Watching this video in Aug 24 , a couple years after it was recorded. I was reading the comments after watching the first time and was surprised at the criticisms of the interviewer . So I listened a second time and this is what I concluded . The interviewer did not interrupt him at all . The gentleman was able to answer ever question he was asked . He was smiling the entire time and even invited the interviewer to go and meet his wife . I think that spoke volumes about how the gentleman felt about how the interview went . Conclusion : There are a lot of antsy ass Karen's who apparently don't understand how to have a conversation with another person . Sign of the internet generation who when you speak to them cast their eyes somewhere else but on the internet they are full of vitriolic opinions . Just wondering .
Hahaha. Indeed we did have a nice interaction and I did not film most of it. His wife was lovely as well. She didn't have a strong accent though so I didn't think to record her. If you enjoyed this video, please subscribe to my channel. I appreciate it!
What were the criticisms? I didn't think the interviewer was rude or interrupted him. I'd love to see a clip of the conversation he had with Margaret 😀
0:29 “Are there any Lancashire sayings or things about the Lancashire region that you could share like for example like something that people say in Lancashire like a regional saying or stuff like that... or what do people say in Lancashire. Some Lancashire terms from where you’re from.” That was probably the most obnoxious and most repetitive sentence I’ve ever heard in my life.
I had a relative stationed at Burtonwood. He told me that the yanks dumped all their Harleys in the canal when they had to go back. This would have been the 60s I think. Apparently butch Cassidy spoke with a Bolton accent
FortOrdWarhorse It comes across that way but honestly I just think the American accent is way more harsh than the softer spoken Lancashire accent. Americans are pretty known for coming across as arrogant and obnoxious in comparison to others.
@@jimjamsim Its not his accent you dumbass its everything about the way he carries the conversation, he interrupts, his questions are rambling and ongoing.
@@gradyparsons6678 how can you not be English if you’re Muslim that’s like saying you can’t be English if you’re catholic you’re an absolute idiot mate
Regional words: "nowt" - nothing "Owt" - anything "Cewd" - cold "Put wood in th'ole" - close the door "Tall'reet" - all right "How ya diddling" - how ya doing?
Dusta want a sup of wather.? - Do you want a drink of water? Thee come here. You come here. Nowt wrong with thee. - Nothing wrong with you Close dooa - Close door.
There isn't a generic Lancashire accent! (I'm Lancashire born n' bred, by the way) His accent is Garstang, which is slightly to you, but to us, VERY different to a Blackpool accent!
TheStrober That may be true. Preston definitely represents but I wonder if that isn't due to sheer number. When you look at all the many smaller communities that make up Lancs it becomes a bit murky
My grandparents were from Lancashire, grandmother originally from Liverpool, although lived in various parts of Lancashire, I think Colne and Burnley. My grandfather was from Preston, and they both emigrated to New Zealand after WW2. Grandmother spoke with more of a Lancashire accent than a scouse accent. They have long since passed, and despite living in NZ for over 50 years, they still had strong accents.
Despite living in London since 1975, people still ask me where I come from (Blackburn, actually). But my grandfather (from Oswaldtwistle) could speak dialect, which used quite a different vocabulary - the use of thee and thou (with quite distinct usages) for example. Another was the word sneck instead of latch (on a door). Places might be named after the people who lived there eg Tum o’Dick o’Bob’s. A saying I remember is “Clogs to Clogs i’ three generations”. Most of this has inevitably passed away now and I can’t help but feel we have lost something of ourselves. Si thi, tha knoas
I'm from Florida, but I've lived in Lancashire (Blackburn, actually) for about 10 years now. I worked in Accrington with people from all around, for instance a Burnley lass who would say stairs like 'stayas' and a lad from Clayton-le-Moors with a hilariously broad accent. There was also a woman born and raised in Oswaldtwistle ('below the lamp' if I recall correctly), or 'Twizzle-twozzle' as she would say; it was absolutely fascinating to hear about the dialect there - things like 'wherst thu from', et cetera. And I love how she said 'cowd' (cold).
@@tsgillespiejr I live in Wilpshire 🤣🤣 did some work at Senator in Altham and the accents are so broad round that way, I'm in the Ribble Valley so the accents are much more tempered.
I'm originally from Lancashire Blackburn, arrived in Australia 1950. My parents have of course passed away but I miss hearing their accent. I miss England not the land but the people. My parents were kind and gentle.
That’s my accent, sounds like everyone I was brought up with. It’s quite a tame Lancashire accent really. Wigan, Bolton, Leigh would all be much stronger.😊
Absolutely right. This man's accent is much more refined than what you normally find in Lancs. Interview some young folk and you'll be pluggin your ears. Sayin that... I love it! 🇨🇦
it's a shame I live in Stockport where the accent sounds like this but more neutered in a way, in fact I choose at times to emphasise a pronunciation just because I'm jealous that my accent feels otherwise so formal yet northern at the same time.
Love the Lancashire accent... Mine is St Helens, but more old school St Helens, than a mix of scouse... Burnley, Bolton way have the best Lancashire accents! #class
Martin Harvey. Thanks for that. Burnley has a bit of a Yorkshire touch to it. In fact when i lived down south i was asked loads if i came from Leeds.My Nan and Grandad, were originally from Warrington. Though they left in the late 50s,when my Mum, her sister and brother were in their late teens/early 20s. My Grandad had a beautiful accent.But nowadays in Warrington, they seem to talk more like Manchester. St Helens accent with the older people is quite nice, but for some odd reason most of the youngsters seem to want to talk a chavvy version of Scouse.
@@burnleyfan11965 My grandmother, although born in Liverpool, lived in Colne and Burnley before she emigrated to New Zealand, my grandfather was from Preston. A staunch Preston North End fan, found it hard to reconcile that the once great Preston North End, were playing in the lower reaches of the football league. Despite living in kiwiland for over 50 years still had strong Lancashire accents.
My grandfather came from Blackburn & my grandmother came from Darwen. They had differing accents. Grandfather had a very broad & thick accent but grandmother's was much softer & rounder. They pronounced some words completely differently to each other. Two towns close together but their accents were wide apart!
Try Bury vs. Bolton a few miles west... very different indeed. Bury accent is harsh (Berreh!) but Bolton is round and mellow like Fred Dibnah. HaRk haRk the dogs do baRk in Bolton!
Its really hard to make out the soft accent because the interviewer is just much too strong, loud, and agressive. The requests sound too much like demands. Awful.
They don’t talk over each other. Your listening problem has nothing to do with the audio of the video. I suppose you’re just biased against American voices, based on your description.
my grandpa is from lancashire, not too far from manchester. he’s lived in australia for most of his life but his accent still sounds just like this man’s accent ❤️
You'd better ask the wife about that or talk to the wife, she'll be better to tell you that, are phrases so often used! What humility and likeability in that Gent only he knew it. From the days when people thought more before they spoke. The American man seemed a little over intent to get the man to say something but he didn't mean any harm, just trying to draw him out when he didn't really need it. Lovely warm friendly accent
Thank you for seeing that! I hoped my fellow American learned to be a bit more patient. Being from the northeast, we tend to be impatient with people who are more 'thoughtful' when they speak, as we tend to have a routine set of answers, and our conversations tend to flow, even if much of what we say is unnecessary! LOL We would likely have a similar response to someone from the midwest, who also would take the time to formulate their thoughts. We have not been gifted with a lot of patience, unfortunately!
@@inconnu4961 Hi, thanks for you reply. It made me smile because the more he was being drawn out, the more it gave the elderly gent to consider and hold the pause. Bless them both. I'm sure they enjoyed the conversation equally. It would be a novelty for him to speak with an American and something he would talk about often at a later date, I'm sure. (Once he had considered it all first, of course!)
@@inconnu4961 I as someone who lives in a simalir area to this gent found people from the North East easier to deal with than people in the South of the US, who can't seem to say what they feel such as " bless your heart " and so on . It makes it harder to interpret to be honest. The only reason this gent speaks slower is because he more than likley wants to make sure he speaking clearly . I would not say Lancashire diaclet and accents are of a slow speaking manner .
My father and some of his family emmigrated from Blackpool to Los Angeles. This mans accent makes me feel happy and calm. sooch a loovly aaksent tew behewld.
A wonderfull Lancashire Accent can be heard on the RUclips channel "Holly - The Cafe Boat". Joanna is from the Blackburn area, and is a joy to listen to her accent. It is a fun well done channel too, about a family on a canal boat.
lancashire is a county with multiple different towns and cities in it e.g blackburn, chorley, preston. Each place has its own accents, its like saying everyone in america has the same accent.
He wasn't Insulting to him . It sounded like he genuinely meant it. This guy honestly did not seem offended by it . I am from a simalir area and the elderly take it as a compliment. Because to get to that age given the times they have lived in its honestly an achievement.
Lancashire and its people are like a hidden gem in England. Our elderly people are just wonderful and are brilliant role models in attitude and work ethic. I really miss Lancashire and hope it doesn't change.
Thank you for sharing this! After looking up my ancestry of my current last name (not the one that is married in past geneaology)- Leatherbury with peoples names on it, it stated the Leatherbury ancestory came from Lancashire, United Kingdom. I live in the United States however and have never been to Lancashire, but found I do talk similar to the guy in this video with the descriptions of how I describe things in my mind of Turn Right, etc and am very visual when I speak. I wanted to say thank you for sharing this video and my dad also wears button down shirts! Hopefully I can figure out some favorite foods here soon of people in Lancashire soon to know if we have any similarities in that also!!! Awesome video!!!
Michelle I’m from near this guy, we like pie’s and bread rolls but we call them “tea cakes” and not the ones with raisins in. We like scones. Pies. More pies. Shepherds pie. Erm, steak pie. Lol.
Lancashire hotpot! Also I'm from Heysham near Lancaster and we like a good chips cheese and gravy. Good luck finding that in the US. The chips have to be done in beef dripping and if you manage to find a gradely (good) chippie (fish n chip shop) in the US you most certainly need scraps on top!
There is an enormous difference. If we still count Liverpool as Lancashire,their accent is so much different to mine, even though ive not got that broad an accent. Though i still sound Burnley.
@@burnleyfan11965 I was told the scouse accent evolved from the industrial revolution, talking to each other over deafening machinery in factories.... its possible, try mouthing words as if intended to be lip read... its very liverpool :)
@@simonmcnicholas cotton town Lancashire was more known for that than Liverpool. Liverpool had a large Irish population and that had an influence on its accent
The late Lancashire Legend Fred Dibnah, you'll hear the Lancashire accent here alright, and witness an old school Steeple Jack at work. ruclips.net/video/wffv8YeoeeM/видео.html
There's more than one Lancashire accent, whether you come from Rochdale, Bolton, Blackburn, etc. This chap's is very nice. I feel 'reyt a' wom' listening to him. The favouriote Lancashire dialect word is 'cruckled'. 😎
When you ask how old he is you realize that he still sees himself as a young, carefree, playful man and genuinely sees the world like one, and just occasionally realizes that he really is "one of those old people" now which breaks his heart
That is definitely a Lancashire accent but not from round here! 😂 I used to get the piss taken out of me for my Chorley accent from people from Preston and they are like 10 miles away! Must be cos people have lived here so long!
If this guy interviewing the old man had met up with my friend Margaret he would never have understood her, she is true Lancashire,as are some of her friends, I don’t understand them when they get talking real lanky, but then it varies from town to town...
Watching this video in Aug 24 , a couple years after it was recorded. I was reading the comments after watching the first time and was surprised at the criticisms of the interviewer . So I listened a second time and this is what I concluded . The interviewer did not interrupt him at all . The gentleman was able to answer ever question he was asked . He was smiling the entire time and even invited the interviewer to go and meet his wife . I think that spoke volumes about how the gentleman felt about how the interview went . Conclusion : There are a lot of antsy ass Karen's who apparently don't understand how to have a conversation with another person . Sign of the internet generation who when you speak to them cast their eyes somewhere else but on the internet they are full of vitriolic opinions . Just wondering .
Hahaha. Indeed we did have a nice interaction and I did not film most of it. His wife was lovely as well. She didn't have a strong accent though so I didn't think to record her. If you enjoyed this video, please subscribe to my channel. I appreciate it!
What were the criticisms? I didn't think the interviewer was rude or interrupted him. I'd love to see a clip of the conversation he had with Margaret 😀
are there any Lancashire sayings? "Yeah: bog off you wazzock."
🤣👍🏻
😂
🤣
👍
I’ve hear a Wazzock is an unfertilised female greyhound. I’m from East Lancashire.
It's such a warm and welcoming accent especially with older peoplw
Yup. My English teacher has that accent and everyone likes her (not just because of that obvsly, but it helped!!😂)
00:45
“You’d be better speaking to my wife about this” never have I heard such a Lancastrian sentence in my life
😂😂😂😂👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼
i know your taking the mick but i think he means his wife would be better on camera lol
0:29 “Are there any Lancashire sayings or things about the Lancashire region that you could share like for example like something that people say in Lancashire like a regional saying or stuff like that... or what do people say in Lancashire. Some Lancashire terms from where you’re from.” That was probably the most obnoxious and most repetitive sentence I’ve ever heard in my life.
He should of said yea we say f**k off a lot
Lee Lee i think you mistook this comment for a different one
Lee Lee then what you said doesn’t apply to my comment at all
Lee Lee wow the fact that you commented and then deleted a dumb ass comment on my video is hilarious
Lee Lee you’re passive aggressive as fuck
This gent comes across as such a delightful person. What a shame the interviewer has such an abrupt manner.
Americans! Very little patience....and hardly any attention span.
It's just the way they are . Very direct .
Interview meant no harm by it
@@aacmove if I had to choose between impatience or being close-minded and condescending like you, I’d take the impatience.
@@ColeForged Good for you.
@@ColeForged KMA!
I’m London born and bred but I have distant relatives from Lancashire, and his accent warms my heart. Reminds me of them.
I'm from Blackpool but I live in Australia, nice old man, I might have gone to school with him.
My mum is from Bolton and I'm Australian.
He is absolutely delightful. Just lovely.
my grandparents had lancashire accents and just wanted to hear the accent again cuz i love it so much. my grandma was also called Margaret🥺
Lovely accent and gentleman
I’m half English born and raised in America and this sounds a lot like my late grandad, miss him a lot
Where was your grandad from mate
Lee Lee what
Iamtheproblem just saw this. He was Manchester born and raised. Lived just down the road from old trafford in stretford
Best place to be half from mate. Best city in the country best stadium in the country and best team in the country lol.
I had a relative stationed at Burtonwood. He told me that the yanks dumped all their Harleys in the canal when they had to go back. This would have been the 60s I think. Apparently butch Cassidy spoke with a Bolton accent
As someone who lives down the road from garstang (poulton-le-fylde) gotta say what an absolute gent really embodying the Lancashire spirit!
In Lancashire we get so lazy with our speech that words like “here you are” just becomes “Eee Ahh!”
Or instead of “get the door” we say “get door”
Leicester speak is quite like that, five words can sound like one ;-)
Lancashire is full of great people 😃
Wait till you go to Yorkshire Christ 100000x better
@@peanutswilbury1017 get lost you yorkie 😂
@@peanutswilbury1017 not a fucking chance
@@peanutswilbury1017 Is it shite! Yarksher folk, short arms and deep pockets.
@@peanutswilbury1017 most memorable person from yorkshire is someone that rhymes with simmy javile
Thank you for sharing this. Recently lost my da, he sounded so much like this. I miss him like crazy. 💕
The interviewer is aggressive and obnoxious. Doesn't let the man talk.
FortOrdWarhorse It comes across that way but honestly I just think the American accent is way more harsh than the softer spoken Lancashire accent. Americans are pretty known for coming across as arrogant and obnoxious in comparison to others.
So every American then
Couldn't agree more! He asked the same question 5 different ways while the man was trying to speak.
So frustrating.
@@jimjamsim Its not his accent you dumbass its everything about the way he carries the conversation, he interrupts, his questions are rambling and ongoing.
I'm an American and yea he is obnoxious...likely from the Northeast in the US. Kept cutting they guy off.
I am an Indian. I love this accent and the old person. How sweet is he!
awesome lovely chap
I don't know why there's a dislike, this seems to be a nice, genuine Lancashire accent
AxSirlotl probably for the interview being obnoxiously loud
It's the best accent, Proud Lancastrian and Muslim.
@@gradyparsons6678 Now it's possible.
@@gradyparsons6678 how can you not be English if you’re Muslim that’s like saying you can’t be English if you’re catholic you’re an absolute idiot mate
@@gradyparsons6678 Believe it or not but there are
Regional words:
"nowt" - nothing
"Owt" - anything
"Cewd" - cold
"Put wood in th'ole" - close the door
"Tall'reet" - all right
"How ya diddling" - how ya doing?
@Suzuki Adventure
"I tell thee"
"have you 'eard your head?"
Dusta want a sup of wather.? - Do you want a drink of water?
Thee come here. You come here.
Nowt wrong with thee. - Nothing wrong with you
Close dooa - Close door.
"Agait" - going, saying "Eeeeh, t'feyers agait allreet" - "ah - the fire is going well" or "Ee were agait...." - "He was saying....."
Lancashire people are very down to earth, the older generation are salt of the earth.
From Morecambe, proud to be from the red rose county 🌹
i’m from lancashire.yep,that’s our accent.
sounds just like my grandpa
This man right here is from the best county in England. 🌹
And Lancashire a county as GDDaniel K rightly states. He's correct too. My own birth county ....
@Stoic I won’t dw
Exactly pal can’t get better than Lancashire eh I’m from Blackburn.
Here's to all England 🍻
I'm American, and I've never heard anyone sounds so similar to my late grandmother. I miss her everyday
Where was she from? I've heard that the Georgia accent in the US is influenced by accents from the West of Britain
@@pgf289 she was from Blackpool and moved to the states as a young adult
The Brits all had an 'American' accents until the eighteenth century. That's where it came from.
@@dlk1dlk1the accent is still spoken is the south west of England, just search up the Bristol accent
Yes, it still survives there where they are not under London's influence.@@Ellanvannin03
THIS IS MY ACCENT MATE IT'S BEAUTIFUL ISN'T IT. ALSO WHAT GOBSHITE DISLIKED IT
Lancashire Lass me 2 😂 I’m from Blackburn
@@alishawhelan-baxter6727 NOOOO I'M FROM BURNLEY WHYY DO YOU SUPPORT BLACKBURN EWW
#ormskirk
@@jamiewoodward7775 ew 😂
It's RUclips....there's always someone.
Garstang is 10 miles from Lancaster, where I live, as the "Crow Flies!" ... I too have a Lancashire accent.
I love this I find our accent beautiful 😁♥️
same here :)
Same I'm proud to be from Lancashire
I have no connection to Britain but I love this accent!
I miss fred dibnah with hits accent. It seems like his accent is extinct now and replaced with imm
Dude this guy is so adorable, I wanna meet him so bad
For those who don't know, he said he was from Garstang
Lancashire born lancashire bred and proud
There isn't a generic Lancashire accent! (I'm Lancashire born n' bred, by the way) His accent is Garstang, which is slightly to you, but to us, VERY different to a Blackpool accent!
Agree. The accents seem to differ from village to village. England has one of the most diverse usage of the English language.
@@CikisHelyzet Blackpool's flatter accent sticks out like a sore thumb, but Preston is probs the most consistent Lancashire accent
TheStrober That may be true. Preston definitely represents but I wonder if that isn't due to sheer number. When you look at all the many smaller communities that make up Lancs it becomes a bit murky
Disagree Lanky is a dialect with different tonations .. Ee by gum lass have you learned nothing 😆
@I love 5G and the aliens that are coming back. Oh a supreme being .. thanks .. I suppose you have a superior intellect?
You spelt Gherkin wrong 😀
What a lovely man !
My grandparents were from Lancashire, grandmother originally from Liverpool, although lived in various parts of Lancashire, I think Colne and Burnley. My grandfather was from Preston, and they both emigrated to New Zealand after WW2. Grandmother spoke with more of a Lancashire accent than a scouse accent. They have long since passed, and despite living in NZ for over 50 years, they still had strong accents.
Big up Preston!
I'm from Preston
@@michaelsnape7547 How is their soccer...oops, football ⚽ team doing this year.
@@gsf67 Burnley are doin alright tbf, they're in the prem like lol
I Love this old guy. I would listen to him read books or even the stock page.
Stunned! 😤
He said Garstang not Garshtag.
I live in Lancaster which is 8 miles North of Garstang. I moved from the South of the UK in 1979 when I was 3. I love Lancashire. Love living here!
Lancaster is really pretty. I went for day trips many times 🖤
We love having you here, big up Lancashire!
He's such a smiley old man. Love him.
How adorable is he!
He is so gentle and peaceful...
It's like if Anthony Hopkins was your grandad, and from Lancashire! Lol!
Yea, humble spirited people like that tend to turn out to have been war heroes and you'd never know. So beautifully unassuming.
Despite living in London since 1975, people still ask me where I come from (Blackburn, actually). But my grandfather (from Oswaldtwistle) could speak dialect, which used quite a different vocabulary - the use of thee and thou (with quite distinct usages) for example. Another was the word sneck instead of latch (on a door). Places might be named after the people who lived there eg Tum o’Dick o’Bob’s. A saying I remember is “Clogs to Clogs i’ three generations”. Most of this has inevitably passed away now and I can’t help but feel we have lost something of ourselves. Si thi, tha knoas
I'm from Florida, but I've lived in Lancashire (Blackburn, actually) for about 10 years now. I worked in Accrington with people from all around, for instance a Burnley lass who would say stairs like 'stayas' and a lad from Clayton-le-Moors with a hilariously broad accent. There was also a woman born and raised in Oswaldtwistle ('below the lamp' if I recall correctly), or 'Twizzle-twozzle' as she would say; it was absolutely fascinating to hear about the dialect there - things like 'wherst thu from', et cetera. And I love how she said 'cowd' (cold).
@@tsgillespiejr I live in Wilpshire 🤣🤣 did some work at Senator in Altham and the accents are so broad round that way, I'm in the Ribble Valley so the accents are much more tempered.
Born n bred in Blackburn where we look after our own, get on with it when it’s dismal and be proud of where we come from
@tsgillespiejr I'm from St Helens ands say cewd instead of cold.
OMG this old man is so adorable!
I'm originally from Lancashire Blackburn, arrived in Australia 1950. My parents have of course passed away but I miss hearing their accent. I miss England not the land but the people.
My parents were kind and gentle.
That’s my accent, sounds like everyone I was brought up with. It’s quite a tame Lancashire accent really.
Wigan, Bolton, Leigh would all be much stronger.😊
Wiganese is stroonngg
Ive got a Burnley accent but its not as strong as some peoples.I can understand Wigan and Leigh quite OK. but Bolton i struggle with.
Absolutely right. This man's accent is much more refined than what you normally find in Lancs. Interview some young folk and you'll be pluggin your ears. Sayin that... I love it! 🇨🇦
None of them are Lancashire they're all Greater Manchester for at least the last 50 years
it's a shame I live in Stockport where the accent sounds like this but more neutered in a way, in fact I choose at times to emphasise a pronunciation just because I'm jealous that my accent feels otherwise so formal yet northern at the same time.
Love the Lancashire accent... Mine is St Helens, but more old school St Helens, than a mix of scouse... Burnley, Bolton way have the best Lancashire accents! #class
Martin Harvey. Thanks for that. Burnley has a bit of a Yorkshire touch to it. In fact when i lived down south i was asked loads if i came from Leeds.My Nan and Grandad, were originally from Warrington. Though they left in the late 50s,when my Mum, her sister and brother were in their late teens/early 20s. My Grandad had a beautiful accent.But nowadays in Warrington, they seem to talk more like Manchester. St Helens accent with the older people is quite nice, but for some odd reason most of the youngsters seem to want to talk a chavvy version of Scouse.
@@burnleyfan11965 My grandmother, although born in Liverpool, lived in Colne and Burnley before she emigrated to New Zealand, my grandfather was from Preston. A staunch Preston North End fan, found it hard to reconcile that the once great Preston North End, were playing in the lower reaches of the football league. Despite living in kiwiland for over 50 years still had strong Lancashire accents.
@Ewan Williams What or who is a nobber? Are nobbers Preston North End fans?
@Ewan Williams cool name, but from what I can see PNE, have never been much chop, can't ever see them making the Premier League.
He's so softly spoken. Hard as nails but a nice bloke. Th ese blokes they're rare but you've found one.
I live here its not
Yes legend! Used to live in garstang. Am 5 min down road now pal :)
My grandfather came from Blackburn & my grandmother came from Darwen. They had differing accents. Grandfather had a very broad & thick accent but grandmother's was much softer & rounder. They pronounced some words completely differently to each other. Two towns close together but their accents were wide apart!
I fuckin love Blackburn.
@@captainkenzie6873 i’m from blackburn and its rough as f**k
@@M4CYL0L4XX Yeah it's a bit of a shit hole in some areas but it's not all bad.
@@captainkenzie6873 all areas aha
Try Bury vs. Bolton a few miles west... very different indeed. Bury accent is harsh (Berreh!) but Bolton is round and mellow like Fred Dibnah. HaRk haRk the dogs do baRk in Bolton!
Its really hard to make out the soft accent because the interviewer is just much too strong, loud, and agressive. The requests sound too much like demands. Awful.
They don’t talk over each other. Your listening problem has nothing to do with the audio of the video.
I suppose you’re just biased against American voices, based on your description.
fashnek No, he's practically yelling at the man. Check your own bias.
Nope, I checked, and what I said is right.
SHOW US MARGARET
Big mistake on my part. Sorry!
Lancashire has so many different accents but this one is the classic rotic Lancashire accent mainly spoken by old people
Asking someone what's their local dielect is like asking a fish about water.
No it isn't. Anyone asking a fish about water must be from Yorkshire.
Couldn’t hear the accent whatsoever over the American -_-
Neither could I.
Sounds like you might have a problem with your listening. I’m sorry 😢
The salt 🧂
ikr, loud ass yank
We got another whiner!
My first girlfriend was from Lancashire…….I could listen to her for hours….(I had no choice!!) Lovely accent. X
Fabulous guy, love him so much
my grandpa is from lancashire, not too far from manchester. he’s lived in australia for most of his life but his accent still sounds just like this man’s accent ❤️
Every town has its own accent. Amazing just a few miles either way. Totally different. And very shakesperian.
You'd better ask the wife about that or talk to the wife, she'll be better to tell you that, are phrases so often used! What humility and likeability in that Gent only he knew it. From the days when people thought more before they spoke. The American man seemed a little over intent to get the man to say something but he didn't mean any harm, just trying to draw him out when he didn't really need it. Lovely warm friendly accent
Thank you for seeing that! I hoped my fellow American learned to be a bit more patient. Being from the northeast, we tend to be impatient with people who are more 'thoughtful' when they speak, as we tend to have a routine set of answers, and our conversations tend to flow, even if much of what we say is unnecessary! LOL We would likely have a similar response to someone from the midwest, who also would take the time to formulate their thoughts. We have not been gifted with a lot of patience, unfortunately!
@@inconnu4961 Hi, thanks for you reply. It made me smile because the more he was being drawn out, the more it gave the elderly gent to consider and hold the pause. Bless them both. I'm sure they enjoyed the conversation equally. It would be a novelty for him to speak with an American and something he would talk about often at a later date, I'm sure. (Once he had considered it all first, of course!)
@@inconnu4961 I guess you guys would fit right in Croatian coffee shops
@@inconnu4961 I as someone who lives in a simalir area to this gent found people from the North East easier to deal with than people in the South of the US, who can't seem to say what they feel such as " bless your heart " and so on . It makes it harder to interpret to be honest.
The only reason this gent speaks slower is because he more than likley wants to make sure he speaking clearly . I would not say Lancashire diaclet and accents are of a slow speaking manner .
He just can't hear you and you're talking really fast
My mam is from Lancashire....she always says "alright cock"...😂 people in Cumbria were always like wtf.
Hahaha! That's right... I miss that.
"Alright, Duck!"
What fot do cocker get that cooker on
My father and some of his family emmigrated from Blackpool to Los Angeles. This mans accent makes me feel happy and calm. sooch a loovly aaksent tew behewld.
Oh bless him, this is everything.
I love our accent i from near blackpool a small town called Blackburn
A wonderfull Lancashire Accent can be heard on the RUclips channel "Holly - The Cafe Boat". Joanna is from the Blackburn area, and is a joy to listen to her accent. It is a fun well done channel too, about a family on a canal boat.
lancashire is a county with multiple different towns and cities in it e.g blackburn, chorley, preston. Each place has its own accents, its like saying everyone in america has the same accent.
I'm from Preston, to people from Lancashire the accents are different but I reckon to anyone else they all basically sound the same
How can I find out if Barnard is alive and well? He is so sweet. My BF and I saw this video two years ago and we still talk about him.
You could visit Garstang, it isn't big
Here's a tip:
When someone says "I'm 76 years old" don't say "good for you".
How insulting
What a snowflake you are !
Reaching such an age is a victory over many of life's hazards.
Good for him !
That’s kind of a ridiculous thing to be offended over.
Eh, he didn't mean it like that. He meant it more of a celebration of a long and fulfilling life. Not many of us get that.
It did sound rather condescending.
He wasn't Insulting to him . It sounded like he genuinely meant it.
This guy honestly did not seem offended by it . I am from a simalir area and the elderly take it as a compliment. Because to get to that age given the times they have lived in its honestly an achievement.
I bet Margaret is known by Peggy like most Margaret's in Lancashire, just like my 88 year old grandma
Lancashire and its people are like a hidden gem in England. Our elderly people are just wonderful and are brilliant role models in attitude and work ethic. I really miss Lancashire and hope it doesn't change.
Come on up the lancs don’t know how I found this but I’m from where he’s from
My grandparents live in Lancashire and I just get major old people vibes 😂😂
Thank you for sharing this! After looking up my ancestry of my current last name (not the one that is married in past geneaology)- Leatherbury with peoples names on it, it stated the Leatherbury ancestory came from Lancashire, United Kingdom.
I live in the United States however and have never been to Lancashire, but found I do talk similar to the guy in this video with the descriptions of how I describe things in my mind of Turn Right, etc and am very visual when I speak.
I wanted to say thank you for sharing this video and my dad also wears button down shirts!
Hopefully I can figure out some favorite foods here soon of people in Lancashire soon to know if we have any similarities in that also!!!
Awesome video!!!
Michelle I’m from near this guy, we like pie’s and bread rolls but we call them “tea cakes” and not the ones with raisins in. We like scones. Pies. More pies. Shepherds pie. Erm, steak pie. Lol.
Lancashire hotpot! Also I'm from Heysham near Lancaster and we like a good chips cheese and gravy. Good luck finding that in the US. The chips have to be done in beef dripping and if you manage to find a gradely (good) chippie (fish n chip shop) in the US you most certainly need scraps on top!
Wish we had more time to hear this lovely Lancastrian accent
You're speaking to the poor fella like he's 12. Show some respect
There’s always a bloody KAREN in the comments section
He doesn't mean to be rude...he's just American.
"poor fella"? Who's being disrespectful now? Do you feel sorry for him?
@@unitywindowdoor2260 you don’t get what he means lol
@@chetisanhart3457 Why is his rudeness tied to his being American? That's like saying all Mexicans are rude because some are.
In preston you will hear TA and CHA almost the time 😂
Mi dad was a lot broader. He was from Blackburn
I’m 40 and I sound like this.
Bless him
there are different lancashire accents
council estate lancashire accents
There is an enormous difference. If we still count Liverpool as Lancashire,their accent is so much different to mine, even though ive not got that broad an accent. Though i still sound Burnley.
@@burnleyfan11965 I was told the scouse accent evolved from the industrial revolution, talking to each other over deafening machinery in factories.... its possible, try mouthing words as if intended to be lip read... its very liverpool :)
@@simonmcnicholas cotton town Lancashire was more known for that than Liverpool. Liverpool had a large Irish population and that had an influence on its accent
True!
Repping Lancashire (Morecambe)
Hardly got to hear the man speak🤦🏼♂️
Wow I just got shot back 10 years of nostalgia of my grandmother
The late Lancashire Legend Fred Dibnah, you'll hear the Lancashire accent here alright, and witness an old school Steeple Jack at work.
ruclips.net/video/wffv8YeoeeM/видео.html
There's more than one Lancashire accent, whether you come from Rochdale, Bolton, Blackburn, etc. This chap's is very nice. I feel 'reyt a' wom' listening to him. The favouriote Lancashire dialect word is 'cruckled'. 😎
Yay we got mentioned
PRESTON BLED
so was there a follow up with margret? hahah
When you ask how old he is you realize that he still sees himself as a young, carefree, playful man and genuinely sees the world like one, and just occasionally realizes that he really is "one of those old people" now which breaks his heart
Bless him❤
Mrs. Patmore would like a word. But this man is unintentional ASMR at its best ❤️
My man talking to an elder like a police officer
That is definitely a Lancashire accent but not from round here! 😂 I used to get the piss taken out of me for my Chorley accent from people from Preston and they are like 10 miles away! Must be cos people have lived here so long!
Right? I used to travel from Bolton to Preston and every village had their own sayings and accent. How incredible! How's Chorley?
@@CikisHelyzet hows Chorley? Same shit hole it's always bin.
@@neilharris2048 I bet 99.999% of them know the difference between "been" and a "bin" though.
Tard.
Garstang is not just outside Blackpool, its twenty miles away
He speaks like Fred dibnah. Lovely accent is lanky.
Fred Dibnah was an amazing character, you couldn't get away with most of the stuff he did these days.
Sounds like Peter Cundall. I kept expecting him to recommend Blood and Bone and ask whether it's lovely.
I sound just like that guy
This is like some cool side quest
If this guy interviewing the old man had met up with my friend Margaret he would never have understood her, she is true Lancashire,as are some of her friends, I don’t understand them when they get talking real lanky, but then it varies from town to town...
This helped me learn a Lancashire accent for my drama class