, which doesn't spread.

    • @halftimelordwizard
      @halftimelordwizard 5 лет назад +1

      Wow such difference. Sounds like two variations of the same thing

    • @faristaj2326
      @faristaj2326 5 лет назад

      American logic is so strange

  • @ColePenner
    @ColePenner 5 лет назад +50

    Watching from the Rain Belt! (Basically Cascadia)

    • @katiearbuckle9017
      @katiearbuckle9017 5 лет назад +3

      Lol, he got us with Unchurched though. But Rain Belt makes more sense.

    • @ColePenner
      @ColePenner 5 лет назад +2

      Katie Arbuckle I mean, God IS a vicious two-faced prick (and he doesn’t exist, of course)

    • @MrMalve25
      @MrMalve25 5 лет назад +3

      Yea I have never heard of Unchurched Belt, though it does fit as many of us here are Athiest or otherwise religiously unaffiliated. In my group of 5 really close friends (yes I have more than 5 friends those are just the ones I hang out with most often) 3 of of us are pretty stout Athiests, 1 i am not actually sure about (though i believe used to be a wiccan i believe) and 1 is a Christian though mostly non practicing (ie believes in God and stuff but dies not goe to church and stuff)
      I was kinda surprised we were not called the rain belt our reputation for wet weather. Ironically Seattle which is known for being super rainy actually get less annual rain fall than most Eastern and Gulf cities. It's just they usually get it massive bursts while we get much lighter amount over anymore constant time frame.
      Finally i was surprised that the Great Lakes were called the fruit belt. I did not know they really grew much fruit there. After researching it a bit the main fruit producing states are actually California at 51% and Florida at 19% (no real surprise forneither of those 2), Washington at 10% (not a surprise to me since I live here, but other may not be aware) then Michigan at 4% and Oregon at 3%.

    • @dajjukunrama5695
      @dajjukunrama5695 5 лет назад

      Americans really hate fictional characters, I’m not visiting, all you do is yell and get triggered

    • @MrMalve25
      @MrMalve25 5 лет назад +2

      @@ColePenner Yea if I actually believed in God, he would have some serious explaining to do. If you have ever seen the the show Supernatural, the last episode of the most recent season really gives what I would consider an appropriate iteration of God if he were to exist

  • @RobinFlysHigh
    @RobinFlysHigh 5 лет назад +16

    9:12 Minnesota:
    *_Am I a joke to you?_*

    • @petergray2712
      @petergray2712 5 лет назад +1

      Yes. Because the Vikings play there.

    • @susanmurphy958
      @susanmurphy958 5 лет назад +2

      @@petergray2712 Very bad Peter Gray very bad.

  • @kylepickus5712
    @kylepickus5712 5 лет назад +5

    Jello jam and jelly are all three different things in the US. Our Jello is your gelatin or jelly, our jam is your marmalade and kept in a jar, and our jelly is like your jam but more artificially flavored and come in squeeze bottles.

    • @stephenwright8824
      @stephenwright8824 5 лет назад +2

      Agreed. Jam and jelly are made differently enough that they can almost be thought of as different classes of food.

  • @mkultrabaked6190
    @mkultrabaked6190 5 лет назад +21

    As a catholic from the Unchurched belt, I can confirm that many people here are religious, but just don’t feel like going to church.

    • @BonaparteBardithion
      @BonaparteBardithion 5 лет назад +1

      I'd never really thought about it before, but now that I do I don't think I know anyone that's strongly religious. I can't think of any particularly dominant religion in the area either, except that a lot of them are some variant of Christianity. There are a dozen different churches in a mile radius, all a slightly different belief. And even among people that do attend no one gives you grief for working Sundays or anything.

    • @TheCriminalViolin
      @TheCriminalViolin 5 лет назад

      @@BonaparteBardithion Same here, although it does seem like the most frequent people I hear that mention their religion/that they are religious tend to be either Moron or JW (Jehovah's Witness).

    • @BonaparteBardithion
      @BonaparteBardithion 5 лет назад +1

      @@TheCriminalViolin
      They're both pretty new forms if Christianity, so they proselytize more than older religions. Compare to the Catholic Church a few hundred years ago when areas were being settled.
      Also, Mormonism has a central Pope-like figure, so as religions go they might be extra organized.

  • @thephilosiphizer9227
    @thephilosiphizer9227 5 лет назад +12

    I'm in the snow belt. But also the Irish belt. It extends from Maine to New York. And it denotes the area most Irish immagrants landed

    • @cyberpotato63
      @cyberpotato63 5 лет назад +2

      The migration you refer to, wasn't the only Irish migration to North America though. That Irish migration was predominantly Irish Catholic population that settled in New York & New England during the middle and later part of the 19th century. There was an earlier predominantly protestant migration of Scots Irish during the colonial period to the middle Atlantic states. What became known as the Scots Irish was actually a mix of protestants from the plantations of Ireland, Scottish from the borderlands with England, Welsh, with a fair number of English and Irish Catholics in the mix.

  • @Blvd40
    @Blvd40 3 года назад +4

    I am originally from Michigan but currently live in Texas. Even being a northerner I had always heard of the Bible Belt but never heard of these other "belts" around the country. Very eye-opening! I am doing a project to unearth the origin of the term Bible Belt. I'd like to refer back to this belt as it compares to other parts of the country with their own nicknames.👌

  • @ItsDannyio
    @ItsDannyio 4 года назад +1

    According to this vid, I’m viewing from the Bible, Cotton, Sun, and Stroke Belts. I could take a 30 min drive to enter the Black Belt.

  • @officielEP
    @officielEP 5 лет назад +7

    In Nigeria.. We have the middle belt. As they are not part of
    The Northeast
    The Northwest
    Southeast
    Southwest
    South-south regions

    • @1Phire
      @1Phire 4 года назад

      dirty centrist

  • @jriver226
    @jriver226 5 лет назад +2

    Maybe this is something for you to explore but the broader idea of Jam in the US is broken up into Jelly, Jam, and Preserves which are distinguished by the pulp. A jelly has no pulp whatsoever, jam has pulp but is spreadable, and a preserve is more or less jam that isn't filtered. I don't believe Jelly would be considered a wrong way to refer to jello, but most Americans associate it more with something like peanut butter and jelly then gelatin snacks, so it would confuse us on the same way using gay as a term for being happy throws many people off.

    • @jriver226
      @jriver226 5 лет назад

      ... that's not how language works, but whatever.

  • @lightdeathguy9266
    @lightdeathguy9266 5 лет назад +9

    You could do a video on British counties in the same style as the one on the US states

    • @lightdeathguy9266
      @lightdeathguy9266 5 лет назад +1

      J Kindness I live in Shropshire and some people think it’s posh

  • @inconsistentvisuals
    @inconsistentvisuals 5 лет назад +2

    the bible doesn't derive from Latin it comes from the ancient greek word vivlos (βίβλος) literally meaning book.The word biblioteca also derives from Ancient greek being formed by the aformentioned word vivlos and theto (θετω) which means to position something , put it in its place

  • @656hookemhorns
    @656hookemhorns 5 лет назад +11

    Watching from the Sunbelt. And what do you call what we call jam?

    • @uekiguy5886
      @uekiguy5886 5 лет назад +3

      "Jam" is the same in both kinds of English. He got that point mixed up.

    • @brucescott9604
      @brucescott9604 5 лет назад

      Bible belt here

    • @BonaparteBardithion
      @BonaparteBardithion 5 лет назад +1

      @Transpecies Grolar Bear
      Isn't marmalade a specific type of jam?

    • @nachtegaelw5389
      @nachtegaelw5389 5 лет назад

      Jam is jam. Apparently they don’t have jelly?

  • @DJPJ.
    @DJPJ. 5 лет назад +8

    The South of Norway is the "Bible Belt".

  • @whatevergoesforme5129
    @whatevergoesforme5129 5 лет назад +3

    I wonder if the US will someday be divided into the left-wing belt and the right-wing belt.

  • @ms.wintersylvia7504
    @ms.wintersylvia7504 5 лет назад +6

    One small detail about the "snow belt" it is more accurately named "the snow belts" as it more refers to the several smaller areas on the lee-ward side of the great lakes that receive the heavier lake-effect snow, rather than one large snowy area.

    • @ReinSouls
      @ReinSouls 5 лет назад

      I never knew anyone who called it the “snow belt.” But I have heard the term “lake effect belt.”

  • @virginiarailfannoah5415
    @virginiarailfannoah5415 5 лет назад +8

    I'm from the Bible and Stroke Belts. Which is ironic, seeing that I'm a Shinto/Buddhist.

    • @singharpan9859
      @singharpan9859 5 лет назад

      Shinto and buddhism are different religions though ?

    • @jonnyOysters
      @jonnyOysters 5 лет назад

      @@singharpan9859 often Buddhism is mixed with traditional religions in East Asia. Like Shinto in Japan and Taoism in China. It's not like Christianity or Islam where one has to follow one or the other.

    • @sokyu7723
      @sokyu7723 5 лет назад

      Interesting. How is the food there? I have heard the food in the Stroke Belt is unhealthy and contributes to the name.

    • @virginiarailfannoah5415
      @virginiarailfannoah5415 5 лет назад

      They are, @@singharpan9859. However, many Japanese people belief that the Buddha and Izanagi coexist.

    • @virginiarailfannoah5415
      @virginiarailfannoah5415 5 лет назад

      You're pretty right, @@sokyu7723. In my hometown, there are crap-loads of fast food places. We have just about every major fast food chain you can think of.
      Also, in the south, we have this fast food chain called Chick-fil-a. It's a very Christian company, tough, and it gets protested in many states. I still like it, even if I'm a Shinto/Buddhist.

  • @jacobchurchwardtruered116
    @jacobchurchwardtruered116 5 лет назад +3

    I'm from the unchurched belt and I agree with the littel attendance and I'm also mormon and I never heard that we like jell-o so that was new.

    • @BonaparteBardithion
      @BonaparteBardithion 5 лет назад +1

      I've heard it, but it seems to be more common in places where LDS are more dominant. I'm from the Northwest. Salads and cookies are the big thing at the potlucks I've been to.

  • @blakehillman6494
    @blakehillman6494 5 лет назад +3

    I'm watching from the Jell-o belt, and your explanation of the region seems spot-on to me. And people here often refer to all brands of gelatin desserts as "jello," just as they often refer to all tissue paper as "kleenexes."

  • @GnosticAtheist
    @GnosticAtheist 5 лет назад +4

    Norway is not really in the vodka belt. We are in the "does it contain any alcohol yes please" belt.

    • @rickard7031
      @rickard7031 4 года назад

      Same for Sweden, but together we can for the akvavit belt! Denmark can join us too.

  • @nightstar4330
    @nightstar4330 5 лет назад +5

    Pine belt is in Missouri
    *Angry Mainer Noises*

    • @jofriko5416
      @jofriko5416 5 лет назад

      Yea but it’s a pine that grows in warmer climates (southeastern US)

  • @chenoaholdstock3507
    @chenoaholdstock3507 5 лет назад +3

    YOU WILL ADORE THE HISTORY OF THE EGGPLANT! I SWEAR, GET ON THAT!

  • @turtlevader
    @turtlevader 5 лет назад +4

    We don’t call your jam jelly. We have moth jelly and jam. And preserves. Each one just gets thicker with more chunks in it.

  • @DrewSprague1218
    @DrewSprague1218 5 лет назад +4

    Your Jello Belt map needs to go a little bit into the west of Idaho, to get Boise in the map. I'm watching from the said belt.

  • @dontsubscribe3702
    @dontsubscribe3702 5 лет назад +9

    “Lovely” Sunshine. If you’re wondering about the stroke belt, the heat mixed with the humidity is a big factor I’m pretty sure

  • @Rakonax
    @Rakonax 5 лет назад +1

    i'm from beer belt, tho my culture demands to call every beer thats not from my region piss water.
    greetings from germany :D

  • @amayasnep
    @amayasnep 5 лет назад +3

    Some other "belts" in the US aren't traditionally belts but are nonetheless important to mention: Tornado Alley (area of US with a high incidence of tornado formation), Appalachia/Piedmont (a belt-shaped region of the US with a similar culture), each of the three main coasts, and the Arizona Sun Corridor (basically the Phoenix-Tucson metro).

  • @nikosajter8250
    @nikosajter8250 5 лет назад +3

    Im watching from the great belt of eastern Europe (I have no clue if that's real or not I'm just trying to make a crappy joke)

  • @MrMisterMaster
    @MrMisterMaster 5 лет назад +4

    Watching from the Vodka belt!
    0:11 The day I see metric numbers alongside the imperial ones in future videos, I'll become a Patreon right away. :)

    • @rowynnecrowley1689
      @rowynnecrowley1689 5 лет назад

      Why do you have to be such a nazi? Is it cuz the metric system makes your dick sound bigger?

    • @MrMisterMaster
      @MrMisterMaster 5 лет назад

      ​@@rowynnecrowley1689 I'd say my dick sounds smaller in metric, because cm is a smaller measurement than inches. But I get your concern.
      This is not the point of this comment though. That comment was my way of telling Patrick how to become a better channel without complaining. It was meant to be said in a positive manner, hence the little smiley at the end. I love "Name Explain", I've been a subscriber for ages and I watch and enjoy every video.
      Also about the whole imperial-metric debate: I'm not saying videos should contain metric only. I say use both! There are many European viewers here. It is a lot more effective for 1 person to convert to metric (say +2 minutes of extra editing) instead of 30 000 people doing it on their own (say 30 seconds * 30 000 = 250 hrs)).
      While I'm at making a longer comment, let me wish you a great day as well! :)
      *TL;DR* No nazi. Dick same size in USA. Name explain great, but great things can become even better.

  • @mcxopjesh
    @mcxopjesh 4 года назад +2

    Jeez, I need to brush up on my history. I'm a Mormon from Utah, and thus from the jello belt. I had no idea there was such a thing as a jello belt, or the importance of it to our culture, I guess the term just isn't all that used. Oh well, the more you know!

  • @tkPuncake
    @tkPuncake 5 лет назад +4

    *talks about frost belt*
    *uses picture from city that can’t handle winters*
    Still an awesome video though keep it up!!

  • @tearlach47
    @tearlach47 5 лет назад +2

    No matter how much I watch Name Explain, I will always see drawn-Patrick's goatee as his mouth.

  • @abigailstandish4143
    @abigailstandish4143 5 лет назад +4

    i always thought that they were called belts because of the highways that ran through them
    btw from the salt belt

  • @RikkiJVelez
    @RikkiJVelez 5 лет назад +1

    I'm watching from the Bible-belt where I lived all my life. I've been an atheist since I was 18.

    • @jeffanderson3962
      @jeffanderson3962 5 лет назад

      I would be an atheist/secularist, but it's WAY too dogmatic for me.

    • @RikkiJVelez
      @RikkiJVelez 5 лет назад

      Jeff Anderson I’ve found identifying as Humanist is more positive.

  • @CYCOCOMICS
    @CYCOCOMICS 5 лет назад +3

    Yeah, we're so "lucky" to have all that sun in the Sun Belt. Arizona longs for rain.

  • @icefrout
    @icefrout 5 лет назад +2

    Kinda weird that the "Unchurched Belt" is in the northwest when the neighboring states of New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Vermont, Maine, and Connecticut are all less religious than Washington. In addition, New York is less religious than Oregon and Rhode Island is less religious than Nevada.

  • @WanJae42
    @WanJae42 5 лет назад +3

    Watching from the Tornado Belt, aka Tornado Alley.

    • @MrCubFan415
      @MrCubFan415 5 лет назад

      WanJae42 Me too! Which state?

  • @____spacecadet____
    @____spacecadet____ 5 лет назад +2

    I guess I'm watching from the Jell-O belt, but I've never heard that name. Maybe that's because I'm in it and it's mostly people outside of it that refer to it as that. 🤔

  • @seanmichael7666
    @seanmichael7666 5 лет назад +4

    Honestly as an Ohioan we kinda find it offensive to be called the rust belt and that name is only used outside the region.

  • @blakepeanutbudderman8163
    @blakepeanutbudderman8163 5 лет назад +2

    The state that I live in is part of (according to the video) the Banana, Corn, Fruit, Wheat, and Frost belts.

  • @grahamlive
    @grahamlive 5 лет назад +3

    Europe has a beer belt? So do I. It holds up my beer gut.

    • @Azknowledgethirsty
      @Azknowledgethirsty 5 лет назад

      In fact we here divide Europe in 3 differently, the Mediterranean belt, which does include turkey but not the balkans, the German belt which doesn't include Belgium but goes include the Nordic countries and the slav belt, which is like the the vodka one but with the balkans

  • @ConnorNolan
    @ConnorNolan 5 лет назад +2

    California doesn't get to be in any belts. If anything, California has belts within it, although I don't think they're called belts. Most areas are named after the geography mixed with a description, like silicon valley or emerald triangle

    • @BonaparteBardithion
      @BonaparteBardithion 5 лет назад

      Aren't you guys in the Earthquake Belt? :P
      (Says the person on the Cascadia Fault.)

  • @ZyphLegend
    @ZyphLegend 5 лет назад +3

    I'm from the tornado belt.

  • @air5096
    @air5096 5 лет назад +2

    11:04 FYI It's only Jelly if it's seedless, it's Jam if it has seeds

  • @JR-my6bc
    @JR-my6bc 5 лет назад +3

    Bible Belt

  • @Jessie_Helms
    @Jessie_Helms 4 года назад +1

    Quick note on “unchurched.”
    At least in the Chrisitan Baptist/nondenominational/Assemblies of God groups you described it very accurately.
    An unchurched person could be prioritizing work over church so they just don’t attend on Sundays/attend rarely.
    They also could be an atheist or agnostic, obviously.
    Or maybe they’re what some would call “practical atheists” (They believe God is real but just can’t be bothered to do much about it, maybe praying at meals or going to church on major Christian holidays).
    None of that is said to condemn them either, at least not in this comment and in the circles I run in.
    It’s simply a good descriptive since calling them atheist isn’t necessarily accurate.

  • @FireurchinProductionsByzantium
    @FireurchinProductionsByzantium 5 лет назад +3

    Origin behind the word Jet (day 3)

  • @Jessie_Helms
    @Jessie_Helms 4 года назад +1

    An interesting consequence of living in the black belt is 1) I didn’t know this was called the black belt and 2) I always assumed Black people made up like 30% of the population, but apparently nation wide its like 10%.
    For as racist as Alabama is perceived to be (and in some parts absolutely is) we have a lot of racial diversity.

  • @michaelfrazier7234
    @michaelfrazier7234 5 лет назад +5

    I just found a really cool pattern in groups of words what they refer to in the uk/us (I’m from the states but have lived in the uk for three years)
    So jel-o and jelly are the same thing but jelly does not refer to jam but more process form of jam you can’t find in the UK. (Jam US is Jam UK)
    I also think of the example of apple juice, cider, and hard cider.
    Where cider in the uk refers to hard cider in the us and cider in the us refers to apple juice in the uk but what Americans call apple juice (a filtered and a slightly dehydrated from of apple juice) does not exist in the uk.

  • @Eclipse-mf6hc
    @Eclipse-mf6hc 4 года назад +2

    Me (when “black belt” is first uttered in this video): Such a cool name! Wonder where it came from!
    Me (when he word “workers” is said): Oh... that’s why it’s called “black belt”

  • @dgray7537
    @dgray7537 5 лет назад +5

    Unchurched Belt should be changed to: "outdoors paradise belt." Or "You want me to do what? with 1/2 my weekends, lol see you on the lift Belt"

  • @kyletowers9662
    @kyletowers9662 5 лет назад +2

    When you do the states names, you should do them in order of when they joined the union; from Delaware to Hawaii.

  • @TheStarswearee
    @TheStarswearee 5 лет назад +4

    Name explain : I think of Germany and Belgium when I hear beer
    The Netherlands: am I a joke to you

    • @sjakierulez
      @sjakierulez 5 лет назад

      Well we aren't known for our beers

    • @AbiGail-ok7fc
      @AbiGail-ok7fc 5 лет назад

      According to some German and Belgium friends I have, when it comes to beer, the Netherlands *is* a joke.

  • @Destroyer83
    @Destroyer83 5 лет назад +3

    What about the place that is simultaneously a "Belt" and not a "belt" The beltway.

  • @montheramer222
    @montheramer222 5 лет назад +3

    I’m the first viewer ☺️

    • @DexFire1115
      @DexFire1115 5 лет назад +4

      Name Explain beat you. Also many people see “0 view” statistic when they click on the video. So everyone thinks they are first

  • @THEQuagyy
    @THEQuagyy 5 лет назад +1

    Welp, Coloradoans, Wyomingites, and Montanans, we must come together to form our own "Neglected Belt" as we barely have any belts poking into our states.

  • @seancondon5572
    @seancondon5572 2 года назад +1

    The bible belt is actually a funny one. See, I was in Windsor, Ontario buying some Cuban cigars, and the Lebanese Canadian guy at the cigar shop asked about my funny accent. Told him I had moved to Michigan for a job, but I was from Alabama, which is in what we call the "Bible Belt" ... where a lot of people talk with a similar accent. Guy found the name of the region amusing.

  • @Dar_Paz
    @Dar_Paz 5 лет назад +3

    Is there YEEHAAW Belt? There should be.
    And I'm watching from the Vodka Belt ;)

  • @username65585
    @username65585 5 лет назад +2

    Jelly and Jam are different.

  • @kevincronk7981
    @kevincronk7981 11 месяцев назад +1

    Your depiction of the bible belt seems to go too far North. I'm from Northern Virrginia, which you included in the bible belt, but this area isn't particularly religious at all much less super religious

  • @BobbiDoll
    @BobbiDoll 4 года назад +1

    Jelly is not Jello. Jello - Dessert made with gelatin.
    Jelly - A spread made with pectin.
    Jam - Made with pectin, has fruit, doesn't have as firm consistency.
    Preserves - Made with pectin and more of the fruit.
    Marmalade - Made with citrus fruit, containing some of the peel in transparent jelly, made with pectin.
    Fruit Butter - A thick spread made with the pulp of the fruit and sugar.

  • @dulcimerrafi
    @dulcimerrafi 5 лет назад +1

    A bit of context of for a couple of the belts that you mentioned:
    1. One defining feature of the Bible Belt is that a plurality of its residents are members of the evangelical Southern Baptist community, unlike most other parts of the country, where a plurality of residents practice Catholicism (I assume the reason for this is that, while Protestants as a whole may outnumber Catholics in many of those parts, no single Protestant denomination predominates). The only other major exceptions, I think, are the Jell-O belt (a term I had never heard of until this video), where LDS is the predominant religion, and parts of the Upper Midwest, where Lutheranism predominates.
    2. The Borscht Belt came into existence because Jews were once barred from attending many mainstream summer camps and resorts for families. In response to these restrictive laws, a set of resorts that catered specifically to the Jewish population popped up in upstate New York, conveniently located near the NY Metropolitan Area with its large Jewish community. Once civil rights laws were enacted that made it illegal for businesses to openly discriminate on the basis of ethnicity or religion, the Jewish-friendly resorts of the Borscht Belt became no longer necessary as Jews could now vacation with their gentile colleagues and companions. The most famous legacy of the Borscht Belt is in the area of comedy, as stand up comedy was one of the main sources of entertainment at these resorts and many famous comics of the mid-20th Century got their start playing what was known as the Borscht Belt Circuit.

  • @kotymcneal8589
    @kotymcneal8589 5 лет назад +1

    Greetings from the Unchurched Belt! Northeastern Oregon specifically

  • @ethanpetersen810
    @ethanpetersen810 4 года назад +1

    "Mormons and jell-o are heavily associated with one another...Mormons love jell-o"
    Dude, I'm a Mormon in the "jell-o belt" and I wasn't aware of that supposed jell-o association, either.
    And I don't even like jell-o.

  • @Jessie_Helms
    @Jessie_Helms 4 года назад +1

    I live in the black, Bible, sun, stroke, and cotton belts.
    Also I think technically outside Tornado Alley but we still get a lot of them.

  • @mr.onehouse264
    @mr.onehouse264 5 лет назад +2

    I've never heard of the Jell-O Belt, though I apparently live on its South end. (Jell-O is a brand name that became a word in itself, like how asking for a Kleenex means you want a paper facial tissue even if the box is a generic store label.)

  • @devenscience8894
    @devenscience8894 4 года назад +1

    The Jell-O pictured should be green. For some reason, Mormons are/were well known for their green Jell-O. It even appeared on the pins for the Olympics that took place in Salt Lake City.

  • @patrickblanchette4337
    @patrickblanchette4337 5 лет назад +2

    11:42 While that is the meaning of the current name; my dad (he’s from Michigan) explained to me that because they put a whole lot of salt on the roads (this the name salt belt) that would cause older models to rust even more quickly, thus the name salt bet was born.
    -Hello from the Sun Belt.