7 Ways I've Become More Midwestern Since Moving Here

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  • Опубликовано: 13 сен 2024

Комментарии • 1,2 тыс.

  • @chrisbosley7095
    @chrisbosley7095 Год назад +431

    Addicted to cheese? Next step is a 'cheese drawer,' a dedicated drawer in the fridge for only different types of cheese!

    • @LymanPhillips
      @LymanPhillips Год назад +15

      We have a dairy shelf in the fridge.

    • @ericaem75
      @ericaem75 Год назад +35

      The cheese drawer is how I know someone is truly Midwestern.

    • @maidenminnesota1
      @maidenminnesota1 Год назад +32

      We have a cheese drawer, but we also keep bacon in it.

    • @Sorrowdusk
      @Sorrowdusk Год назад +25

      👀 Everyone doesn't have those? I mean there is deli meat too

    • @bsteven885
      @bsteven885 Год назад +31

      WHAAA? You mean a cheese drawer is NOT a usual thing?

  • @catatonicbug7522
    @catatonicbug7522 Год назад +113

    After you said "no one wears flannel pajama pants in public" I was so glad to hear you say "except at Walmart!" Its so true!

    • @MK-dr7dx
      @MK-dr7dx Год назад +2

      And college campuses. Tired, overworked full-time students apparently don't have a lot of time for laundry and have to make do with whatever they can throw together.

    • @Scarybug
      @Scarybug Год назад +2

      @@MK-dr7dx I was going to say, I remember students, especially girls, in Milwaukee in 1999-2003 going to class in red flannel pajama pants all the time. It's good to know it's still a thing today.

  • @Jst.a.Normal.Bottle.of.Mustard
    @Jst.a.Normal.Bottle.of.Mustard Год назад +444

    As someone from the midwest who enjoys british comedy i must say, your channel is a diamond in the rough

  • @robabiera733
    @robabiera733 Год назад +283

    Lawrence, you still have a very British sense of humor and I don't think any baseball cap is ever going to be able to change that.

    • @dollhousegirl7153
      @dollhousegirl7153 Год назад +5

      lol, right!

    • @bossfan49
      @bossfan49 Год назад +1

      Also the "u" (not a "w") in Laurence.

    • @EvTheFlickFan
      @EvTheFlickFan Год назад +1

      @@bossfan49 That also ( and still ) screws me up whenever I need to write that name ( yes I’m that unsure I won’t even try to type it again )

  • @eosborne6495
    @eosborne6495 Год назад +261

    Ope is an all purpose expression of mild social distress. Like, “I’m fully aware that this is not life threatening or even particularly memorable for either of us, but I’ve suddenly become uncomfortably aware of myself, and I feel the need to acknowledge the slight alarm that I feel and/or have caused.”

    • @Psianth
      @Psianth Год назад +30

      At the end of the day it's really just a shortening of 'oops'

    • @Khronogi
      @Khronogi Год назад +24

      That and "no problem" anytime anyone does anything.
      "Excuse me"
      "Ope, sorry"
      "Aw, no problem"

    • @ferretyluv
      @ferretyluv Год назад +2

      So just oops.

    • @CaroleWillett
      @CaroleWillett Год назад +20

      I think "ope" has a much broader application than just "oops".... like a "oh would ya look at that" for instance.

    • @kynn23
      @kynn23 Год назад +12

      @@CaroleWillett Yeah, it also has a "Wait a minute" connotation.

  • @nariu7times328
    @nariu7times328 Год назад +379

    I love that you say "I became more mid-western" because if we have learned anything from your channel, it is that America is HUGE and has many ways to be.

    • @kathyjohnson2043
      @kathyjohnson2043 Год назад +9

      Many!

    • @gutterspeak
      @gutterspeak Год назад +3

      Who had to learn this?

    • @ImOk...
      @ImOk... Год назад +19

      I agree. I wish we could all be acknowledged by our states. Alaska has nothing in common with Hawaii, just like New England crime rates have nothing in common with Texas (sorry). Colorado landscape is the complete opposite of Florida and the west coast personality is not the same as the northeast. I could go on.

    • @nariu7times328
      @nariu7times328 Год назад +7

      @@ImOk... I magine this is true for Great Britain and other countries as well, I am just glad it was expressed well in this video.

    • @Wesleeezy
      @Wesleeezy Год назад

      Agreed

  • @JodysJourney
    @JodysJourney Год назад +89

    So funny. When you were discussing no Midwesterner wearing the red flannel pants in public, I said “well, maybe in Walmart” just before you did. Ope! 🤣🤣🤣

    • @davidkermes376
      @davidkermes376 Год назад

      mine are green and black checked.

    • @bsteven885
      @bsteven885 Год назад +1

      YES!! 😂 It's not only a trope, it actually happens!

    • @_Frank_the_Tank
      @_Frank_the_Tank Год назад +1

      Are pants a thing in the more northern Midwest states? Seems like in Iowa we all just wear camouflage cargo shorts year round... Granted when it gets chilly out I'll toss on one of my button up long sleeve flannel shirts. Camo shorts and a flannel shirt, we call that an Iowa tuxedo

    • @JodysJourney
      @JodysJourney Год назад +1

      @@_Frank_the_Tank Funny you should mention that. I taught college for almost 30 years and college boys ALWAYS wore cargo shorts, no matter the weather. It was the girls who would wear flannel pajama pants. 🤣👍🏻

    • @sammiller6631
      @sammiller6631 Год назад

      @@_Frank_the_Tank Are camo shorts really a thing?

  • @calebleland8390
    @calebleland8390 Год назад +50

    "All of my loved ones and Uncle Toby..." It's these little moments that make these videos so enjoyable. And, of course, the content itself, which is filled with little moments like those.

  • @DoughBrain
    @DoughBrain Год назад +128

    The fact that you specify Midwestern means you’re definitely American now! 🥳
    Welcome to the family!

  • @bobmcstuffins8194
    @bobmcstuffins8194 Год назад +159

    I'd love to see a Charlie Berens and Laurence crossover.

  • @virmirus
    @virmirus Год назад +51

    As a Midwesterner, a little bit of me is wonderfully proud that "OPE" has osmosed.

    • @thelightshineth8848
      @thelightshineth8848 Год назад +1

      I'm a life-long Floridian but I did live in Kansas for 5 years. I know FOR SURE I've said "ope" or some hybrid of that and "oop" at least since then, and now I am distraught, as I know I will never know the answer to this question: Is this something I always said before, or is this a part of the Midwest that managed to sneak undetected into my psyche??

    • @moonflight1867
      @moonflight1867 Год назад +1

      ​@thelightshineth I've always lived in the Midwest, but my Southern friend's ya'll slowly infected my vocabulary...I have no clue when exactly it was. But I say ya'll far more often than I care to admit. XD

    • @thelightshineth8848
      @thelightshineth8848 Год назад

      @@moonflight1867 lol, i mean it's kinda fun. i grew up in south FL which isn't "south" at all, but living in north FL for the past 15 years have definitely picked up the "y'all" probably among other things I'm unaware of 😁

    • @moonflight1867
      @moonflight1867 Год назад

      @thelightshineth I admit saying 'ya'll' is actually pretty fun- don't tell that to my friend, though. Or I'll never hear the end of it (like so many of our inside jokes...).

  • @azurithdetwilight
    @azurithdetwilight Год назад +105

    As someone who lived and grew up in Indiana, i have recently discovered your channel and it very much amuses me seeing how you look at our life. I never knew watching someone go to Lowes could be entertaining. Keep up the good work

  • @KaityKat117
    @KaityKat117 Год назад +46

    Honestly as someone who grew up most of my childhood in Michigan I never knew that ope was a regional thing. It took until I saw some RUclips video (well into my adulthood) talking about Midwestern mannerisms before I learned that "ope", "thingamajig", "yeah no"/"no yeah", and "lemme squeeze on by"were all Midwestern phrases.

    • @ferretyluv
      @ferretyluv Год назад +4

      The “yeah no” thing is definitely not regional. We say it on the east coast. I also hear it’s an Australian thing as well.
      Thingamajig/whatchamacallit/whoozats/etc are also not regional. We say it here as well. It sounds like the guy who you were listening to was just Californian.

    • @Sentientmatter8
      @Sentientmatter8 Год назад +2

      It's wild thingamajig doesn't feel remotely regional what do people elsewhere say when they can't remember or don't know the name for a thing???

    • @Beachtrader0007
      @Beachtrader0007 Год назад +4

      @@Sentientmatter8 doo hickey is a good one. Thingamabob too

    • @vanhattfield8292
      @vanhattfield8292 Год назад +4

      @@Sentientmatter8 A "Whatchamacallit"...

    • @Kinikia95
      @Kinikia95 Год назад

      I saw ope on youtube and thought oh that's those Wisconsin people, corny. Suddenly hit me one day that I say ope several times a day every day. So much I was never aware.

  • @Ciborium
    @Ciborium Год назад +72

    Brian Blessed is a national treasure! He, and his beard and his voice, must be protected and conserved.

    • @elultimo102
      @elultimo102 Год назад +7

      I always wanted Brian Blessed to play the Spirit of Christmas Present, should they do a remake of "A Christmas Carol." (Imagine that voice in that part).

    • @beanhavok2287
      @beanhavok2287 Год назад +3

      The man that launched a thousand memes....
      God bless that man!

    • @AnthropoidOne
      @AnthropoidOne Год назад +3

      Tennis balls my liege

    • @robviousobviously5757
      @robviousobviously5757 Год назад +9

      Hawkmen FLY!

    • @jaycee330
      @jaycee330 Год назад +1

      BRIAN BLESSED!!

  • @FurtiveGlancer
    @FurtiveGlancer Год назад +32

    "The dairy hair incident of 2012" has captured my attention. I do hope to hear more in a future video. 😄

    • @kynn23
      @kynn23 Год назад +1

      He could make it a running joke, like the spaghetti incident in Calvin & Hobbes.

    • @Lucius1958
      @Lucius1958 Год назад +4

      @@kynn23 The NOODLE incident. That can't be proven, anyway: nobody can pin it on Calvin!

    • @kynn23
      @kynn23 Год назад

      @@Lucius1958 Oh, good call! Thanks for the correction. :)

  • @BamaRushandLilMan
    @BamaRushandLilMan Год назад +120

    I giggled at this video. I am southern bred American and now I have lived (20 years) in the Upper Great Plains which is claimed by Charlie and Miles and found myself have been indoctrinated by almost every aspect of the "OPE" lifestyle.

    • @markerwin2110
      @markerwin2110 Год назад +12

      Keep er moving and watch out for Deer

    • @carrieflood4265
      @carrieflood4265 Год назад +5

      He should do a colab with Charlie and Miles. Well, maybe not due to the Chicago thing...😂
      Go Packers!! 💚💛

    • @Khronogi
      @Khronogi Год назад +4

      ​@@carrieflood4265 Bears suck. With my obligatory remark out of the way, I'd love to see that.

    • @laurawendt8471
      @laurawendt8471 Год назад +3

      The ope is so useful, just such a good politeness shorthand 😂 entirely inoffensive, the sound u make even has a higher slightly surprised uptick in register to denote your complete harmlessness 😮

    • @nickgavis0305
      @nickgavis0305 Год назад +5

      I’m from south Florida and I always use the ope thing too. Though it’s more of a kind of oop than ope if that makes any sense lmao

  • @jasonsummit1885
    @jasonsummit1885 Год назад +40

    I knew an older lady who was from Scotland and moved here when she was 17, she never lost her accent the whole 65-70 years she lived here.

    • @kynn23
      @kynn23 Год назад +5

      I read years ago that whether or not you lose your accent depends on whether you arrived before some specific age (I want to say it was around 8 years old). It had something to do with a pruning the brain goes through around that time. I really should try to find the article and save it this time...

    • @catw6998
      @catw6998 Год назад +4

      My hubby still has his New England way of talking even though we live more than 7 hours drive away. Some have even noticed after talking for a bit with him and then remarking. Something like, “hey, you’re from Boston, aren’t you?”

    • @franciet99
      @franciet99 Год назад +3

      Im from the states and had a boyfriend that was from Manchester. We would go out into the world and people would think that we were both from Australia. Never quite understood that as I have Avery generic accent as I’ve lived all over the Midwest and south. I catch on to accents easily but not to any British ones.

    • @aimeeinkling
      @aimeeinkling Год назад +4

      Yep. My husband's grandmother was from Australia. She lived here from WWII until she died ten years ago. Her accent was unmistakable. 🤣

    • @alansmithee8831
      @alansmithee8831 Год назад +3

      ​@@franciet99 My friend and I, from Yorkshire, the other side of the Pennines from Manchester, toured the US for 3 months in 1990s. We were often mistaken for Irish, due to being heard speaking in dialect, not just having an accent. This left some proud Irish-Americans embarrassed, especially that we were from England. We consoled them by saying my friend having the forenames James Stewart was down to celtic ancestry.

  • @alyssasmith6010
    @alyssasmith6010 Год назад +18

    #1 is so true! When my husband worked in London he shaved every day and wore a three piece suit. Within a year of moving to the US he shaves every couple of weeks and wears jeans and race t-shirt to work. Same type of job.

  • @edwardallenthree
    @edwardallenthree Год назад +35

    Flannel pajama pants are the style at my daughter's middle school. It goes across genders, social lines, activity groups, they all love to wear flannel pajama pants to school.

    • @Mick_Ts_Chick
      @Mick_Ts_Chick Год назад +4

      Wish I could get away with that at work!

    • @oldsilver6035
      @oldsilver6035 Год назад +4

      Flannel sheets are really nice too.😊

    • @linkly9272
      @linkly9272 Год назад +3

      Over half of my days spent at high school were spent in flannel pajama pants and a sweatshirt. No regrets.

    • @melindar.fischer5106
      @melindar.fischer5106 Год назад +2

      I work in a middle school (in Kansas), and the same is true here: boys and girls and NB wear flannel pajama pants every day to school. All races wear flannel pajama pants to school. Speakers of different native language wear flannel pajama pants to school...

  • @mariannepeterson6725
    @mariannepeterson6725 Год назад +71

    I'm enjoying the growing richness of your narrative style. It's reminiscent of Mark Twain and that's a very, very good thing. The flow and delivery feel as though you are liberating yourself. Your journey of self discovery is a joy to behold.

  • @hathaway5724
    @hathaway5724 Год назад +12

    Midwesterners are the best! I’ve lived and traveled the US and world. It’s been affirmed for decades. Yay all things midwestern Laurence and midwestern wife.

  • @ElleCoyote
    @ElleCoyote Год назад +29

    My Dad was a big Cubs fan. They won the Series the year he was born, and never again until well after he died. Nevertheless, he loved the Cubs.

    • @jeepstergal4043
      @jeepstergal4043 Год назад +3

      Being a Cubs fan is a lifelong commitment, one that teaches loyalty in the face of disappointment and dismal failure.
      I grew up on the North Side, four blocks from Cubs Park.

  • @neekniggit3606
    @neekniggit3606 Год назад +12

    "Ope" is an exclamation of an accidental mishap and not really an apology. However people realize what has occurred was not on purpose so no harm no foul which could be seen as an apology, but not really.

  • @MsArri81
    @MsArri81 Год назад +13

    The beard! My Scottish husband never had a beard until he met his now American wife. And we don't reside in the Midwest. 😂 Also never paid attention to Ope until you mentioned it and I realized that both of my uncles say Ope a lot! They reside in Cleveland OH.

  • @pickledpopcorn8404
    @pickledpopcorn8404 Год назад +24

    As a Texan, I see up north as too cold to be inhabitable. As a northerner, my husband sees Texas as too hot to be habitable. Guess it's where you're raised. Love your channel

    • @kynn23
      @kynn23 Год назад +3

      Did you compromise and settle in a mutually-inhabitable state?

    • @midwestlakelife
      @midwestlakelife Год назад +1

      How funny! Yes, I was born and raised in Michigan and find the South to be too hot for someone like me to live.
      I prefer winter to summer.

    • @pickledpopcorn8404
      @pickledpopcorn8404 Год назад +1

      @@kynn23 Kinda, started in Texas awhile, then went to Ohio, Tennessee, Indiana...

    • @Beachtrader0007
      @Beachtrader0007 Год назад

      @@pickledpopcorn8404 It sounds like he won. Those are all colder!

    • @MarianneKat
      @MarianneKat Год назад

      Why do Furnaces always marry Freezers? 😂😂 my frozen 'southern' husband is always cold. By 'southern' I mean Toledo, Ohio. We live in MI. 😊

  • @Maderyne
    @Maderyne Год назад +14

    I'm a midwestern, born and raised as such. I've been around the world but came back to my midwestern roots. You, Laurence, are most welcome here in the heartland of the USA. Keep your British accent, it is your trademark! Go Cubs!

    • @Navyuncle
      @Navyuncle Год назад

      You had to ruin a good post by those last two words 😁 I know you meant to say " Go Cards!" Even though they are a bunch of Jr high girls this year.🥴

    • @BiggestPLANTS
      @BiggestPLANTS Год назад

      LETS GO ROYALS (they suck so much but I don’t care and nothing but death can stop me from supporting them)

    • @Kinikia95
      @Kinikia95 Год назад

      I was with you until that end part.

  • @timothycary7417
    @timothycary7417 Год назад +22

    I grew up in California and many Westerners said, "Oopsie Daisy" instead of "Ope."

    • @Anelisa8520
      @Anelisa8520 Год назад

      Big "oopsie"-sayin' Californian here. Though I did grow up on the East Coast...
      (Meaning I say it a lot, not that I'm big. I'm extremely medium.) (Wait--is that even possible?)

  • @francleighscarlett
    @francleighscarlett Год назад +12

    I took my flannel shirt on my last visit to the UK in late March (I wanted to be warm) having no idea flannel isn't a thing. I got a few lumberjack comments and it was referred to when set out to dry by my host as a "tartan".

  • @sigsin1
    @sigsin1 Год назад +63

    When I lived in LA, I was in a class discussing stereotypes. The question was ‘what does a lesbian look like?’ The lesbians in the class said comfortable shoes, practical comfortable clothing. Having grown up in Michigan, I thought well, if that’s the case, every woman in the Midwest is a lesbian.

    • @vanhattfield8292
      @vanhattfield8292 Год назад +2

      Aren't they? At least potentially? 😋

    • @MK-dr7dx
      @MK-dr7dx Год назад +7

      @@vanhattfield8292 Schrodinger's sexuality. Until I get unambiguous confirmation of a person's sexuality, they are simultaneously pansexual and asexual and everything in between.

    • @OtakuUnitedStudio
      @OtakuUnitedStudio 11 месяцев назад +2

      Wearing flannel is another stereotype that doesn't work in a specific place, in this case the South. Most women wear flannel, and the few lesbians I knew while living there were more likely to wear button-down dress shirts.

    • @Gakulon
      @Gakulon 10 месяцев назад

      I wish 😔

  • @Ciborium
    @Ciborium Год назад +17

    Beards are also a sign of masculinity. Very few women can grow beards. As Shakespeare wrote, "He that hath a beard is more than a youth, and he that hath no beard is less than a man; and he that is more than a youth is not for me, and he that is less than a man, I am not for him."

    • @jodil1209
      @jodil1209 Год назад

      I had never heard that before. Very interesting!! My husband has been growing a beard for probably 10 years. He does it to cover his double chin. Plus he's getting pretty bald, so he definitely wears hats everywhere. He wanted to wear his hat to our oldest daughter's wedding. 😅😅

  • @maidenminnesota1
    @maidenminnesota1 Год назад +13

    4th generation Minnesotan. My son-in-law told me that we say "ope". I didn't believe him. Not 5 minutes later, I said it. Dang it. We DO use it. Unconsciously and all the time. It's a cross between oh and oops. BTW: Somewhere in Minneapolis there is a Mary Tyler Moore statue where she's tossing her hat (from the TV show). Yep, 4th generation Minnesotan, and I've never seen it in person myself. Couldn't tell you where it is.

    • @milemarker301
      @milemarker301 Год назад

      Central downtown , Nicolette Ave pretty sure. Where Dayton's used to be (I think). Haven't been there in decades, but pretty sure.

    • @squirrelvert
      @squirrelvert 6 месяцев назад

      The thing you're talking about is NATIONWIDE. I live in DC and first heard it hear about five years ago. Growing up in the Midwest for the first 30 years of my life, I never heard it, even once. It's a "starved for attention" thing -- we'll take any bad stereotype, as long as people are talking about us. Even if it's totally bullshit.

  • @ryanroberts1104
    @ryanroberts1104 Год назад +9

    I know how you feel. I'm from the west coast and now I live in the south. It might as well be an entirely different country. Food is different. People are different. Language is different. Laws are different! Sometimes I say y'all...and then my eyes get really big like "did I really just say that?!" The other day I was about to start doing something and I said "I'm fixin' to". WTF? How did I learn an entirely new language without my consent?

    • @brendafrazier811
      @brendafrazier811 Год назад +1

      I’ve found that can happen by reading books. A few years ago I was reading the Outlander books (a lot of Scottish dialect). I was reading at lunch at work when a coworker came in. I looked up and answered her in Scottish phrasing. While I was trying to figure out what in the world just happened, she said that I needed to stop reading “those books”!

  • @Navyuncle
    @Navyuncle Год назад +44

    Larry, don't worry about becoming a Midwesterner. Feli from Germany has become one too. She even went as far as to lose her German accent. She speaks American English as good as a native.

    • @alansmithee8831
      @alansmithee8831 Год назад +2

      @Ron Wallace. Are you qvite sure? I suggested they should do a collaboration in comments before.

    • @The_One_In_Black
      @The_One_In_Black Год назад +9

      I'm pretty sure there's a huge overlap between channel viewers, because once I started watching Lost in the Pond, the algorithm immediately started recommending Feli.

  • @jmr9735
    @jmr9735 Год назад +7

    "ope!" That's funny. I grew up in south Texas, lived in Northern Minnesota and southern MN, and northern and central Indiana. I've been in Indiana for 30 years total. I swear, I only just heard the word "Ope" for the first time maybe a year ago. My co-worker says it all the time. In fact, I recently asked her why she says it. It's odd that I haven't heard it before. Maybe it never grabbed my attention before.

  • @Pikkonuos
    @Pikkonuos Год назад +50

    Im 37 and from california, but ive lived in oregon for 10 years and i feel that these words are always options to use, and not out of the ordinary to hear. Ive found myself saying ope before, but not realizing where ive picked it up from. Never have i heard someone genuinely confused on what ive said, or why i said it. Love your content and youre making the pond a little smaller with your videos. ❤

    • @dantemoose420
      @dantemoose420 Год назад +7

      Eugene here; can confirm. "Ope, just gonna squeeze past ye" is a common refrain 'round these parts

    • @julienielsen3746
      @julienielsen3746 Год назад +1

      I've lived in Oregon all my life.Almost 64 years. I don't remember ever hearing someone say "ope".

    • @winterkeptuswarm
      @winterkeptuswarm Год назад +2

      I didn't know it was Midwestern, maybe some of my teachers were secret Midwesterners!! 😮 (I grew up in San Francisco) 💕

    • @debbylou5729
      @debbylou5729 Год назад +2

      Oregon isn’t any different from California. Was this kind of a hallucinatory dream?

    • @drunvert
      @drunvert Год назад +1

      I say it. California native. But parents both from Nebraska

  • @jennieluft8746
    @jennieluft8746 Год назад +4

    As someone who grew up in NE Indiana when “ope” came up I thought what is that I’ve never said that and then you gave the example and I thought “Ope! Yes I have!” 😂😂

    • @kynn23
      @kynn23 Год назад +1

      I think we midwesterners just swallow the P sound a little more. It's more like a glottal stop.

    • @catw6998
      @catw6998 Год назад +1

      Come to think of it, i believe I’ve heard my Grandfather say that a few times. I thought it was some German thing. My Grandparents did live in Indiana for a few years before moving back to NY. Could it be both a German and midwestern thing?

    • @squirrelvert
      @squirrelvert 6 месяцев назад

      The example is him saying "oh, oh!" People from anywhere in that situation might say that.

  • @marisadaniela6
    @marisadaniela6 Год назад +4

    You know when people use the phrase "yeah, we dont claim him". Well, this is the opposite of that. Very happy to have you here in the Mkdwest!

  • @rakellcolotta3675
    @rakellcolotta3675 Год назад +9

    Thanks Laurence, you always make me smile. This Anglophile is glad you came to America.

  • @heathermcd12
    @heathermcd12 Год назад +69

    So after I moved to Oklahoma and heard my 1st tornado siren. I naturally grabbed my rain jacket, brolley and bag to leave work and go home. My coworkers laughed and said one doesn’t drive in a tornado warning but hunkers down. After that I was nicknamed Terri Poppins because of being so British and all 🤣🤣🤣. 18 years later and I am all like, “Hey y’all want to go eat at Kaysa Waneeta’s?” (Casa Juanita’s) I miss being British 🧐

    • @FFXIgwyn
      @FFXIgwyn Год назад +5

      I'm sorry you live in Oklahoma.

    • @jodirauth8847
      @jodirauth8847 Год назад +8

      Tornadoes are no joke in Oklahoma

    • @conradnelson5283
      @conradnelson5283 Год назад +12

      In Oklahoma, we have a recurring show on television called the “ tornado show”. All the local channels send people out to chase the tornadoes and then they broadcast it live. So you can sit on your front porch watching the storm come in and you might spot a tornado, while at the same time, flipping channels, watching the same storm on the television. I even have a radar app that gives me a very accurate reading on the weather. It’s called RadarScope. I don’t know what I’d do without it. I have now seen eight or nine actual tornadoes, including an F5. They are very scary.

    • @TheCJTok
      @TheCJTok Год назад +3

      I love it here in Oklahoma and yes, the weather definitely keeps you on your toes around here. Grew up in Houston and the biggest concern there was flash flooding or hurricanes. At least you had time to prepare for hurricanes.

    • @lisaprice8785
      @lisaprice8785 Год назад +2

      Leave Oklahoma...last chance saloon.
      Move to New Mexico and get a Latino accent

  • @mmmpotstickers8684
    @mmmpotstickers8684 Год назад +3

    Thank you for solving my 40 year old mystery about the opening line from the song "Tempted" by Squeeze. "I bought a toothbrush, some toothpaste, a flannel for my face. "

  • @bigpeeler
    @bigpeeler Год назад +10

    "Especially in Walmart" - Spot on. 👍

  • @jeffnaslund
    @jeffnaslund Год назад +10

    I was born in Chicago, but moved to South Florida when I was seven. Needless to say, I consider myself a Floridian. But I will always have a soft spot for my home town.

  • @brucetidwell7715
    @brucetidwell7715 Год назад +13

    Lawrence, your sense of humor is absolutely wonderful but you hit out of the park more times in that 10 minutes than you have in ages. I can't even pick a favorite line.

  • @CarbonPotato
    @CarbonPotato Год назад +10

    Speaking of Midwest, I just watched your accents video, and being from Wisconsin, I tried picking out the accent in my own voice, and I swear it's something that you develop with age, i think im a little young for it, or i havent been up north often enough. If you really want to hear Wisconsin accents, there's a Wisconsin comedian named Charlie Berens, he is like, the definition of midwest, specifically, well, Wisconsin. There's a woman who really has quite an accent, Alex Wehrley, who upon just looking her up is his ex-wife featured in a couple videos, i didn't know that. But yeah, they are Wisconsin wrapped up into people. funny stuff

  • @FuzzyMarineVet
    @FuzzyMarineVet Год назад +6

    One of the greatest attractions of Winnie for Americans is that his mother, an American, gave him a deep understanding of and love for the United States.

  • @Troy-McClure81
    @Troy-McClure81 Год назад +4

    That Ring Light reflection off the glasses is driving me crazy I keep trying to swipe the dot away lol

    • @kynn23
      @kynn23 Год назад +1

      Glad I'm not the only one!

  • @eweasel1
    @eweasel1 Год назад +6

    You know, I'd like to meet Uncle Toby. Buy him a pint and a whiskey and hear stories about young Lawrence.

  • @Aramis419
    @Aramis419 Год назад +1

    Hailing from the Philadelphia region, I was recently at my cousin's place in [UNDISCLOSED MIDWESTERN TOWN], and nearly bumped into someone and I said, "Whoops, my bad, I'm sorry!" and the guy responded "Ope!" and moved on.
    I didn't know if he was insulting me, making a movie reference, or telling me to screw off.
    Thank you for explaining that!

  • @susanbrannigan
    @susanbrannigan Год назад +21

    As a St. Louis-raised American (Go CARDS!) currently obsessed with England, I think this is my favorite of your videos so far. America's not so bad if you know where to look.
    BTW, I was surprised and pleased to see a statue of Abraham Lincoln outside Westminster in London. 😁

    • @Khronogi
      @Khronogi Год назад

      ​@@MrBrashRooster I think the idea that you get a lot of people asking you questions and someone vandalizing your car shows you a lot of about the vandal.
      They have no idea why they are vandalizing that car other than you are percieved as different.
      So you take kindly to the task of being an impromptu ambassador?

  • @Semiam1
    @Semiam1 Год назад +9

    That clothes drying rack is definitely British. I had one when I lived in England. 😂

    • @kynn23
      @kynn23 Год назад +4

      I'm midwestern and have one! Some clothes just don't go in the dryer.

    • @lesleywilliams323
      @lesleywilliams323 Год назад

      Clothes horse … that’s what we call it in England 😀

    • @jmh7286
      @jmh7286 Год назад +4

      The Amish in Indiana use drying racks.

    • @lisaphares2286
      @lisaphares2286 Год назад +1

      The Amish in Ohio do too. My mom always had one for camping to hang towels and wet socks and I have one like that and one I think of as asian. It folds down like an umbrella and has a hook. If you put it hook up the arms go horizontal and it has 2 clips on each. Great for wool socks/underwear and to make elastic last longer in bras and underwear.

    • @pkmcnett5649
      @pkmcnett5649 Год назад

      We have the drying rack, just no place to put it. There is a clothesline in our basement, though.

  • @jasonhatt4295
    @jasonhatt4295 Год назад +5

    Midwest!? Great choice! That’s where I’m from!

  • @user-mj9hq6vm1g
    @user-mj9hq6vm1g Год назад +1

    Just love your humor you must keep your wife in stitches all the time God Bless

  • @suemccoy7533
    @suemccoy7533 Год назад +8

    Laurence, you crack me up, love your RUclips videos.

  • @llamasugar5478
    @llamasugar5478 Год назад +2

    My aunt was buried in one of the first Chicago Cubs caskets; it’s a comfort that she lived long enough to see them win.

  • @sooz9433
    @sooz9433 Год назад +5

    You are unique Laurence... one of a kind no matter what Country we're talking about!!❤

  • @aaronkcmo
    @aaronkcmo Год назад +2

    the hat that you're wearing here is called a "dad" hat. baseball caps are structured in the front to present a flat space for a logo/graphic.

  • @cindylewis3325
    @cindylewis3325 Год назад +19

    My ancestors came from Europe, lived in Chicago in the 1920s- most are still there but my branch moved to Miami Fl in the 1950s, & now they span the country from New England to California. What you are referring to is “The Melting Pot”. It’s when you really became American and leave your roots behind. Let’s face it most of America came from some other country. Nice video ❤

  • @rosehagood3146
    @rosehagood3146 Год назад +1

    I don't have to binge because I watch every episode almost as soon as it comes out.

  • @deborahdanhauer8525
    @deborahdanhauer8525 Год назад +31

    I say the ope thing too and I lived in Kentucky until I was 30 and then in Tennessee. To me it means I’ve made a mistake somehow, so dropping a piece of cheese in the kitchen is appropriate usage. If I’m doing the back and forth thing in the hallway with someone coming the opposite way, I might start with ope, but eventually I’ll ask, “Do you want to dance?”❤️🤗🐝

  • @ajwinberg
    @ajwinberg Год назад +8

    Laurence, your videos make me so happy. Every time I see a new video from you I can't help but smile.

  • @JRBye
    @JRBye Год назад +5

    If you like cheese come down to Springfield Il and have a horseshoe. It is basically an open face cheeseburger with toast, your choice of a few different meats but mostly hamburgers and fries all in a pile covered with cheese sauce. There are a ton of different cheese sauce recipes but Darcy’s Pint has the best sauce I think anyway. Next time you are down here have one if you haven’t already.

  • @LillibitOfHere
    @LillibitOfHere Год назад +13

    The fact that you’ve apologized to cheese spread makes you 100% midwestern.

    • @alansmithee8831
      @alansmithee8831 Год назад +2

      @Liz K. He must have worked on his Kraft.

    • @dubbynelson
      @dubbynelson Год назад

      he said "casserole" instead of "hotdish" i gotta dock him a point for that

    • @Kinikia95
      @Kinikia95 Год назад

      ​@@dubbynelsonWe say casserole in michigan. At least i've never heard hotdish And i'm old.

  • @songofruth
    @songofruth Год назад +4

    Here's a memo that got lost that I'd love to know about. My great, great grandfather was from England. Story is (supported by historical records) he came over to fight on the side of the north in the civil war. I've also heard of someone from Canada doing the same thing. I never knew that people from other countries came here just to fight for the USA in that war. Seems like that is definitely a lost memo.

  • @jeremyklein9679
    @jeremyklein9679 Год назад +2

    Ope is a very versatile word. It can be used apologetically, when a mistake is made, in bewilderment, in surprise, and even when happy. It's probably only second to the F word in its adaptability, which is also a very popular word in the Midwest.

  • @maryclark1049
    @maryclark1049 Год назад +8

    Ooooh Laurence! Yes we Midwesterners use "ope" a lot but "Whoopsie daisy" is cute lol😂

    • @TheCanadiangirl4
      @TheCanadiangirl4 Год назад +2

      Where I live in Ontario we tend to says oops but it sounds like we react the same way as Laurence's demo.

    • @maryclark1049
      @maryclark1049 Год назад +1

      @@TheCanadiangirl4 yes it's so funny I found myself saying "ope" yesterday when I dropped something. It was about an hour after I watched the video. It made me realize I probably say it a lot lol

  • @Sleepingbear2222
    @Sleepingbear2222 Год назад

    Thank you for bringing America and Britain closer.

  • @korbiroberts2971
    @korbiroberts2971 Год назад +2

    Very Funny! Thank you soooo much for this look at being a midwesterner, and with such British charm!

  • @OtakuUnitedStudio
    @OtakuUnitedStudio 11 месяцев назад

    Brian Blessed has made everyone blessed

  • @donnawoodford8145
    @donnawoodford8145 Год назад +33

    I'm back in the Midwest in a couple of days. Midwestern people are generally friendly, and family oriented, but each state has a different feel. So, I suggest that you see other Midwestern states, if you haven't already done such. Many adventures out there!

    • @maramakesjournals2319
      @maramakesjournals2319 Год назад +4

      Come to Wisconsin. Our state fair is the first full week in August. Come early, stay all day. 🐄

    • @franciet99
      @franciet99 Год назад +2

      @@maramakesjournals2319I lived in Cudahy as a child. That’s the only way I survived the winter 😜 Lived for a very short time in Canada as an adult. I looked back on my childhood and realized I couldn’t feel the cold. And I’m someone that went barefoot in the snow in WI. Now I’m in the southern part of the US and don’t miss the snow one iota. 😜

    • @maramakesjournals2319
      @maramakesjournals2319 Год назад +2

      @@franciet99 OMG! My daughter lives in Cudahy. I love it there when the smell of bacon is in the air. Small world.

    • @franciet99
      @franciet99 Год назад +1

      @@maramakesjournals2319 wow! That’s were my youngest sister was born. How cool!

    • @snappleshibes26
      @snappleshibes26 Год назад +2

      @@maramakesjournals2319 Seconding Wisconsin! You guys are by far the friendliest of the Great Lakes states. Ohio isn’t far behind (from personal experience).

  • @peppermoon7485
    @peppermoon7485 Год назад +1

    From the Midwest here 👋from Missouri :)

  • @lisamoore6804
    @lisamoore6804 Год назад +12

    I know I've said this before but I'm originally from Cincinnati, Ohio and now live near Sioux Falls, SD and I had to get used to not having a Kroger, a Skyline or GoldStar and a White Castle restaurant. I have my mom send me Cinti. Chili spice packs, so there's that. I also noticed the Midwestern ish, Minnesotan-ish accents here. A few people have noticed that I'm not from around here.

    • @JeannineDobson
      @JeannineDobson Год назад +3

      As someone who was raised just one county north of Cincinnati and still lives there, I'll bet you make sure to get your Cincinnati Chili "fix" every time you come back for a visit! If I lived as far away as you, I'd be driving home with a suitcase full of canned Skyline. 😂

    • @mommywebb1
      @mommywebb1 Год назад +2

      As my cousin’s wife drove to Ohio from California for the first time she told me she knew she was almost here when she saw her first Kroger sign. My cousin talked about it so much through the years that they stopped and she said he got misty eyed 😂

    • @bluekitty3731
      @bluekitty3731 Год назад +1

      I'm from Michigan and would miss my Coney island's restaurants if I was to move!

    • @lorimiller623
      @lorimiller623 Год назад +2

      I've lived in Indiana for seven years now and still think of Kroger as King Soopers and Hardee's as Carl's Junior.

    • @lisamoore6804
      @lisamoore6804 Год назад +1

      @@lorimiller623 There is another Kroger affiliate called Baker's but it's in Omaha,NE, too far for me to drive, lol. I keep asking them when they're gonna put on out here.

  • @carrollnabors4846
    @carrollnabors4846 Год назад +1

    Lawrence, you are without a doubt one of the funniest gentlemen on RUclips. I have always been a huge fan of the British sense of humour. (That spelling was just for you. LOL) Y'all should come live down in the South. Winters are short, summers warm, but we all have AC. So, consider yourselves invited to the South. :)

  • @Jeff_Lichtman
    @Jeff_Lichtman Год назад +8

    For midwestern roadside kitsch, you need to go to Collinsville, Illinois to see the World's Largest Catsup Bottle. Also to Chester, Illinois to see the Popeye character trail, with statues of Popeye, Olive Oyl, Swee' Pea and Eugene the Jeep, J. Wellington Wimpy, Bluto, the Sea Hag, Alice the Goon, and more from the cartoons and Thimble Theater comic strip.

    • @CometdownCat
      @CometdownCat Год назад

      And somewhere along those paths (given or take a state) you can go dine in a quaint restaurant where they will throw the rolls at you….
      That was ages ago, no clue if it’s still around and I can’t at the moment remember the name…but they would proudly proclaim their thrown roll heritage across billboards for miles and miles away

    • @bluedaisy352
      @bluedaisy352 Год назад +1

      @@CometdownCat Lambert's Cafe!! They're still around

  • @mowm88
    @mowm88 Год назад

    Never stop being you Laurence

  • @trish7754
    @trish7754 Год назад +3

    OMG! I do that "ope" thing all the time! I never knew it could actually be a word! You crack me up! I love your channel.

  • @stevenkolb6158
    @stevenkolb6158 Год назад +1

    Lawrence needs to go to Dubuque's Mississippi River Museum to take a selfie sitting on the park bench with the Samuel Clemens (aka Mark Twain) statue.

  • @emilywagner6354
    @emilywagner6354 Год назад +4

    Brian Blessed is awesome! He requires no explanation. 😀

  • @robylove9190
    @robylove9190 Год назад +1

    Have a wonderful weekend, Laurence!

  • @paulherman5822
    @paulherman5822 Год назад +7

    You're truly a Midwesterner when you are sitting in your wood paneled living room eating pot roast on a TV tray. 😁

  • @mrst7831
    @mrst7831 Год назад

    As a Canadian, those flannel pants remind me so much of the lumber jacket pattern, which originated from our north in the lumber camps. Now, it is seen in everything from pillows to hats, jackets and wall paper !!!

  • @maryhildreth754
    @maryhildreth754 Год назад +3

    Oooh Laurence, you should do a collaboration video with Adventures and Naps. She is a Canadian girl who moved to England about 7 years ago and has a channel about the differences.

    • @alansmithee8831
      @alansmithee8831 Год назад

      @Mary Hildreth. I reckon Feli from Germany might also be a good collaboration, to try to gain subscribers on each other's channels. She is from Munich and lives in Cincinnati. MoreJPS channel has been reacting to her videos prior to going to Germany and I started watching and commenting on the original videos when RUclips started recommending them. It helps that I learned German in school.

    • @maryhildreth754
      @maryhildreth754 Год назад

      @@alansmithee8831 I watch her too.

  • @kennykendall5709
    @kennykendall5709 Год назад

    Go, Cubs!!! Greetings from downstate IL, where we are surrounded by Cardinals fans.

  • @marshallbrink5227
    @marshallbrink5227 Год назад +3

    😂😂”Dairy Hair!!” Didn’t know you speak French too!😅

  • @Almightynienaber
    @Almightynienaber Год назад

    You’ve described “Ope” in a way I can’t describe how well you’ve done it you midwesterner.

  • @davidwilkins5932
    @davidwilkins5932 Год назад +3

    Another great Laurence installment. Only thing possibly “missing” were glimpses of critters. I’m an absolute Kafka fan, and I can’t quite remember the doggo’s name, being primarily a catman. And I absolutely relate to being a shameless cheese-oholic. Since both of us are border residents of the Cheese State, we can safely place blame there-you to the north, and me to the east.

  • @blafonovision4342
    @blafonovision4342 Год назад

    Lawrence, I was born and raised in Iowa, and lived almost all my 53 years in the Midwest. You are now a Midwesterner.

  • @dantemoose420
    @dantemoose420 Год назад +12

    I, for one, welcome our Britwestern overlord!

  • @affenschwanz64
    @affenschwanz64 Год назад

    "Awesome" is how you explain Brian Blessed!

  • @juliayoung537
    @juliayoung537 Год назад +3

    Great video! 😂 Flannel pajama pants are even popular in the Southern US

  • @zombie_snax
    @zombie_snax Год назад +1

    I only have enough energy left to leave a comment and help our favorite import in the algorithms. I'll watch tomorrow at lunch.

  • @wendysmom
    @wendysmom Год назад +4

    I realized I became an American when I needed more ice in my water than my DH and when flying to Europe I felt like there is no A/C in airports. Yep, I am naturalized alright but still with my accent.

    • @Alberto-wu1mj
      @Alberto-wu1mj Год назад

      I live in the wettest place in the USA, and I always have a metal drink cup full of ice for my water. My friend in BC always comments I do this even in the winter.

  • @Navyuncle
    @Navyuncle Год назад +2

    Larry, I noticed that you have been to Alton, Illinois. I saw your picture of you standing by the Lifesize statue of Robert Wadlo across from the SIU school of Dental Medicine.

  • @lucyalderman422
    @lucyalderman422 Год назад +3

    I live in Canada and the neighbour lady was a British war bride and she almost lost her accent as her children were going to school but if she was talking fast or laughing when she was talking there it was even 40 years later

  • @brkaz5864
    @brkaz5864 Год назад

    No explanation necessary, LOVE LOVE LOVE Brian Blessed.

  • @slimernow
    @slimernow Год назад +10

    if you really want to explore different accents, try baltimore. it’s the only city in the US that pronounces their words similar to people in England. there’s actually lingual studies about how they kept their english accents.

    • @vanhattfield8292
      @vanhattfield8292 Год назад +1

      It depends on which part of Baltimore you explore. There are places in Baltimore where the inhabitants most definitely do not sound British. 😂

  • @williamdalton5874
    @williamdalton5874 Год назад

    You still have it because it's yours, and God Bless the Queen.

  • @Motherhubbard170
    @Motherhubbard170 Год назад +2

    Once you've passed puberty, your accent is set for life :)
    before that a child will always change their accent to the country regardless of the parent tongue

    • @melindar.fischer5106
      @melindar.fischer5106 Год назад

      Yes! I learned this in a linguistics class in college. Accents are locked in by the time of puberty.
      I think it has to do with us being hard-wired to mate with someone who is different from us genetically, to diversify the population. We are attracted to foreign accents (find them charming or alluring), because the accent indicates the person is not from "around here", and therefore is not a close relative.

    • @bibliotekarin
      @bibliotekarin Год назад

      My boyfriend left East London when he was seven, and many years later there is no trace of Cockney in his speech, which makes me a little sad. And when he does an impression of his mother, it sounds more like the Monty Python crew when they are pretending to be women!

  • @CriminalFriday
    @CriminalFriday Год назад +2

    I've noticed that while the 'ope' stereotype is often associated with the midwest, it also applies largely in the southeast as well.

  • @JessWLStuart
    @JessWLStuart Год назад +3

    I started out in Iowa, but I've ben a west coaster most of my life. How about you all?

    • @corinnepmorrison1854
      @corinnepmorrison1854 Год назад

      Lived in So California for almost 60 years… Then 30 minutes from Lake Tahoe, on the Nevada side, for 13 years…. Now on a mountaintop in Wyoming… Love(d) each of those places!!
      ❤️🇺🇸❤️

    • @sherieffiong853
      @sherieffiong853 Год назад

      Illinois is my home state. Lived in Austin Texas and a neighboring city for about 10 years. Moved back to my hometown about 13 years ago. Still happier here. And I have visited a few other states. I would love to explore the rest of the country and our beautiful planet.

  • @robynfree1558
    @robynfree1558 Год назад

    I too, am thankful that Brian Blessed