From my understanding USA doesn't allow ä or ö at all, so they had to change their last names. It is interesting that a lot of the finnish americans have vaguely finnish accents, just a bit. They are butchering the last names tho, just how other americans would pronounce them (aka not trying).
@@ellem8990 Makes me think of how Antti Holma (who lives in the US) has said he tells American people to pronunce his name like "auntie" because that's at least sinnepäin and is easier for them to grasp. And that in like, grocery store coupon apps etc he writes his name as Andy. I can imagine the same has happened on a bigger scale over generations of Finnish immigrants. The pronunciation has been americanized out of convenience, and after a few generations no one knows how the name is pronounced in Finland.
@@a.e.3984 A lot of immigrants do this when they relocate to a different culture. Loads of Asian Americans with kids called Bill or Susan or whatever, and many just choose an english name to use for themselves as well. Same goes for people from cultures closer to England like the Swedes, if an American is called Lindberg he'll 100% pronounce it differently than a Swede or a Finnish Swede would.
Yes I didnt know small communities like these existed in there. Didnt these finns came there in late 1800s, so they speak bit diffrent version of finnish, but maybe finns that go there nowdays can still understand their finnish.
also the pronunciation is way way off.... i bet you could get closer to pronouncing it correctly if you were a drunken Indonesian dude asked to pronounce a German word and then you are shown a Russian word written with the Arabic Naskh script....
@@wernerxThese people are americans first, finnish second. 150 years in America and several generations later doesn't really make you an ethnic finn anymore. It's like comparing a jamaican to a nigerian
@@maxuli21 They are genetically finns and that is pretty obvious when you Look at them. And genes are the most ingluential and dont change on 200 years at all.
@@kimanthoni6377 yeah he has Finnish ancestry. I think Pamela Anderson and maybe Dave Mustaine (Megadeth) come to mind as being of partly Finnish ancestry.
@@Galluxi Moninaisuus on aina hyvästä ja kieli on myös taidetta. Sama asia jos sanoisi, että Beethoven on vitun turha jätkä, koska Mozart ei kuuroutunut.
@@Galluxi Onpa surullinen ajattelutapa sinulla. Mikään kieli ei ole turha, vaan ne kaikki ovat suuri rikkaus. Eri kielillä maailmaa hahmotetaan eri tavalla ja kieli on erittäin merkittävä osa kulttuuria. Englannin paremmuus on täysin subjektiivinen asia, suosittuvuus mitattavissa, mutta ei sekään noin yksinkertaista ole. Indoeurooppalaiset kielet on vähän tylsiä minusta, kun niitä on täällä Euroopassa joka puolella. Silti on erittäin hienoa, että niitä on niin paljon ja erilaisia.
would be cool to visit one day and talk about finland and finnish culture over there. maybe even teach some finnish words, like "hilavitkutin" or the ever useful "no niin".
Saying it's Kotajärvi says absolutely nothing about how it's supposed to be pronounced. You may hear it in your head, but people who are accustomed to other languages hear it differently in their heads.
@@JiihaaSUsing the IPA, it’s pronounced: /’ko:t̪ɑ:jær:ʋi/ How the Finnish language is written is very close to the IPA so if you’re familiar with that, it’s pretty easy to know how to pronounce. It’d be very hard to make it clear how to pronounce it any other way. Hope you understand IPA :).
@@CrummyJoker "pronounced as it's written" contains zero actual information if you don't know how a language is pronounced. There are multiple ways of pronouncing each letter depending on the language (and in some languages depending on the word or context), so it's "pronounced as it's written" only for those who already know how it's pronounced.
It’s a weird feeling; hearing, what is, basically, a perfect American accent; but with Finnish cadence and energy-levels; even though I doubt most of those people speak Finnish, well, ever 😅.
Tikkanen. They pronounce it like Tikanen. If they said it with P letter its sounds like pikanen, wich means like doing something fast 😂 Maybe Tikkanen likes to do things fast..?
That sounds like a pretty standard Finnish accent actually! A little more "authentic" English than what you normally hear in Finland when Finns speak English, but you can definitely hear the Finnish behind that accent :)
Ollaan kuitenki internetissä nii Ihmiset tykkää valittaa kaikesta turhasta. Kommentoin itsekin tuosta lausumisesta mutta en valittanut niinku muut tekee. Sanoin että jos p kirjaimella sanois ton Tikkasen nii kulostais että Pikanen 😂
@@anttikristian4060 I was in highschool with this kid Matias Kotajärvi and he was from a fundamentalist laestadian family. Had like 15 siblings.. This near Oulu
US culture, whole land of the immigrants thing. European Americans don't have an American heritage so many claim the heritage of the country their ancestors were from.
In what way are they finnish if they dont speak finnish and are culturally american They are just descended from traitors and weak willed people who left their homeland@@Sup3rman1c
Olisi kyllä kiinnostanut tietää että mitä se "ethnic music" oikeasti on, jos siellä lauletaan jotain Mattia ja Teppoa niin tarviin koko ruokapöydän facepalmia varten.
I'm a Finn, and here's how you pronounce Kotajärvi: ”KOH”. (rhymes with the ”o” in chorus) ”TAH” (rhymes with the ”a” in park) ”YAER” (rhymes with the ”a” in marinade) ”VIH” (rhymes with the ”y” in happy)
Why all the H letters? None of those are actually pronounced. Although maybe without those, English speakers would pronounce e.g. "ko" and "kou" the same way.
Saakuti kun osaa puhua hyvin englantia, nykypäivinä se olisi pelkkää öötä ja äätä se nuorison ääntäminen kun ei koulu kiinnosta Andrew taten sigmajuttujen takia :D
I thought this video was going to be funny and mocking in a lighthearted way because it was about Finnish people and had a lot of views but it's just normal. These people must not be Finnish enough.
Now the powers that be are trying to erase finnish culture even in Finland. Great to see finnish people celebrate finnish heritage and culture in USA. Greetings from Finland! Terveisiä Suomesta!
As a Finnish man I feel so conflicted. On one hand, I am honoured the people are proud of their roots and ancestors. But on another hand, I think cultures should be protected. And I don’t like the idea of Finnish culture changing or diluting American culture. It’s okay to do stuff like this from time to time, as long as it doesn’t become a norm. The difference of our cultures is what makes this world so beautiful. I really don’t like the idea that the whole world becomes one big group of “same culture” and there’s nothing new for us to discover. Protect American culture 🇺🇸 Protect Finnish culture 🇫🇮 Protect all cultures 🇩🇪🇨🇮🇩🇰🇨🇳🇯🇵🇮🇩🇳🇵🇬🇧🇧🇹🇲🇼🇿🇦🇹🇷🇻🇦🇲🇰🇷🇸🇵🇸
How is it "Finnish culture changing or diluting American culture"? They are Finnish-Americans, they don't claim Finnishhood as how it is practiced in the current nation state of Finland. Their Finnishness is rooted in their family, the stories, tradition, and (on some cases) words that has survived within the community for generations, despite many years of Americanization policies. It's a heritage identity for them, not a national identity; When people like that say "i'm Finnish", they are refering to lineage and their ethnic connection to the region, not Finnish culture as is practiced today in Finland.
eikö niillä nimenomaan ole omaa perhetaustaa Suomesta? ja jos jokainen elää maassa maan tavalla-periaatteen mukaan, niin olis aivan jäätävän vaikee tutustua muihin kulttuureihin. kauan eläköön Suomen suurlähetystön saunaillat amerikassa jne !! toisaalta Suomen amerikkalaistuminen vituttaa mut se on laajempi kulttuurillinen ilmiö eikä mikään kyläjuhla
@@villasukat3808 Enpä tiedä millä tavalla tuo tuota vaikeuttaisi. Kun käyn Ruotsissa, elän kun ruotsalaiset. Kun käyn Egyptissä, elän kun egyptiläiset. Kun käyn Kiinassa, elän kun kiinalaiset. Päinvastoin, kulttuuriin tutustuminen vaikeutuu, kun haluaisi esimerkiksi mennä Pariisiin tutustumaan ranskalaiseen kulttuuriin, mutta kadut täynnä rukousmattoja ja kebab-paikkoja, kun maahanmuutto voimistuu ja paikalliset itse muuttavat ‘ranskalaisemmille’ alueille.
RUclips:
Nonnii kattopas tästä tämmönen 11 vuotta vanha, käytännössä unohdettu video.
Algoritmin kummallisuuksia. Kuinkakohan suuri osa näistäki vähäisistä näyttökerroista on tullu vasta nyt kun algoritmi on tän hoksannu
@@usefool6477Niinpä
Noh kerrankin jotain mielenkiintoista.
Ja pelkkänä monona 😂
::DD oli hyvä.
I love that Finns around the world remember their roots and they get coverage but the pronunciation of the surnames almost make me cry
Was the pronunciation bad?
@@sebastiansebastian7377 It was very bad :D But that is to be expectected from a native English speaker.
@@sebastiansebastian7377 it was.
@@sebastiansebastian7377 the ä in kotajärvi would be pronounced like the a in cat
"Was the promunciation bad?" it was a disgrace.
Butchering those lastnames but you guys got the spirit
The pronunciations of these last names are so amazing 💀
Yeah, incredibly wrong 😂
mä en ole vissiin ainoa, kuka saa tämän videon ehdotuksiin?
jea
et, mielenkiintoista
Hieno video
et :D
*joka/*kuka
interesting how the surnames change both in spelling and pronounciation
From my understanding USA doesn't allow ä or ö at all, so they had to change their last names. It is interesting that a lot of the finnish americans have vaguely finnish accents, just a bit. They are butchering the last names tho, just how other americans would pronounce them (aka not trying).
@@ellem8990 Makes me think of how Antti Holma (who lives in the US) has said he tells American people to pronunce his name like "auntie" because that's at least sinnepäin and is easier for them to grasp. And that in like, grocery store coupon apps etc he writes his name as Andy. I can imagine the same has happened on a bigger scale over generations of Finnish immigrants. The pronunciation has been americanized out of convenience, and after a few generations no one knows how the name is pronounced in Finland.
@@a.e.3984 A lot of immigrants do this when they relocate to a different culture. Loads of Asian Americans with kids called Bill or Susan or whatever, and many just choose an english name to use for themselves as well. Same goes for people from cultures closer to England like the Swedes, if an American is called Lindberg he'll 100% pronounce it differently than a Swede or a Finnish Swede would.
they forgor the ä
@@a.e.3984 eeexactly
Matt Huuki looks like the most finnish man you can come across. To hear a finn speak american english so well is a mindfucn
I as a finn just can't help but laugh at how they pronounce their last names. Kotajärvi especially
Its weird, William Kotajärvi looks a lot like another Kotajärvi i used to know in Finland lmao.
Mooses Kotajärvi, tukkijulli entinen
My surname is Kotajärvi, maybe I know him
That William Kotajärvi kinda looks like my uncle, maybe we are related
My left ear enjoyed this video
Yeah, I thought my headset was broken for a bit lmao
If i ever go visit U.S, i know where i'm going ;)
samoin
Same here... ! 🙋🙋
Yes I didnt know small communities like these existed in there. Didnt these finns came there in late 1800s, so they speak bit diffrent version of finnish, but maybe finns that go there nowdays can still understand their finnish.
@@jout738 Oh yeah we do. Its kinda "old" finnish but absolutely understandable
ite en. suomalaisia näkee jos suomessakin
Kotajärvi doesn't actually mean "hut on a lake", it means "hut lake"
also the pronunciation is way way off.... i bet you could get closer to pronouncing it correctly if you were a drunken Indonesian dude asked to pronounce a German word and then you are shown a Russian word written with the Arabic Naskh script....
@@NecrotechianI didn't mind how news caster pronounce they last names.
@@Icemanfi80 was actually focusing on the kid who should know better as its his name... but yeah the reporter was not THAT bad...
and not a single word of Finnish was spoken
Yeah, very much like Finland 🤦♂️. Perinteet hyvin hallussa..?
@@wernerx mä en tiedä mitä sä aasi selität? Ymmärrätkö, että Suomessa asutaan myös kehä kolmosen ulkopuolella? Vitun urpo
@@wernerxThese people are americans first, finnish second. 150 years in America and several generations later doesn't really make you an ethnic finn anymore. It's like comparing a jamaican to a nigerian
@@shueibdahironce a finn allways an finn 😄but yeah can't expect them to speak finnish much
These are really finnish looking people :D hilarious
I was thinking the same, maybe because they are Finnish people :D
They are finnish by heritage so no suprise there.
@@omBrezeeNamaha A lot can happen in 200 years, I don't consider any Americans European.
@@maxuli21 They are genetically finns and that is pretty obvious when you Look at them. And genes are the most ingluential and dont change on 200 years at all.
Suomi mainittu. Calumetissa tavataan!
Proud to be part fin on my mom's side
Totta! Ymmärtääkseni Matt Damon on tiukasti Suomalainen? Isoisä ja isoäiti?
@@kimanthoni6377 yeah he has Finnish ancestry. I think Pamela Anderson and maybe Dave Mustaine (Megadeth) come to mind as being of partly Finnish ancestry.
@@nativeeurope1299 No wonder Dave Mustaine looks just like Mika Häkkinen :D
@@Jansk1hMustaine ex- Mustonen.
I thought he was going to say "next year, in place of Heritage Day, the city will put on a satanic ritual"
Well.. I mean... After all, Finland DOES have the highest number of metal bands per capita in the world, so it might still make sense.
Nice to see and hear the Tikkanens of the new continent. Hello from Helsinki, Finland.
Onhan tämä nyt hienoa että näitä saa nähdä, tosiaan "unohdettuja videoita", edelleen Tuben algoritmin syövereistä.
Kotajärvi would rather mean "hut lake" or "lake of the hut" than "hut in a lake"
Tämä. Huutista jenkille :D :D
Jabba the Hut asuu kodassa
Tuo poika sanoi että "hut on a lake" joka on ihan pätevä käännös.
@@psynque Sanoisin "lake with a hut on it" olis oikeammin sanottu.
@psynque Says the Finnish expert who needs google translate to write a comment
Näköjään se kieli vaan häviää ajan saatossa
@@Galluxi Moninaisuus on aina hyvästä ja kieli on myös taidetta. Sama asia jos sanoisi, että Beethoven on vitun turha jätkä, koska Mozart ei kuuroutunut.
@@Galluxi Onpa surullinen ajattelutapa sinulla. Mikään kieli ei ole turha, vaan ne kaikki ovat suuri rikkaus. Eri kielillä maailmaa hahmotetaan eri tavalla ja kieli on erittäin merkittävä osa kulttuuria. Englannin paremmuus on täysin subjektiivinen asia, suosittuvuus mitattavissa, mutta ei sekään noin yksinkertaista ole. Indoeurooppalaiset kielet on vähän tylsiä minusta, kun niitä on täällä Euroopassa joka puolella. Silti on erittäin hienoa, että niitä on niin paljon ja erilaisia.
Englantihan on monessa suhteessa kielistä typerimpiä, mutta minkäs teet, kun on johtava maailmankieli.@@Sipu97
Videon pikkujätkä syntynyt USA:ssa ja opiskelee suomea. Cool!
@@Galluxi Elä sie höpäjä piättömiä, itte olet turha kieli
would be cool to visit one day and talk about finland and finnish culture over there. maybe even teach some finnish words, like "hilavitkutin" or the ever useful "no niin".
Damn, my surname Kotajärvi is quite rare. It feels wonderful to know that there are people in so far away that might be related to me
477 people is quite usual rarity in finland
Watching this from Helsinki. Terveisiä Helsingistä!
Me ollaan sit Viljams :D Naurettiin tolle sukunimen ääntämykselle kovasti.
It took me a while to get the name was Tikkanen and not an English/American name Tickenen. Or what the hell is William Codacharwe, it's Kotajärvi :D
@@vke6077 That's what he said ffs :D
Saying it's Kotajärvi says absolutely nothing about how it's supposed to be pronounced. You may hear it in your head, but people who are accustomed to other languages hear it differently in their heads.
@@JiihaaS It's pronounced as it's written...
@@JiihaaSUsing the IPA, it’s pronounced: /’ko:t̪ɑ:jær:ʋi/
How the Finnish language is written is very close to the IPA so if you’re familiar with that, it’s pretty easy to know how to pronounce.
It’d be very hard to make it clear how to pronounce it any other way. Hope you understand IPA :).
@@CrummyJoker "pronounced as it's written" contains zero actual information if you don't know how a language is pronounced. There are multiple ways of pronouncing each letter depending on the language (and in some languages depending on the word or context), so it's "pronounced as it's written" only for those who already know how it's pronounced.
Sound: L🔊 R🔈
It’s a weird feeling; hearing, what is, basically, a perfect American accent; but with Finnish cadence and energy-levels; even though I doubt most of those people speak Finnish, well, ever 😅.
Whats funny is that finns couldn't throw a celebration like that if their lives depended on it.
Calumet upper Michigan is a great city
Perkele.
R.I.P. headphone users
Nope it's the lake by the hut. If the name was "hut by a lake" like he said it would be Järvenkota
hutlake
If someone has the nickname "Jabbada" and last name Kota what does that name translate to?
@@Dennis-ud2nh höhö
RUclips: Morjensta morjensta, katoppa nopee töissä ollessas tällänen 11 vuotta vanha video missä lausutaan kaikki suomalaiset sukunimet väärin.
Where is the alcohol?
💖👍
Tortillat avataan
Erittäin outoa kattoa kun on tottunut että ihmiset joilla on suomalaiset piirteet olis ahdistuneita ja ujoja.
Tikkanen.
They pronounce it like Tikanen. If they said it with P letter its sounds like pikanen, wich means like doing something fast 😂
Maybe Tikkanen likes to do things fast..?
TORILLA TAVATAAAAAAN!!!!
Allala
Hyvä homma!
Torille? Torille!
miks vitussa youtube heittää tämmöse etusivulle
Yoopers sure have a unique accent.
That sounds like a pretty standard Finnish accent actually! A little more "authentic" English than what you normally hear in Finland when Finns speak English, but you can definitely hear the Finnish behind that accent :)
@@Jayzon666 What? No, these people have American accents, not Finnish ones.
@@Jayzon666 ei kyl ollu yhtään suomalaista aksenttia noilla
@@skinnynestyKyllä on ihan selvästi pieni aksentti. Ei toki yhtä vahva kun jos täysin suomenkielinen puhuisi englantia.
@@vaahtobileetBut that is clearly different than standard American accent :)
Hello youtube, let's make everyone care about finland through a random video. I'm on board.
👍🤞🤞🙏👏🙏
🙏🥀🧚💖🧚🥀🙏
"American drinkfestival days" 🍻🍹🍸🍷
I wanna talk with finnish Americans
true diversity
Miks hää vai sillai?
My right ear is thankful for some time off.
Hyvin kohdennettu video potentiaalisille katsojille. Muutama vuosi siihen menikin :D
Suomalaiset itkee kommenteissa että huonoo lausumista. Mutta mitä väliä sillä on jos eivät ole Suomessa ees syntyneet?
Ollaan kuitenki internetissä nii Ihmiset tykkää valittaa kaikesta turhasta. Kommentoin itsekin tuosta lausumisesta mutta en valittanut niinku muut tekee.
Sanoin että jos p kirjaimella sanois ton Tikkasen nii kulostais että Pikanen 😂
1:20 Pookie 😅
I've met Kotajärvis this year, don't know, if they are relatives to this William :) Those, whom I've met, are from Lapland originally.
Yeah, they are from here, and I bet they are all related.
@@anttikristian4060 I was in highschool with this kid Matias Kotajärvi and he was from a fundamentalist laestadian family. Had like 15 siblings.. This near Oulu
I might be just dumb but why people in USA say they are Finnish as an example and they are not born in Finland.
It is ethnicity.
Ethnically a Finn is still a Finn, no matter if you're in the new world or the old one.
US culture, whole land of the immigrants thing. European Americans don't have an American heritage so many claim the heritage of the country their ancestors were from.
In what way are they finnish if they dont speak finnish and are culturally american
They are just descended from traitors and weak willed people who left their homeland@@Sup3rman1c
Jus Sanguinis
Dej reminisensed abhoit harritach deis 🇫🇮✌🏻
Luulin että ameriikan suomalaiset tuli 40luvulla takaisin puolustaa suomea ?😅
Everyone getting this recomended now
Eiköhän mennä torillle kaikki?
I like how they pronounce their finnish surnames in american English
youtube läväytti ihan tyhjästä etusivulle
Leppävaara Le Leppävaara
Cotacharvy 💙🤍
Olisi kyllä kiinnostanut tietää että mitä se "ethnic music" oikeasti on, jos siellä lauletaan jotain Mattia ja Teppoa niin tarviin koko ruokapöydän facepalmia varten.
RUclips algoritmi tapaamme jälleen :D
Vittu! Mut myös... Torille!!
Kotajärvi 🙂🙏🧚💖🧚🙏
Ei helvetti mikä ehdotettu video RUclipslta
Aika mielenkiintoista eikö
Coat-a-jarvi
Torilla tavataan
torilla tavataan
I'm a Finn, and here's how you pronounce Kotajärvi:
”KOH”. (rhymes with the ”o” in chorus)
”TAH” (rhymes with the ”a” in park)
”YAER” (rhymes with the ”a” in marinade)
”VIH” (rhymes with the ”y” in happy)
Why all the H letters? None of those are actually pronounced. Although maybe without those, English speakers would pronounce e.g. "ko" and "kou" the same way.
Kotijärvi ”koutadžarvi”
ai vittu mun vasen korva
Saakuti kun osaa puhua hyvin englantia, nykypäivinä se olisi pelkkää öötä ja äätä se nuorison ääntäminen kun ei koulu kiinnosta Andrew taten sigmajuttujen takia :D
Miks tätä ehdotetaan mulle nyt? 😂
Miät vittua nyt youtube.
Kännissä ku käki, taas
vissii vähä myöhäs yt suosittelee...
cosplayers
It's hutlake. Not hut on a lake
oon kissa btw
Suomi mainittu.
Hyvä Suomi! Perkele!
Tikkanen translates directly "with woodpecker" or "people of woodpecker".. Finnish names are weird..
little woodpecker
Calling "iskelmä" ethnic music is so cursed.
torille!
Vasen korva😀😀
1:14 he can't even pronounce his own surname correctly.
Weird how the boy called Kotajärvi butchered his own surname.
I bet the people teaching him "Finnish" are not even able to speak it themselves.
I thought this video was going to be funny and mocking in a lighthearted way because it was about Finnish people and had a lot of views but it's just normal. These people must not be Finnish enough.
Young mr. Kotajärvi doesn't know how to pronounce his own last name. Finnish j is like y in Yankee.
Now the powers that be are trying to erase finnish culture even in Finland. Great to see finnish people celebrate finnish heritage and culture in USA. Greetings from Finland! Terveisiä Suomesta!
11 years ago looks a lot better than today. People looked a lot happier.
People complain about the last name pronunciation, but they're alright
As a Finnish man I feel so conflicted. On one hand, I am honoured the people are proud of their roots and ancestors. But on another hand, I think cultures should be protected. And I don’t like the idea of Finnish culture changing or diluting American culture. It’s okay to do stuff like this from time to time, as long as it doesn’t become a norm. The difference of our cultures is what makes this world so beautiful. I really don’t like the idea that the whole world becomes one big group of “same culture” and there’s nothing new for us to discover.
Protect American culture 🇺🇸
Protect Finnish culture 🇫🇮
Protect all cultures 🇩🇪🇨🇮🇩🇰🇨🇳🇯🇵🇮🇩🇳🇵🇬🇧🇧🇹🇲🇼🇿🇦🇹🇷🇻🇦🇲🇰🇷🇸🇵🇸
How is it "Finnish culture changing or diluting American culture"? They are Finnish-Americans, they don't claim Finnishhood as how it is practiced in the current nation state of Finland. Their Finnishness is rooted in their family, the stories, tradition, and (on some cases) words that has survived within the community for generations, despite many years of Americanization policies. It's a heritage identity for them, not a national identity; When people like that say "i'm Finnish", they are refering to lineage and their ethnic connection to the region, not Finnish culture as is practiced today in Finland.
@@mailio4536 I'm a strong believer in "When in Rome, live as the Romans do."
eikö niillä nimenomaan ole omaa perhetaustaa Suomesta? ja jos jokainen elää maassa maan tavalla-periaatteen mukaan, niin olis aivan jäätävän vaikee tutustua muihin kulttuureihin. kauan eläköön Suomen suurlähetystön saunaillat amerikassa jne !! toisaalta Suomen amerikkalaistuminen vituttaa mut se on laajempi kulttuurillinen ilmiö eikä mikään kyläjuhla
@@villasukat3808 Enpä tiedä millä tavalla tuo tuota vaikeuttaisi. Kun käyn Ruotsissa, elän kun ruotsalaiset. Kun käyn Egyptissä, elän kun egyptiläiset. Kun käyn Kiinassa, elän kun kiinalaiset.
Päinvastoin, kulttuuriin tutustuminen vaikeutuu, kun haluaisi esimerkiksi mennä Pariisiin tutustumaan ranskalaiseen kulttuuriin, mutta kadut täynnä rukousmattoja ja kebab-paikkoja, kun maahanmuutto voimistuu ja paikalliset itse muuttavat ‘ranskalaisemmille’ alueille.
no miks sulla on saksan lippu kuvana sitte
these are americans
with finnish heritage
TORILLE
You need to start before you finnish.
Can't even pronounce his last name correctly.