American Reacts to 50 British Problems!

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  • Опубликовано: 30 янв 2025
  • Tea troubles, queuing qualms, and other peculiar predicaments await! From the mildly annoying to the downright hilarious, we'll explore the unique challenges that Brits face daily.
    Original Video: • 50 Funny “Very British...
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    #VeryBritishProblems #AmericanReacts #BritishHumor

Комментарии • 504

  • @BedtimeStoriesChannel
    @BedtimeStoriesChannel Год назад +59

    I remember being in a restaurant once and the waitress dropped a tray of cutlery. Everyone turned with that annoyed expression at such a cacophonous intrusion. When she said "Sorry", everyone's face softened, and then some bloke at the back said, "That's ok, I'm shit at my job too". Place erupted with laughter.

    • @andrewsteele4952
      @andrewsteele4952 7 месяцев назад +5

      Of my experience, I am a Brit, if bar/pub or resturant staff drop something most people watching will start clapping and cheering!

    • @lunarl
      @lunarl 5 месяцев назад +1

      Sounds fake. If you don't cheer, you're an outsider

    • @mellowfellow-h8r
      @mellowfellow-h8r 3 месяца назад

      @@lunarl no, it's a "thing". I don't exactly understand whhy it's a "thing", but, it's a "thing".

  • @sionedwilliams9065
    @sionedwilliams9065 Год назад +92

    It's not the 25°c that f*cks us over. It's the humidity. You watch people slowly 🫠

    • @julianaylor4351
      @julianaylor4351 Год назад +7

      My secret rush to Boots and buy the skin coolant meant for foreign holidays, reduce my underwear aka no vest and walk in the shade. ❤

    • @DornishVintage
      @DornishVintage Год назад +1

      The humidity in the UK is not that bad. You're an island. As a fellow Euro, I've suffered through weeks in the US with 95F and 90% humidity.

    • @julianaylor4351
      @julianaylor4351 Год назад +12

      @@DornishVintage The problem is our building, they aren't built for a hot climate and you only find air conditioning in modern, public, industrial and commercial buildings. Most homes are old and so there is always a rush, these days to buy electric fans in hot weather.

    • @howardchambers9679
      @howardchambers9679 Год назад +14

      ​@@DornishVintageit's a different sort of heat. And bear in mind we Brits aren't used to it. Anything over 30°C and we are melting

    • @lunarl
      @lunarl 5 месяцев назад +1

      ​ @DornishVintage our buildings are made to hold in heat though and dont usually have any air conditioning.

  • @JustMe-ks8qc
    @JustMe-ks8qc Год назад +83

    There are indeed biscuit laws, they vary by biscuit type.
    eg, Got Jaffa Cakes? Here's what's required
    1. Keep packet in non dominant hand while you...
    2. Eat all the Jaffa Cakes.
    3. It is only acceptable to put a full Jaffa cake packet down if you have a bonus triple-pack and you are working on the other two.
    4. Do not share your Jaffa Cakes. This decreases how many Jaffa Cakes you can eat.
    5. Always eat other people's Jaffa Cakes. This increases how many Jaffa Cakes you can eat.
    6. Only eat your Jaffa Cakes sitting down if you live alone.
    7. The use by date on your Jaffa Cakes packet is for decoration only. Nobody expects your Jaffa Cakes to survive more than an hour or two after they leave the shop.
    You're welcome.

    • @AnnQlder
      @AnnQlder Год назад +8

      You cracked me up 😂😂😂🇦🇺

    • @clairecalton2116
      @clairecalton2116 Год назад +19

      And don't forget to do the full moon, half moon, total eclipse thing!

    • @JustMe-ks8qc
      @JustMe-ks8qc Год назад +6

      @@clairecalton2116 Black hole. Devours everything. Jaffa Cakes especially.

    • @julianaylor4351
      @julianaylor4351 Год назад +1

      I have the same issues with a chocolate covered biscuits and alike. 🍫😁😋

    • @catherinewilliams3850
      @catherinewilliams3850 Год назад +1

      I can see by your sermon that you really hate Jaffa Cakes?🤣

  • @sirstix-a-lotfpv8604
    @sirstix-a-lotfpv8604 Год назад +109

    The depressing thing is the people you only see at weddings turn into the people you only see at funerals.

    • @hahatoldyouso
      @hahatoldyouso Год назад +5

      So true

    • @paulfletcher3998
      @paulfletcher3998 Год назад +6

      My God, that's the truth isn't it. Got a funeral next week.

    • @julieannsheridan6438
      @julieannsheridan6438 Год назад +3

      Yup very true

    • @BlackxGarden
      @BlackxGarden Год назад +3

      Exactly. If you don't do something about it, one day your funeral will be the next one everyone gets together at. So stop bloody procrastinating and arrange a day out with your mates, no matter how much admin is involved in that for you these days with your pets/kids/houses/spouses/jobs/responsibilities. Life is literally too short.
      (I think I'm saying that to myself as much as anyone else...)

    • @brigidsingleton1596
      @brigidsingleton1596 Год назад +1

      I've been to more funerals than weddings - let me think... Five weddings ... (Inc two of mine!) ... I think, six (Inc my twins one)...and three more family funerals I wasn't able to attend due to ill health. 🥺

  • @Isleofskye
    @Isleofskye Год назад +26

    My idea of British sarcasm. On a train from Central London to Kent, some passengers were standing, yet I saw one Guy in a 2 seater with his bag on the inside of him.
    ME: Pointing to the seat.Thanks! ...HIM: kissing his teeth/muttering some annoyance at my temerity of disrupting his comfort.
    ME: Pointing to the offending bag .." NO! Not You! HIM! He's the one(the bag ) taking the seat and not paying mate"...with mock irritation at the bag.
    HIM,thinking "I'm going to be sitting next to a nutter!"..... that disorientated him:)

  • @WOFFY-qc9te
    @WOFFY-qc9te Год назад +41

    My chum Richard and I were in queue for the cable car down from Mont Blanc, US guy was slowly working his way forward by engaging in conversation and then turning to the one in front to start another. When he got to me he said "where are you from" ?. I said "Britain and queueing is a great British tradition kindly not spoil my enjoyment". Those behind started to chuckle and would not let him back in. A cold day in 1990. RIP Richard.

    • @QTGetomov
      @QTGetomov 11 месяцев назад +7

      I was waiting in a queue to see a show once really late at night and these people came along and just jumped the line. They just walked up and tried to push in right at the front.
      And do you know what we did?
      AHA! No! We didn’t just tut and whisper “shocking!” to the other people in line. Instead we did the most un-British thing ever and loudly called them out on it!
      It felt like rebellion, and I liked it!

    • @ruthmeb
      @ruthmeb 7 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@QTGetomovI did this in the baker the other day and got the stink eye and sark from a staff member...

  • @RogersRamblings
    @RogersRamblings Год назад +106

    Many non-British people don't understand the subtlety of "sorry". Of course it can be used as an apology but it can also be a prelude to getting a slap as in "Sorry, but who the .... do you think you're talking to!" and anything in between.

    • @sludgiebear
      @sludgiebear Год назад +14

      Similar to the usage of "mate" 😉

    • @jockeyladjockeylad8492
      @jockeyladjockeylad8492 Год назад +1

      Yeah - a rough translation "You were a dick just then - you know it, I know it, it's a universal accepted truth - but I haven't the time, inclination or patience to get into it with you. So I'll just say 'sorry' & we will both get on with our day."
      You couldn't be more British if you were a Bulldog in a Union Flag Waistcoat eating a Frenchmen.

    • @old.not.too.grumpy.
      @old.not.too.grumpy. Год назад +14

      The meaning of the word "sorry" is totally dependent on the inflexion use.
      Non Brits will only hear the word used.
      We British will know the meaning behind the word

    • @more-reasons6655
      @more-reasons6655 Год назад +9

      Sorry is an exclamation mark that you put at the start of a sentence

    • @lisasimpson4574
      @lisasimpson4574 Год назад +2

      😂🤣 so true my Fellow Englishman 😂

  • @nolajoy7759
    @nolajoy7759 Год назад +24

    Eveybody knows broken biscuits have no calories. Broken biscuits also spoil the look of the biscuit jar so it's just good housekeeping really.

  • @anthonydinsdale8783
    @anthonydinsdale8783 Год назад +42

    The Antiques Roadshow signature tune came on at 7pm on Sunday and it triggered every kid who hadn't done their homework to run up to their room and try and finish it. It's still a trigger for a lot of us 😊

    • @lara28490
      @lara28490 7 месяцев назад +1

      Must be a bit older than you, when I was a kid the trigger was Songs of Praise...

  • @Sparx632
    @Sparx632 Год назад +44

    22:40 The UK has a generally temperate climate leaning on the colder side, so when it goes above 25°C a lot of us really can’t cope, especially since UK homes aren’t built for hot weather and tend to keep heat in as well as lacking air conditioning. That’s what the post is getting at

    • @martinmaynard141
      @martinmaynard141 Год назад +5

      I'm a Brit living in Seville in Southern Spain (reputidly the hottest city in Europe) and I joke about the fact that I see posts on FB when it gets over 25° because here that is considered a nice day

    • @gemlou763
      @gemlou763 Год назад +8

      ​​@@martinmaynard141As a brit who lived many years in the canaries now back in the Uk I struggle with anything over 25 here. In the Canaries fine with it 35 plus.

    • @georgeprout42
      @georgeprout42 Год назад +10

      Humidity

    • @marylynne9104
      @marylynne9104 Год назад +5

      Also given that 25C usually only happens for an average of two and a half weeks a year, it’s not really worth the expense of getting AC installed, so we complain a lot and use underpowered fans to sluggishly move the hot humid air around.

    • @vivianhull3317
      @vivianhull3317 Месяц назад

      And yet so many Brits are coming to Australia, and not to Melbourne. It's to the shineshine coast, Queensland.

  • @sonikurino1
    @sonikurino1 Год назад +52

    To understand the 25C one, there is a video floating around about why that temperature feels so much hotter in the UK than some other places - should make more sense!

    • @lawrenceglaister4364
      @lawrenceglaister4364 Год назад +16

      I've warned people about it being hotter than they think even though they are from Australia, etc etc usually get told to sod off , until I see a red lobster walking towards me , I smile , they say f.....k off 😂😂😂😂

  • @Hoscitt
    @Hoscitt Год назад +36

    WW3 about to kick off over a piano at a train station is a very British problem 😄

    • @Rachel_M_
      @Rachel_M_ Год назад

      😂

    • @jillosler9353
      @jillosler9353 Год назад +9

      GO! Brendan Kavanagh - you show those bloody commies!!! 😂😂

  • @rikmoran3963
    @rikmoran3963 Год назад +57

    Slapping your thigh and saying 'Right!', is standard practice for declaring your intention to terminate the conversation and leave. I think it was Alannah on the Adventure & Naps channel, (a Canadian who has lived in the UK for years), who said that she had noticed it was something that she had started doing. It's taken a few years, but she is almost fully assimilated now! 😂

    • @martinmaynard141
      @martinmaynard141 Год назад +2

      Also Wandering Ravens (a American couple) picked up on that

  • @JackNap1er14
    @JackNap1er14 Год назад +18

    Walking through Oxford a few months ago I noticed a stampede of students walking towards me whilst they were blocking the pavement, as soon as they got in front of me I shouted "SINGLE FILE" & the young female student in the front jumped at least a foot in the air lol

  • @shirl790
    @shirl790 Год назад +43

    Faffing is my most favourite word in the world. Brits love Faffing ❤️

    • @EdDnB
      @EdDnB Год назад

      🤨

    • @KyleNornIreland
      @KyleNornIreland Год назад

      Messin about

    • @annono4714
      @annono4714 Год назад +7

      Faffing about before leaving the house is my other half favourite activity

    • @EdDnB
      @EdDnB Год назад

      @@KyleNornIreland you mean mincing about….

    • @jillosler9353
      @jillosler9353 Год назад

      Faffing about while waffling = tapping fingers loudly and impatiently on the nearest flat surface!

  • @billyhills9933
    @billyhills9933 Год назад +36

    "It's cold out."
    "Well, put it away then!"

  • @carolineskipper6976
    @carolineskipper6976 Год назад +24

    Very British Problems is a great account. Always hilariously true!
    Thinking it's 'lovely' at 70 degrees is VERY un British!!!!! That's just about the hottest temperature people feel ordinary life can continue. Any hotter and we melt into a puddle and can't do anything!

  • @onecupof_tea
    @onecupof_tea Год назад +21

    Say ' sorry', but it's also expected that the other person apologises too, as it's normally 50:50, especially bumping into someone.
    When they say 'that's alright ', I feel like punching them.
    When a relative invited me to join her at the head of a queue, she explained to the whole queue we were related, and would be travelling together, just to avoid a mutiny.

    • @pheenixani
      @pheenixani Год назад

      A man once stepped in front of my wheelchair and I accidentally ran over his foot and we were both so mortified we spent literal minutes going over the 'no no, I'm sorry' routine until it got awkward

  • @NotAgnor
    @NotAgnor 9 месяцев назад +10

    There’s something all Americans need to understand:
    UK heat is unlike any other, 30° in the UK feels hotter than the core of the sun. Our sweat doesn’t evaporate so you end up both wet and hot. We have no air conditioning. Our houses are designed to retain heat. Opening a window makes it hotter. As someone who can handle it being hot, the 2022 heatwave (40+° in the shade btw) made it physically impossible and medically dangerous to be outside!

  • @slytheringingerwitch
    @slytheringingerwitch Год назад +42

    I love the fact that after reacting to this, you'll use the word 'faff' in a conversation which will be met with very confused expressions.

    • @malcombe7001
      @malcombe7001 Год назад +3

      Oh, that has to be done. I used to have a dictionary in the toilet, I would look for a word I didn't know and have 24 hours to use it. I used to drink in a local pub then, so it was easier, I loved when a word would come back at me, amazing stuff. You have to entertain yourself sometimes.

    • @julianaylor4351
      @julianaylor4351 Год назад +1

      Can't stand people messing around with bank cards on their phone that don't work. 😁

    • @nolajoy7759
      @nolajoy7759 Год назад +3

      I love the word 'faffing' and use it often. No other word quite fits the bill so well.

    • @freewheelinfranklin6201
      @freewheelinfranklin6201 Год назад +2

      @@nolajoy7759 I always used it in conjunction with farting as in "They were farting about and faffing on."

  • @Beejay950
    @Beejay950 Год назад +46

    Sorry, but we don't call cookies biscuits, you call biscuits cookies. :-)

    • @theapavlou3030
      @theapavlou3030 10 месяцев назад +1

      Just came here to day this 😂

  • @CrowMaiden
    @CrowMaiden Год назад +18

    6:45-ish, the comment about queue skippers reminded me of the one time I've used an airport (we were going to Shannon Airport in Ireland).
    still in the English airport (Gatwick), we were all in line and someone pushed in further up. turns out the British public will unite over only 3 things; hating the weather, Bonfire Night, and complaining/tutting loudly about someone cutting the queue.

    • @marycunningham8466
      @marycunningham8466 11 месяцев назад

      We tend to say jumping the queue

    • @CrowMaiden
      @CrowMaiden 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@marycunningham8466 out of interest, who's 'we'?
      I ask because in my area of England, we tend to use cutting and jumping interchangably. I've heard both about an equal amount since I was born.

  • @Lily33McC
    @Lily33McC Год назад +15

    I hate it when people start complaining about everything! My Dad says “This coffee is expensive, £1.75 for 2 custard creams, £5 for parking, it’s ridiculous!”
    Look Dad if you don’t stop complaining we won’t invite you round again!!! 😂
    I’m Joking - l don’t speak to my Dad, we’re not allowed to - he’s a bus driver.

    • @Isleofskye
      @Isleofskye Год назад +1

      Lynn,I have known some people to dive to explore the underwater world, observe marine life, and experience the beauty of coral reefs and other underwater landscapes but to dive onto a Bus? 😀

  • @LalaDepala_00
    @LalaDepala_00 Год назад +15

    The Dutch version of queuing:
    Walk into a store. Silently make a mental note on the people who were inside before you got inside and thus will be served before you. Be nervous about new people coming in who might not follow this rule. Be relieved that they do. Wait your turn.

    • @andrevandervlies5700
      @andrevandervlies5700 10 месяцев назад +2

      Correct. Upon entering, asking: "Are you all together?" is optional.

  • @redceltnet
    @redceltnet Год назад +31

    The reference to roasting everything in the fridge is talking about our Sunday lunches. Such options include: slices of roast beef, roasted potatoes, roasted yorkshire pudding... the peas and corn will be on the hob (the flat bit at the top). All of it will be heavily coated in gravy. Hence the 50,000 calories.

    • @jillosler9353
      @jillosler9353 Год назад +4

      Don't forget the roast parsnips!!!! 😅

    • @redceltnet
      @redceltnet Год назад +3

      @@jillosler9353 Oh, I forgot a lot of things. I think it takes first-hand experience to appreciate what a British Sunday roast is like. :)

    • @JaneAustenAteMyCat
      @JaneAustenAteMyCat Год назад +1

      Corn?

    • @zoeblay8771
      @zoeblay8771 Год назад +1

      Finally another person who has corn with their roast dinner....respect!!

  • @milliegoodwin5389
    @milliegoodwin5389 Год назад +21

    Summer in the UK is awful because of the humidity and lack of air conditioning in most places
    There's nowhere to avoid the heat, and the humidity will usually be 60-90% so even your sweat can't keep you cool because it can't evaporate in the humid environment, add to that that our houses are made to keep heat IN
    We had a summer where the heat reached 40°C (104°F) and it's estimated that around 1000 people died from it

    • @patthewoodboy
      @patthewoodboy Год назад +1

      they didnt die from the heat , they died because they were old , get over it

    • @milliegoodwin5389
      @milliegoodwin5389 Год назад +15

      Only 495 of the deaths were people over 85, and heat stroke is a well known cause of death that can happen at any age
      Bit needless to tell me to get over myself, but okay

    • @saranissen6210
      @saranissen6210 Год назад +2

      maybe also some old people don't have the same feeling of thurst as younger people, so they might not drink enough, or the heat is just harsher to them.

    • @julianaylor4351
      @julianaylor4351 Год назад +4

      I couldn't sleep upstairs that summer. 🥵

    • @milliegoodwin5389
      @milliegoodwin5389 Год назад +6

      @@julianaylor4351 I had to sleep with just the sheet of my duvet, a fan on, and windows open, and I still woke up drenched in sweat every morning

  • @Paul_Allaker8450
    @Paul_Allaker8450 Год назад +4

    I think its the Blitz mentality that makes us understate everything when facing some sort of hardship, a bit like the Black Knight from The Holy Grail.........you get the idea.

    • @julianaylor4351
      @julianaylor4351 Год назад +1

      Tis nothing but a scratch.... arm has been taken off. 😁

  • @catherinewilliams3850
    @catherinewilliams3850 Год назад +2

    They missed, - going to the Dr's - sit in Dr's room, (Dr) 'how are you today' (patient) 'Fine thank you', then thinks 'why did I say that'?
    🙄😂

  • @marktubeie07
    @marktubeie07 Год назад +21

    07:56 now this is why your channel is brilliant - your honest reactions crack me up every time !!😂😂😂😂

  • @primalengland
    @primalengland Год назад +36

    We’d be happy to have you as an honourable Brit.

    • @cenedra2143
      @cenedra2143 Год назад +3

      Agreed 👍

    • @SideQ-rr6my
      @SideQ-rr6my Год назад +3

      Ayes to the right...

    • @heraklesnothercules.
      @heraklesnothercules. Год назад +2

      I think you mean "honorary", though "honourable" would probably work. 🙂

    • @primalengland
      @primalengland Год назад +4

      @@heraklesnothercules. You’re quite right. How did that slip through the net? Sorry, sorry, excuse me, sorry……… 😊

    • @dialwright
      @dialwright Год назад

      honourary

  • @vaudevillian7
    @vaudevillian7 Год назад +16

    You definitely need to react to why it feels hotter in the UK when it doesn’t seem hot - remember the UK has generally had a colder, mild climate and the infrastructure is built around trapping heat. Houses are brick built and insulated and have no AC

  • @JGMP7887
    @JGMP7887 Год назад +6

    Bro you need to watch an episode of the TV sitcom "The Royle Family".
    It will teach you everything you need to know about typical British family life lol

  • @paulfletcher3998
    @paulfletcher3998 Год назад +10

    I think the most British thing is using insults as terms of endearment.

    • @nolajoy7759
      @nolajoy7759 Год назад +4

      And Australians have taken that on board and to the next level! 😅 🇦🇺

    • @paulfletcher3998
      @paulfletcher3998 Год назад +1

      @@nolajoy7759 You're not wrong.

    • @mehallica666
      @mehallica666 4 месяца назад

      ​@@nolajoy7759I was just about to say the Aussies have certainly embraced that concept.

  • @lomion79
    @lomion79 Год назад +6

    Oh! The joy this video has brought me. You are hilarious.

  • @GetheS
    @GetheS Год назад +5

    22:36 our houses were built to keep us warm so 90% are insulated and they're all made of brick.. So with our summers getting warmer they're basically ovens

  • @froggy8030
    @froggy8030 Год назад +12

    Single file when someone is walking towards you is just manners.

  • @misschieflolz1301
    @misschieflolz1301 Год назад +5

    22:25 - thing is warmer temperatures are unbearable in the UK. Between not having A/C.... I mean virtually no one has A/C at home, and not all businesses will have A/C either, our houses and buildings are mostly designed to trap heat and then there's this pesky little thing.
    The number of hours of daylight we have typically when we're getting these heatwaves. At peak time during the summer solstace, sunrise can be as early as 4:15am, and even after sunset, It can still be moderately light up until 10:30pm..... plus we don't have true night at that point. We don't get any time for buildings to cool down, so you're kinda stuck in hot humid places with no chance of escaping the heat.

  • @julianaylor4351
    @julianaylor4351 Год назад +5

    British weather, it's going to be sunny, put an umbrella in your bag, it's going to be warm, put a scarf in your bag, it's going to be hot, prepare to melt, it's suddenly rain and you forgot your umbrella, jump on a bus and pack it out with other damp people. 😁

  • @dinastanford7779
    @dinastanford7779 Год назад +2

    The one about the long queue refers to the queues for the lying in State of Queen Elizabeth ll

  • @watchreadplayretro
    @watchreadplayretro Год назад +4

    Or Eric Idle's wonderful scene in National Lampoon's European Vacation!

  • @nicw5574
    @nicw5574 Год назад +12

    I love Very British Problems, it makes me realise I'm not weird just British
    For me it was Bullseye on the tv Sunday evening that made me have the back to school panic. Even now I can't watch repeats of Bullseye without getting the same feeling. I'm an adult.
    If you identify with even half of these, you're definitely a honourable Brit, though that did nearly slip when you thought 25C was fine

    • @monkeyspit153
      @monkeyspit153 Год назад +1

      They had an active serial killer on Bull's eye in one episode

    • @psyraven76
      @psyraven76 Год назад

      Ski Sunday theme song for me!

    • @Kimmillennial
      @Kimmillennial 8 месяцев назад

      ​@@monkeyspit153Correct! His name is/was Peter Howard Moore & he killed 4 men between September & November 1995. They didn't know at the time when he was on bullseye that he'd already killed ppl, so seeing the episode he was in now is creepy 😬 Weirder for me, as iirc, he was either arrested or charged with the murders on the 30th November 1995, which is the day I was born 😱 Also, I live in Merseyside, which was one of the areas he travelled past! 😨

  • @annono4714
    @annono4714 Год назад +6

    Roast everything in the fridge means we eat roast dinners on Sundays and faffing is looking for change at the cash register or when you can't find your car keys when leaving the house or going to the toilet at the last minute, basically keeping others waiting or delaying your departure because you are faffing around with last minute issues or being disorganised.

  • @patrickskelton3610
    @patrickskelton3610 Год назад +2

    I remember my Grandmother saying "I'll do it in two shakes of a lambs tail". Sometimes the lamb didn't shake its tail.

  • @julianaylor4351
    @julianaylor4351 Год назад +2

    I dropped a packet of biscuits from my shopping on the kitchen counter, last week...opened them, ate the broken ones. 😁😋

  • @G02372
    @G02372 Год назад +5

    That pavement/road comment is spot on 😂 I spend half my time out in the gutter 😂 🇬🇧

    • @SideQ-rr6my
      @SideQ-rr6my Год назад +4

      If I'm going to have to make eye contact I'd rather be in the road 😅

  • @devinecaesar
    @devinecaesar Год назад +2

    AirCon isn't common in the UK, even in our cars. Every car has fans for heating and circulating air but they don't cool the air below the temperature of the car they only heat it up or recirculate it. Air conditioning in a car that actually cools the air costs extra. Newer trains and buses have it but older trains don't, so getting around when it's hot is a nightmare. The company that manages London Underground (TfL) for example has been put under increasing pressure to upgrade all of its stations and lines to have air conditioning as temperatures down there reached 47°C [116°F] - so far less than half the trains have air conditioning with more set to be replaced later this year

    • @julianaylor4351
      @julianaylor4351 Год назад

      I noticed a new phenomenon, people rushing to Argos to buy fans every time they say a heatwave is coming.

  • @helensmusings
    @helensmusings Год назад +1

    The southern 'Bless your heart' always reminds me of British sarcasm lol

  • @cerdicw9998
    @cerdicw9998 Год назад +1

    As a nation, Britain has a history of excessive aggression. There is a theory that we had to develop a culture of extreme politeness to prevent us from all killing each other!
    There is also a theory that this aggression/politeness behaviour is also seen in Japan - interestingly another country that is a collection of islands off the end of a continent…

    • @lordomacron3719
      @lordomacron3719 Год назад

      Ha ha. I always say about the British everyone hates the English including most of the English.
      (Edit I am English. A Brummie to be precise.)

  • @Isleofskye
    @Isleofskye Год назад +2

    I remember over 40 years ago, meeting a Guy on holiday who, also, lived in London and he came over from East to South East London to have a drink a week after we came back from Corfu.. He wanted to come back for a cup of tea before he went home. Reluctantly, I said "Great" and then put on my pajamas and dressing gown.
    Paul: "Point taken" and he left soon after, chuckling at my "subtlety..lol.

  • @ianprince1698
    @ianprince1698 Год назад +1

    coming up to a crossroads saying after you no after, you for 10 minutes before someone goes, that's the reason we started using mini roundabouts

  • @margaretflounders8510
    @margaretflounders8510 Год назад +3

    During rationing WW2, women would join a queue without a clue what they were queuing for....

  • @annettemoore7264
    @annettemoore7264 Год назад +7

    I'm a Scouser, 😊 I'm 63 now and the last door I held for someone was about a month ago, "he" was an elderly gentleman, around 80, he shuffled past me without as much as a nod so I said "yes Boss" rather loudly in what I think sounds like a black American accent 🙄 😂😂😂

    • @Isleofskye
      @Isleofskye Год назад +5

      I'm 69 in London. I was at the end of the queue, last year,in a Bank. A customer left the counter and I stepped back from the queue to open the door for him and he never even acknowledged it and I went out into the street and shouted THANK YOU to him:)

    • @CathySalmon-rs1dm
      @CathySalmon-rs1dm Год назад +1

      I'm a 73 year old English woman, yesterday I I held the door open for an elderly man who didn't even acknowledge my existence. I had to take several deep breaths lol

  • @ethancantwell8549
    @ethancantwell8549 Год назад +3

    25:15 When someone is choking my family's go to response is "Sorry but can you die quietly".

  • @MrRjhyt
    @MrRjhyt Год назад +3

    The Transcript of asking if someone is in a queue, occurs every time I visit my Chemist/Pharmacy. There's usually two queue, and then more waiting for a script to be made up.

  • @daveac
    @daveac 7 месяцев назад +1

    One of the two Ronnies (Ronny Corbett) had his own comedy show called 'Sorry' 1981 to 1988 (42episodes) & comedian Tony Hancock did one episode of 'Hancock's Half Hour' called 'Sunday Afternoon at Home' S5 E14 in 1958

  • @lesleycarney8868
    @lesleycarney8868 Год назад +7

    Very truthful and funny. I used to have a friend years ago who's house all the girls ended up at after we had been out on girly nights just to carry on drinking a bit and order our taxis. ( pre mobile phone days ) If we overstayed their welcome her husband used to put his pyjamas on and just sit in the living room lollllllll

    • @Isleofskye
      @Isleofskye Год назад +1

      I remember over 40 years ago, meeting a Guy on holiday who, also, lived in London and he came over from East to South East London to have a drink a week after we came back from Corfu.. He wanted to come back for a cup of tea before he went home. Reluctantly, I said "Great" and then put on my pajamas and dressing gown.
      Paul: "Point taken" and he left soon after, chuckling at my "subtlety..lol.

  • @readMEinkbooks
    @readMEinkbooks Год назад +7

    The Sunday roast is the big lunch the Brits have and it feels like you've roasted everything in the fridge. And you eat till you pop. Although it can be consumed throughout the week, it is traditionally consumed on Sunday. It consists of roasted meat, roasted potatoes and accompaniments such as Yorkshire pudding, stuffing, gravy, and condiments such as apple sauce, mint sauce, or redcurrant sauce.

    • @zoeblay8771
      @zoeblay8771 Год назад +1

      And the left over veg makes for yummy bubble and squeak to have with a full English (I know traditionally that's supposed to be on boxing day but who actually follows that rule? Lol)

  • @stewrmo
    @stewrmo Год назад +2

    I do enjoy these character studies you are performing for us all! Keep it up! 😁

  • @jacksmith4460
    @jacksmith4460 Год назад +2

    regarding the temperature, .....you dont understand until experience it. This is the thing, most summer you will get a lot days between 25c(77f) and 35c (95f) and in the summer in June through to September you will get spells that most days are around 30c (86f) what you dont know is the humidity that usually comes with that, sometimes , and its rare you will get drier heat at that temp but we are talking maybe 5 times in my life it has been more than a 1 week before the humidity comes back, or the temp drops. I my self am half Greek ,and have been to Greece, and that is 40+c (104f) but drier (I was on the islands but on the mainland its eve drier) and that was comparable to abut 34/35c (92-95f) in the UK in terms of how you feel it, how overwhelming it is.
    Couple this with hardly any of our buildings having AC and you will understand Heat tolerance in the UK drops unless you come from a very hot humid place, and then you will ease through it. Also our buildings are built for the 250-300 days of the year when its colder and wetter and its about keeping water out and heat in, same with our cars , we have AC but much weaker AC systems in cars usually as standard, and US style beefier AC systems that would come as standard would be optional extras so we are basically sat in ovens in the Summer slowly cooking LMAO

  • @bonariablackie4047
    @bonariablackie4047 Год назад +3

    The term faffing relates to taking an uncessary amount of time doing things you should have done earlier. A good example of faffing: A person has been queuing for five minutes. They get to the till, open their rucksack, rootle around until they find their purse/wallet, comes up with 50 pennies, which they count out one by one, the item is £1.00. so then they have to look again for that 50p, which eventually turns out to be 3 x 10p and 4 x 5p. Then they have to put each thing one by one into their rucksack. Instead of making sure they had the cash correct and ready to go in their purse/wallet and using both hands to pack their items before paying the correct amount. Meanwhile, there is now a queue of 15 people waiting to be served. THAT would be called faffing.

  • @Dan-B
    @Dan-B Год назад +5

    Me: *Someone with debilitating social anxiety, realising I’m actually just British*

  • @saranissen6210
    @saranissen6210 Год назад +4

    This was hillarious. 😂 Seems like I'm an honorary Brit too, cause I could relate to a lot of them(or some of them might be do to being an introvert or just a northern european, that might easier relate) for example sometimes being too polite, too modest, eating broken cookies/crackers first, many times when coming home from work and being glad you have nothing planed so you can just stay inside/at home, and I LOVE tea(just plain, no milk or sugar etc, I only put milk in coffee), count change twice and still often say "they should all be there" etc, and my favorite seasons are spring and autumn so I don't like it too cold or too hot(at 25°c I'd often complain 😅)

  • @liamkelly6628
    @liamkelly6628 Год назад +1

    On holding a door open! Do I look like I work here! After 5 people walk through..... then close the door behind me 😢

  • @TheJohnboyhunter
    @TheJohnboyhunter Год назад +4

    It's almost as if British people like eating biscuits and drinking tea while looking out of the window at the rain. Especially on a Sunday.

  • @JaneG58
    @JaneG58 3 месяца назад

    Ben, Paul and Colin - you are absolutely amazing people. Thank you so much.

  • @jeanproctor3663
    @jeanproctor3663 Год назад +9

    Woohoo! First commentor and viewer! 😁
    ETA: I'm now following VeryBritishProblems and having a good chuckle, while reading such pearls as "You know a British person's life has been completely ruined when they very quietly say "bugger"" - IT'S SO TRUE! 😂

  • @PaulHaigh072
    @PaulHaigh072 Год назад +1

    19:15 I think your accent might actually be classed as a hate crime 🤣😂

  • @y_fam_goeglyd
    @y_fam_goeglyd Год назад

    The "What do you fancy doing?" one. Welcome to a typical daily conversation with my hubby, usually about what is for dinner. 😂
    The thing about getting the washing in, it means the laundry you'd put out to dry on the line. The washing is synonymous with everything waiting to go to the washing machine/the laundry, the washing part of the laundry, the drying part, and sorting it out and putting it away.
    When it comes to "being hot" here, remember that these are the British _Isles._ We are fully surrounded by water, some of which comes directly from the Caribbean (Gulf Stream) which warms up the west so much that palm trees can grow outdoors in Scotland. That is not exaggeration, it happens.
    We pretty much _never_ get dry heat (unless we're getting wind from the Sahara - bloody red dusty sand gets everywhere), it's always humid. So the temperature feels at least 10° C hotter than it actually is and it's exhausting! Think "wind chill" in reverse (but in winter, it makes everything colder, adding to wind chill!) Even if you blink you will get more sweat pouring down.
    So 25°C, which should be pleasantly warm (about the temperature that everyone can deal with, you can go to the beach or not suffer from the heat if you're stuck in an office wearing a suit - though when possible, the jacket is off and either a fan is running or the windows are open). However, it can actually feel like you're in a sauna while wearing a yeti costume. The vast majority of the country is further north than Moscow (and, iirc, Churchill in Canada, but it's nearly midnight and I'm too tired to look. Sorry!), but even Scotland is warmer than there. It's surprising just how hot (and cold) this place can feel - don't go by just the temperature, you're on a hiding to nothing if you do.

  • @kateparkinson5068
    @kateparkinson5068 Год назад

    I loved your staring down ... Best laugh I've had all day x

  • @lisasimpson4574
    @lisasimpson4574 Год назад

    Your videos do make me laugh ! Its great when you get our english humour but when you dont get it im there shouting at the screen like “Dude” 🤣😂🤣😂🤣😂.

  • @boomjacks5703
    @boomjacks5703 Год назад

    Sorry but... lol. Your best reaction video yet. Now I'm going back to my tea, biscuits and watching the rain!

  • @Jaxbauer23
    @Jaxbauer23 Год назад +1

    As a British person, if someone held a door open for me I would stop and say "No, after you" with a forward sweeping arm movement!

  • @sarahfoster6765
    @sarahfoster6765 Год назад +2

    Roast everything in the fridge refers to our Sunday roast dinner. ❤️🇬🇧.

  • @JBW27
    @JBW27 Год назад +9

    "Y'all, I might be British". No, no, that won't do. The line is "Oh my, I think that I might be just a tad British. Although, of course, I do not in any way wish to impose myself upon you, and apologise profusely for any offence or inconvenience caused by proclaiming such". 😂😋🤦🏻‍♂️

  • @bonariablackie4047
    @bonariablackie4047 Год назад +1

    In the UK there are basically three types of weather. Cold and wet. Cold and windy. Cold, wet and windy. So if the sun gets to what most Americans would call a cold day, we go on about how hot it is and assume it is a heatwave if it lasts more than a week.

  • @jillosler9353
    @jillosler9353 Год назад +1

    People who work Monday to Friday - often with the sun beaming down - mentally plan all the fun things and places they will go to at the weekend . . . and then wake up Saturday morning to grey skies which they KNOW will turn into rain. One wet miserable weekend later they go back to work on Monday - with sunglasses on because the sun is out again! 25C doesn't sound hot but our humidity in the UK makes it feel hot and uncomfortable.

  • @Isleofskye
    @Isleofskye Год назад +2

    Good Reaction, as always:)
    Brit 1: Makes a suggestion
    Brit 2: "We'll See": Translation: Not a chance in hell 😀
    and what has, literally, happened to me tonight.....Female Friend: "I'm running late. Be WARNED. " Me: She isn't going to show....and she didn't.......

  • @ballendorf
    @ballendorf Год назад +2

    One thing I will always find amusing, is that in the UK, if you ask someone how they're doing, they will never genuinely respond that they're doing "Great" or "Fantastic". The best you'll ever get is "Fine", "Alright", "Could be worse" or of course, "Not TOO bad".

  • @flybobbie1449
    @flybobbie1449 Год назад +2

    I think it's clever how biscuit manufacturers put the broken biscuits at the end of the packets.

    • @flybobbie1449
      @flybobbie1449 Год назад

      You know when summer as arrived UK, blokes put shorts and T shirt on when it hits 10 degress C. Young women dress the same all year round, next to nothing.

  • @sephirothvii7773
    @sephirothvii7773 Год назад

    You made me laugh out loud afew times with this one.
    Love your vids mate

  • @bobhale7302
    @bobhale7302 Год назад +1

    Saying "Thank You" out loud if a motorist pauses to let you cross the road even though he can't possibly hear you.

    • @simonblackham4987
      @simonblackham4987 7 месяцев назад +1

      ... you have to exaggeratedly mouth "Thank you!" whilst maintaining eye contact with the driver 😊

  • @gwaptiva
    @gwaptiva Год назад +2

    I have found that answering the question "what is your greatest weakness" during interviews with "Marzipan" usually gets the message through that I think that question stinks... and if not, it's not a place I want to work

    • @nolajoy7759
      @nolajoy7759 Год назад

      Oh, I must remember that one.

  • @wilky952
    @wilky952 Год назад +3

    If you come to the UK, please wait "in line", Iv seen people shanked over it, and rightly so. The ambulance arrived to a chorus of 70 year olds cheering "bleed out, bleed out". Its harsh but fair.

  • @wenglishsal
    @wenglishsal 5 месяцев назад

    I really enjoyed this @JJLA Reacts, thanks for the chuckle.
    Heartiest best wishes from Wales.

  • @MuckinFental
    @MuckinFental 2 месяца назад

    @MuckinFental
    0 seconds ago
    HAH!! The bit about suddenly remembering something, although it was the entire of whatever’s going on is spot on. NHS Doctors call it “The Doorknob Problem”, where somebody presents at clinic complaining of stomach pains, then, as they put their hand on the knob to open it, the patient says, “oh before I go” and then they admit their bollocks have turned a violent shade of orange and he’s not sure if that thing he placed in his rectum last week is ever going to come out again.

  • @geekexmachina
    @geekexmachina Год назад +1

    The funny thing about the multiple meaning stuff is it is often delivered the same without tone or inflections leaving the hearer to decide what it means. This goes back to most parts of old europe when duels were common and after duels were banned. In order to prevent blood shed this and euphamisims were popular. Its well depicted un zepherellis romeo and juliette and the musketeer films with micheal york

  • @masonjames3182
    @masonjames3182 Год назад

    I think it's a reflection of adults reminiscing as the antique roadshow was always on before you realised you gotta go back to school?

  • @zoeblay8771
    @zoeblay8771 Год назад +2

    Roast everything in the fridge- it is pretty much the law (or possibly even the 11th commandment ) that us Brits must eat a roast dinner on a Sunday. Also if its home cooked by your mum then expect at least 10 different veg, and enough food to feed at least every family down your street!!
    25° is hot for us. I went to Hawaii a few years ago and it was 35° , I swear to God I nearly died from heat exposure.
    We do like to apologise a lot. A man on the tube once accidentally trod on my foot, I couldn't stop apologising to him, I mean how dare I put my foot where he wanted to put his foot !!
    Also, you don't use the word ages in the US??!
    Please, please, please react to carrot in a box (and carrot in a box:the rematch)
    Love your channel xx

  • @julianaylor4351
    @julianaylor4351 Год назад +1

    There's a WW2 cartoon I found once, in a British history book, that had people queueing, but they didn't know what the ration they were queueing for was for. 😁

    • @LadyPakal
      @LadyPakal 11 месяцев назад +1

      During rationing, if you saw a queue, you joined it, as it meant the shop had a supply in of something you likely wanted.

  • @MuckinFental
    @MuckinFental 2 месяца назад

    The “Are you..?
    Oh no. I’m just waiting for
    OH, I thought..
    Haha. No no.
    Hah, thank you!”
    Script happened in every lateral queue I’ve ever been in

  • @wessexdruid7598
    @wessexdruid7598 Год назад +6

    JJ - you really need to read a book by Kate Fox, an anthropologist, called 'Watching the English'. You will find it both funny - and enlightening.

  • @nightowl5395
    @nightowl5395 Год назад

    So funny....all so recognisable 😅 I am enjoying your responses...and do like your voice.. 👌

  • @julieannsheridan6438
    @julieannsheridan6438 Год назад

    We do sarcasm very well lol & to queue jump is the ultimate no no! Do it if you are tired of living lol

  • @jjwatcher
    @jjwatcher Год назад

    That was sidesplittingly good, I saw myself. 🤣

  • @glyniswilliamson1912
    @glyniswilliamson1912 6 месяцев назад

    Just saw this today! Love your reactions to these problems and also your re- enactments of the comments .... so funny. Your English accents are really good too. How about trying a Scottish accent if you get the chance. Great channel!

  • @ronturner9850
    @ronturner9850 Год назад

    One of the best reactions for ages!

  • @MuckinFental
    @MuckinFental 2 месяца назад

    Oh you really are getting quite British side-effects! And I love it.

  • @flybobbie1449
    @flybobbie1449 Год назад +1

    Queues, i visited my US cousin in Boston. We went to the Cheers bar and stood in queue outside.After a minute or so, person in queue said, we aren't waiting to go in, we're waiting for a bus..........we sort of then pretended we were weren't waiting and shuffled in...

  • @howardchambers9679
    @howardchambers9679 Год назад

    Ok, like the fact you research so subbed.

  • @rosalynmccartney115
    @rosalynmccartney115 Год назад +1

    Say you could be British but think microwave tea is OK????😂