Native Korean Reads Heated Korean Reddit Posts

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  • Опубликовано: 15 июл 2024
  • in this video, i explored the depths of Reddit's r/AITA to find Korea-related posts. definitely wasn't disappointed and i had fun judging ppl's stances on culture
    TIMESTAMPS:
    0:00 - Intro
    0:08 - AITA for refusing to bow to my Korean fiancee's grandparents?
    2:43 - AITA for asking a Korean person if they're from North or South?
    4:24 - AITA for wanting to learn Korean and "straying out of my lane"?
    7:21 - AITA for not wanting to follow Korean culture even though my parents want me to?
    9:12 - AITA for not telling my Korean date I’m learning Korean for fun?
    12:06 - Outro
    Leave a like if you enjoyed and if you want to see more of this!
    WATCH MORE HERE:
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    ➤ korean tries out duolingo korean: • Native Korean Speedrun...
    ➤ korean vs. international k-pop fans: • Korean vs. Internation...
    ★ Instagram: / andrewshin02 ★
    ============================
    🎵 MUSIC USED 🎵
    Kevin MacLeod - Jaunty Gumption
    Kevin MacLeod - Monkeys Spinning Monkeys
    Kevin MacLeod - Run Amok
    Kevin MacLeod - Pixel Peeker Polka (faster)
    ============================
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Комментарии • 40

  • @OllehRebelz
    @OllehRebelz  10 месяцев назад +6

    If you wanted to learn how to write Korean, this video is just for you: ruclips.net/video/FqSxX1Gcqi8/видео.html

  • @Mcgturtle3
    @Mcgturtle3 Год назад +55

    "One of those girls" yeah he thought she was a koreaboo lol

  • @LottePea
    @LottePea 11 месяцев назад +49

    I remember feeling ashamed when I first started learning korean back in 2017 'cause I came across the therm "koreaboo" and didn't fully understand what it meant, but also understood that it was a bad thing. Took me a while to figure out the difference between being a koreaboo and being in love with a culture
    And honestly to this day I feel a little uncomfortable near asian guys, 'cause my brain is like "am I attracted to his features or am I fetishising?" It's a thin line to me, and I'm a people-pleaser, so I would also feel really bad in the last post situation 😂

  • @ttoek0247
    @ttoek0247 Год назад +53

    As someone who is Korean American, I can definitely agree with these things, and these kinds of situations are some that I see in my life, but I do not want to be rude to those people who try to learn Korean because they just want to learn the language

  • @nerdydivanikki
    @nerdydivanikki Год назад +48

    Oh my word... the learning Korean thing is so irritating. I'm more into Korean media than OP there and I've been learning Korean since 2019, but I just like language learning. I additionally have like 6 languages that I want to study casually after Korean. I've started 2 more already. Most of the languages are Asian languages, but one of those languages is mostly for work since I tutor ESL students from Japan a lot, so I want to better understand their language to help explain English by knowing how the languages differ fundamentally. But I just love making friends and connecting over shared cultural interests. And when my parents hear my language goals (even when I tell them one language I want to learn is Swedish to connect to the family roots and feel a sense of culture for once in my life), they say "those languages are all so... far... why not learn French or Spanish?" Like my goals shouldn't have to do with closeness to what's familiar. It feels like they became more okay with Korean over time and they try to be supportive, but when I bring up new languages, they're like... back to the initial "why (not your race's language)??", "where else can you speak it besides (country of origin)??" type questions I got when I started Korean. It baffles me how people just don't grasp the idea of learning something outside of your normal/childhood or familial bubble.

  • @mariakim19931
    @mariakim19931 Год назад +26

    The thing about North and South is especially complicated for me as a Korean living in Europe because my ancestors emigrated to the Russian Empire from Korea before it had been split so when someone asks me this question, I have to mentally prepare for a long explanation

  • @IzabellaLuiza
    @IzabellaLuiza Год назад +32

    That was such a good video. I was also baffled by people. As someone not from the US, if someone I was dating decided to learn my language, I would have a blast. And actually that happened when I was in college in the US: my boyfriend was Greek-American and learned a lot, I would always translate my friends to him but sometimes he would get most of it without needing me. My Americans friends learned a lot of words and phrases and would talk to us regularly in our language and that was always fun.

  • @maxidentfelix
    @maxidentfelix Год назад +35

    • As a kpop fan who's a poc and NOT Korean, I disagree with the dude who said that she's a koreaboo. I'm learning Korean again after 6 years because I couldn't find the time these past years since late middle school (grade 7 and 8) and high school had been extremely busy for me, I graduated this year, finished my finals and got my results (luckily I passed all subjects). I have plenty of free time now with literally nothing to do since I'm always sitting at home being bored af. I'm genuinely interested in the Korean culture and follow many Korean content creators who explain and educate people about Korea. Many of them have said that most Koreans aren't welcoming and are racist towards foreigners (they won't even talk to you unless you know how to speak Korean).
    • I will tell you about an interaction that I had with a Korean man last year when I went to Chicago to meet my older brother. The man was our lyft driver and I saw his screen. I noticed that his last name is "Kim" and he spoke limited English (assuming that he's not that comfortable talking in English). When we reached our destination I told him "안녕이가세요" with a little bow, he smiled at me and said "고맙습니다". I could see that he was a little taken aback since it was unexpected from my side but it felt really nice that he also told me thank you (felt weird since he told it to me formally considering the fact that I'm alot more younger compared to him) but yeah, that's my little story about my interaction with a kind ahjussi :)

  • @bhyaguta
    @bhyaguta Год назад +24

    this was very fun to wtach!! and i would definitely like to watch more similar videos

    • @etanesnil7072
      @etanesnil7072 Год назад +1

      seconding this, would love to see more of these videos!

  • @idgon09
    @idgon09 Год назад +7

    The language thing is insane. I speak English, Spanish, and Korean fluently and currently studying Chinese because I am visiting Taiwan and felt it would be cool to recognize the characters

  • @RedCat0.2
    @RedCat0.2 Год назад +17

    I would love to see more reddit videos, its so interesting

  • @badtzmaruxo
    @badtzmaruxo Год назад +6

    My sisters only call me 언니 if they want something. 😅

  • @saturn_in_blue
    @saturn_in_blue 4 месяца назад +1

    My wife is kind of a Koreaboo and she told me a while ago that when we first met she was super interested in talking to me because she thought I was Korean (by my looks). I am Chinese. In the end, I guess Chinese was "good enough" and we've been together for 8 years now. 😅

  • @CamillaMarieH
    @CamillaMarieH Год назад +1

    Would love more like this!

  • @janny_kr
    @janny_kr Год назад +9

    I want to learn Korean to understand kdramas and lives without subtitles that's it 😂 And I think most kpop fans that want to learn the language think similar.

    • @xtoastywolfyx9694
      @xtoastywolfyx9694 11 месяцев назад +5

      lol same, I've also started to really like the culture and would like to visit it one day. Also knowing another language is never a negative thing

  • @AllycatlovesAG
    @AllycatlovesAG 10 месяцев назад +2

    I did french immersion in school, so I grew up speaking English at home and french at school. I've always loved geography and learning about other cultures. Languages ties into that, and after trying to pick up spanish and hebrew, Korean has been the only language outside of school I have actually stuck with learning. It is much easier to pick up a language when you consume media in that language, like K-dramas and Music. It also helps that my university has a lot of Korean students, and I was able to be matched with native speakers in a language learning program my school has. It's been fun picking up a language and being able to have simple conversations. But anytime I tell someone I'm learning korean, I feel embarrassed because of the Koreaboo stereotypes discussed in the video. I'm white. I've been learning about the culture, practicing with native speakers etc, but there is still so much judgement. Yes, I am a k-pop obsessed person, but I enjoy being able to talk about daily life in a foreign language, not just song lyrics. At the end of the day, learning a language is a valuable skill, and we shouldn't judge people for what language they're learning. Don't just pick up the "stereotypical" words and call yourself fluent though

  • @JulyIzHere
    @JulyIzHere 4 месяца назад +1

    The first one seemed really weird to me but just think of it as shaking hands with someone you respect. The actual annoying part is second guessing everything you say with formal speech. Makes it so hard to freely talk. That’s what a lot of my Korean friends say and I kinda agree

  • @babowasalwayshere
    @babowasalwayshere 11 месяцев назад +4

    You ever come so full circle on your high horse refusing to be racist that you end up being extra racist? Segregation bad. Why would avoiding learning a language be cultural appropriation, that's *literally* segregation, what?? I'm kind of glad I've been around so many people from different backgrounds and seen how frustrated people get with entitled people, like for instance Americans coming to a foreign country and expecting everyone to speak english. So I never operated under some delusion that learning another language is racist. Not sure why so many people who DO think that way have been cropping up if I'm honest.. My friends from other countries have all pretty much unanimously agreed that if someone took interest in their language and culture they'd be *elated* by that, because it's a huge form or respect to like someone's culture and language so much you want to learn more about it.

  • @nikki-diary
    @nikki-diary Год назад +5

    11:32 I'm East Asian and live in the States, and I've been subject to many weird... err... fetishes of people who like me for my race rather than my person. It's more common than you think. I think maybe the guy was thinking about that, but I wouldn't really be sure.

  • @blondesalute
    @blondesalute Месяц назад +1

    I hateddddddddd the first AITA thing. I went to the Reddit post and there were a ton of people bashing him but he replied something like: "it's like slapping someone across the face. Would you do it? Even if it was a loved one's culture? Also, I think it's weird she's not taking my feelings as the man she's marrying into account."
    The comments ripped into him, don't worry. But I don't think he gets it.

  • @spooders
    @spooders 4 месяца назад +1

    I been asked the north or south thing so many times in my life, i've started to say north and you know what? They never believe me and I always say, "then why'd you ask?" lol

  • @NDDJayasinghe
    @NDDJayasinghe Год назад +1

    Make more of this type of content!

  • @steinbot110
    @steinbot110 4 месяца назад

    "If you ever see a Korean out in public, please always assume they are from the South. North Koreans, they don't get to leave their country. *tongue click* And if they get caught, it's death." This alone 💀

  • @nevaansbooks2078
    @nevaansbooks2078 4 месяца назад

    Why would someone think you're 'out of your lane' or 'appropriating' for trying to respect another country's culture and language?

  • @Salma-ix8qw
    @Salma-ix8qw Год назад +7

    We need more Duolingo videos please 😍🤭

  • @NerdilyDone
    @NerdilyDone Год назад +1

    Story 4 kinda breaks my heart. Why wouldn't you want to appreciate your own culture? Korean is cute as a language. It's fine to show it off.

  • @1rish_pher099
    @1rish_pher099 3 месяца назад

    I think the bow thing is different in different cultures. In the UK, and a lot of American TV shows, bowing is a form of submission. You bow to a king, the monarchy, a priest, etc. While it is more common place in Korea. I get where he is coming from but to feel emasculated is a bit much and not understanding their culture and the traditions of the area.

  • @thoughtcheese7310
    @thoughtcheese7310 10 месяцев назад

    The North or South Korean one was very relatable to me and to make it funny I’m half Korean (mom’s side)

  • @NeichoKijimura
    @NeichoKijimura 11 месяцев назад

    6:36 I'm a heptaracist now, fuck

  • @yuklimka7251
    @yuklimka7251 5 месяцев назад

    Stephanie Soo did a video on the first story from the fiancee's POV. The dude's comment is ridiculous. He comes from a non-bowing culture, so it wouldn't carry the same meaning. If someone's not willing to develop intercultural competence, don't get into a bicultural relationship.

  • @SonjaPonjrev
    @SonjaPonjrev 4 месяца назад

    I think the guy in the last post thought she dated him *because* he was Korean, like a fetish or something like that.

  • @daftnessrollz
    @daftnessrollz Год назад +9

    7:46....that is the MOST internalized racist pro White thing I've ever heard. He needs to love himself. His parents should have regulated who he hung out with as a kid. Should have kept him with his own kind cause damn. Seems he hates his own birth right.

    • @ArsenicApplejuice
      @ArsenicApplejuice 10 месяцев назад +4

      Kept him with his own kind…. Umm wow, sounds a little racist.
      Tbh sounds like a pretty normal thing that happens in teens. Pushing back against authority individuating as a person. It’s a difficult time. Just manifesting in this way unique to his circumstances

    • @mistermiles3271
      @mistermiles3271 8 месяцев назад +2

      Idk. As someone born an raised in America to African parents I can understand not fully identifying with a certain cultural identity. Just let the kid be a kid and work through who he wants to be himself? Not identifying with the culture of your birth is not necessarily racist, but segregating a korean child from white children to make sure he comes out "korean" enough is pretty darn racist