Want more British culture videos? Watch these next! 🔴 13 Things That Make British People IRRATIONALLY ANGRY ruclips.net/video/FDYTxQJxpGQ/видео.html 🔴 American Couple Explores Small English Town ruclips.net/video/sbLJPT_j3m4/видео.html 🔴 8 Things We HATE About The UK ruclips.net/video/9MJ0iNHvXpQ/видео.html
When you say you have been in New UK houses with separate taps, how old are they in years? My house is around 70 years old and for the area would be classed as fairly new as most are around 100years old minimum. Hence nearly every house has old plumbing and two taps.
The public school thing is because the school isn't payed for by the government, it's payed by a member of the public aka the founder. That's the agreement people in my area have at least
Weatherspoons would be happy to replace the dish with a new dish if it's overcooked or undercooked, mostly we don't complain, if we order something sweet we expect that it's going to be sweet so we won't complain if it's too sweet we just won't eat it. For the most part, there are some Karen's in the UK who will complain about literally everything.
@@helenchelmicka3028 "cheers me mon" here in the Black Country :) What sort of country wouldn't thank the driver though? That's awful, surely just an American thing to be so rude?
I say "thank you" to every bus driver. I am 76 years of age but I still give up my seat to any others who are in greater need than myself ~ Why ? ~ because I'm British √
I think Jessica should research about the uk. I just hate it when people tried to do a British accent you sound like people from London. Just think how many nations make up Great Britain. England is not Great Britain London is not England.
Beans on toast isn't a typical breakfast staple. It is however not anywhere near as "weird" as the American idea of putting syrup with bacon or sausage!!
@@michaeljamesmacaulay1689 I have no doubt ! I didn't learn about the bacon and the butter first hand, but from one of our service engineers who covered the USA and was taken to a state fair by a client, and where he saw stands selling the chocolate covered bacon and deep fried butter. I was too grossed out to hear any more ! 😁
I'm sure you have had pancakes or waffles. In the U.S.they are usually served with either bacon or sausage (link or patty) and eggs served on separate side dishes in restaurants and cafes. If made at home, everything is on one plate.
Except one person fires them down twice as quick and demands everyone else drink up, one person complicates the order by changing their tipple each time, one person buys the round in Spoons costing him £5 and yours is in the wanky hipster bar where every drink is £10, and one person says "nah I'll just get my own". I'm just mixing with the wrong crowd aren't I.
Signing off a letter or email with "Yours sincerely" is only done if the letter starts with "Dear Grace". If one starts with "Dear Sir/Madam" one ends with "Yours faithfully". Personal emails can end "Regards" or "Kind regards", "Love, Tony xx" or "Love. Dad xx" etc.
Strangely enough, I apply the letter-writing convention to e-mails, too. (I do a lot of historical research, so if I'm sending a enquiry to a library etc, I generally address it, "Dear Sir/Madam" and end it "Yours faithfully" - unless I can find a specific contact, in which case I do "Dear Mr. Smith/Ms. Smith" and end it "Yours sincerely" or sometimes "With kind regards.) What I find interesting is that there is such a variance in the way people address e-mails when they send me an enquiry; sometimes it is "Hi" or "Hello", other times I get "Dear Kate", and often it will be "Dear Ms. (Surname)". Saying that, in the past, I've also had "Dear Mrs. (Surname)" . . . and I'm not actually married! (I don't take offence at it, I just find it fascinating.)
@@manamar Yes, it does imply that, I reserve it for Customer Service or help departments that have not performed to their job description. Hugs and Kisses is becoming a popular sign off in these times.
You say this woman claims to have been the UK 10 years. Looking at her views, I doubt she's been there 10 minutes - or she lived in a cupboard under the stairs 👨🏫
Underneath these stairs, I hear the sneers and feel the glares Of my cousin, my uncle and my aunt Can’t believe how cruel they are And it stings my lightning scar To know they’ll never Ever give me what I want
@@brandonaston2261 Nothing wrong with beans and are the main component of the dish it's not really considered a "combination" the toast simply serves as a vehicle to mop up the sauce although the melted butter from the toast does add some extra flavor to the beans.
I've been in the catering trade for nearly 60 years and I do not think it's thing, returning food to the kitchen. If I want revenge on a customer it will not be done surreptitiously, they will know boy will they know. Spitting in their coffee only you know and there may be a little satisfaction in that, but coffee in their lap, they know, you know and their friends know. Uhm. may be I'm evil.
@R Tim Not correct, OP is correct. When writing a formal letter, and you will, for example a job application even if emailed is often a typed letter sent as an attachment, you should always use "yours faithfully" when addressed Dear Sir/Madam and "yours sincerely" when addressed to a name. Email and text yes more informal but still if email is used in a semi-formal work setting, "Hi (person's name)" and "Regards, (your name)" are standard formats for emails. Deal with a lot of this at my work, look for correct spelling and grammar from applications, poor examples go straight in the bin. Saying they aren't essential any longer is the slippery slope towards poor standards and ultimately anarchy!! ;)
Fun fact. Heinz beans in the UK were specially formulated for that market, they were unique to it. Here in Canada I can buy about 12 different varieties of Heinz beans, including "British" style.
@@julianb1474 i found that out when visiting Banff. Was slightly confusing at first, i never thought of ours being "British" until i saw that was stood there trying to work out if i wanted British or original flavour. Think the staff at the shop thought the hapless Brit was having some sort of breakdown with the beans.
I always think that the rising inflection is just passing on the joy of speaking to you. 😀 Why the heck does autocorrect want to keep changing Joy to Not?
In all my adult life I have only had one "comp" meal in London. It was suggested by one of the party who was a former restaurant manager. The rest of us were totally amazed that it could be done. She (the suggester of the comp) stuck to her guns and argued for 20 mins that we were not paying for the vile food and awful service. As she got louder & louder, this attracted attention from other diners, we were actually quietly murmuring, "its fine its fine we will pay" and eventually the manager comped the entire meal asking us to leave immediately. Could be because she wasn't British.
@@thewhovianhippo7103 I know, I'm crazy, up is down and down is up to me, I wear hats on my feet and an old boot on my head and walk backwards everywhere, paahahahaha!! Cuckoo cuckoo!
I've never not said thank you to a bus driver, regardless of where I am and how good/bad the driving was. It's a habit I just can't break, plus if the driver was rude I'll say it anyway but in a sarcastic manner.
For goodness sake, why is it so difficult for Americans to grasp the concept of putting the plug in a washbasin??? Is this really the nation that's just managed to dump a vehicle the size of a Range Rover on Mars?
Because it’s insanely inefficient to grab a plug, put it in the drain, turn on some cold water, turn on some hot water, get the right mix, lather your hands with soap in a bowl of water, rinse them in the water that’s now gross with the dirt that just came off your hands, and pull out the stopper. Just turn on the tap to warm, wash your hands in the stream of water and turn it off. Done. Brits would drop all the individual pieces of the Range Rover on Mars, try to assemble them from 130 million miles away and then wonder why people look at them like they’re nuts.
Here's a good old British phrase "Jessica is talking utter Bollocks". As for the language issues I think you'll find we invented this the clue is in the name. Even new houses you should never drink from a hot tap as it goes through a boiler very unhealthy, the cold is straight off the mains supply. 🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧
Trained bar staff should know who's next. When, years ago, I worked as a barman, we were told that it was important to mentally note the order in which people came to the bar. Not, easy, especially if it's busy. Much easier in a "local" where you are likely to know the customers by name.
If the bar staff turn to me to be served and I know someone was before me, I say say that 'that person was before me' in a conversational and friendly way or even turn to the person to let them get served first.
For basically my entire childhood I washed my hands on the cold tap because the hot was too hot. Now I tend to go hot for the first 10 seconds and switch to cold when it gets too hot. ...sometimes there will be a sign in public toilets that says “Caution hot water”! I love being a Brit it’s hilarious! 😂
When I was a kid we used to put in the plug, get some water in the sink and wash hands that way, then rinse under the cold, now as an adult I do similar to you, the hot for as long as I can tolerate then switch to the cold mainly to prevent my skin from peeling off.
The hundred "byes" and "he was first in the queue" is because all social interactions have to be as awkward (and insincere) as possible. It's a British rule 😂
Sorry about this, but I have to tell you about the 'cheese/nightmares' thing. Many years ago I was a university summer school. I was vegetarian and at that time the veggie options were very limited. The only thing I could have for dinner was a blue-cheese pasta bake. That night I woke up screaming twice: the first nightmare was about a manky tramp (vagrant) grabbing me as I exited a phone box - he kissed me and one of his teeth came out in my mouth. I woke up half screaming and half retching. The second nightmare was even worse. I still remember this vividly 30+ years later.
10:42 Public schools were originally so called when they were founded, some going back to the late Middle Ages, because previously the only education was through a church or military school or private tutoring for the very select few. Most public schools set about to provide an education to boys (not girls) regardless of class, occupation, home location or religion, making them "public". Eton for example was originally founded to educate a small number of poor boys from the area so they could graduate into university. The term public school is still used by places such as Eton in reference to their original status, but the education profession prefers the term "independent schools" rather than private schools. A government funded school such as your local comprehensive would be termed a state school.
The candy from the beach called 'rock' is more analogous to candy canes. It's a stick of sugary hard candy and there's often a shop dedicated to selling only 'sticks of rock' which can come in all sorts of flavours.
Britishes? I'm British but have never heard of that, and fish finger sandwiches are brilliant as are bacon sandwiches and chip ( fries ) sandwiches, you don't know until you try 😀🇬🇧🇺🇸🇬🇧🇺🇸
My fish finger sarnies are a gourmet delight... 50/50 bread from asda, Spreadable butter, Asda pink Seafood sauce (Thickly spread on both slices), chopped iceberg lettuce, four omega 3 Birdseye fish fingers straight from the George Formby... a dash of bottled lemon juice and a touch of salt.
"Dissapointing candy sticks" I have never been so offended 😤😂 Update: Nevermind I hadn't got to the beans on toast comment yet because that one truly hurt
Here in Canada too. Where I live, I try to be polite, but if someone tries to cut in, I will tell them where the back of the line is if someone else doesn't.
@@mayloo2137 it's 12,25 am here in Leeds. No snow either, sadly. I love snow. Have a lovely afternoon May, thanks for taking the time to reply. 😁 Canada sounds very nice
A public school in England and Wales is a fee-charging endowed school originally for older boys that was "public" in the sense of being open to pupils irrespective of locality, denomination or paternal trade or profession.
Before schools were opened that were available to anyone who could pay the fee (if there were one), the schools were opened by trade guilds etc and were exclusively for the children of guild members. The first truly free schools open to any child were often opened by the church which is why we still have so many schools with Saints names (some are still part managed by churches).
The very first public schools were for members of the Royal Court and their families. Previously it had only been royal children that had been tutored. Even though it was still only a small privileged group of children that were now being educated, it was public in the sense that it was no longer just for royalty.
@@stevebarlow3154 many people were tutored - anyone with lots of land sent their children to learn to keep accounts and understand some law. In Scotland the education act of 1496 made education compulsory for the children of substantial landowners.
@@charlestaylor3027 Indeed, I should have said that the children of the royal courtiers were the first to be taught as a group and have regular lessons.
I'm gonna hit back on this one with weird US things 1. Why do you have parcels dropped at your door? only for someone to steal them, this idea is awful 2. What's up with carrying cash absolutely everywhere? The whole world has moved on with contactless. Surely carrying all this cash is a recipe for disaster 3. You call jelly jello, but jello is a brand so what do you call jelly that's not made by the jello company? 4. What's up with bin bags lining the streets everywhere you go? Is there no system, This has to attract rats? 5. Cheese in a can 6.You have elections..... FOR 597 DAYS... Then the President elect has to wait another 3 months just to sit in the White House, this is just crazy 7. When watching US TV it seems to me you can not cope without 15 minutes of what's coming up, followed by tons of advertising cliffhangers and the most dramatic music you will ever hear, in fact most reality TV will clip together parts from different times to make it seem more dramatic 8. Go to a store in the US, pick something out, go to the cashier and BOOM... Tax🤦🏾 9. Have a nice day, have a nice day, have a nice day.... Grrrrr, no one believes this is sincere at all 10. Erbs.... There is absolutely no need for you to say this, but you do, and it has nothing to do with accents.
Agree with most. On the parcels thing, if it was only the post office doing delivery, that would be one thing, but there's a whole variety of couriers in use now, so I'm not sure what the alternative is.
@@julianb1474 Same here in the UK, DPD, DHL, Parcel Force, FEDEX, UPS, Yodel, Royal Mail, Collect Plus and Hermes all deliver in the UK but we have a system and it goes like this, if Royal Mail (National Post Service) deliver a parcel but you are not in then there are 3 options, leave the parcel somewhere hidden, leave the parcel with a neighbour or take the parcel to the nearest Royal Mail depot, if any of the 3 things above have happened you get left a card which details where your parcel is. Now if the other major companies deliver your parcel you will normally be able to track its journey and if you are not in you can request it to be redelivered, have it sent to a local store which you have to go and collect it or you can direct the driver to put it in a place that you trust is safe. You don't get parcels stolen here.
It used to be a thing of 'No Trainers' (sneakers) for entry into a club (disco or dance in my day). Basically you had to be smartly dressed for admission. It might be different today.
10:37 Public schools are called that beacause they are open to the public. Before state schools children were sent to the schools run by your church or employer.
If that yank lady can't suss why they are called fish fingers ,then it's already to late , you say fish don't have fingers ,.maybe so ,BUT THEY DINT HAVE STICKS EITHER !!!!
I do not recognise any of the things "Jessica" is complaining about. My guess is, if that was her experience, she spent 10 years in the home counties or London area.
Fish finger sandwiches, on white bread, with a bit of tomato sauce (ketchup) 😋 It's amazing, please try it 😊 Edit: thanks for your suggestions, I'll have to try them out 😋🙂
I generally avoid getting into rounds being a teetotaller, I'mma have a water or a £2 juice, also I'm teetotal, I don't want to be handling other people's alcohol!
I beg to differ on the rounds thing being complex here (at about 13:30). I was once in a bar in New York and a local guy (a regular there) explained that you give the bartender an extra dollar when you pay for each drink then later he buys you a drink back....or something. I didn’t understand it then and I still can’t work out how it was meant to work. Enjoying these vids btw.
On the subject of hot and cold taps, try running both into the basin, that's what the plug is for and you will also save some water over washing hands under running water. Handy tip if your water is on a meter as is increasingly common.
I'm not sure about this Jessica, I don't feel like she's having fun with this, her tone feels a bit sneering to me. Anyway... The tutting IS the conflict! The ultimate sanction! The swan thing is kind of true, in the sense that it's one of those things that keeps getting repeated. But it's never questioned. Logically if the beating of a swan's wing could break your arm, it would also break its wing, as birds' bones are thinner & weaker than ours. What the hell is a troach drop, or an army & navy tablet?! Never heard of them! Our rock isn't the same as your rock candy, they're sticks of (usually peppermint flavoured) candy, often with the name of the resort running along their length. If you google "Blackpool rock" you should find some classic examples. The school thing goes back centuries, when rich families would hire personal tutors for their children. Public schools were so-called because they were open for a paying public, rather than being employed privately by families. This was long before there was any concept of universal or state education, so the confusion never arose. The tap/faucet thing has been explained over and over again ad nauseam. Any American who has even a passing interest in Britain MUST have encountered this and learned the reasons before now, so she's clearly just trying to pick a fight. As for why we still do it in new houses - why not? If it ain't broke. And the serious answer is that however clean your hot water is, if it is in contact with your cold water, that means all your stored water is warm and is a legionella risk.
@10:16 Jessica may be less confused if she learned the difference between patronizing a person and giving your patronage to a business. public schools are paid for by the public that attend them. -state school are paid for by the state.
In the UK we have some beautiful beaches, not necessarily all that warm and sunny! Beaches in Northumberland were even used/stolen by the Canadian tourist bored to advertise their coastline in adverts!
Indeed, Americans who think that London IS the entire UK, will probably go to Brighton and say" all The beaches are pebbles" 😂 we have 5000 miles of coastline in the British isles, and some are as beautiful as the Caribbean. Take a look at Scotland's north coast.
I live in Brighton and love the sound the shingle and pebbles make as the waves retreat. My other favourite beach is at Aberdyfi, in Wales. It's a fabulous beach made of very fine white sand that stretches along the coast as far as the eye can see.
I live in Guernsey and we have great beaches. But personally I prefer stoney/rocky beaches because sand is a pain in the arse, gets everywhere. I'd much rather find a beach where you can go into the water straight off the rocks. Just my preference.
13:30 ish depends on how the culture does rounds. In German the rules are pretty simple: if you sit at a table where people are playing cards or dice the loser has to order a round, if you drop a card or dice you have to buy a round and if you are about to leave and hadn't yet have to buy a round you have to buy a round. Though here buying a round means that you decide what everyone else gets to drink (with the exception of beer, there you let the people choose their own preference as people are extremely religious about their type of beer (this is intervowen into class system, origin, social status, position in the family and so on, so way too sensitive to challenge if you aren't looking for a fight) ,so you can look out for the most evil Schnapps there is on the menue to make everyone else curse your name for making them drink it. Alternatively there is a ship's bell usually near the counter that you can ring which means that you will buy everyone in the Kneipe (~pub/ beer hall) the next round of drink of their choosing, usually done if you want to celebrate something
'At the Bar' etiquette is hugely important when there is a big group of people waiting. Everyone there knows who was there before them and no one likes a queue jumper, but whoever the person is that points to who's turn it actually is, virtually guarantees themselves to be served second.
As a Brit, I would say that patronise - pronounced pat-tro-nise means to treat someone as if they're stupid; whereas pay-tro-nise means frequent as a customer. The former is a lot more common
I'd offer a business my patronage, I wouldn't patronise them unless they deserve it. I feel it's another burgled/burglarized thing, though I could totally be wrong on that.
In London, many don't thank the driver but those who do usually say, "thanks driver" or "cheers" and we do have a number of sandy beaches in the UK as well as pebbled ones
is a woman called Kim Woodburn lives near me who walks to the front of the queue declaring who she is in the local shop every time i see her. apparently she's of the TV and must assume she's entitled. People just can't be arsed with her. I once got glass in my food and didn't complain but i am Irish and just didn't go back.
Lol, when I hang up my phone, I always say bye, bye, bye, bye,bye! I cant help it I even know I do it but its such a force of habit, I often laugh at myself :D
We had separate water taps in the US until (from my almost 79-year-old viewpoint) fairly recently, when single tap faucets were introduced. Every house I lived in until I got married had bathroom sinks like that.
Now then, the bar queue thing. Having spent plenty of time both sides of the bar, any decent bar person has the queue memorised. However, if you are sixth in the queue and say “no, this person was next”, then you can advance to second in line.
Furthermore, signalling to the bartender with a longitudinally folded banknote between the index and middle fingers will actually render you invisible.
@sameebah As a former barman customers who make simple consistent orders every time are a dream during busy periods. I'd always prioritize someone like you over some half-blitzed person trying to remember a round of random drinks for 8 people, plus a round of shots. And you and your pal have good taste in whiskey.
@@Canalcoholic I hated that! Oh, you've got money to PAY for your drink so I should serve you first? Like I'm just giving all these other people drinks for free?
As mentioned the mixing of clean and dirty water, the failure of the fixing on the swivel of the mixed tap system one can fail and you still have a usable tap. Put the plug in add cold then add hot to suit. It's not rocket science, really simple !
It reminds me of the woman who says to the fellow holding the door open for her, 'You needn't hold the door open because I'm a lady.' The fellow replies, 'I didn't, I held it open because I'm a gentleman.'
Saying thank you when getting off a bus - I do that anyway, except when the bus breaks down and I'm going to miss a train and have to call a taxi to get to the train station on time.... Fortunately I don't uses buses much. Don't forget, the bus driver is probably bored to death and everybody appreciates the occasional thank you. As for obliging everybody else to do the same after me, how rude is it to NOT thank the driver for getting you to your destination? That's not Britishness, that's just respect.
The idea that eating cheese at night gives one nightmares (whilst probably a myth), goes back a long way. In A Christmas. Carol (1843), Dickens has Ebenezer Scrooge make a weak joke to the ghost of Jacob Martley that he can only see him because he ate cheese for his supper.. Incidentally, the equally mythical idea that a Swan can break your arm (or leg) is almost universal in Britain.
As a person who has been around swans quite a bit yes they can do some serious damage to a human be it from actually attacking a human in defence to trying to evade capture and it is perfectly possible for a swan to break a human arm. The monarch owning all the swans in. The UK dates back hundreds of years when it was a Royal decree that swans were on the menu at Royal Banquets this law does actually stand to this day but the monarch actually only owns the mute swans throughout the entire UK not the Whooper swans who are migratory to the UK in the summer
About the swans thing. A few years ago, I was fishing the nearby river, and 2 swans came along, One a bit larger, I think it was male and female. The female got out on the bank and literally waddled right around me, then got back into the water after it passed me. The male just swam by giving me the evil eye. Then they both swam on. And I didnt even catch any fish.
They're called 'public' schools because they're paid for by the members of the public (that go to them), and normal schools are 'state' schools because the state pays for them. The name refers to who funds them
Aristocrats used private tutors; public schools came into being the still rich who couldn't afford tutors but could manage to pay for schooling. County schools were set up at the end of 19th century and were the beginning of publicly funded state education
The original public schools date back to the middle ages. Previously it was only children of royalty that were tutored. Then it was opened up to members of the Royal Court and their relatives. Still a small elite group, but public in the sense it wasn't just for royalty any more.
The issues with the "two taps" thing are that it's been explained to death about 8 million times to the point that as yet undiscovered tribes in the heart of the Peruvian jungle know it about yet "the greatest country in the world" cannot comprehend something so simple boggles the mind. Secondly the way it's presented in these videos seems to imply that it's something we choose to have whereas for the most part the houses we have grown up in over the last 60 years or so came equipped like it so we had no choice in the matter, obviously things are changing but considering the ages of some of our properties there are still many traditional style water outlets installed all across this island of ours.
When living in South Korea I was offered some cooked dog, it got as far as my mouth but then my cultural conditioning kicked in. I just couldn’t bring my self to try it. However when in Australia the Kangaroo sausages were amazing.
For me, it's milk in first. That way, if I accidentally "glug" too much milk into the cup/mug, I can remove some before I pour the tea. Accidentally pouring too much milk when the tea is _already_ in the cup/mug results in over-milky tea, which I detest.
Two separate taps, to fill the sink with water twice as fast obviously :You Americans spending twice as long filling sinks than us, that's why we have had all that extra time to invent things. :)
Excellent point. I have a mixer tap in my kitchen and it is so slow and useless and it's impossible to control the temperature. Thankfully, for my bath, I have separate taps.
What's this weird American idea that every place in UK has 2 taps one hot and one cold. Some do, which depends on the type of sink fitted. Most don't and are single mixer tap.
That was very funny. I’m British and I think many of the things you point out are weird. Nowt wrong with Beans on Toast though. The word “Butty” being smutty never struck me before - I will never think of butties in the same way 😂😂😂😂
No idea how I missed this video when you first uploaded it a couple of years ago, but I'm watching it now and can't stop laughing...because it's all so true! I've never heard "Britishes", BTW, in my 50 years of living here. The part about the flexible meaning and/or threat level implied by "fuck off" is definitely spot on. 😆 So much of understanding English here in the UK is being able to appreciate context, and I think a lot of that only comes with experience. I couldn't explain to someone how I know when someone means a certain phrase sarcastically, threateningly or sincerely, but somehow it's become a superpower I gained from being born and raised here. Love this video, and watching the two of you recognising the truth in those tweets. 😁
Love the videos. As a Brit I'm going to stand up for the round system. In my circle it's used between my close group of friends who'll go to the pub a couple of times a week and out on the town on the weekend. We all drink similiar drinks, each pub will of course cost more or less than the last but the mutual agreement is that over 20+ years of drinking together, it'll all even itself out. Huge win if your round falls in a Wetherspoons. The other plus is that only one person needs to go and queue for drinks (although that's not to say more than one may surround the bar to try and get served quicker). This of course benefits the bar staff also, avoiding having to take 4 or 5 seperate orders for a single drink. There is always that one guy who fancies a cocktail or similarly expensive beverage at some point in the night, this could prompt a number of events: 1) The whole group transitions to the equally expensive drink. 2) The rounds continue and the perpetraitor is on the receiving end of abuse for the rest of the night for being 'that guy'. 3) The rounds stop as it's likely at that point where people start to separate/leave/stop drinking. 4) Rounds continue but in smaller groups - I regularly end up in a round of 2 with my best mate towards the end of any night as we know we stick to the same places. I also enjoy the system as it keeps the ongoing joke about whose round it is going throughout the night, someone always gets tricked into their round . Completely away from rounds, if we ever go out in a group of say 10+ people for football nights or for Stag weekends etc, we tend to use a 'kitty' system instead. Each person will throw say £50 in the kitty for the night and we use the combined money to pay for the drinks throughout the night. If the money runs out, each person will put another £20 or so in to keep the drinks coming. We used to use cash for this but we now just transfer the money to one persons Monzo account (created especially for kitty purposes) and this card is used for the night to save any disputes on rounds etc. I share your frustrations when food is involved however. If I'm going to a restaurant and I've had a cheap meal yet my friend has ordered steak and wine - that's not getting split down the middle! If each person has ordered something that costs fairly similar, I'd rather just split it though than fuss over maybe just a quid or two's difference, again, it'll probably get evened out at the next meal. Those people that try and order the most expensive items and split the bill are normally outed.
Want more British culture videos? Watch these next!
🔴 13 Things That Make British People IRRATIONALLY ANGRY ruclips.net/video/FDYTxQJxpGQ/видео.html
🔴 American Couple Explores Small English Town ruclips.net/video/sbLJPT_j3m4/видео.html
🔴 8 Things We HATE About The UK ruclips.net/video/9MJ0iNHvXpQ/видео.html
When you say you have been in New UK houses with separate taps, how old are they in years?
My house is around 70 years old and for the area would be classed as fairly new as most are around 100years old minimum. Hence nearly every house has old plumbing and two taps.
I like the consistent electricity supply.
The public school thing is because the school isn't payed for by the government, it's payed by a member of the public aka the founder. That's the agreement people in my area have at least
The repeated bye's are usually because the person on the other end refuses to shut up the first time you say bye.
Weatherspoons would be happy to replace the dish with a new dish if it's overcooked or undercooked, mostly we don't complain, if we order something sweet we expect that it's going to be sweet so we won't complain if it's too sweet we just won't eat it. For the most part, there are some Karen's in the UK who will complain about literally everything.
Saying "Thank You" to a bus driver is just good manners. It is not applied maths! It's not difficult either.
Right I always say thank you even getting out of a cab
Here in Bristol it's never thank you - always "cheers drive"
@@helenchelmicka3028 😂 very true
@@helenchelmicka3028 "cheers me mon" here in the Black Country :) What sort of country wouldn't thank the driver though? That's awful, surely just an American thing to be so rude?
I say "thank you" to every bus driver.
I am 76 years of age but I still give
up my seat to any others who are
in greater need than myself ~
Why ? ~ because I'm British √
“Britishes” is absolutely wrong, it’s simply not a word.
Thanks for letting us know 😂😂
It smacks of something a German would bark in a WW2 film.
Obviously a typo. It might've been "Britishers", but even that's not an English word, it's German. As might've been the person that typed it.
@sameebah Numerous times!
@@Otacatapetl Numerous typos!
Jessica doesn't sound like shes lived in the UK for 10 years
She sounds like she's just made it all up for attention
Agree entirely.
Yep.
She’s actually stayed here for a day and gotten pissed out of her mind in a club, hence the tweets.
I think Jessica should research about the uk. I just hate it when people tried to do a British accent you sound like people from London. Just think how many nations make up Great Britain. England is not Great Britain London is not England.
I can only assume that Jessica lives near Brighton and has remained resolutely companionless during her stay in the UK
The dog on the counter joke was just absolutely savage haha.
I found the dog one funny lol I thought grace might of kicked him under the counter for his Comment 🙂
It was funny but some ppl in this day and age will find it racist
@@happyguy2k Like many things, it depends on who's saying it and the intent behind it.
I actually laughed out loud at the dog on the 'bar top' joke. Anyone that thinks it's racist needs a sense of humor transplant.
I found it super offensive LOL
If someone uses the term ''Britishers' they have never been to the UK in their whole life#
I've heard it used a few times, mainly by Indian ex-pats living in the UK
Not quite true. Britishes as per the video is wrong, Britishers has an element of colonial teasing.
@@andyxox4168 what an unpleasant choice of phrase Andy
Beans on toast isn't a typical breakfast staple. It is however not anywhere near as "weird" as the American idea of putting syrup with bacon or sausage!!
Or chocolate covered bacon. Or deep fried butter.
@@Kevin-mx1vi ... and then on top of multi-storey pancakes !!!
@@michaeljamesmacaulay1689 I have no doubt !
I didn't learn about the bacon and the butter first hand, but from one of our service engineers who covered the USA and was taken to a state fair by a client, and where he saw stands selling the chocolate covered bacon and deep fried butter. I was too grossed out to hear any more ! 😁
@@Kevin-mx1vi chocolate covered bacon ?
and deep fried butter ?
Please excuse me while I vomit !!!
I'm sure you have had pancakes or waffles. In the U.S.they are usually served with either bacon or sausage (link or patty) and eggs served on separate side dishes in restaurants and cafes. If made at home, everything is on one plate.
We from Britain are called Britons as a collective.
as opposed to Bretons who will just shrug and ignore you :)
Sometimes called "brits"
Buying a round at the pub is not complicated, if 5 people are in a group each person buys a round and each round contains the same drinks each time
Except one person fires them down twice as quick and demands everyone else drink up, one person complicates the order by changing their tipple each time, one person buys the round in Spoons costing him £5 and yours is in the wanky hipster bar where every drink is £10, and one person says "nah I'll just get my own". I'm just mixing with the wrong crowd aren't I.
and feeling the need to stay for 5 bloody pints. Especially if you are last in the group and have yet to buy a round. Hic!
Complaining at restaurants is like asking for our food to be spat on.
Iv been British for 38 years (I'm 38 lol) I honestly think Jessica Rose is just making things up that don't exist 😂
Paul, i've been British for 61 years and agree.
@@russcattell955i Dm me on insta. Let's be besties lol
@@simplypaul8681 You are welcome to have a look at my insta and comment. I live in France by the way.
@@russcattell955i what's your insta?
@@simplypaul8681 russcattell
Signing off a letter or email with "Yours sincerely" is only done if the letter starts with "Dear Grace". If one starts with "Dear Sir/Madam" one ends with "Yours faithfully". Personal emails can end "Regards" or "Kind regards", "Love, Tony xx" or "Love. Dad xx" etc.
Thank you for explaining, Tony!!
Strangely enough, I apply the letter-writing convention to e-mails, too. (I do a lot of historical research, so if I'm sending a enquiry to a library etc, I generally address it, "Dear Sir/Madam" and end it "Yours faithfully" - unless I can find a specific contact, in which case I do "Dear Mr. Smith/Ms. Smith" and end it "Yours sincerely" or sometimes "With kind regards.) What I find interesting is that there is such a variance in the way people address e-mails when they send me an enquiry; sometimes it is "Hi" or "Hello", other times I get "Dear Kate", and often it will be "Dear Ms. (Surname)". Saying that, in the past, I've also had "Dear Mrs. (Surname)" . . . and I'm not actually married! (I don't take offence at it, I just find it fascinating.)
@@jcstato9048 They were examples, could have written "Dear miss @@@@@" or "Love @@@@ xx"
"Kind regards" is a fine sign off. However "Regards" expresses seething hatred for the recipient.
@@manamar Yes, it does imply that, I reserve it for Customer Service or help departments that have not performed to their job description. Hugs and Kisses is becoming a popular sign off in these times.
You say this woman claims to have been the UK 10 years. Looking at her views, I doubt she's been there 10 minutes - or she lived in a cupboard under the stairs 👨🏫
Cue American singing the Harry Potter theme tune cause they think we do that here
@@craiganthonyhill why fried rice why not burgers that's American speciality (yes this is a joke)
@@thewhovianhippo7103 I'm old, thick & didn't get the rice thing either 😀
Underneath these stairs,
I hear the sneers and feel the glares
Of my cousin, my uncle and my aunt
Can’t believe how cruel they are
And it stings my lightning scar
To know they’ll never
Ever give me what I want
@@jazzzzy4 My reply was Harry Potter related lmao 😂
The unconscious thigh slap when you said “right I’m off”
Someone that scoffs at beans on toast hasn't actually had beans on toast, they are awesome especially if topped with cheese and Worcestershire sauce.
I haven’t had beans on toast but I can only assume it tastes like beans on toast lol. Not exactly a rippling combination.
@@brandonaston2261 Nothing wrong with beans and are the main component of the dish it's not really considered a "combination" the toast simply serves as a vehicle to mop up the sauce although the melted butter from the toast does add some extra flavor to the beans.
No you are wrong they are disgusting and yes I have tried it and yes I am British!
@@lukewalker3 I'm going to petition the King to have you excommunicated.
@@davew4998 good I would gladly take it for the country and what I standing believe disgusting 🤢
The only weird as hell thing here is Jessica 🙄
I think I've sussed that, in American, "weird" means "Something the Americans don't do".
Which is weird, because to us it is everything that they do do.
@@helenwood8482 Can't disagree with you there 🤣🤣
Exactly. We are the status quo. 🤣🤣
@@WanderingRavens Good group them. Status Quo
Weird is inherently subjective to everyone - quite simply something that’s not ordinary to that individual.
NEVER EVER complain about the food in the UK 🇬🇧 - you don't want to eat food you returned to the kitchen - EVER!
Haha, good to know. Are british cooks famous for messing with people's food?
I've been in the catering trade for nearly 60 years and I do not think it's thing, returning food to the kitchen. If I want revenge on a customer it will not be done surreptitiously, they will know boy will they know. Spitting in their coffee only you know and there may be a little satisfaction in that, but coffee in their lap, they know, you know and their friends know. Uhm. may be I'm evil.
We have basically have no food that's is from Britan
This is bullshit, I worked in kitchens for years and no self respecting cook or chef would mess with someone's food.
Had a still frozen solid Cauliflower and sauce on a Christmas meal once and a frozen Steak and ale pie, sent them back.
I was taught in school if you know the persons name who your writing to you end with sincerely, if you don't know their name you end with faithfully.
@R Tim Not correct, OP is correct. When writing a formal letter, and you will, for example a job application even if emailed is often a typed letter sent as an attachment, you should always use "yours faithfully" when addressed Dear Sir/Madam and "yours sincerely" when addressed to a name.
Email and text yes more informal but still if email is used in a semi-formal work setting, "Hi (person's name)" and "Regards, (your name)" are standard formats for emails. Deal with a lot of this at my work, look for correct spelling and grammar from applications, poor examples go straight in the bin.
Saying they aren't essential any longer is the slippery slope towards poor standards and ultimately anarchy!! ;)
After watching this video,Jessica reminds me of that line in The Life of Brian. "....OHHH,SHE'S MAKING IT UP AS SHE GOES ALONG!!!"
Ahhh genius!! 😅😅😅
Beans on buttered wholemeal toast is actually a fairly healthy snack.
I had that with melted cheese on top for dinner
I add curry powder to the beans.
I like to put grated cheese on the top and it melts all into the beans
Fun fact. Heinz beans in the UK were specially formulated for that market, they were unique to it. Here in Canada I can buy about 12 different varieties of Heinz beans, including "British" style.
@@julianb1474 i found that out when visiting Banff. Was slightly confusing at first, i never thought of ours being "British" until i saw that was stood there trying to work out if i wanted British or original flavour.
Think the staff at the shop thought the hapless Brit was having some sort of breakdown with the beans.
Jessica has NEVER been to the UK!
Just saying “Bye” once and putting the phone down?! Cold.
I agree and say a lot about the attitude of the person on the other end of the telephone line.
but the high pitched bye-eee makes me feel like the person is being scarcastic and wants to get away from me
I always think that the rising inflection is just passing on the joy of speaking to you. 😀 Why the heck does autocorrect want to keep changing Joy to Not?
100% you may as well say 'get stuffed'
@@lexxieburton6182 they probably are
Eric, that guy in the queue played you... I’d have told him to p*ss off to the back of the line lol
In all my adult life I have only had one "comp" meal in London. It was suggested by one of the party who was a former restaurant manager. The rest of us were totally amazed that it could be done. She (the suggester of the comp) stuck to her guns and argued for 20 mins that we were not paying for the vile food and awful service. As she got louder & louder, this attracted attention from other diners, we were actually quietly murmuring, "its fine its fine we will pay" and eventually the manager comped the entire meal asking us to leave immediately. Could be because she wasn't British.
I doubt I would enjoy the company of Jessica as much as I enjoy the fun you two generate. She strikes me as a misery-guts. Anyone else agree?
Absolutely. She would not be welcome at my place whereas Eric and Grace would be.
Yes. Usually I love Americans who bother to come over and join in with us, but she apparently just came to hate us.
100%
Sounds like she hates us, if she doesn't like life here why has she stuck around for 10 years?
Totally
Scones are not a breakfast item 🤦♀️
They can be if you want, I had a scone for breakfast yesterday myself.
But then I am a bit of a rebel and like to live life on the edge.
But but but we have them for tea
@@thewhovianhippo7103
I know, I'm crazy, up is down and down is up to me, I wear hats on my feet and an old boot on my head and walk backwards everywhere, paahahahaha!! Cuckoo cuckoo!
@@jackdshellback3819 i eat Beans as a desert
If its breakfast tea scones are fine for breakfast
Jessica Rose needs some sort of therapy
I doubt she ever lived in the UK, made up
@@debswales4869 Or lived in London which is not like the rest of the UK at all.
@@debswales4869 I agee, sounds like she is getting her information from someone who lived in the UK, in 1970 and older, so not relevant
As someone from London, she hasn’t lived here, either.
A false "no you first" should be met by "thank you" and acceptance of the offer.
As a Brit, the Cheese before bed and Swan thing is accurate
Traditional British club bouncer call as you try to enter some clubs:
"OI! Can't you bleedin' read. It sez NO TRAINERS!
Never understood that why does the landlord not want his costomers to wear trainers ?
@@johnmccallum8512 Common as muck, not classy enough for his fine establishment 😉
@@dave_h_8742 This is Huddersfield there are no "classy" establishments in this here town.
@@johnmccallum8512 😂😂😂
I've never not said thank you to a bus driver, regardless of where I am and how good/bad the driving was. It's a habit I just can't break, plus if the driver was rude I'll say it anyway but in a sarcastic manner.
I did this today to a surly bus driver, embarrassed him when I was nice..
For goodness sake, why is it so difficult for Americans to grasp the concept of putting the plug in a washbasin??? Is this really the nation that's just managed to dump a vehicle the size of a Range Rover on Mars?
Because it’s insanely inefficient to grab a plug, put it in the drain, turn on some cold water, turn on some hot water, get the right mix, lather your hands with soap in a bowl of water, rinse them in the water that’s now gross with the dirt that just came off your hands, and pull out the stopper. Just turn on the tap to warm, wash your hands in the stream of water and turn it off. Done. Brits would drop all the individual pieces of the Range Rover on Mars, try to assemble them from 130 million miles away and then wonder why people look at them like they’re nuts.
@@kevinmiller1121 you don’t use the plug to only wash your hands hahah, you use the plug when you’re washing the dishes!
@@saouke In the UK we have washing up bowls for washing the dishes and sauce pans, I feel we are not wasting too using too much water that way too.
@@saouke So, which tap do you use to wash your hands - the freezing cold one, or the boiling hot one?
@@kevinmiller1121 The hot one. It takes time to heat up
Here's a good old British phrase "Jessica is talking utter Bollocks". As for the language issues I think you'll find we invented this the clue is in the name. Even new houses you should never drink from a hot tap as it goes through a boiler very unhealthy, the cold is straight off the mains supply. 🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧
I would never recommend pushing into a queue in Britain as you are likely to get a good kicking!
Everybody in a pub knows who is next, although the bar staff may not.
Trained bar staff should know who's next. When, years ago, I worked as a barman, we were told that it was important to mentally note the order in which people came to the bar. Not, easy, especially if it's busy. Much easier in a "local" where you are likely to know the customers by name.
Exactly, as with many of her points, she is incorrect and confused.
@@raymartin7172 Yeah, but that's the problem isn't, most pubs are chain pubs who employ (mostly) incompetent kids who have no desire to be at work.
And the unwritten rule in my group of friends was while you were in the round you ordered drinks in the same price range
If the bar staff turn to me to be served and I know someone was before me, I say say that 'that person was before me' in a conversational and friendly way or even turn to the person to let them get served first.
For basically my entire childhood I washed my hands on the cold tap because the hot was too hot. Now I tend to go hot for the first 10 seconds and switch to cold when it gets too hot.
...sometimes there will be a sign in public toilets that says “Caution hot water”! I love being a Brit it’s hilarious! 😂
When I was a kid we used to put in the plug, get some water in the sink and wash hands that way, then rinse under the cold, now as an adult I do similar to you, the hot for as long as I can tolerate then switch to the cold mainly to prevent my skin from peeling off.
The hundred "byes" and "he was first in the queue" is because all social interactions have to be as awkward (and insincere) as possible. It's a British rule 😂
The long goodbyes are only for our loved ones
Sorry about this, but I have to tell you about the 'cheese/nightmares' thing. Many years ago I was a university summer school. I was vegetarian and at that time the veggie options were very limited. The only thing I could have for dinner was a blue-cheese pasta bake. That night I woke up screaming twice: the first nightmare was about a manky tramp (vagrant) grabbing me as I exited a phone box - he kissed me and one of his teeth came out in my mouth. I woke up half screaming and half retching. The second nightmare was even worse. I still remember this vividly 30+ years later.
10:42 Public schools were originally so called when they were founded, some going back to the late Middle Ages, because previously the only education was through a church or military school or private tutoring for the very select few. Most public schools set about to provide an education to boys (not girls) regardless of class, occupation, home location or religion, making them "public". Eton for example was originally founded to educate a small number of poor boys from the area so they could graduate into university. The term public school is still used by places such as Eton in reference to their original status, but the education profession prefers the term "independent schools" rather than private schools. A government funded school such as your local comprehensive would be termed a state school.
The candy from the beach called 'rock' is more analogous to candy canes. It's a stick of sugary hard candy and there's often a shop dedicated to selling only 'sticks of rock' which can come in all sorts of flavours.
Sticks of rock have the name of the resort printed throughout them, eg Blackpool rock or Brighton rock.
See Graham Greene's novel "Brighton Rock"
I live in a seaside resort, and there was always a shop selling "sticks of rock", in our case with the words Whitley Bay running through it..
So hard you can break your jaw or molar on it if not careful 😀
@@dave_h_8742 Broken into chunks by holding a knife edge to it and whacking with a hammer :)
I’m 58, have lived here since birth, have never had a stick of rock in any other flavour than peppermint. Are there really other flavours!?
Britishes? I'm British but have never heard of that, and fish finger sandwiches are brilliant as are bacon sandwiches and chip ( fries ) sandwiches, you don't know until you try 😀🇬🇧🇺🇸🇬🇧🇺🇸
Chip butty :)
British fish taco innit?
My fish finger sarnies are a gourmet delight... 50/50 bread from asda, Spreadable butter, Asda pink Seafood sauce (Thickly spread on both slices), chopped iceberg lettuce, four omega 3 Birdseye fish fingers straight from the George Formby... a dash of bottled lemon juice and a touch of salt.
Have you ever tried fish fingers dipped in custard?
@@mayloo2137 11th Doctor, is that you?
Fish have fingers because Captain Birdseye said so arrrrrr
"Dissapointing candy sticks" I have never been so offended 😤😂
Update: Nevermind I hadn't got to the beans on toast comment yet because that one truly hurt
If you try and jump the queue you'll get more than a simple 'tut' from me!
Speaking as a Britishishers person, can we take a moment to feel sorry for Jessica, poor lamb. Never, ever EVER mess with the queue
Here in Canada too. Where I live, I try to be polite, but if someone tries to cut in, I will tell them where the back of the line is if someone else doesn't.
@@mayloo2137 hi from a chilly Yorkshire May, i hope you're having a lovely day
@@paulmoore4223 well it's a sunny afternoon here in Calgary with no snow so I would consider it a good day.
@@mayloo2137 it's 12,25 am here in Leeds. No snow either, sadly. I love snow. Have a lovely afternoon May, thanks for taking the time to reply. 😁 Canada sounds very nice
A public school in England and Wales is a fee-charging endowed school originally for older boys that was "public" in the sense of being open to pupils irrespective of locality, denomination or paternal trade or profession.
Before schools were opened that were available to anyone who could pay the fee (if there were one), the schools were opened by trade guilds etc and were exclusively for the children of guild members. The first truly free schools open to any child were often opened by the church which is why we still have so many schools with Saints names (some are still part managed by churches).
The very first public schools were for members of the Royal Court and their families. Previously it had only been royal children that had been tutored. Even though it was still only a small privileged group of children that were now being educated, it was public in the sense that it was no longer just for royalty.
@@stevebarlow3154 many people were tutored - anyone with lots of land sent their children to learn to keep accounts and understand some law. In Scotland the education act of 1496 made education compulsory for the children of substantial landowners.
@@charlestaylor3027 Indeed, I should have said that the children of the royal courtiers were the first to be taught as a group and have regular lessons.
I'm gonna hit back on this one with weird US things
1. Why do you have parcels dropped at your door? only for someone to steal them, this idea is awful
2. What's up with carrying cash absolutely everywhere? The whole world has moved on with contactless. Surely carrying all this cash is a recipe for disaster
3. You call jelly jello, but jello is a brand so what do you call jelly that's not made by the jello company?
4. What's up with bin bags lining the streets everywhere you go? Is there no system, This has to attract rats?
5. Cheese in a can
6.You have elections..... FOR 597 DAYS... Then the President elect has to wait another 3 months just to sit in the White House, this is just crazy
7. When watching US TV it seems to me you can not cope without 15 minutes of what's coming up, followed by tons of advertising cliffhangers and the most dramatic music you will ever hear, in fact most reality TV will clip together parts from different times to make it seem more dramatic
8. Go to a store in the US, pick something out, go to the cashier and BOOM... Tax🤦🏾
9. Have a nice day, have a nice day, have a nice day.... Grrrrr, no one believes this is sincere at all
10. Erbs.... There is absolutely no need for you to say this, but you do, and it has nothing to do with accents.
Now, that is a list with which I am in complete agreement.
Haha! We agree with just about all of these! Maybe we should make a part 2 to this video - "American things that are weird as hell" xD
@@WanderingRavens I'm in favour
Agree with most. On the parcels thing, if it was only the post office doing delivery, that would be one thing, but there's a whole variety of couriers in use now, so I'm not sure what the alternative is.
@@julianb1474 Same here in the UK, DPD, DHL, Parcel Force, FEDEX, UPS, Yodel, Royal Mail, Collect Plus and Hermes all deliver in the UK but we have a system and it goes like this, if Royal Mail (National Post Service) deliver a parcel but you are not in then there are 3 options, leave the parcel somewhere hidden, leave the parcel with a neighbour or take the parcel to the nearest Royal Mail depot, if any of the 3 things above have happened you get left a card which details where your parcel is. Now if the other major companies deliver your parcel you will normally be able to track its journey and if you are not in you can request it to be redelivered, have it sent to a local store which you have to go and collect it or you can direct the driver to put it in a place that you trust is safe. You don't get parcels stolen here.
It used to be a thing of 'No Trainers' (sneakers) for entry into a club (disco or dance in my day). Basically you had to be smartly dressed for admission. It might be different today.
10:37 Public schools are called that beacause they are open to the public. Before state schools children were sent to the schools run by your church or employer.
If that yank lady can't suss why they are called fish fingers ,then it's already to late , you say fish don't have fingers ,.maybe so ,BUT THEY DINT HAVE STICKS EITHER !!!!
I doubt that 'Jessica' has even been to the uk as just too many things are wide of the mark.
Like your channel though.
I do not recognise any of the things "Jessica" is complaining about. My guess is, if that was her experience, she spent 10 years in the home counties or London area.
There is no way she has spent 10 years in the UK.
After 1 year she would know how we live.
Agree, no way she has spent 10 years here.
@@keithparker5103 I live in the home counties and am original from London, and I too think she is talking bollocks, so that is an incorrect guess.
@@theprophet9429 Thanks for putting me right. I am in the Midlands and know no one round here who fits "Jessicas" descriptions.
Fish finger sandwiches, on white bread, with a bit of tomato sauce (ketchup) 😋 It's amazing, please try it 😊
Edit: thanks for your suggestions, I'll have to try them out 😋🙂
I'll give it a go 😂
@@WanderingRavens White bread
Chips
Mayonaise
Fish fingers
Ketchup
White bread
Sorry your all wrong fishfinger sandwiches with salt & onion vinegar and Tommy sauce on Wholemeal seedy bread buttered is the best combination
Put the milk in LAST !
I totally agree, something from ym childhood :-)
I generally avoid getting into rounds being a teetotaller, I'mma have a water or a £2 juice, also I'm teetotal, I don't want to be handling other people's alcohol!
I beg to differ on the rounds thing being complex here (at about 13:30). I was once in a bar in New York and a local guy (a regular there) explained that you give the bartender an extra dollar when you pay for each drink then later he buys you a drink back....or something. I didn’t understand it then and I still can’t work out how it was meant to work.
Enjoying these vids btw.
I’m not offended by “Britishes”. It’s not correct. She’s just being silly on purpose.
She's being STUPID !!!
Or bo
Sorry or both
On the subject of hot and cold taps, try running both into the basin, that's what the plug is for and you will also save some water over washing hands under running water. Handy tip if your water is on a meter as is increasingly common.
Too much brain power, they dont deal well with multiple tools 👀
Also if you want to splash water on your face your head fits between the taps
I'm not sure about this Jessica, I don't feel like she's having fun with this, her tone feels a bit sneering to me. Anyway...
The tutting IS the conflict! The ultimate sanction!
The swan thing is kind of true, in the sense that it's one of those things that keeps getting repeated. But it's never questioned. Logically if the beating of a swan's wing could break your arm, it would also break its wing, as birds' bones are thinner & weaker than ours.
What the hell is a troach drop, or an army & navy tablet?! Never heard of them!
Our rock isn't the same as your rock candy, they're sticks of (usually peppermint flavoured) candy, often with the name of the resort running along their length. If you google "Blackpool rock" you should find some classic examples.
The school thing goes back centuries, when rich families would hire personal tutors for their children. Public schools were so-called because they were open for a paying public, rather than being employed privately by families. This was long before there was any concept of universal or state education, so the confusion never arose.
The tap/faucet thing has been explained over and over again ad nauseam. Any American who has even a passing interest in Britain MUST have encountered this and learned the reasons before now, so she's clearly just trying to pick a fight.
As for why we still do it in new houses - why not? If it ain't broke. And the serious answer is that however clean your hot water is, if it is in contact with your cold water, that means all your stored water is warm and is a legionella risk.
I agree with you about Jessica, she comes across as rude and offensive and like she’s taking the mick.
You said it for me and agree Jessica is being objectionable.
Where is Jessica living? UK has some amazing beaches! Studland in Dorset for one! She needs to get out more!!
@10:16 Jessica may be less confused if she learned the difference between patronizing a person and giving your patronage to a business.
public schools are paid for by the public that attend them. -state school are paid for by the state.
Don't McDonalds have Filet-O-Fish in the US? This is fish in a sandwich, the same as a fish finger sandwich
Or a tuna sandwich.
In the UK we have some beautiful beaches, not necessarily all that warm and sunny! Beaches in Northumberland were even used/stolen by the Canadian tourist bored to advertise their coastline in adverts!
Indeed, Americans who think that London IS the entire UK, will probably go to Brighton and say" all The beaches are pebbles" 😂 we have 5000 miles of coastline in the British isles, and some are as beautiful as the Caribbean. Take a look at Scotland's north coast.
@@jonntischnabel yes, i loved Scotland and was surprised as a Spaniard to find such gems! Water was too cold for me tho, but super beautiful!
I live in Brighton and love the sound the shingle and pebbles make as the waves retreat.
My other favourite beach is at Aberdyfi, in Wales. It's a fabulous beach made of very fine white sand that stretches along the coast as far as the eye can see.
@@Brytonrock I live in the Brighton area too. Pebble beaches are underrated. You can skim stones for ages.
I live in Guernsey and we have great beaches. But personally I prefer stoney/rocky beaches because sand is a pain in the arse, gets everywhere. I'd much rather find a beach where you can go into the water straight off the rocks. Just my preference.
Makes you wonder why on earth Jessica is still living in the UK !
Deport Her Immediately ~
Reason ~ SHE's WEIRD !!!
13:30 ish depends on how the culture does rounds. In German the rules are pretty simple: if you sit at a table where people are playing cards or dice the loser has to order a round, if you drop a card or dice you have to buy a round and if you are about to leave and hadn't yet have to buy a round you have to buy a round. Though here buying a round means that you decide what everyone else gets to drink
(with the exception of beer, there you let the people choose their own preference as people are extremely religious about their type of beer (this is intervowen into class system, origin, social status, position in the family and so on, so way too sensitive to challenge if you aren't looking for a fight)
,so you can look out for the most evil Schnapps there is on the menue to make everyone else curse your name for making them drink it.
Alternatively there is a ship's bell usually near the counter that you can ring which means that you will buy everyone in the Kneipe (~pub/ beer hall) the next round of drink of their choosing, usually done if you want to celebrate something
'At the Bar' etiquette is hugely important when there is a big group of people waiting. Everyone there knows who was there before them and no one likes a queue jumper, but whoever the person is that points to who's turn it actually is, virtually guarantees themselves to be served second.
They're called public schools because they are open to anyone(who can pay for them), rather than being privately educated at home by a tutor.
"britishes" wow, just wow
As a Brit, I would say that patronise - pronounced pat-tro-nise means to treat someone as if they're stupid; whereas pay-tro-nise means frequent as a customer. The former is a lot more common
Yes, I would agree with that.
Agreed!
I think that's a case of the American pronunciation seeping in.
I'd offer a business my patronage, I wouldn't patronise them unless they deserve it. I feel it's another burgled/burglarized thing, though I could totally be wrong on that.
In London, many don't thank the driver but those who do usually say, "thanks driver" or "cheers" and we do have a number of sandy beaches in the UK as well as pebbled ones
is a woman called Kim Woodburn lives near me who walks to the front of the queue declaring who she is in the local shop every time i see her. apparently she's of the TV and must assume she's entitled. People just can't be arsed with her. I once got glass in my food and didn't complain but i am Irish and just didn't go back.
You dont say thank you to a bus driver here in bristol - its “cheers drive” 😂
I always say cheers boss, regardless of geography; I said it in NYC and it totally baffled them.
I always say thank you when I get off a bus.
Most Brits Do, because ~
It's a Common Courtesy √
I think jessica a: hasnt been in the UK 10 years, b:perhaps should move back to US.
All I can say to Jessica is 'Sincerely'
😂
Lol, when I hang up my phone, I always say bye, bye, bye, bye,bye! I cant help it I even know I do it but its such a force of habit, I often laugh at myself :D
British Customer Service Training - Lesson One: Learning to hate the customer (6 week course)
The customer may always be right but is not always correct.
Specialist sub-module : Computer Help lines
In my experience customers are usually arrogant twats. Perhaps explains why I'm not in customer service.
Cheesy Beans (mixed in melted cheddar) on toast is a game changer 🇬🇧
23 B , I think I’m getting a stiffy.
@@greatunwashed1856 make sure the beans are basically orange, then salt and white pepper on.
23 B , thanks, when you say Orange, you mean baked beans?
@@greatunwashed1856 yeah, but mix in enough cheddar cheese to make it go bright orange
23 B , great, now I get it, many thanks.
Please don't use Britishes.
Two taps when it is not necessary anymore from a hygienic perspective?
"I can tell you in one word: TRADITION!"
We had separate water taps in the US until (from my almost 79-year-old viewpoint) fairly recently, when single tap faucets were introduced. Every house I lived in until I got married had bathroom sinks like that.
Most homes in the UK do now anyways my home was built in the 80s so we still have separate taps but soon as we get the new boiler we can put mixes in
Now then, the bar queue thing. Having spent plenty of time both sides of the bar, any decent bar person has the queue memorised. However, if you are sixth in the queue and say “no, this person was next”, then you can advance to second in line.
Furthermore, signalling to the bartender with a longitudinally folded banknote between the index and middle fingers will actually render you invisible.
@sameebah As a former barman customers who make simple consistent orders every time are a dream during busy periods. I'd always prioritize someone like you over some half-blitzed person trying to remember a round of random drinks for 8 people, plus a round of shots.
And you and your pal have good taste in whiskey.
@@Canalcoholic I hated that! Oh, you've got money to PAY for your drink so I should serve you first? Like I'm just giving all these other people drinks for free?
@@goldenappel It’s not like it was ever “two pints, two Cinzanos, and keep the change”.
And TWO hearts from the Ravens on one thread, I am not worthy.
Because we invented the sink plug.
Exactly!
Yes, put the plug in and mix the hot and cold water in the sink.
A mini hand bath.
And we call them Taps not Faucets.
In my entire life I have never ever found the two tap system a problem. I really do not understand all the moaning Americans do about it online.
As mentioned the mixing of clean and dirty water, the failure of the fixing on the swivel of the mixed tap system one can fail and you still have a usable tap.
Put the plug in add cold then add hot to suit. It's not rocket science, really simple !
I wonder if Americans take a bath by Just running the taps and splashing beneath them, like a weird shower....oh maybe they do use a plug????
It's good manners to thank the bus driver or indeed any one who provides a service. There is no law about it.
It reminds me of the woman who says to the fellow holding the door open for her, 'You needn't hold the door open because I'm a lady.'
The fellow replies, 'I didn't, I held it open because I'm a gentleman.'
I raised to say thankyou and have a good day or evening
I wonder if the Gloria Gaynor song "Never Can Say Goodbye" is based on a real life experience of talking to a Brit on the phone. 🤣
Saying thank you when getting off a bus - I do that anyway, except when the bus breaks down and I'm going to miss a train and have to call a taxi to get to the train station on time.... Fortunately I don't uses buses much. Don't forget, the bus driver is probably bored to death and everybody appreciates the occasional thank you. As for obliging everybody else to do the same after me, how rude is it to NOT thank the driver for getting you to your destination? That's not Britishness, that's just respect.
Railway station PLEASE 😷
The idea that eating cheese at night gives one nightmares (whilst probably a myth), goes back a long way. In A Christmas. Carol (1843), Dickens has Ebenezer Scrooge make a weak joke to the ghost of Jacob Martley that he can only see him because he ate cheese for his supper..
Incidentally, the equally mythical idea that a Swan can break your arm (or leg) is almost universal in Britain.
The swan thing isn't a myth. Their necks are really powerful.
As a person who has been around swans quite a bit yes they can do some serious damage to a human be it from actually attacking a human in defence to trying to evade capture and it is perfectly possible for a swan to break a human arm. The monarch owning all the swans in. The UK dates back hundreds of years when it was a Royal decree that swans were on the menu at Royal Banquets this law does actually stand to this day but the monarch actually only owns the mute swans throughout the entire UK not the Whooper swans who are migratory to the UK in the summer
One of my friends used to eat cheese before he went to bed to give himself nightmares-
Swans can be very aggressive during the nesting season. People have ended up in hospital when they have got too close to the nest.
There’s more of gravy than of grave about you 👻
About the swans thing.
A few years ago, I was fishing the nearby river, and 2 swans came along, One a bit larger, I think it was male and female.
The female got out on the bank and literally waddled right around me, then got back into the water after it passed me.
The male just swam by giving me the evil eye.
Then they both swam on. And I didnt even catch any fish.
I fished in a canal once , I didn't catch any fish either, small world.
They're called 'public' schools because they're paid for by the members of the public (that go to them), and normal schools are 'state' schools because the state pays for them. The name refers to who funds them
And 'Private' schools used to be truly private. You only went to them if you were a member of the private group that owned them.
Aristocrats used private tutors; public schools came into being the still rich who couldn't afford tutors but could manage to pay for schooling. County schools were set up at the end of 19th century and were the beginning of publicly funded state education
The original public schools date back to the middle ages. Previously it was only children of royalty that were tutored. Then it was opened up to members of the Royal Court and their relatives. Still a small elite group, but public in the sense it wasn't just for royalty any more.
They do not pay for your food. They apologise and take some off your bill. X
The issues with the "two taps" thing are that it's been explained to death about 8 million times to the point that as yet undiscovered tribes in the heart of the Peruvian jungle know it about yet "the greatest country in the world" cannot comprehend something so simple boggles the mind. Secondly the way it's presented in these videos seems to imply that it's something we choose to have whereas for the most part the houses we have grown up in over the last 60 years or so came equipped like it so we had no choice in the matter, obviously things are changing but considering the ages of some of our properties there are still many traditional style water outlets installed all across this island of ours.
Ooooh, getting into her asian roots. Yikes! Also, "putting things in butties"; Eric, you're on fire today!
Thanks 🤣
When living in South Korea I was offered some cooked dog, it got as far as my mouth but then my cultural conditioning kicked in. I just couldn’t bring my self to try it. However when in Australia the Kangaroo sausages were amazing.
Definitely sounds rude when Eric said it 😂
@@WanderingRavens Just to balance it out please say the word khaki more often.... Really funny particularly if you refer to khaki pants.
For me, it's milk in first. That way, if I accidentally "glug" too much milk into the cup/mug, I can remove some before I pour the tea. Accidentally pouring too much milk when the tea is _already_ in the cup/mug results in over-milky tea, which I detest.
Two separate taps, to fill the sink with water twice as fast obviously :You Americans spending twice as long filling sinks than us, that's why we have had all that extra time to invent things. :)
Excellent point. I have a mixer tap in my kitchen and it is so slow and useless and it's impossible to control the temperature. Thankfully, for my bath, I have separate taps.
What's this weird American idea that every place in UK has 2 taps one hot and one cold. Some do, which depends on the type of sink fitted. Most don't and are single mixer tap.
That was very funny. I’m British and I think many of the things you point out are weird. Nowt wrong with Beans on Toast though. The word “Butty” being smutty never struck me before - I will never think of butties in the same way 😂😂😂😂
No idea how I missed this video when you first uploaded it a couple of years ago, but I'm watching it now and can't stop laughing...because it's all so true! I've never heard "Britishes", BTW, in my 50 years of living here. The part about the flexible meaning and/or threat level implied by "fuck off" is definitely spot on. 😆 So much of understanding English here in the UK is being able to appreciate context, and I think a lot of that only comes with experience. I couldn't explain to someone how I know when someone means a certain phrase sarcastically, threateningly or sincerely, but somehow it's become a superpower I gained from being born and raised here.
Love this video, and watching the two of you recognising the truth in those tweets. 😁
Never ever heard ‘Britishes’ before. Sincerely is more of a business thing to put
It's 'Britishers'
@@hjr2000 you do understand you've written EXACTLY the same thing as above with no difference
It’s also an incredibly derogatory term, that would never be used by anyone from Britain. It’s always used in an insulting manner.
Sincerely depends how you start a letter as in Dear Sir/Madam. If you start a letter with first names ,ends with yours faithfully.
@Rob Crossgrove ok. I knew it was one or the other. It's 40 years since I wrote for a job.
I have heard Americans say that we do certain things in the UK but I have rarely or never seen those things.
Hiya. Most of the time, Jessica's talking out of her sandwiches. Stay safe. All the best to you.
😂😂 you're amazing
Love the videos.
As a Brit I'm going to stand up for the round system. In my circle it's used between my close group of friends who'll go to the pub a couple of times a week and out on the town on the weekend.
We all drink similiar drinks, each pub will of course cost more or less than the last but the mutual agreement is that over 20+ years of drinking together, it'll all even itself out. Huge win if your round falls in a Wetherspoons.
The other plus is that only one person needs to go and queue for drinks (although that's not to say more than one may surround the bar to try and get served quicker). This of course benefits the bar staff also, avoiding having to take 4 or 5 seperate orders for a single drink.
There is always that one guy who fancies a cocktail or similarly expensive beverage at some point in the night, this could prompt a number of events: 1) The whole group transitions to the equally expensive drink. 2) The rounds continue and the perpetraitor is on the receiving end of abuse for the rest of the night for being 'that guy'. 3) The rounds stop as it's likely at that point where people start to separate/leave/stop drinking. 4) Rounds continue but in smaller groups - I regularly end up in a round of 2 with my best mate towards the end of any night as we know we stick to the same places.
I also enjoy the system as it keeps the ongoing joke about whose round it is going throughout the night, someone always gets tricked into their round .
Completely away from rounds, if we ever go out in a group of say 10+ people for football nights or for Stag weekends etc, we tend to use a 'kitty' system instead. Each person will throw say £50 in the kitty for the night and we use the combined money to pay for the drinks throughout the night. If the money runs out, each person will put another £20 or so in to keep the drinks coming. We used to use cash for this but we now just transfer the money to one persons Monzo account (created especially for kitty purposes) and this card is used for the night to save any disputes on rounds etc.
I share your frustrations when food is involved however. If I'm going to a restaurant and I've had a cheap meal yet my friend has ordered steak and wine - that's not getting split down the middle! If each person has ordered something that costs fairly similar, I'd rather just split it though than fuss over maybe just a quid or two's difference, again, it'll probably get evened out at the next meal. Those people that try and order the most expensive items and split the bill are
normally outed.