American Reacts to Europeans and Americans Roasting Each Other!
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- Опубликовано: 24 сен 2024
- Prepare for a hilarious showdown as we dive into the world of transatlantic banter to react to Europeans and Americans roasting each other! From cultural stereotypes to friendly jabs, we'll explore the comedic rivalry between these two continents.
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#RoastingEachOther #EuropeanVsAmerican #TransatlanticBanter
(Talking about medical bills) “These are both good burns!”
Yeah, just that ours are a lot cheaper to treat 😂
Ribbing is the word you were desperately flailing for!
Some all it banter or bangs.
Bloody autocorrect.Bants
@@kerryannestevenson6099 You can say Banter but US Americans think 'bangs' are a hair fringe.
Nothing like a playful rimming though 😅😂
😳😳🤣
"Playful rimming.... playful rubbing.... razzing??" LOL 😅!
I think the word you meant was 'ribbing' - your suggestions are more fun though
I saw a British burn once saying 'We have pub's older than your country!'😂
I have a clock that's older than American, and it works better.
It doesn't do 'military time' though. We haven't got round to weaponising time yet.
The "Crooked house" pub, near me, has recently been burned down and demolished by the owners illegally, that was from 1760 or something...
sixth form was the last year of school, so they think we have changed "form" as in shape its funny tho
As in "final form".
Yeah, I liked that one.
5th form was the final year (when I went to school), you left school at 16. 6th form was a precursor/stepping stone to University/College.
Many parts of the UK don't even use the word 'form', to describe the year they are in. They just say '6th Year'.
@@Thurgosh_OG that's not what a Sixth Form is though...
No matter how many times I hear it, it’s still wild to me that a person is expected to pay so much for a medical emergency.
It’s such a scam 😂
Like, how do they justify $10,000 for an ambulance?
What fuel do they put in the tank? Liquid gold? What annual wage are the paramedics on? $7 million a year?
Seriously, if I told you to make an ambulance as expensive as you possibly could, then you'd struggle to make it a tenth as expensive.
Give me the itemised bill. I'd love to know how the hell you could ever make a medical taxi service more expensive than buying a brand new car and driving yourself there...
@@klaxoncowI think a tenth as expensive is not actually that difficult. I live in the Netherlands and was carried off by ambulance once. That ride was €960. It was actually fully paid for by health insurance and so cost me nothing, but I did get to see the bill.
The sixth form joke was a reference to Doctor Who and his habit of changing bodies on a regular basis.
I lolled at the Doctor Who joke.
I love the American accent the most when they say "Thank you for your doodie"
JJ i'm lovin your subtle way of plugging your merch and not forcing it on us just a little finger tap! I salute you o7!
The mug-tickle is very weird and does not warm me to him. I understand the importance of merch but this is creepy.
The moon flag. Beautiful. First LOL of the day.
Ironically, because there's no atmosphere to protect from the sun's radiation, any flag put on the moon would have been bleached pure white by the sun long ago. So the only flag on the moon is the flag of surrender.
I was asked by an American "do you use US Dollars in the UK?"
We all love a bit of playful rubbing from time to time. ;)
Speak for yourself. I prefer the playful rimming.
Except in the rougher parts of town when it's playful robbing...
6:11 _"We have states bigger than your country"_
But - the point was specifically about London (1572 sq km), as opposed to DC (177 sq km) or, say, NYC (784 sq km).
9:48 As of 2023 _"Where does the US rank in education? The United States ranks 13th in education with an Education Index score of 0.883."_ It hasn't been first since the mid-1960s.
Yeh, USA has states bigger than our country. OTOH we have planets bigger than your continent. And footpaths 40 times older than your country. And one of the colleges within our Cambridge University has more Nobel prizes than your country.
‘Sixth form’ is referring to the senior years 16-18 at school before they might go to collage or university (roughly equivalent to 12th form in the US)
That berk thought ‘Form’ Was referring to the student transmogrifying into another species .😂😂😂
It's a Pokemon training school.
They're evolving into their final form.
But the term 'Form' for a year of school, isn't even used in every part of the UK or even in every school in the English bit.
Or from 16-18 you go to college before you go to university... 😂
The sixth form joke was brilliant.
Ooh, what a thrill to hear my hometown, Catford mentioned. 😁
There are almost no Mexican restaurants in Europe. They are common in the USA as so many Mexicans or people descended from Mexicans live in the USa. This is because the US border is relatively easy to cross. Swimming the Atlantic to get to Europe is a little more tricky. Also the main spicy food in the US is Mexican food whereas Europe has Indian food and Mexican stands zero chance of supplanting that.
That's not true at all. There are a lot of Mexican restaurants in every single city in Europe - you can search for Mexican restaurants on Google maps and find that there are just as many Mexican restaurants as Indian restaurants. Although it is true that there are way more Mexican people in the US due to their very close proximity.
@@h-Qalzielin my city we have over 50 Indian restaraunts and 1 Mexican (and it's shite)😂
@@h-QalzielThere isn't a single Mexican restaurant ANYWHERE NEAR where I live. Thousands of Indian ones though.
There are approximately 1500 Mexican restaurants in the whole European continent as compared to 15380 Indian restaurants.@@h-Qalziel
There are approximately 1500 Mexican restaurants on the European continent as compared 15380 Indian restaurants. Also I lived in the UK for 55 years and only ever saw 2 Mexican restaurants neither of which was actually Mexican.@@h-Qalziel
I’m willing to bet that English people know more about Mexico and Mexican food than Americans know about Wales and Welsh food.
Bragging because you know something about your next door neighbour… 😂
You mean Occupied East Wales
@@michaelgillman2505 No he means Occupied West Englandshire.
...and we know what avocados are, lol. :)
@@michaelgillman2505 I didn’t.
@@Thurgosh_OG I didn’t.
I love how americans will measure anything with another object. "How long is this wall? Oh, its 8 dishwashers long. How much flour in this recipe? 2 cups. How big is the yard? Half a football field. How heavy is your truck? About 2 cows and 3 chickens."
How many double decker busses or Olympic sized swimming pools? We Brits do it too
@@MsPataca I've not seen British Cooking recipes, using Imperial for about 50 years. They've been metric for decades, so where are you finding these old recipes from?
That comment about the US probably beating other country in a war made me realize I couldn't think of a war between my country and the US. The reason being; "Official relations were established in 1782 and, as the two were never at war or in serious conflict, were referred to by U.S. President Ronald Reagan in 1982 as "the longest unbroken, peaceful relationship that we have had with any other nation.""
I don't think many people would refer to a fraction of a mile in how many feet there are. Remember, 8 furlongs in a mile, 10 chains to the furlong, 4 rods to the chain, need I go on?
poles and perches, need I go on
Don't forget the playful rimming?!?! :D
And give me a playful rub while you're at it :)
Do you know whats glaswegian for the late queens husband. CHOOKY EMBRA.
😂😂
We just called him Phil the Greek. 🇦🇺
Teasing and bantering, one upping
Hahaha the "Americans have no banter" one. Top notch reply 😂😂😂
We had a friend round who's boyfriend was American i said something about MATA he just had to respond it's MAGA "make america great again " no its MATA "make americans thin again"!
An interesting twist to this is that with the British it can be difficult for an outside observer to discern whether what sounds objectively like an insult is in fact an insult or an expression of camaraderie. As an example, in the job I had many moons ago (not in the UK), my colleagues included an Englishman and a Scotsman who got along extremely well, although it could be difficult to tell when they were in the pub having seemingly violent discussions about football and uttering things like "Right, you miserable Scottish bastard, cheers!"
I was in NY on holiday and a yellow cab driver drove off with me half in, half out of the car. I badly bruised my legs being dragged and broke my wrist. Loads of people appeared from nowhere and were actual angels but they asked me about a million times if I wanted an ambulance as obviously not used recklessly by Americans 😂 It was probably the most expensive journey I’ve ever taken but at least we had insurance and it’s something I can say I’ve done!
You can drop the avocado in the trash/bin [where it belongs] without peeling it, though.
The word you're looking for is "Banter".
Hello from the UK 🇬🇧.....its 'Ribbing' (just meaning a kind of 'taking the piss'!!) ...NOT 'Rimming' (that has a whole different meaning here in the UK!!! involving anal sex acts!!!) 😂😂😂😮!!!
I just love your videos JJ ...keep them 'coming' (also a word that has a double meaning here in the UK 😳 😅!!!)
,
How many more times will you need the "shire" lesson? And to add insult to injury the "derby" part wasn't even pronounced correctly! 😂 Its pronounced "darbyshr" ❤
That's not even that difficult. How about Strathaven, Milngavie, Worcestershire... Difficult, right enough, if you find Glasgow or Edinburgh challenging 🙂
@@MattMcQueen1 Let them try saying 'Avoch' correctly. Plenty more like that and worse in the Highlands.
Coioa Layda was call you later…in English caw ya l8a
only in London. go two miles in another direction when you get out of that toilet, and the accent and dialect changes
Lol😂😂😂😂 Rimming!! Ribbing!
Did you know that over the years the sun has bleached the flag on the moon so it's now all white. So now people think it was the french that landed there. 😎
American 'Moon flags' were so awesome, they even came with their own wind.
American "moon flags" were put there courtesy of a German war criminal.
No one mentioned Twenty five plus paid leave days from work each year in any job, Now that’s freedom along with employment rights.
we call it taking the piss...........
I think the R word was ribbing? Great video, gotta love a bit of banter 😀
It's possible the word you were looking for at the end there was "roasting", but thank you for the chuckle :)
I think he meant 'ribbing'
@@avigailbloch2740 That makes more sense yeah you're right
The 6th Form in a UK school is your last or 2nd last year at school depending if you go onto Upper 6th Form or not.
DERBYSHIRE is pronounced DARBYSHUR.
If you think that 20 KILOS and 20 OUNCES are the same, then you are WELL MISTAKEN !!
"A LOT" means "MANY". Nothing to do with cars !!
"Durbyshyer"!
The '6th Form' term, is not used in every school and much less so in Scotland.
Is there a lower 6th form too?
@@sgtmajor5700 Yes there is. Year 12 (ages 16-17) is also known as the Lower Sixth while Year 13 (17-18, so the year in which you take your A-Levels) is Upper Sixth. I don't know what their equivalents are in America though.
Fair play, this has been your best video in a while . You seem to be like the guy I originally subbed to. You mean playful "ribbing" as in playfully jabbing them in the ribs as a provocation to laugh at their joke. As for the last point...It's both hilarious; as that's something I'd do as I've never bought an avocado whole (although I have tried it and thought it was disgusting), let alone prepped one; but I also find it a bit stupid that Americans would look down on us for that. You guys are next door to Mexico and it was never part of the British Empire. I would be like us looking down on you for not knowing Cymraeg, Indian or even Scottish food
The irony of the American saying we have probably beaten you at war at somepoint when America has never won a war on there own 😂
The word is RIBBING
that means estate agents would have to say everyhouse someone died in deerrr
I believe 'ribbing' was the word you were reaching for. :)
Americans also have to do their doody
JJLA the word you're probably looking for is 'Banter'.
No, it was "ribbing"...
I've been watching your videos for a while now and every time I watch it drives me crazy trying to figure out who it is that you sound like. After months of racking my brain I finally figured it out, you sound just like Jeffrey combs from Star Trek.
Fun fact: The USA flag on the moon is bleached white by the Sun. 😂😂😂
❤❤❤
The US flag on the Moon is now a French flag.
@@Thurgosh_OG White = Traitor 😂
Bloody = Hero ❤️🤣
The US "moon flag" arrived there by courtesy of a German war criminal.
"Derbyshyer"? Ohhh, you mean Darbysher.
Playful ribaldry may have been the term you were looking for? If so, good on you!
I had a case of playful ribaldry once until I bought a hairpiece.
It's banter
Tbf the Mexican gbbo one,Mexican food isn’t a thing here. We’ve started getting Taco Bell which is just a really shit kebab shop. And beans are never fried let alone re fried,that would ruin the toast.
I think the word you are looking for is BANTER.
ribbing, the word is ribbing😉
We (in the U.K.) would say "playful banter" or "ribbing" I think that Americans might say "roasting". If I'm wrong please let me know.
Lol people forget America hasn’t won a war in nearly 100 years
6th Form is the final two years of school.
in some parts of the UK, not all by a long way.
I live in a house that is over 2 hundred years old & It is in tip top condition with all modern stuff & spent lots of money for luxury stuff in it & an American insta friend said to me I should upgrade???my reply back to her was kind & I just said ok
Sixth form is the school year for 16-18 years when they are officially in further education and studying A levels
Only on some schools in England. Many Schools don't use the term 'Form' at all.
@@Thurgosh_OG I was merely explaining what sixth form meant not how many use the term. It’s either sixth form or years 12 and 13
The 4th July is the USA's birthday 🎂
Ribbing is that what word u looking for 12:48
But you can't do "You're"
@@jean-lucpicard5510 it's the spelling police is it 🥱🥱🤫🙄
Last I knew, the cost of an ambulance to take a patient to hospital in the UK would be about £450 per patient. All the beds are also rented for £300 per night.
Official figures for ambulances, show it to be £252 (average), if an ambulance is required to attend a scene and transfer someone to a hospital. Not that the patient has to pay any of that. For the them it is free at the point of use.
America hasn't won that many wars, just destroying poor countries. You lost to Vietnam😂
Was 'banteR' the R word you were looking for? 😀
I am a 66 year old woman living in uk and i always use imperial system.
Ribbing, JJ. It's ribbing.
Ribbing! Kind of shows where you mind went with rimming and rubbing 😉
ribbing/ banter
I thought as an / actor singer you would really appreciate , REN, the Tale of Jenni and screech, full version. Very British and an amazing singer actor himself.
Playful Banter
Playful conversational jousting.
Ribbing
Playful banter!
Music in your videos is SUPER annoying. Couldn't watch.
I get annoyed by your British Accent which is like an East End Gangster, complete with frown.
Ribbing
Ribbing
Ribbing