0:37 "Slaps, no cap, take the L, Weebs." Suisei calling us out in the most cute way possible. Hearing them interpret modern slang seriously is super cute.
she's also pointing out that the English language fans talk exclusively in aged reddit catchphrases like they're afraid to depart from them, which is true and kind of weird. the JP fans often say the same thing as each other but the equivalent of "haha" and so on, like, they talk like normal human beings
I swear, feeding Sui English slang only makes her more powerful! And she’s definitely the type of person to put it to use whenever the situation calls for it xD
Well, to be fair, the only way to get the hang of a language is to use it; and if you don't use what you learn about a language, you WILL lose it. Ask anyone who's bilingual.
Kinda impressive that she was able to remember the slang lingo that accurately after so much time had passed. I still struggle learning some of these phrases, because this generation is just insane with their lingo.
I don’t even bother. Too much of I’d dumb af, imo. Like “no cap.” Why does that mean what it means? I think the term I hate most, though, is actually from our generation or even a bit older: “finna” instead of “gonna.” I guess it comes from “fixing to?” But it just makes me irrationally angry every time I see it. Like, “it’s the same number of let’s and syllables, I think… so just use gonna, you absolute morons.” Honestly, shouldn’t annoy me so much. Doesn’t make any real sense. But it does. 🤷♀️
how do you tell suisei that most people probably don't know that weeb came from a nonsense word in an almost 20 year old web comic that became a word filter in early 4chan
Huh, interesting. I just assumed "weeaboo" must've been somehow borrowed or derived from another Japanese word, but maybe that's just because I know basically nothing about Japanese language
Just that? 20 years? If asked before this, I'd have said weeaboo was 30-40 years old, back when japanophilia really started in the West with imported animes.
1:49 The second meaning of "take the L" is specifically a reference to Chicago. "L" is short for "elevated", and refers to the elevated train that runs through the city as part of the transit system there. For more info, search Wikipedia for "Chicago L". Those who played the first Microsoft Midtown Madness video game back in the day might remember it since that game was set in Chicago and featured the train as part of the level design.
I went to Anime Central this year since its like 20 mins away from where I live and I cosplayed as Gura. I met so many other Gura cosplayers there it was crazy. The Vtuber Cosplay Meet at 4pm on Saturday that day was pretty cool, there were LOT of people cosplaying as Hololive. If there's anything, I hope Hololive gives the midwest some love and hosts a concert in Chicago. The Phase Connect booth was pretty cool, they had a webcam with a tv and I talked to one of the vtubers there. I'm astonished that Koro learned these words lmaooo.
I saw quite a few Gura's there. I didn't see anything about a vtuber meetup in the guidebook though so I missed out :( Historically Chicago has been a major trade and event hub. The Chicago area has multiple convention centers including the biggest one in the US. So we could definitely handle a large concert.
It was awesome, unfortunately I didnt see any Kiara cosplays so that sucked for me. I hope we get meet and greets and an official holo booth as well as nijisanji next year.
I was at the panel where we taught her these words! 😂😂😂 It was her first time in America, and she was very excited to be there to meet her overseas fans! She also mentioned that she was very excited to go to Walmart to buy toothpaste 😂
Ope is strictly a Midwestern thing. Only states like Wisconsin, Michigan, and Minnesota use it. In Illinois, you'll only really hear it in northern cities like Chicago because of the proximity to Wisconsin.
Japanese people complain about English being hard meanwhile us English speakers trying to learn 3 more alphabets just to be able the read the language 😂 But seriously I wanna learn japanese
We refer to the train lines as "the L", referring to the fact that the trains are elevated above the street in some locations, especially downtown Chicago. Thus, "taking the L" would be synonymous with "taking the elevated train/track". But the fact that we got Sui to use the midwest "ope"... I'm so proud of our city.
Weeb is short for Weeaboo, which comes from a web comic called Perry Bible Fellowship in which during a business meeting, a presenter is complaining about the company wasting time and resources on "Weeaboo", which causes the other attendees to remark that he said "Weeaboo" and line up to haze him by chaining him to a pole and smacking his rear with paddles while chanting "WEE-A-BOO, WEE-A-BOO!". 4chan took this term and applied it to anyone talking about anime for some inexplicable reason. There is no logic or reason to this relationship.
Early on in 4chan history, posters were using another derogatory slang term (which also began with a 'w'). Its usage annoyed moot or one of the mods so much they word-filtered it to weeaboo. Anonymous wasn't deterred, and weeaboo replaced the old word in meaning.
The original word wasn't _extremely_ offensive, as far as 4chan goes... it was "wapanese" for "wannabe japanese" or "white japanese". (And it possibly could sound like the very offensive slur for Italians, which I didn't know at the time.)
I always just figured the logic was that "people who should be hazed in the same way as the original reference" aspect, though I've never actually followed 4chan culture.
The way ive always understood "weeb" is to mean someone who isnt Japanese but is obsessed with Japanese anime and culture to the point that they kinda make it their identity. Especially in the sense that their entire view of Japanese culture is through the lens of anime rather than like, an actual understanding of the realistic culture. Itd be akin to something like if someone from Japan who acted American and was obsessed with American culture, but their only knowledge of the US came from like, American TV shows like sitcoms and Dramas and stuff. They'd be pretty insufferable while also having a very skewed view of what the actual culture is like. Thats just my understanding of the word. Although these days whenever I hear or use the word "weeb", its mostly in an ironic context or as a joke, rather than a serious description of someone.
wapanese was word filtered to weeaboo, wap was word filtered to weeb. 4chan has never been known for censorship, and there was never any hatred against using words like wapanese. the word filters were merely always historically appropriated for lulz. just like today, common phrases like tbh get word filtered to desu, and fam gets changed to senpai. to imply that there is intention or meaning behind this is simply overthinking it.
Gachi? = No cap. Choco-sen is teaching us great words all along xD Love the way both said *"Weebs"* 🤣 I thought weebs were negative back then but nowadays it's more like a joke because everyone becomes weebs with anime's popularity?
Something like that. Derives from 'weaboo' ... and I have no idea where That came from, but it describes someone who is obsessive and obnoxious... but also very ignorant about the thing they're obsessing over and being obnoxious about and has no interest in being corrected (and words either derived from it, or of similar origin, are used for people with similar attitudes and behaviours towards the ww2 German military, various elements of British culture, and various other things). The current use of 'weeb' is just 'someone who's kind of into anime, manga, japanese games, J-pop, and associated things as a catagory (rather than incidentally), in about the same way anyone else is into their prefered genres of entertainment'
@@laurencefraser iirc weeaboo was just a random non-word, 4chan just auto-corrected posts with it. Not sure if it's for otaku or wapanese, but it was pretty insulated from the rest of the internet. Honestly the only people who were offended by it were people who were offended by people making fun of their otaku-ness.
it went from 'weaboo' to 'weeb' at about the same time it went from 'super derogitory' to 'acceptably neutral desciptor' (and shifted from refering specifically to the obsessive and obnoxious ignorant twits to just fans of Japanese media (as a catagory, rather than fans of a specific thing that's incidentally Japanese) in general.)
Real weeboo don't love anime they love Japanese food, samurai, Japanese culture, think like Japanese hence they think anime is uncool cause of negative connotations of anime otaku.
Omg there's a whole channel of hololive radio/podcast things?! A while back, I thought it was radio only and missed out on so much extra holo stuff. Now I've got a lot of listening to catch up on!
Some _weebs_ have no idea about that embarrassing short period in history what _weaboos_ went through. And that feels weird to me. But if you thought the cringe was bad now…
Being an Otaku and seeing the early versions of weeaboos I'll admit they made me internally and externally scream in a pillow. Thankfully over the years they started to calm down somewhat after realizing that no one was amused with their rossetta-tier Naruto havin nonsense.
@@kaze0fox I think the cringe kinda peaked when the first season of AoT dropped and there were endless posts of "weebs vs normies in the AoT world", and so many people thought they could use the ODM gear acting like they'd join the Survey Corps ad be heroes, the Black Butler fujoshis, that and the concerningly serious use of broken japanese. We use it for fun now, but back then, when people seriously used it, it was so embarrassing. Pre-2000s, "otaku" was an outright social stigma. But goddammit the anime being pumped out was pretty high quality. Unless if you watched Pokemon, Yu Gi Oh, or Dragon Ball Z or something, then you'd be accepted into friend groups. 2001-2015, "weaboos" are the weird neighbor that could only be friends with other weaboos or converted normies into weaboos. Anime had a few diamonds but there were a few more "misses" than "hits" in retrospect, and some tropes started to really take place. 2015-current, "weebs' have somehow integrated rather well into society. But you still have the occasional fujoshi with a shrine dedicated to someone from MHA. But you'll never see anime like Cowboy Bebop or Black Lagoon produced again... now here's an isekai about a vending machine. I guess the sub-culture had to balance itself out somehow... but as someone who grew up in the 2000s, seeing so many people now getting into anime outside of the super mainstream, unknowing of that weird era we went through, feels funky. But it's so funny seeing newcomers acting like we used to, and thinking that it's different. Trust us, we've seen this before...
@@nobuffer101 It's also just how it works. Society judges subcultures from the outside and creates a stigmatized nonexistent "average" member of it, because being interested in anything isn't cool. Eventually there are enough members of those subcultures that people meet them and realize they're mostly just regular people, and the stigma begins to fade. I remember when D&D, video games, or comic books meant you were a basement-dwelling, scabby dork with impossibly thick glasses who died if they had to get exercise, and now those are as mainstream as _watching an anime_ is.
I guess one can say that she is preparing herself for a trip to Chicago with some of the terms used. It's weird for them to acknowledge Upper-Midwest terms, given how it's often regarded as flyover territory. I wonder what would happen if she and the others discovered terms like "uff da" and "hotdish".
"No cap, take the L, weebs." Damn Suisei is brutal.
she's not wrong
Im not even mad 🤣
The guy who sent the message had to have done it on purpose lmao
@@Syls1989 It wouldn't surprise me, honestly. 😆
Make sense tho
I was not expecting suisei to go "no cap, take the L"
"no cap take the L weebs"
ouch
She even said it with some flow as well, "oops, pops, slaps, no cap take the L weebs"
Lmfao 😂
Emotional Damage
She was this close to say "Deadass" lol
0:37 "Slaps, no cap, take the L, Weebs."
Suisei calling us out in the most cute way possible. Hearing them interpret modern slang seriously is super cute.
she's also pointing out that the English language fans talk exclusively in aged reddit catchphrases like they're afraid to depart from them, which is true and kind of weird. the JP fans often say the same thing as each other but the equivalent of "haha" and so on, like, they talk like normal human beings
I found her saying, "Take the L, weebs." way funnier than I should've. XD
Hearing suisei go "Hontoni, no cap no cap" is surreal
The tragedy of her getting all her slang from weebs
no kappu
@Shinidoshi I mean I'd consider the "critical lack of skill in normal social interaction" to be more of a key element here than age range per say
Suireal
Fr fr onG
Wait has it really been 2 years since "Hi honey!" ...
That stream went live Apr 21, 2021.
Where does the time go...?
I can't believe it's been that long since me and suisei got married huh?
MY BACK
We're old
@@Oruta563 GWS, buddy
why is Suisei casually listing off a bunch of English slang the funniest thing? 0:36
It's the attempt of reading those and the confusion she got from it.
Rapping
Hearing her saying "Take the L" and being utterly confused broke for some reason. XD
I think ope, she meant cope or I'm just dumb
@@venomark7883 ope is oop-
"No cap, take the L weebs" destroyed me
Whoever taught Koro-chan did a good job, those are some pretty accurate explanations
I swear, feeding Sui English slang only makes her more powerful!
And she’s definitely the type of person to put it to use whenever the situation calls for it xD
Can’t wait to hear what comes out of this in the months to come 😂
If she can remember it all. Not sure she will from just this one experience. But maybe.
@@Paradox-es3bl She might bust out with some of it down the line, like learning "It's the ping!" a while back :D
Well, to be fair, the only way to get the hang of a language is to use it; and if you don't use what you learn about a language, you WILL lose it. Ask anyone who's bilingual.
Someday she can beat calli rap if she want try something new
Now we wait till sui uses these slangs on Mikochi and she'll be like "nanii"
Hearing Suisei speedrun through English slang was something I didn't know I was missing in life
"Take The L"; now that's one new wave era cover song I would like to hear by Suisei.
There is something about sui chan listing english slangs 0:35
I'm laughing way too hard at this, I think something woke up inside of me
No cap, take the L, weebs
Suisei so bussin no cap W
L = elevated = elevated train system (in Chicago only) 地下鉄じゃなくて、地上鉄だ。
Sui-chan's "Take the L, WEEBS" is meme template worthy
Finally, Suisei joins Luna in the no cap club
Sui-chan could definitely learn some more English slang from -Anemachi- Calli
BASED. DOPE. SUPERLIT.
b u s s i n .
For real?
Koro-chan has great memory! Or she’s just really good with relating words.
Kinda impressive that she was able to remember the slang lingo that accurately after so much time had passed. I still struggle learning some of these phrases, because this generation is just insane with their lingo.
He's just like me fr fr, L + ratio, he got that W rizz
@@ThatGuy-c we are destroying the English language
Languages evolve, adapt and morph with people. We're not destroying it, we're just changing it once more.
@@Rogeryoo we are destroying the English language
I don’t even bother. Too much of I’d dumb af, imo. Like “no cap.” Why does that mean what it means? I think the term I hate most, though, is actually from our generation or even a bit older: “finna” instead of “gonna.” I guess it comes from “fixing to?” But it just makes me irrationally angry every time I see it. Like, “it’s the same number of let’s and syllables, I think… so just use gonna, you absolute morons.”
Honestly, shouldn’t annoy me so much. Doesn’t make any real sense. But it does. 🤷♀️
0:37 Suisei English
Someone should remix this. There was a distinct flow to it
Pops, slaps
no caps
take. the. L
The "gachi gachi no cap" got me lmao
how do you tell suisei that most people probably don't know that weeb came from a nonsense word in an almost 20 year old web comic that became a word filter in early 4chan
Huh, interesting. I just assumed "weeaboo" must've been somehow borrowed or derived from another Japanese word, but maybe that's just because I know basically nothing about Japanese language
Jeez. It goes that far back? God damn.
@@shitfacejohnson4085 More like wannabe otaku.
Just that? 20 years? If asked before this, I'd have said weeaboo was 30-40 years old, back when japanophilia really started in the West with imported animes.
@@DinnerForkTongue It was a made-up nonsense word in (IIRC) an XKCD strip.
Someone forgot to specify to her that "ope" and "pop" are regional
What is “ope”?
@@forlornfriend ope, sorry there bud didn’t mean to bump into you
@@forlornfriend Ope, there goes gravity.
@@zdspider6778I see what you did there
@@forlornfriendit's the Midwestern version of excuse me. Minnesota ,Wisconsin, and probably Michigan are the big states it's used very heavily.
1:49 The second meaning of "take the L" is specifically a reference to Chicago. "L" is short for "elevated", and refers to the elevated train that runs through the city as part of the transit system there. For more info, search Wikipedia for "Chicago L".
Those who played the first Microsoft Midtown Madness video game back in the day might remember it since that game was set in Chicago and featured the train as part of the level design.
And I thought it's because Chicago train sucks so it's an L lmaoooo
basically the background for every Batman related movie/game/TV show
Philly uses it like that too. Not sure about NYC.
I thought L stood for "loss".
I Googled "Chicago L". I got 2.2 billion results. Seems about right.
I went to Anime Central this year since its like 20 mins away from where I live and I cosplayed as Gura. I met so many other Gura cosplayers there it was crazy. The Vtuber Cosplay Meet at 4pm on Saturday that day was pretty cool, there were LOT of people cosplaying as Hololive. If there's anything, I hope Hololive gives the midwest some love and hosts a concert in Chicago. The Phase Connect booth was pretty cool, they had a webcam with a tv and I talked to one of the vtubers there. I'm astonished that Koro learned these words lmaooo.
I saw quite a few Gura's there. I didn't see anything about a vtuber meetup in the guidebook though so I missed out :(
Historically Chicago has been a major trade and event hub. The Chicago area has multiple convention centers including the biggest one in the US. So we could definitely handle a large concert.
It was awesome, unfortunately I didnt see any Kiara cosplays so that sucked for me. I hope we get meet and greets and an official holo booth as well as nijisanji next year.
@@bleachno9 I saw 1 Kiara there
@@bleachno9 Saw a few Gura's there, I know I saw a Shylily too
its been funny seeing "no cap" spread. started as a twitch emote, then a bttv emote, now its a offline thing that even idols are saying.
0:37 here is the replay button for you... I keep replaying it..😅
"Ope slaps no cap take the L weebs"
-Hoshimachi Suisei
I was at the panel where we taught her these words! 😂😂😂 It was her first time in America, and she was very excited to be there to meet her overseas fans! She also mentioned that she was very excited to go to Walmart to buy toothpaste 😂
ive never heard of ope in my life?? XD
“Ope” is strongly associated with midwestern US dialect
@Magnus yhhh either that or it’s really underground Chicago only lingo 😅
@@sus_gus ohh ok i’m from across the pond so that explains it 😅
ope is less of a word and more of a sound that midwestern people spontaneously create when they accidentally bump into someone
For a bit there I thought they were talking about opp
0:37 LOL the background radio dudes found it hilarious too
The Otaku became the "Anime Lover Native" and weebs is "Foreigner Anime Lover"
PERRY BIBLE FELLOWSHIP
Suisei straight up bussin' frfr no cap
Ope is strictly a Midwestern thing. Only states like Wisconsin, Michigan, and Minnesota use it. In Illinois, you'll only really hear it in northern cities like Chicago because of the proximity to Wisconsin.
LMAOOOO SUISEI REALLY SAY IT "No cap take the L, weebs"
this video is BASED, DOPE, SUPER LIT
The history of weeaboo as a phrase has always intrigued me.
"Slaps" as I understand it, you say it when something is really good, it slaps
Japanese people complain about English being hard meanwhile us English speakers trying to learn 3 more alphabets just to be able the read the language 😂
But seriously I wanna learn japanese
I'm impressed.
0:36 same energy as bocchi's "black is no"
Whoever wrote that letter definitely listed those in that order on purpose
We refer to the train lines as "the L", referring to the fact that the trains are elevated above the street in some locations, especially downtown Chicago.
Thus, "taking the L" would be synonymous with "taking the elevated train/track".
But the fact that we got Sui to use the midwest "ope"... I'm so proud of our city.
I love the person laughing in the background.
Weeb is still negative.
Suisei becoming a midwesterner by learning ope
Weeb is short for Weeaboo, which comes from a web comic called Perry Bible Fellowship in which during a business meeting, a presenter is complaining about the company wasting time and resources on "Weeaboo", which causes the other attendees to remark that he said "Weeaboo" and line up to haze him by chaining him to a pole and smacking his rear with paddles while chanting "WEE-A-BOO, WEE-A-BOO!". 4chan took this term and applied it to anyone talking about anime for some inexplicable reason. There is no logic or reason to this relationship.
Early on in 4chan history, posters were using another derogatory slang term (which also began with a 'w'). Its usage annoyed moot or one of the mods so much they word-filtered it to weeaboo. Anonymous wasn't deterred, and weeaboo replaced the old word in meaning.
The original word wasn't _extremely_ offensive, as far as 4chan goes... it was "wapanese" for "wannabe japanese" or "white japanese". (And it possibly could sound like the very offensive slur for Italians, which I didn't know at the time.)
I always just figured the logic was that "people who should be hazed in the same way as the original reference" aspect, though I've never actually followed 4chan culture.
The way ive always understood "weeb" is to mean someone who isnt Japanese but is obsessed with Japanese anime and culture to the point that they kinda make it their identity. Especially in the sense that their entire view of Japanese culture is through the lens of anime rather than like, an actual understanding of the realistic culture.
Itd be akin to something like if someone from Japan who acted American and was obsessed with American culture, but their only knowledge of the US came from like, American TV shows like sitcoms and Dramas and stuff. They'd be pretty insufferable while also having a very skewed view of what the actual culture is like.
Thats just my understanding of the word. Although these days whenever I hear or use the word "weeb", its mostly in an ironic context or as a joke, rather than a serious description of someone.
wapanese was word filtered to weeaboo, wap was word filtered to weeb. 4chan has never been known for censorship, and there was never any hatred against using words like wapanese. the word filters were merely always historically appropriated for lulz. just like today, common phrases like tbh get word filtered to desu, and fam gets changed to senpai. to imply that there is intention or meaning behind this is simply overthinking it.
0:36
Japan: otaku
EN: weebs
ID: wibu
Japan : Otaku
EN : Otaku
ID : Otaku
that other word has never been a positive label.
@@Shiirow Found the weeb
Somehow Suisei saying them all in rapid fire succession was just gold XD
The only people who would claim “weebs” is not a negative term are the kind of weebs who would actually go to an anime convention.
Absolutely true. I've never seen weeb used to describe liking anime positively
Love the dude laughing in the background
Oh god they're learning Midwestern, can't wait for Ope to catch in on Japan xD
Gachi? = No cap. Choco-sen is teaching us great words all along xD
Love the way both said *"Weebs"* 🤣
I thought weebs were negative back then but nowadays it's more like a joke because everyone becomes weebs with anime's popularity?
Something like that. Derives from 'weaboo' ... and I have no idea where That came from, but it describes someone who is obsessive and obnoxious... but also very ignorant about the thing they're obsessing over and being obnoxious about and has no interest in being corrected (and words either derived from it, or of similar origin, are used for people with similar attitudes and behaviours towards the ww2 German military, various elements of British culture, and various other things).
The current use of 'weeb' is just 'someone who's kind of into anime, manga, japanese games, J-pop, and associated things as a catagory (rather than incidentally), in about the same way anyone else is into their prefered genres of entertainment'
@@laurencefraser you either forgot or deliberately omitted "Gaijin" as the correct word for "Someone".
@@lusterjoker7876 gaijin is foreigner iirc
@@dickysatria7268 correct it is a shortened form of gaikokujin, literally person from a foreign country.
@@laurencefraser iirc weeaboo was just a random non-word, 4chan just auto-corrected posts with it. Not sure if it's for otaku or wapanese, but it was pretty insulated from the rest of the internet. Honestly the only people who were offended by it were people who were offended by people making fun of their otaku-ness.
At first i though, Holo JP learning english was cool. No i realize they will now have access to American Zoomer culture, oh god.
Midwest Sui-chan
That one guy laughter after sui says take the L. He knows. Hearing suisei saying those zoomer lingo is like some sorr of feber dream
Her saying no cap is pretty funny for some reason
Haha I was at the panel with Chicago with KoroAzu! Was so fun!
Weeb used to have negative connotations back then. It still does, but it also used to.
used to be way way worse but yeah.
it went from 'weaboo' to 'weeb' at about the same time it went from 'super derogitory' to 'acceptably neutral desciptor' (and shifted from refering specifically to the obsessive and obnoxious ignorant twits to just fans of Japanese media (as a catagory, rather than fans of a specific thing that's incidentally Japanese) in general.)
Real weeboo don't love anime they love Japanese food, samurai, Japanese culture, think like Japanese hence they think anime is uncool cause of negative connotations of anime otaku.
@@kawaiipotatoes7888 Nah its include anything related to Japan and doing cringe things with it. Anime included.
Dang Azusa tadokoro got those down
i really just learned what "no cap, take the L and slaps" from this video
Omg there's a whole channel of hololive radio/podcast things?! A while back, I thought it was radio only and missed out on so much extra holo stuff. Now I've got a lot of listening to catch up on!
glorious
This clip slaps no cap no way im taking the L on this one ope better take that pop weebs
Hearing Japanese people suddenly say "no cap" at the end of their sentence will surely catch me off-guard.
Some _weebs_ have no idea about that embarrassing short period in history what _weaboos_ went through. And that feels weird to me.
But if you thought the cringe was bad now…
Being an Otaku and seeing the early versions of weeaboos I'll admit they made me internally and externally scream in a pillow. Thankfully over the years they started to calm down somewhat after realizing that no one was amused with their rossetta-tier Naruto havin nonsense.
@@kaze0fox I think the cringe kinda peaked when the first season of AoT dropped and there were endless posts of "weebs vs normies in the AoT world", and so many people thought they could use the ODM gear acting like they'd join the Survey Corps ad be heroes, the Black Butler fujoshis, that and the concerningly serious use of broken japanese. We use it for fun now, but back then, when people seriously used it, it was so embarrassing.
Pre-2000s, "otaku" was an outright social stigma. But goddammit the anime being pumped out was pretty high quality. Unless if you watched Pokemon, Yu Gi Oh, or Dragon Ball Z or something, then you'd be accepted into friend groups.
2001-2015, "weaboos" are the weird neighbor that could only be friends with other weaboos or converted normies into weaboos. Anime had a few diamonds but there were a few more "misses" than "hits" in retrospect, and some tropes started to really take place.
2015-current, "weebs' have somehow integrated rather well into society. But you still have the occasional fujoshi with a shrine dedicated to someone from MHA. But you'll never see anime like Cowboy Bebop or Black Lagoon produced again... now here's an isekai about a vending machine.
I guess the sub-culture had to balance itself out somehow... but as someone who grew up in the 2000s, seeing so many people now getting into anime outside of the super mainstream, unknowing of that weird era we went through, feels funky. But it's so funny seeing newcomers acting like we used to, and thinking that it's different. Trust us, we've seen this before...
@@nobuffer101 It's also just how it works. Society judges subcultures from the outside and creates a stigmatized nonexistent "average" member of it, because being interested in anything isn't cool. Eventually there are enough members of those subcultures that people meet them and realize they're mostly just regular people, and the stigma begins to fade. I remember when D&D, video games, or comic books meant you were a basement-dwelling, scabby dork with impossibly thick glasses who died if they had to get exercise, and now those are as mainstream as _watching an anime_ is.
that hi honney pronounced in perfect english
0:36 Blessed Suinglish
Sounds like Principal Brown from that one Gumball episode hahaha
This video kind of slaps, no cap!
Christ, this is cursed.
"honto dayo, no cap" (c) hoshimachi suisei
Man i forgot slaps was actually a popular phrase at one point. It died out so quickly.
The word weeb stopped being that harsh when the weebs just decided that it wasn't that important so they used the word to call themselves weebs :^)
“weebts” i felt that
Yep I knew this was gonnna get clipped as soon as I heard “no cap, take the L” that’s going to my sound board
I was a witness and a part of history. This is my legacy.
Her teaching slaps no cap
Axel: I'm so proud of my senpai, no cap.
Ten bucks says he WOULD say that.
Ah, the origins of "Weebs"...
Suichan "hi honey" is still the best !
I'd like to add that, I think it was Suiseio, that they also found out the literal translation of "slap", as in the action.
Nah, you two take the W
I guess one can say that she is preparing herself for a trip to Chicago with some of the terms used. It's weird for them to acknowledge Upper-Midwest terms, given how it's often regarded as flyover territory. I wonder what would happen if she and the others discovered terms like "uff da" and "hotdish".
She learned this stuff at Anime Central, which takes place in the Chicago area. Not a coincidence.
tfw them not knowing "Take the L" is "Admit you Failed/Lose"
Exporting zoomer slang to other countries should be considered a crime against humanity.
オタクを英語に訳すとき、weebともnerdともgeekともotakuとも訳されるからよう分からん
"Take the L, weebs" HOLY OMEGA KEKKERS
Suisei slaps.
The best meaning about what is a "Weeb" (which is short for weeaboo) is already on video, narrated by a legend: Papa Franku
I think "for real" is closer to gachi
0:14 That "Eh?", though... 😆
filthy frank weeb definition is the true one
imagine trying to explain the tortured etymology of the term "weeb"
"well there was this online comic called Perry Bible Fellowship..."
i like how she say don't use the term weeb 💀💀
I WAS THERE! I WAS AT THE PANEL WHERE WE TAUGHT KOROAZU THAT SLANG!!! LET'S GOOOOO