What Japanese Find Weird About Other Countries (Interview)

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  • Опубликовано: 28 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 6 тыс.

  • @ThatJapaneseManYuta
    @ThatJapaneseManYuta  5 лет назад +3370

    Do you remember that the guy in orange said that he didn't speak English? Well, he actually perfectly understood some of Greg's questions that he asked in English :D It's a good example that Japanese people tend to downplay their skills. So if you speak Japanese, feel free to downplay your Japanese skills and Japanese people will be impressed.
    But if you don't speak Japanese, I can send you some free Japanese lessons by email so click here and subscribe: bit.ly/39o4rOX

    • @handi_chun597
      @handi_chun597 5 лет назад +35

      i like this kind interview!
      about downplay skill i'm very agree
      ショールームアプリに最初は英語に挨拶、片言英語で答える
      あとで日本語に答えて全員めっちゃびっくりした、すぐツッコミ来る🤣

    • @randomboiyo6254
      @randomboiyo6254 5 лет назад +32

      wait. we should downplay our skills? how does that impress people im kinda confuzzled.

    • @felixthefox100
      @felixthefox100 5 лет назад +102

      @@randomboiyo6254 just be like I only know hello and then surprise them by speaking full sentences

    • @PotatoMelancholy
      @PotatoMelancholy 5 лет назад +8

      Good day Mr. Yuta, can you do a video of what do Japanese think of Philippines/Filipinos? Thank you 😊😊

    • @RmNrIHRoZSBDQ1AK
      @RmNrIHRoZSBDQ1AK 5 лет назад +9

      僕:「こんにちは。」
      日本人:「あぁ!日本語上手。」
      下手でごめんなさい。

  • @atoro4335
    @atoro4335 4 года назад +18423

    Okay but when I went to Japan there was an old guy with a shirt that just said "Vegetable" in English on it and I about died of laughter 😂

    • @atoro4335
      @atoro4335 4 года назад +464

      @KripKay that is too funny 🤣🤣🤣

    • @GunsForever11
      @GunsForever11 4 года назад +181

      KripKay AHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA

    • @jessicamcdonald7131
      @jessicamcdonald7131 4 года назад +999

      Japanese Engrish is the best type of engrish

    • @icecubes9056
      @icecubes9056 4 года назад +163

      @@jessicamcdonald7131 Lol my grandparents have the accent

    • @ek2211
      @ek2211 4 года назад +17

      LOL

  • @nevreiha
    @nevreiha 4 года назад +8847

    I think everyone who isn't American thinks US portion sizes are mad

    • @StratTwo
      @StratTwo 4 года назад +190

      Bruh I can chug a large soda

    • @jamesson1154
      @jamesson1154 4 года назад +730

      Earth Vision XXR that’s why most of us have diabetes.

    • @StratTwo
      @StratTwo 4 года назад +289

      @@jamesson1154 don't worry if I eat enough salt I'll be able to avoid diabetes, because sugar causes diabetes so I can eat as much burgers to balance if

    • @pranavnair2939
      @pranavnair2939 4 года назад +516

      Even people from the US think US portion sizes are crazy.

    • @destituteanddecadent9106
      @destituteanddecadent9106 4 года назад +49

      I mean European dish sizes also tend to be a bit big for me (Japanese, 45kg)

  • @陈晰然
    @陈晰然 4 года назад +3435

    I am Chinese, when I went to Japan, I was surprised that when I asked where was the toilet, a Japanese staff at the bank not only told me where the bathroom was, but escorted me there, which gave a very good impression

  • @lauracelis8004
    @lauracelis8004 3 года назад +290

    Also I love how respectful they are. They all wanted to avoid calling costumes weird, just different.

    • @DonVigaDeFierro
      @DonVigaDeFierro 3 года назад +30

      Well, if one thing the Japanese people are NOT, is straightforward. Some people may think is dishonesty, but it's more like they avoid being confrontational at all costs or saying "rude things".
      My uncle worked in Osaka for a while, and he says that you kinda become very self-conscious because you're constantly thinking "Shit, am I being rude? Am I annoying people? Am I making a good impression?" For example, he told me about the time when some people went up to him and asked him if he was some sort of music artist, he was kinda flattered at first, but actually thought afterwards: "Shit, I need a haircut and better clothes!"... He never knew whether they meant it or not, but he got better clothes and a haircut and suddenly nobody was looking at him funny on the street.
      My uncle is very fluent in Japanese and that really helped him pick up some of the more subtle "social cues". Shortly after, he was hanging out with his coworkers and going to restaurants to eat chicken wings and drink with them.
      He also visited Kobe or something.
      Well, the point is, yeah, don't expect a straightforward talk with a stranger in Japan...

    • @shaina8947
      @shaina8947 3 года назад +2

      * customs :)

  • @CloudStrife78
    @CloudStrife78 4 года назад +9394

    What I find strange about Japan: People actually paused for a second and considered their answer before blurting out the first random thing that popped into their heads.

    • @andyappleton3353
      @andyappleton3353 4 года назад +342

      I find British people to be like that too.

    • @Doc_Fun
      @Doc_Fun 4 года назад +632

      @H D the U.S. is a very large country with a highly diverse breadth of inihibition between the various states and regions. Don't generalize us too much, it's a disservice to both you and us.

    • @YokoUmihara
      @YokoUmihara 4 года назад +493

      Japanese people tend to think before answering. It's a habit I guess. They don't try to answer a question if they don't know the right answer. Unlike people in other countries who just talk, not minding if their words make sense or not lol.

    • @Drownedinblood
      @Drownedinblood 4 года назад +225

      @Guy Eudes Pretty much. Paris syndrome is a real thing. Some people literally faint when they realize it's not the romantic haven they thought it was, and some Japanese lady has literally started a clean up group to try and make Paris what it is in the movies, it's sad but hilarious.

    • @Yaheleven
      @Yaheleven 4 года назад +45

      Scandinavian and German people consider their answers too.

  • @My.Name.Is.Chris.
    @My.Name.Is.Chris. 4 года назад +2880

    "Its called child size because its aproximately the size of a small child if they were liquified"

  • @sobb7299
    @sobb7299 4 года назад +4510

    Hey, I’m the one who had an interview with 2nd group (someone might think I’m lying lol)
    I watched this video for the first time just right now, and I think my English ability was horrible at this time...
    I didn’t have enough English vocabularies...
    And also, so sorry for everyone who felt uncomfortable with my opinion. But I think this experience was so precious for me because it gave me the chance to think about how we(Japanese people) and the people from foreign countries live together in this world. Thank u Yuta!!!!!!
    PS: Thank you all for giving me a lot of heartwarming messages😭🙏🏻

    • @sobb7299
      @sobb7299 4 года назад +664

      And 6 months later from this interview, I started the internship in NPO(which is called “very50”), and supporting the social entrepreneurs in some countries. I thought I need to improve my English ability and do something for making an impact to the world (even if it’s small) through this interview!!!!!

    • @spudthegreaterusa8386
      @spudthegreaterusa8386 4 года назад +38

      you the one on the right or left.?

    • @bloatedpotato
      @bloatedpotato 4 года назад +492

      ​@@spudthegreaterusa8386 It shouldn't be too hard to figure out considering only one of them speaks English in the video...

    • @lotsofsocks520
      @lotsofsocks520 4 года назад +650

      Your English was actually great, I didn't need subtitles to understand. And spot on point about hierarchy in America, a lot of people don't realize U.S. as a country is rich but there are 40 million living in poverty.

    • @mikimousesousou6580
      @mikimousesousou6580 4 года назад +26

      Domo.Yoroshiku onegaishimasu🙂🙂
      Well. Ur pronunciation is not bad tho however I would like to help u with that... also i'm looking to have some quick chats with u in order to help me improving my Japanese speaking skill.
      So um yeah.. if u agree with that please contact me on:
      fcb account: Mse altair (soufi)
      Gmail: seradjelfadhel39@gmail.com

  • @nohandleforme....
    @nohandleforme.... 3 года назад +89

    When I visited Japan, one thing I noticed right away was how polite and friendly everyone was toward me. They really made me feel welcome in their country. I love the Japanese people.

  • @Rytonic69
    @Rytonic69 4 года назад +3827

    Funny thing about the cup sizes: I have been stationed in Japan for a few years, and have gotten pretty used to eating out at Japanese places. I went home back to America and went to the movies with my family. When we were buying snacks, I ordered a large drink, and my Dad asked me if I was sure. I said "No problem, I'm really thirsty anyways." The girl selling the snacks pulls out this massive bucket of a cup and all I could think was "Oh shit, I forgot what country I'm in."
    Ended up taking the drink home with me and adding rum so I wouldn't waste it

    • @stefannotchev7209
      @stefannotchev7209 4 года назад +179

      *laughs in Japanese*
      Seriously tho, cool story 😂 so what was being stationed in Japan like for you?

    • @1977Futre
      @1977Futre 4 года назад +47

      That story was great in many ways. Not least that you lived in Japan ...Managed to get home now and again and consumed rum on your trip back home.

    • @Rytonic69
      @Rytonic69 4 года назад +128

      @@stefannotchev7209 I love Japan. The people here are so polite and professional. The vending machines serve hot coffee, which is a godsend when I'm standing watch outside in winter.

    • @Archedgar
      @Archedgar 4 года назад +66

      Japan cup sizes, heehehehehehe.

    • @Anonymous551656
      @Anonymous551656 4 года назад +48

      In Australia, a standard "Large" drink is closer to the Japanese size than the American. The first time I saw an American-size large cup was when Subway restaurants opened here, and apparently carried across their same cup sizes. I ordered a large. When the attendant showed me a cup the size of a bucket and asked if I was sure. I was like "...hell no. I'll take the regular."

  • @hon3ytea138
    @hon3ytea138 4 года назад +5177

    "Have you ever found any foreign foods weird?"
    "Cilantro, I hate it"
    Mexicans:

    • @chipwalter4490
      @chipwalter4490 4 года назад +539

      bruh...they just pissed off *three billion* people from INDIA

    • @revresbo101
      @revresbo101 4 года назад +455

      Hating cilantro is picking a fight with an entire race

    • @bloatedpotato
      @bloatedpotato 4 года назад +148

      Have you ever smelled a stink bug? They smell exactly like cilantro when squashed and seeing as stink bugs come from east Asian countries such as Japan it would make sense Japanese people would want to avoid eating it..

    • @30803080308030803081
      @30803080308030803081 4 года назад +93

      Cilantro is actually used heavily in Chinese food too.

    • @tarzan2441
      @tarzan2441 4 года назад +58

      My japanese mom is in love with cilantro lol

  • @tyleryoung5415
    @tyleryoung5415 4 года назад +6074

    Everytime she spoke english i thought i was understanding Japanese

    • @jetso2000
      @jetso2000 4 года назад +153

      Bruh same

    • @jetso2000
      @jetso2000 4 года назад +52

      それは時々本当にそのようになります。

    • @turnleftaticeland
      @turnleftaticeland 4 года назад +381

      every time she spoke japanese i thought i wasn’t understanding english

    • @tai6142
      @tai6142 4 года назад +59

      Sgrp 270 no, that is Hiragana and Kanji

    • @chickendumpling5662
      @chickendumpling5662 4 года назад

      jetso2000 LMAO

  • @sincix446
    @sincix446 4 года назад +295

    The greeting kiss thing is not just uncommon in Japan. It's uncommon in all of Asia.

  • @Ted_Bell
    @Ted_Bell 4 года назад +7363

    Man that city looks so clean compared to most cities in the U.S.

    • @DarknessXX77
      @DarknessXX77 4 года назад +727

      Yup Japan is very strict with their trash management.

    • @HaxHaunter
      @HaxHaunter 4 года назад +333

      no need to go that far, just go to Canada lol

    • @natural_law
      @natural_law 4 года назад +90

      Demographics

    • @TheUtuber999
      @TheUtuber999 4 года назад +132

      Two rightwing parties no longer tax corporations and the rich, so there isn't sufficient tax revenue in the US to maintain the infrastructure.

    • @weshansen7892
      @weshansen7892 4 года назад +122

      @@HaxHaunter you really never been to Canada have you

  • @Funxion_
    @Funxion_ 5 лет назад +1946

    The mic quality with such a windy weather is fantastic , very good investment on your equipment

    • @princessthyemis
      @princessthyemis 5 лет назад +19

      true!

    • @MxMoondoggie
      @MxMoondoggie 5 лет назад +58

      You literally just need to put a fluffy cover on the microphone. Most people will use the mic on the camera which is not good in windy weather, having a separate mic and cover is much better.

    • @TrustTheFund
      @TrustTheFund 5 лет назад +30

      Depending on the mic and muff you can still get excessive noise from wind, despite protection.

    • @ronineditor9920
      @ronineditor9920 5 лет назад +4

      I was just going to say that!!! How in the hell is this so clear!? I have an NTG-2 but it's awful in the wind, even with a 'dead cat' on it.

    • @iraklikobiashvili5321
      @iraklikobiashvili5321 5 лет назад +1

      :D

  • @excessivegrot2643
    @excessivegrot2643 5 лет назад +7871

    ‘Before I went to New York I thought it was a big city’ SAVAGE

    • @Whutever42
      @Whutever42 5 лет назад +945

      Lol compared to Tokyo NYC is probably nothing area wise

    • @jyde50
      @jyde50 5 лет назад +1486

      @@Whutever42 not only that, she said she thought people were rich but was surprised there were poor people in newyork, the fact is that western countries like making themselves the greatest while downgrading other people. same as Paris syndrome.

    • @Lionheart1188
      @Lionheart1188 5 лет назад +12

      @@Whutever42 no

    • @Whutever42
      @Whutever42 5 лет назад +236

      @@Lionheart1188 yes

    • @JeremyGalloway
      @JeremyGalloway 5 лет назад +539

      Area and population wise, yes, NYC is smaller. There is nowhere in the world a Japanese person from Tokyo can visit that will be a bigger city than their hometown. But I've taken many Japanese people around Manhattan, and they are always amazed how tall the buildings are and how tightly packed they all are. In Japan, they can't build that high due to earthquakes. And also the traffic and general activity is much more hectic in NY than in Tokyo, so I think most Japanese people are pretty impressed with NYC.

  • @atapuma5756
    @atapuma5756 3 года назад +94

    A thing that always shocks me (in a good way) about Japan culture is how perfectionist and methodic they are when crafting something or learning a skill/job. Almost maniacal... Could be food, art, everything. For instance, you need years of practice to become a sushi chef, I mean only to start making actual nigiri you need years of just watching the seniors!

    • @Scuffed_Andy
      @Scuffed_Andy 3 года назад +6

      They pursue perfection.

    • @keyore8915
      @keyore8915 2 года назад

      @@Scuffed_Andy they don't want to be all-rounder. But perfectionist in one skill at a time

  • @tomdugmore5393
    @tomdugmore5393 5 лет назад +1557

    My family hosted a Japanese exchange teacher to my school when I was a kid. She totally freaked out when my mum gave her a hug to greet her!
    By the time she left, it was hugs all around. I always did wonder what her friends and family thought when she returned...

    • @theramendutchman
      @theramendutchman 5 лет назад +371

      For some reason I imagine an entire town in turmoil by the hands (and arms) of a lunatic on a hugging spree.
      It's a happy thought.

    • @somedudewatchintv5297
      @somedudewatchintv5297 5 лет назад +120

      She probably dialed it down when she got back.

    • @kaioocarvalho
      @kaioocarvalho 5 лет назад +195

      Imagine here in Brazil where we greet women by hugging them and kissing both of their cheeks. She'd have a heart attack!

    • @stanleydrones
      @stanleydrones 5 лет назад +121

      I'm an American and I dread hugging people that I'm not extremely close with. It just feels disingenuous to me most of the time.

    • @theanafront3746
      @theanafront3746 5 лет назад +12

      @@theramendutchman This is such a wholesome comment. ^_^

  • @chrismellos5841
    @chrismellos5841 4 года назад +2928

    If you find "open" people weird, you should reeeeally come to Greece - most people greet you like you are family from the first moment lol

    • @hitokiriizo
      @hitokiriizo 4 года назад +295

      Bro, Greeks are some of the kindest people I've ever met. Very funny too.

    • @Forlfir
      @Forlfir 4 года назад +105

      @@hitokiriizo they are also very attractive, specially the guys 😏 I really like Athens

    • @MrJason005
      @MrJason005 4 года назад +34

      @@hitokiriizo As a Greek I agree haha

    • @lahaine8026
      @lahaine8026 4 года назад +107

      Also in Serbia,people will act like they knew whole life.Like somebory eould just randomly start speaking with you about their life problems and shit or fo beyond their way to help you out with anything you need,even tho they have nothing to gain from it.

    • @plineepsiplineepsi2718
      @plineepsiplineepsi2718 4 года назад +42

      Greece is a shit hole though

  • @audreyrouge417
    @audreyrouge417 4 года назад +1921

    I visited Japan last year on a school trip and was shocked by the cleanliness of every place I visited (Tokyo, Kyoto, Nagoya). We went to Tokyo Disneyland, and I was walking past a little green area with some friends when I saw a Japanese schoolboy accidentally leave his softdrink on the seat. As soon as he started to walk away about 4-5 unrelated people called out to him and he rushed back, picked it up, apologised to everyone and then put it in the appropriate bin. In Australia that would not happen because a) no-one would care enough to tell him to clean it up and b) if he was australian his response would have been "get fucked"

    • @moondust2365
      @moondust2365 3 года назад +82

      Here in the Philippines, that likely wouldn't have happened either. Mostly because the response would be "Where else would I throw it then?" considering unlike Japan and Singapore, there's too little trash cans. I feel like that's part of the dirtiness here. If there aren't any trash cans around, the only choices you have is either litter (secretly, although some people just throw it even with people looking) or put your trash in your pocket and look stupid. So...

    • @calmclaren2108
      @calmclaren2108 3 года назад +45

      @@moondust2365 chris broad said in a vid that considering the cleanliness theres a surprisingly small amount of bins around tokyo etc

    • @moondust2365
      @moondust2365 3 года назад +19

      @@calmclaren2108 Really? Huh. They probably don't use disposables then. Here in the Philippines, lots of street food and others stuff are sold in packets, disposable containers, plastic cups or bags, stuff like that. If you're gonna sell disposables, there should be a place to dispose of them, but sadly there's very few trash cans here. Thank God that some of the street vendors are considerate enough to have their own trash cans for their customers.

    • @calmclaren2108
      @calmclaren2108 3 года назад +6

      @@moondust2365 this sound's like quite a problem! i think part of it is it would be genuinely shameful to do. so regardless of convenience they'll just carry shit however long they need

    • @jackpatterson7110
      @jackpatterson7110 3 года назад

      What was disney like? I've always wanted to go to a Japanese disney :)

  • @samgon7058
    @samgon7058 3 года назад +556

    That women was low key being cat called and didn't realize it b/c of the culture difference

    • @AnneLemonadeReacts
      @AnneLemonadeReacts 3 года назад +97

      That is exactly what came to my mind

    • @mmmprecisely220
      @mmmprecisely220 3 года назад +126

      Yeah, at first I agreed that we greet each other a lot in America but once she said they yelled calling her cute and I got real disappointed

    • @bingbing860
      @bingbing860 3 года назад +15

      @@mmmprecisely220 except she wasn't talking about dudes, she was talking about other women.......

    • @mmmprecisely220
      @mmmprecisely220 3 года назад +67

      @@bingbing860 Doesn't mean it's not catcalling

    • @hieinh
      @hieinh 3 года назад +31

      @@mmmprecisely220 It doesn't mean it's cat calling

  • @TheWheatless
    @TheWheatless 4 года назад +3413

    3:39
    “Americans use ‘fuck’ a lot, so why censor it?”
    As an American, I completely agree

    • @伏見猿比古-k8c
      @伏見猿比古-k8c 3 года назад +287

      Also why are we so ok with violence and murder in tv shows and movies, yet cursing and nudity is off limits?

    • @lacidar3752
      @lacidar3752 3 года назад +45

      @@伏見猿比古-k8c If the popularity of stuff like game of thrones or the witcher are any indication, we are demonstrably fine with them (and people overblow the violence in common American media. Real gore is just as rare.). Just an idiosyncrasy of hollywood, I suppose. "Yeah, we could do that. Or we could *not* do that."

    • @neamraven
      @neamraven 3 года назад +71

      Problem is not the censorship of the word (although censorship definitely is a problem), problem is people's poor vocabulary and feeling the need to use an expletive every two words. It's like they can't even talk unless they use the same 3-4 words in every sentence. It's not just 'fuck', but that's one of them.
      TLDR: People can't speak or read.

    • @piratesmanX
      @piratesmanX 3 года назад +38

      It's more on highlighting mannerisms. Surely people today no longer treated 'fuck' as a word of insult in major cases, but it is still presenting a low sense of mannerisms during social interaction, especially with strangers. You don't immediately say any vulgarities with strangers because you are trying maintain your mannerisms as a sign of general respect to that individual. Imagine vulgarities being normalized and people just use it casually, especially in meetings during work hour, that will eventually sounds weird and inappropriate overall, if not, will probably cause some misunderstanding during the verbal expression.

    • @derfzgrld
      @derfzgrld 3 года назад +23

      @@piratesmanX But well mannered would be to avoid the word, not to censor it. Censoring it is just really, really annoying.

  • @slashyerr
    @slashyerr 4 года назад +2642

    When I was in Tokyo, I saw a girl that had a hat saying 'I like to beat my children' and cracked up so much, and kept walked away still cracking up.

  • @Blablablarandomguy
    @Blablablarandomguy 3 года назад +74

    Been all over Japan more than 7 times. What I find "weird" about Japan: The opposite of their views on customer service. Customer service is impeccable and business give the impression of taking extreme pride and care in what they do. Toilets are really cushy. What a wonderful word to use to describe a toilet. People sit REAL close to each other on the train. Like literally butt pressed against butt. I swear at one point someone was literally half sitting on my lap. Discrimination in establishments are the norm there, where no foreigners are allowed. Discrimination is everywhere in the world but that was a really unique manifestation of it that I had never seen elsewhere in the world. And people are actually really friendly somehow despite the idea that they're shy. As a foreigner I've had Japanese people in the table next to me in restaurants etc. smile and strike up a conversation with me. One time I was in this expesnive steak restaurant with my family and the couple next to us started talking to us. Another time I was there with my friend in a diner in Asakusa Tokyo and an old lady at the table next to us just smiled and started chatting with us. Fun times. I even had the pleasure of staying at my friend's family's house in Japan and one thing about Japanese houses that stands out to me is how the toilet is in its own room while the shower is in a totally different room which if you think about it actually makes perfect sense and every home designer should follow. Like who the heck decided the shower and the toilet bowl should be in the same room? That's weird to me. And lastly you just feel so comfortable on the street because people are so good at appearing to mind their own business. Nobody stares, nobody cares, unlike other countries where you have people staring and glaring you down. I felt so free to be me and be alone without any eyes on me. Lol

    • @pelinalwhitestrake3367
      @pelinalwhitestrake3367 3 года назад +7

      In Russia we also have separate rooms for shower and toilet.

    • @SatumangoTheGreat
      @SatumangoTheGreat 3 года назад +3

      @@pelinalwhitestrake3367 In the Netherlands too, although a larger upstairs bathroom may have a toilet. Exceptions exist though, mainly in small apartments.

    • @mandmauckland
      @mandmauckland 3 года назад +1

      @@pelinalwhitestrake3367 same here in New Zealand, not 100%, but almost every house I've ever been to. And certainly every one I've ever lived in.

  • @robertbloom4424
    @robertbloom4424 4 года назад +5555

    Wearing shoes in the house IS weird!

    • @Lu1zh1
      @Lu1zh1 4 года назад +412

      I put my shoes on my head and walk with my hands

    • @WormInsideTheApple
      @WormInsideTheApple 4 года назад +165

      @sneksnekitsasnek is your dad russian

    • @DennisMaltzev
      @DennisMaltzev 4 года назад +58

      @@WormInsideTheApple why us?

    • @WormInsideTheApple
      @WormInsideTheApple 4 года назад +128

      @@DennisMaltzev cause, yknow the meme. _In Russian, we wore shoes in bed and walk outside barefoot_ .

    • @Tan12
      @Tan12 4 года назад +47

      Not in the southern US, unless it's just the preference of a particular household. We don't wear muddy shoes inside of course, but if we've just been walking on dry grass or concrete then it's just a quick wipe and stomp on the doormat and in we go.

  • @sakina12323
    @sakina12323 4 года назад +714

    When the women said 'maybe we are too clean' I instantly thought of how freaking clean the ground in in the video! Not a chewing gum, ciggarette bud or wrapper in sight

    • @gorilladisco9108
      @gorilladisco9108 3 года назад +25

      And they do that without draconian laws like the one in Singapore.

    • @ClownWorldInvasion
      @ClownWorldInvasion 3 года назад +3

      those things are found in leftist run places exclusively

    • @KaitN9
      @KaitN9 3 года назад +1

      You'd be surprised to see how it is actually dirty in places where people do not come/stop by a lot, the roads are incredibly dirty as soon as you leave a major city.

    • @VonBlanproductions
      @VonBlanproductions 3 года назад +2

      The reason for that is that it’s regularly cleaned by a large workforce... not that people don’t litter. Still impressive though!

    • @gorilladisco9108
      @gorilladisco9108 3 года назад +15

      @@VonBlanproductions There is littering, and there is littering. I believe the level of littering in Japan is much lower than other countries (except Singapore under its heavy punishment). That will help a lot.

  • @B_q.u.e.e.n
    @B_q.u.e.e.n 4 года назад +588

    When I was in Japan I got lost in the subway in Tokyo, and a very friendly Japanese man helped me and left me even the seat of the train that would take me to Kyoto, and bought me food too, but I forgot to ask for the number to thank him. If you read this thank you n.n.

    • @donramon7603
      @donramon7603 3 года назад +66

      It happened to me too. 1st time a high school aged girl helped us and took a different train with us until he left us in the right platform. It took her at least 30-40min of her time. 2nd time a hotel worker who just finished her shift also helped us in the train. 3rd time a man oriented us and guided us to the right platform. (until the pandemic hit us) I tried my best to guide any person who seemed help her in Sydney. And the good thing is I even made friends with whom I am still in contact. Japanese people are incredibly polite and helpful.

    • @Yourebeautyfull
      @Yourebeautyfull 3 года назад +22

      I don't think he will read this but I can pretend to be him if that makes you comfortable... "It was my pleasure, please feel welcome to come back anytime!" :D

    • @B_q.u.e.e.n
      @B_q.u.e.e.n 3 года назад +8

      @@Yourebeautyfull jajajsjs thank you, so sweet

    • @capogocrazy6125
      @capogocrazy6125 3 года назад +7

      @@Yourebeautyfull Simp

    • @Yourebeautyfull
      @Yourebeautyfull 3 года назад +22

      @@capogocrazy6125 Obviously triggered because you don't have the balls to interact with girls lol :D

  • @alaiterg
    @alaiterg 3 года назад +177

    How is it possible for a city more populous than the Netherlands to be so quiet and clean? It’s mind-blowing

    • @user-rr5ce1wb2j
      @user-rr5ce1wb2j 3 года назад +26

      The Japanese are so quiet, humble and respectful, it's the way their culture has been for a very long time. I'm not saying that people in the Netherlands aren't all of those things, but I think it's a matter of honor to hold those values in Japan.

    • @aizad330
      @aizad330 3 года назад +13

      education and hygiene awareness

    • @789Moonlight
      @789Moonlight 3 года назад +7

      I’d love for my city to take notes. People litter all the time!! It’s disgusting ;(

    • @MmeHyraelle
      @MmeHyraelle 3 года назад +7

      Discipline and respect.

    • @Ejaz100
      @Ejaz100 3 года назад +2

      India could never

  • @miranpadilla3395
    @miranpadilla3395 4 года назад +1779

    If Japanese people think that Americans are too friendly I think they'd have a heart attack if they saw how strangers treat you in Latin America, maybe Italy as well. I'm not really extroverted but most people in Latam countries will make you feel like you're their best friend in just a couple of hours

    • @IcidLink
      @IcidLink 4 года назад +85

      Miran wants tea yeah and meanwhile their body steals your wallet while you distracted by the Friendly Stranger

    • @miranpadilla3395
      @miranpadilla3395 4 года назад +58

      @@IcidLink lmfaoo never been robbed tbh but i've heard of that happening

    • @onemillionpercent
      @onemillionpercent 4 года назад +8

      that's really cool. i want to visit

    • @imeakdo7
      @imeakdo7 4 года назад +49

      can confirm as a latin american.

    • @vipoerx4532
      @vipoerx4532 4 года назад +35

      American Small towns are quite friendly too, just avoid the trailer parks.

  • @defvii
    @defvii 5 лет назад +6700

    what did you find odd about america?
    the poor people

  • @ericforsyth
    @ericforsyth 5 лет назад +3941

    "Do you speak English?"
    "No"
    "Where have you been?"
    " *Pretty much the whole anglosphere except the UK and Ireland* "
    😂

    • @jakegaubatz
      @jakegaubatz 5 лет назад +123

      I was thinking that too! Lol

    • @amariluna
      @amariluna 5 лет назад +21

      LOL!

    • @william97able2
      @william97able2 5 лет назад +471

      this is one thing I noticed about Japanese people... Many of them actually speak English on a fundamental scale. However, because of the shyness plus their lack of confidence, they would rather say they don't speak it, or they speak it poorly... He most likely knows English pretty well..

    • @ericforsyth
      @ericforsyth 5 лет назад +115

      william97able: You’re most likely right. It’s the same in many European countries where the best non-native speakers of English reside (Sweden, Norway, Denmark, The Netherlands). It’s a shame, really, since people can’t really judge them unless they’re fluent in more languages.

    • @wtfdidijustwatch1017
      @wtfdidijustwatch1017 5 лет назад +9

      Ireland is in the UK...

  • @samirfajar9416
    @samirfajar9416 3 года назад +45

    4:30 Foreigner are weird for wearing t-shirt like "神" while japanese wear shirt that says "become door"

  • @Iskelderon
    @Iskelderon 5 лет назад +2959

    Kudos to those two young ladies for making an honest effort to use a foreign language when they're talking about other countries!

    • @YeahTheDuckweed
      @YeahTheDuckweed 5 лет назад +11

      Some curious insight as well.

    • @yongquanwu3921
      @yongquanwu3921 5 лет назад +21

      That kid in africa need to learn more english if he can't understand what the totally fine english the lady has spoken.

    • @SKY11211213
      @SKY11211213 5 лет назад +1

      @@ThatKidinAfrica Live from where I am from - doesnt really speak Japanese often so I think that was the reason because he works mostly from home and does muni documentations.

    • @tyynymyy7770
      @tyynymyy7770 5 лет назад +66

      Why should you use a foreign language when talking about other countries? Wtf

    • @pablo8286
      @pablo8286 5 лет назад +3

      @@ThatKidinAfrica They obviously could

  • @TheJjcczz
    @TheJjcczz 4 года назад +1633

    I’m surprised no one mentioned calling people by their first name instead of their last

    • @Sacrxd_6
      @Sacrxd_6 4 года назад +15

      Same

    • @tonyam3898
      @tonyam3898 4 года назад +45

      That’s only in professional settings

    • @jamesson1154
      @jamesson1154 4 года назад +85

      Tonya M I know Jdrama isn’t real and a lot of it is exaggerated or embellished but I’m 100% sure they base most of their scenes off of real life interactions in Japan... you know, how Japanese people interact? That’s how they get the audience to relate to the movie (you know, Japanese people watch Japanese shows and movies?) Last name bases until they have 3-4 kids together or have gone through two wars together. It’s just the law over there.

    • @tonyam3898
      @tonyam3898 4 года назад +43

      James Son as a person who doesn’t watch jdrama and has been to Japan, I’ve only herd people called by their last names if they were a waiter or something. Everyone else was “kun, san, Chan, and sama”

    • @jamesson1154
      @jamesson1154 4 года назад +1

      Tonya M lol Jameson never lets me down.

  • @cyancyborg1477
    @cyancyborg1477 4 года назад +823

    My mom's Ethiopian friend was similarly shocked when she arrived to San Francisco and saw so many homeless and poor people. She also thought the US was a place where everyone is rich, or at least middle class, but we actually have obscene levels of wealth inequality for a first world country.

    • @jacobh2147
      @jacobh2147 3 года назад +32

      @Rays Through Trees, Summer Breeze As someone who's lived in the balkans and mexico, that's not true

    • @Pranav_Bhamidipati
      @Pranav_Bhamidipati 3 года назад +3

      @Rays Through Trees, Summer Breeze You forgot about the science.

    • @venomlink2033
      @venomlink2033 3 года назад +11

      It’s most obvious in the big cities.

    • @cheat123
      @cheat123 3 года назад +1

      @Rays Through Trees, Summer Breeze idk if thats true

    • @Jyudee
      @Jyudee 3 года назад +19

      Mm yea. The money gap is really large, even in the so called “middle” still leagues behind the rich. Take what I say with a huge spoon of salt though, i only know what I see through observation.

  • @conqueryourself9527
    @conqueryourself9527 3 года назад +364

    For Japanese, don't ever change. Keep the tradition alive and that's what make Japanese culture respected by foreigners. Nothing wrong being shy or being different, that's what makes your country unique to the world. I worked with other Japanese clients here in the US and even as Americans knows how to respect them.

    • @MaiNguyen-ck4br
      @MaiNguyen-ck4br 3 года назад +10

      I don’t know man I know some people in Japan it hard to connect with them they kinda fake it hard to know Japanese people tell the truth or not they really good at lying someone said to me in Japan if someone invite you to eat at lunch time they just do it because they want to be polite you better said no because if you said yes you annoyed them and if Japanese people said you good at Japanese they are mocking you

    • @ChristmasSpirit606
      @ChristmasSpirit606 3 года назад +8

      @@MaiNguyen-ck4br if people say that you're good at their langauge is just people being typical lowering their standard for foreingers who managed to speak their language a bit. it's not that we think you're really good at it, it's that we know to speak Asian lanaguage for any westerners is very hard, so we kinda just affirm your effor to even learn it
      not really mocking you though

    • @MaiNguyen-ck4br
      @MaiNguyen-ck4br 3 года назад +4

      @@ChristmasSpirit606 no it a culture thing in Japan Asian people kinda look alike so it hard to know when people from my country talking in Japanese if it good they said nothing about it but if it bad they said some suff like:oh your Japanese really good to mock us because they know we are Asian but not Japanese because our Japanese is bad in Japan people said good things to being polite or mocking they not gonna talk shit right to your face

    • @georgeoust
      @georgeoust 3 года назад +26

      The only thing I’d change abt Japan is the issue with sexism, sexual harassment and minority discrimination. Other than that I love their culture very much

    • @GabuzonX
      @GabuzonX 3 года назад

      @@MaiNguyen-ck4br that's the difference sometimes... if someone here in Italy have a bad day or want to say something a little bit rude like "yeah your italian is really bad", they will not try to hide it and be themselves. Of course it's different going from person to person, but in general it's easy to meet someone for the first time that can answer to you in a rude way, and maybe after some chat they will be gentle and funny

  • @nashkepler2220
    @nashkepler2220 5 лет назад +335

    This is probably one of my favorite channels on RUclips

    • @madmaster8304
      @madmaster8304 5 лет назад +2

      ie “Channels” = Many Channel

    • @nashkepler2220
      @nashkepler2220 5 лет назад +1

      @MichaelKingsfordGray Yeah lol my keyboard autocorrected that and i didn't see it untill you guys pointed it out

    • @travelleryu
      @travelleryu 5 лет назад +2

      Mine too

    • @Zeehee-tm9wg
      @Zeehee-tm9wg 5 лет назад

      Why is it? Do you not have anything better to do that dribbling hen you think about Japan all the time? Grow up, stop pretending to be Japanese and come back when you can speak about politics in Japanese, filthy weeaboo!

    • @WayfinderKnight
      @WayfinderKnight 5 лет назад +1

      subscribe to pewdiepie!brofist

  • @MadIIMike
    @MadIIMike 5 лет назад +2636

    Am I the only one who had to smile when the guy said he finds it strange that foreigners in Japan wear T-Shirts saying weird things... considering Japan is kinda famous for Japenglish texts on almost everything?

    • @creestee08
      @creestee08 5 лет назад +72

      Thats china.

    • @Wenslock
      @Wenslock 5 лет назад +254

      I live here in Japan and I see it a lot. I found it odd, too.

    • @Kiki-nz6nj
      @Kiki-nz6nj 5 лет назад +45

      MadIIMike I am Japanese but I know😂

    • @flymarkus0957
      @flymarkus0957 5 лет назад +85

      You don`t get to see a "God" everyday so enjoy the fukin moment ! 😹😹

    • @midnightkiteflight6333
      @midnightkiteflight6333 5 лет назад +41

      He’s probably referring to superdry 極度乾燥しなさい

  • @YouNeverKnowWhoIsWatching
    @YouNeverKnowWhoIsWatching 5 лет назад +594

    I love how the lady at 5:50 starts naming all these cool exotic countries she's been to , then ends off with "Seattle".

    • @anonygent
      @anonygent 5 лет назад +76

      Kenya Loves Japan To be fair, she started off with "Hawaii". That's not a country, either.

    • @cheef825
      @cheef825 5 лет назад +12

      thats where im from and i had a bruh moment lmao

    • @Celestial7Heavens
      @Celestial7Heavens 4 года назад +5

      Japan’s geography is just as bad as that of United States. 😂

    • @mr.q337
      @mr.q337 4 года назад +56

      @@anonygent See, the concept and culture of Hawaii is completely different from the main land US, that it should be a country of its own. Which it was in the past.

    • @muhammadalfatih2640
      @muhammadalfatih2640 4 года назад +18

      @@anonygent Borneo isn't a country either. It is an Island with 3 countries on it, Brunei, Indonesia and Malaysia.

  • @artomeri7266
    @artomeri7266 3 года назад +75

    "Foreigners go out of their way to communicate with me..."
    Poor guy, hope he never finds himself in Russia or Finland :D

  • @hjcolwell1
    @hjcolwell1 4 года назад +2699

    "It's really weird when Americans wear weird shirts; like ones saying '神' (god) on them"
    ...While his friend standing right next to him is wearing a shirt that literally just says 'Supreme' in English 😂😂

    • @mr.q337
      @mr.q337 4 года назад +218

      IKR! Double standard much. It is always cool when you see another language that you don't understand LOL

    • @Drownedinblood
      @Drownedinblood 4 года назад +429

      Supreme is a brand though. It's likely the guy with the 神 shirt knew exactly what he was wearing and thought himself above the locals.

    • @lawlrd6655
      @lawlrd6655 4 года назад +70

      @@Drownedinblood or it is just a "House Kami" DragonBall shirt lol

    • @Drownedinblood
      @Drownedinblood 4 года назад +5

      @ॐ गणेश ॐ It's cuz I've dealt with that mentality before.

    • @AlEx-uj8rj
      @AlEx-uj8rj 4 года назад +25

      @@Drownedinblood or he just thought it was cool

  • @alonsoalcantar7847
    @alonsoalcantar7847 4 года назад +813

    When she said Americans say "fuck" a lot in everyday conversations I was laughing cuz its true 🤣.

    • @R.T.and.J
      @R.T.and.J 4 года назад +139

      "Fuck, she's right"

    • @eurekahope5310
      @eurekahope5310 4 года назад +15

      I wonder if this is generational or cultural because few of my acquaintance say it. Admittedly, I hear it said by younger people (strangers while shopping, etc.) fairly frequently. I am a young Gen X and live in a semi-rural area.

    • @ParanormalAbnormal
      @ParanormalAbnormal 4 года назад +33

      i fuckin agree with you

    • @TypowyKubini
      @TypowyKubini 4 года назад +8

      Imagine Poles, without "kurwa" some of us would be mutes.

    • @alonsoalcantar7847
      @alonsoalcantar7847 4 года назад +23

      @@eurekahope5310 I think it has just become an accepted thing between us younger people. We dont use or take the word to it's full meaning. Words do only have as much power as you give them.

  • @morgan97475
    @morgan97475 5 лет назад +352

    I love how clean Japan is.

    • @natural_law
      @natural_law 4 года назад +3

      Demographics

    • @ThePresentation010
      @ThePresentation010 4 года назад +17

      When an area is homogeneous it's easier to unite and have similar, same values and respect. Hence Japan. The west likes to take in dog shlt from 3rd world countries and fq themselves up.

    • @natural_law
      @natural_law 4 года назад +1

      @@ThePresentation010 difference between like and been forced.

    • @ThePresentation010
      @ThePresentation010 4 года назад +8

      @@natural_law Sounds like discipline. Which ani. mals don't have. The kids in Jpn clean the school.

    • @natural_law
      @natural_law 4 года назад +2

      @@ThePresentation010 sounds like subversion and Japan will be forced to open up and take on mass immigration under the guise of aging population as one of a few excuses. See Western Europe for example.

  • @TheRexhim
    @TheRexhim 3 года назад +37

    That's why it's so important to visit other counties. You realize the world isn't just your little box at home

  • @heroofthe4-starmastersword526
    @heroofthe4-starmastersword526 4 года назад +259

    3:45
    I love how that's the one thing she picked up from American conversation and speech😂
    Tells you a lot about our country

    • @hugoa2637
      @hugoa2637 4 года назад +20

      Wonder what she'd think of the UK lol

    • @drillbitt4426
      @drillbitt4426 4 года назад +5

      hell yeah, i take it as a compliment tbh

    • @kuraitsuki6813
      @kuraitsuki6813 4 года назад +2

      Lol I used that word a lots

    • @calus_bath_water
      @calus_bath_water 3 года назад +6

      It's funny because Americans swear the least out of the english speaking countries

    • @angbenyi6618
      @angbenyi6618 3 года назад +15

      @@calus_bath_water ...which tells you quite a lot about English countries.

  • @TKnightcrawler
    @TKnightcrawler 5 лет назад +157

    That girl in the second set of interviewees had great English. Not many people can throw the word "hierarchy" around, but she used it perfectly.

    • @SadistModeOn
      @SadistModeOn 5 лет назад +9

      her English is pretty good, but in Japanese they use the English word "hierarchy" (with somewhat altered pronunciation so it's "hii ra ru kii") in basically the same way we use it in English (and if anything they use it more). so it wasn't strange she could use it.

    • @crappyaccount
      @crappyaccount 5 лет назад

      @@SadistModeOn wow, that's interesting. Never would have known that one

    • @megaibfernape3612
      @megaibfernape3612 5 лет назад +2

      I mean I suppose that's like an important word in Japanese? Because hierarchy is more rigid in Japan. So when she's learning English she learns that word because she uses it a lot in Japanese.

    • @cobbler88
      @cobbler88 4 года назад

      It's a word she should be somewhat used to.

    • @lizjohnson1979
      @lizjohnson1979 4 года назад +2

      I think her point was more about how many poor/homeless (she didn't say homeless but she is polite, I think she meant "street people") people there were, and she's not wrong. In our capitalist society where socialism is a bad word, we have this bizarre mentality on wealth, it's like, I did what I had to do to get wealthy, so fuck you your trash for not being wealthy too.. I dislike that part of america.

  • @awesomo845
    @awesomo845 5 лет назад +704

    "They wore shoes in the house. It was unforgettable and uncomfortable"
    LOL, Never change Japanese people.

    • @eldafint
      @eldafint 5 лет назад +119

      Northern europe agrees with the Japanese on this one

    • @darkestdesires1619
      @darkestdesires1619 5 лет назад +55

      I was surprised when they said that, over here I don't know any household that's like this. We almost always take our shoes off before going inside

    • @malachkah
      @malachkah 5 лет назад +101

      Wearing shoes inside is so stupid unless you want to clean all the mud and shit afterwards.

    • @tldoesntlikebread
      @tldoesntlikebread 5 лет назад +18

      She must've had a weird host family because I live in New Zealand and don't know anybody who would do that. Unless you're just about to go.

    • @mr.q337
      @mr.q337 4 года назад +13

      See, it make sense to keep your dirty shoe at the door before you enter. Same reason you don't fkin wear raincoat to your bed

  • @Krawurxus
    @Krawurxus 3 года назад +43

    The "no shoes in the house" thing is a habit I adopted at some time in my early teens.
    Not because of Japan, but in Germany there were a lot of fresh Eastern European immigrants in the 90s.
    A lot of my friends at school were from those families, and I'd often get scolded by some Russian granny for wearing shoes inside.
    Somehow it made sense to me so eventually I stopped doing it at home too.

    • @gweegygweegy6126
      @gweegygweegy6126 3 года назад +2

      I’m Canadian, and it’s normal to take off your shoes in houses. Is it just an American thing to wear shoes inside?

    • @andij605
      @andij605 3 года назад +2

      @@gweegygweegy6126 In the Netherlands and Belgium they also don't necessarily take shoes off, which boggles my mind so bad. Some families do. Others don't, or they only take it off on their upper floors, and not on the ground floor. It makes me roll my eyes so bad, cause they also don't really tend to mop their floors or anything, so it's all quite dirty.
      But in eg. apartment type of homes they mostly take the shoes off.
      I'm from Eastern Europe as well, so for me the cleanliness standards are quite weird in the West. They would wash their hair daily, but like never ever mop the floor, and I'm like why...

    • @gweegygweegy6126
      @gweegygweegy6126 3 года назад

      @@andij605 Interesting, thanks for the reply!

    • @Happy_days01
      @Happy_days01 2 года назад +1

      I find it funny she mentioned it was New Zealand that her host family made her wear shoes inside. Natives in New Zealand also remove our shoes especially in traditional houses. She was staying with an English host family.

    • @gavind351
      @gavind351 2 года назад +1

      @@gweegygweegy6126 I get that this is 8 months old, but it depends.
      Carpeted floor? Keep them at the door.
      Hardwood floor? Keep them on more.

  • @PikaLink91
    @PikaLink91 5 лет назад +306

    So the thing most Japanese note is how open to conversation other cultures are.

    • @ceresbane
      @ceresbane 5 лет назад +27

      implying japanese are not. which is concerning.

    • @tevbuff
      @tevbuff 5 лет назад +65

      @Arturo Sanchez Yeah Japanese people tend to be quiet and reserved. But once they feel comfortable around you, they will open up.

    • @BigSmallTravel
      @BigSmallTravel 5 лет назад +2

      @@ceresbane Yes, indeed.

    • @jakegaubatz
      @jakegaubatz 5 лет назад +34

      They are actually very talkative once they know you! If you can get around Japanese people drinking, you will not find friendlier, more open people to talk to! In America, I feel it's the opposite and people want to be left alone (or just their group) when drinking.

    • @profgamer1
      @profgamer1 5 лет назад +2

      Ay a fellow Kingdom Hearts fan!

  • @jaysee6320
    @jaysee6320 5 лет назад +75

    Can we just talk about how clear the audio is even with all that wind??!

  • @brianisme6498
    @brianisme6498 4 года назад +293

    I actually agree with her statement about the word ‘fuck,’. It doesn’t really make all that much sense honestly. Like it’s just a sound that pretty much has the same meaning as frick the word we use to censor it. But isn’t that just the same thing then just with a different sound.

    • @jaydashnine
      @jaydashnine 4 года назад +24

      Honestly I feel like the US has more of a culture of cursing in public. In other English-speaking countries, like Canada, it's not as acceptable. So considering that a lot of American media is shown in other countries, I'm personally glad that profanity is censored.

    • @brianisme6498
      @brianisme6498 4 года назад +23

      jaydashnine hmmm, I wouldn’t agree I’ve lived in both Canada and Australia and both swear a lot. Both Canadian and Australia media has swearing in it. Most adults don’t mind. It is when overused or when children are around that people get upset.
      America and Australia are more loud about it compared to Canada

    • @coupledyetivonvanderburg5385
      @coupledyetivonvanderburg5385 4 года назад +7

      @@jaydashnine Don't forget that French Canadians *love* the word "fuck".

    • @sirmoonslosthismind
      @sirmoonslosthismind 4 года назад +22

      the people who care about "fuck" are small in number, but quite motivated about it, whereas people who don't care don't care. the squeaky wheel gets the grease.

    • @porcorosso4330
      @porcorosso4330 4 года назад +5

      I prefer to communicate without swear words.
      I mean do swear words enhanced the conversation or are they mostly just meaningless adjectives.

  • @jadehartfuss7
    @jadehartfuss7 3 года назад +131

    Omg I'm laughing so hard, the girl was like "american use the word fuck a lot idk why they censor it" and I said without thinking "she's not fucking wrong tho" and I was like lmaoooo 😭😭 it's just so casual

    • @benjwilliams5104
      @benjwilliams5104 3 года назад +5

      I agree. Like most of the things were observations that were expected or at least unsurprising to me. Her insight on the commonplace yet taboo nature of "fuck" was....REALLY jarring and thought-provoking. We use it ALL THE TIME, but it still gets censored in a lot of places.

    • @Carlosk12
      @Carlosk12 3 года назад +1

      Well it's not something you'd say in front of your momma or grandma, at least in my family since we're hispanic

    • @lauragoreni3020
      @lauragoreni3020 2 года назад

      @@benjwilliams5104 thought provoking? No offense but it doesn't take much to reach the same conclusion as her.

    • @benjwilliams5104
      @benjwilliams5104 2 года назад

      @@lauragoreni3020 Idk, I was appreciative of a chance to see a bit of my own culture from the outside. It changed the way I thought about it. If it didn't have that effect on you. that's fine, too.

    • @dearthditch
      @dearthditch 7 месяцев назад

      Good thing she didn’t bring up Australias favorite swear word

  • @eskeeeet
    @eskeeeet 5 лет назад +472

    I find the comments about the western laid-back way of communication pretty spot on. I'm Kuwaiti and I lived in the States for about 5-6 years. I was amazed during my 1st couple of months in North Carolina by how people would give random compliments about your clothes and how they smile whenever there's eye contact. I thought they were flirting with me at 1st lol. Of course that depends on what state/city you live in, and it's not the case in all western societies. My Scottish friend actually used to hate this particular trait about Americans saying that they talk a lot and calling them "unclassy' lmao. Japanese on the other hand can seem very stiff. A relative went to Tokyo and hated it. He said they were so quiet and machine-like that it felt lonely. I absolutely love it though.

  • @schwi7021
    @schwi7021 4 года назад +416

    Me after hearing how much that last girl traveled: uh, I left Texas to go to the Oklahoma panhandle once

    • @HiHi-jh2uz
      @HiHi-jh2uz 4 года назад +26

      I once went from North to South Carolina

    • @Bikebrh
      @Bikebrh 4 года назад +8

      My sister, who works in Illinois less than a mile from the Illinois/Missouri state line, has a coworker who has never been to Missouri.

    • @blakedavis2447
      @blakedavis2447 4 года назад +13

      @ Roman razo Texas is bigger than the entire country of Spain by about 172,682 sq km so if your well traveled in your home state and you’ve been to Oklahoma then your well traveled even if you can’t name off a grocery list of places , most people ( especially some Europeans ) just don’t realize just how big America really is so don’t feel bad

    • @loekvanhoutert8807
      @loekvanhoutert8807 4 года назад +14

      ​@@blakedavis2447 You're definetely not well traveled if you've only seen Texas and Oklahoma. Nature and landscape wise the US is amazing and you can see a lot, but culturally and historically it's very limited. You're absolutely right that most Europeans underestimate the size of the US, but most Americans tend to underestimate the difference a 100 miles makes in the rest of the world

    • @preasidium13
      @preasidium13 4 года назад +7

      Loek van Houtert I don’t think you realize just how cultural diverse Texas and Oklahoma really are...

  • @aku_mado
    @aku_mado 4 года назад +695

    if some random people on the street called me "cute", i'll be creeped out

    • @18nigellsutojo11
      @18nigellsutojo11 4 года назад +83

      I actually have experienced it....its not completely unpleasant but more uncomfortable, like how are you supposed to respond naturally! The most you can do is just say thank you and pretend it never happened, which feels quite uncomfortable

    • @aku_mado
      @aku_mado 4 года назад +16

      @@18nigellsutojo11 i think the best way is just to ignore (even if it's uncomfortable), you can't know what kinda people they are.. especially if you're abroad

    • @cyancyborg1477
      @cyancyborg1477 4 года назад +107

      Depends on the setting and by whom, especially speaking as a woman. If an old woman at the park says I look cute, that feels nice, I like that. But I'm walking alone at night, it makes me feel afraid.

    • @singoutloud7127
      @singoutloud7127 4 года назад +26

      What if they call you "ugly"?

    • @Kalani_Saiko
      @Kalani_Saiko 4 года назад +23

      @@cyancyborg1477 It's like followers on instagram are cool, but followers in a dark alley are not

  • @aogabby
    @aogabby 3 года назад +40

    When I went to Japan I saw a shirt in a store that said "You have got big hands"
    I think people in Japan would think it weird that us Canadians usually say "Thank you" to the bus driver after getting off the bus

    • @x__x8618
      @x__x8618 3 года назад +2

      i'm japanese but i don't think it's wired at all lol i myself do that too and i think it's common

  • @pyronix
    @pyronix 4 года назад +622

    2:51 How is anybody not talking about how in China, parents just let their children poop anywhere? WTF. That's disgusting.

    • @chipwalter4490
      @chipwalter4490 4 года назад +220

      well in India full grown adults do that. So there's your "two most populated countries on Earth".
      Looks like it's a "people problem" for much of humanity... Master Yoda hasn't taught them the Force yet, I guess.

    • @windwardhaven
      @windwardhaven 4 года назад +144

      Apparently, California is adopting that activity for any age....

    • @thighlover408
      @thighlover408 4 года назад +57

      Sails Fast I will KILL MYSELF if it happens here
      Fucking shit on your own damn lawn keep everything else clean

    • @travellingswine5890
      @travellingswine5890 4 года назад +65

      she prob met some very undereducated person. that's literally illegal in most tier1-3 cities in china

    • @Liam-jy7yi
      @Liam-jy7yi 4 года назад +7

      This is a bit embarrassing but when I was little my mum cutted my pj's bottom because I wasn't potty trained so whenever I had an accident it would just go on the diaper so my mum wouldn't need to wash the clothes (cause sometimes the piss would leak through and it's just disgusting)

  • @yuckfou514
    @yuckfou514 5 лет назад +1692

    "Japanese large size is American small size" mwehe

    • @kyomademon453
      @kyomademon453 5 лет назад +222

      Japanese people are generally thiner and healthier thats why

    • @ああ-p2e2i
      @ああ-p2e2i 5 лет назад +96

      American McDonald’s is crazy

    • @ああ-p2e2i
      @ああ-p2e2i 5 лет назад +21

      American McDonald’s is crazy

    • @zuboy4272
      @zuboy4272 5 лет назад +50

      Japan hate fat people , balck people , brown people and lazy people !

    • @mizto3291
      @mizto3291 5 лет назад +231

      @@zuboy4272 Um what the fuck are you talking about?

  • @awsmstevie
    @awsmstevie 5 лет назад +401

    the girl at the end who didnt know what cat calling is... lol

    • @Gaston-F
      @Gaston-F 5 лет назад +43

      That's what surprised me the most, I would like to know if it doesn't happen in japan or if she was just oblivious by being in another country

    • @ruke2577
      @ruke2577 5 лет назад +51

      @Mafia Murda I'm Japanese and it doesn't happen... At least I've never seen.

    • @ruke2577
      @ruke2577 5 лет назад +8

      @Mafia Murda 客引きはcatcallじゃねえよゲエジかよおめえは

    • @tylerstoner5675
      @tylerstoner5675 5 лет назад +14

      maybe because she had no word to label it as made it less likely for her to be offended by it

    • @shanghaifunk.
      @shanghaifunk. 5 лет назад +68

      Maybe she is just not a butthurt feminist like western girls and she appreciates the compliment ?

  • @bigsherk42069
    @bigsherk42069 3 года назад +19

    One thing I’ve noticed is no matter where you are, people are basically the same. We do the same things, want the same love and happiness, go about our days in similar fashions. Everybody just does it differently. I have Hmong friends that I stay with a lot, and the culture differences are def there, but basically humans are all the same. I find us Americans can be somewhat condescending when talking to people who speak differently, either changing their tone to match theirs, or by dumbing down their talk instead of using single words and short phrases. Other than that, people are pretty much the same everywhere. We all like to have fun, laugh, spend time with family, go out, and make something of ourselves.

  • @southgoesnorthwest
    @southgoesnorthwest 5 лет назад +173

    We try not to talk too much with customers sometimes because it can be perceived as pushy if you are right next to them or trying to help them the whole time. But at some stores it's a requirement to say hello when someone enters and try to start a conversation with them. 😂 I always feel too pushy when I have to do that. I personally only like being helped in certain stores.

    • @Nashmi-JO
      @Nashmi-JO 5 лет назад +1

      come to jordan or arab world
      we say hello to everyone at street if eye contact happen😂😂

    • @chaeyoungsbestie414
      @chaeyoungsbestie414 5 лет назад +1

      I work at a grocery store seasonally because I'm a student and oh my god I HATE frontlining (when there are no customers at the register so you have to go out of your way to stand in front of your register and ask if people are ready) its so awkward omg. I usually just talk to my coworkers since were all just trying to kill time since my store isnt the busiest at certain times of the day. If someone needs help, they can make eye contact with me or they could look confused and then I'll approach them.

    • @izzyGO52
      @izzyGO52 5 лет назад +1

      I deffo prefer a sales assistant who is available and findable but who isnt in your face all the time.
      In US, i found they're just too annoying and pushy, but in France if i needed sth there were seemingly only people at the tills with a long line of people in the way.
      I like UK shop system best so far since they're friendly when you need them to be and once theyve helped you, then they get on with the rest of their tasks :)

    • @fliegerj
      @fliegerj 5 лет назад

      @@Nashmi-JO I was in a store in Dammam looking at the beautiful gold pieces for sale, and everyone who came in, whether Arab or western, was greeted by a loud and hearty, "Salaam alaykum!" I loved going back and forth on the price of things. It was very intimidating at first, but it seemed the shop owners were more and more friendly if you drove a hard bargain, like a respect thing. I did learn that if the shop keeper offers you "a gift" once you agree on a price and buy something, you cut a bad deal and the shop keeper offers you a trinket to ease his guilty conscience. I miss price dickering. It just doesn't fly in Walmart.

    • @nothingtoit142
      @nothingtoit142 5 лет назад +1

      Yeah, I feel like if they're trying to talk with me they want to force a product, or over-help and take up my time. I think in the US we tend to prefer independent actions.

  • @AntoineBandele
    @AntoineBandele 5 лет назад +354

    And that's one of the major things I did not like when I went to Japan. There was no love for latin food. I sorely missed my tacos with all their cilantro goodness.

    • @sjr3078
      @sjr3078 5 лет назад +2

      I did not expect to see you on here lol. Keep up the great work at JK!

    • @siddhanthbhattacharyya4206
      @siddhanthbhattacharyya4206 4 года назад +6

      @A I think the reference is to the Cilantro and other spices/ingredients used in Latino cuisine which is completely absent in Japanese cuisine.

    • @drillbitt4426
      @drillbitt4426 4 года назад

      ok, question, is that pfp a scott pilgrim reference or am I crazy?

    • @drillbitt4426
      @drillbitt4426 4 года назад

      it looks like when scott pilgrim earned the power of love in the comics

    • @thombrick
      @thombrick 4 года назад +1

      I was a little confused by the term 'latin food' I thought you meant Italian food lol.

  • @BradTheThird
    @BradTheThird 5 лет назад +743

    Damn, I'm getting good at this. I could understand the second group of people like they were speaking English.

    • @austinwiebe3801
      @austinwiebe3801 5 лет назад +454

      Homura Akemi he’s obviously joking because the second group were the girls who were speaking English. Before you insult someone, make sure you’re correct.

    • @odaoh
      @odaoh 5 лет назад +221

      @Homura Akemi hi, why do you feel the need to insult him over learning a language? sorry for my bad grammar

    • @jakegaubatz
      @jakegaubatz 5 лет назад +200

      @@odaoh Because he's one of those miserable online people who must insult people to make himself/herself feel good.

    • @diagonalcoin
      @diagonalcoin 5 лет назад +48

      @Homura Akemi oh, so now were taking life lessons from the guy with the anime profile pic

    • @ShaferHart
      @ShaferHart 5 лет назад +29

      @@n.8224 the worst kind of weeb, the self-loathing one!

  • @pete6705
    @pete6705 3 года назад +8

    Yes, that’s a good point, I’ve been to Japan several times, the service is perfect there. In the US the service isn’t anywhere close as good, it’s laziness and just a lack of care

  • @goombapizza6335
    @goombapizza6335 5 лет назад +97

    I'll never stop saying "hello", "please", "thank you" and "goodbye" to workers at any business where I am a patron. I try to adapt culturally wherever I am, but politeness and consideration is not up for debate. A waitress or clerk is not an animal. That is a human being, and I am trading my money for their service. It is an equal exchange. They're not slaves.
    To thank someone is to acknowledge that they did a favor for you that they weren't obligated to do. You are in their debt because they did something for you.
    To say "please" is to tell a person, "I know you are not obligated to do this by the laws of nature, but it would make me very happy, and I ask you this as a favor or kindness."
    To greet someone is to acknowledge that they exist in your vicinity and are a human being with thoughts and feelings just like you, and wish them a good day, the same as you hope they wish you. To say goodbye is the same thing but chronologically reversed.

    • @MacMan2152
      @MacMan2152 5 лет назад +16

      You are not in their debt because you pay for their work. It is all about whether you want to be nice to staff or not. Sometimes (at least where I live) they are complete pieces of shit who do their job exclusively to get their payment at the end of the month and do zero effort to be good workers

    • @moonsets-on_you
      @moonsets-on_you 5 лет назад +8

      @@MacMan2152 both of yall are true and I agree with your points.

    • @custos3249
      @custos3249 4 года назад +2

      Ok, weirdo. Must take you hours to get through a Walmart

    • @kart0ffel
      @kart0ffel 4 года назад +1

      Is cultural. I also do it but what is expected is different in every country.

    • @Hoshikani
      @Hoshikani 4 года назад

      Goomba Pizza this comment is too underrated

  • @bintavi7034
    @bintavi7034 5 лет назад +131

    I hate cilantro too. Apparently it has something to do with genetics that makes it taste soapy

    • @simeon7450
      @simeon7450 4 года назад +24

      i never knew that! super interesting. To me its one of my favourite spices, and i never understood why people found it repulsive (more than just preferencial difference). Its so good in some curries.

    • @DUCKDUCKGOISMUCHBETTER
      @DUCKDUCKGOISMUCHBETTER 4 года назад +6

      Cilantro was strange to me...at first. And I wavered between thinking it was awful, and thinking it was good.
      Eventually I settled on "good". Now I crave it with Mexican food, which I didn't grow up with unless you count Taco Hell. And even that was rare in my early childhood.
      I definitely get the weird aspect of how cilantro could taste to people. It's an acquired taste for sure.
      I wish I could learn to like fish, or basically anything from under the water, including clams, oysters and lobsters, etc. Aside from a tuna fish sandwich or tuna salad, I pretty much can't stand any of it. But I know millions of people love it, so it's something I'm missing out on unfortunately.

    • @sarabeth641
      @sarabeth641 4 года назад

      To be fair, you can dislike something without it tasting soapy. Cilantro tastes like an herb to me, just not an herb I like much.

    • @wpscz
      @wpscz 4 года назад +2

      I'm still processing their dislike for cilantro

    • @justanawkwardnerd
      @justanawkwardnerd 4 года назад

      For me, it's not necessarily that soapy as it is an INTENSE flavor. It's usually too much half the time, but while I love cilantro lime rice and will eat it by the bucket full, I can't stand pico de gallo or similar salsas BECAUSE of the cilantro in it - or something, but I'm pretty sure the cilantro is a major offender in it for me. I also can't stand onions or have a great tolerance to even mildly spicy things, so I don't think I would have ever liked salsa anyway.

  • @cheef825
    @cheef825 5 лет назад +35

    2:26 i went to high school in Taipei and when I first moved there my friends told me that if I didn't get hit by a scooter at least once a week then I didn't go outside enough LMAO

  • @eriknunez8757
    @eriknunez8757 3 года назад +10

    I can’t wait to visit Osaka. I just started learning Japanese reading and writing.

    • @oishi388
      @oishi388 3 года назад

      Me too. I wAnt to settle in Tokyo. I'm also learning. ありがよ

  • @moorooster223
    @moorooster223 5 лет назад +120

    "I was so surprised by the hierarchy in america" oof

    • @wowno5763
      @wowno5763 4 года назад +50

      Rich people own this country, so yes, there is a hierarchy in the west. Oligarchy is a better word for it.

    • @dhirajpallin2572
      @dhirajpallin2572 4 года назад +33

      I'm pretty sure she means 'wealth inequality'

    • @hopelessly.lavenderly
      @hopelessly.lavenderly 4 года назад

      yay capitalism ........

    • @Treviisolion
      @Treviisolion 4 года назад

      BenjaminFranklin99 uhhh, it isn’t as stark as New York where homeless people live on the streets among skyscrapers owned by billionaires, but there are still billionaires that live in fancy mansions in the country while homeless people live in the streets of the city.

    • @cielgoeswoof324
      @cielgoeswoof324 4 года назад

      There is a hierarchy but it's not really something that comes up.

  • @jamesrael9557
    @jamesrael9557 4 года назад +34

    The girl at 2:00 on the left with the neck choker, when the wind blows her hair, is stunning!

    • @dhirajpallin2572
      @dhirajpallin2572 4 года назад +5

      Definitely a looker, although the girl at 4:54 has an amazing smile!

    • @jokerkenny1801
      @jokerkenny1801 3 года назад

      my heart was taken by the girl

  • @CBlargh
    @CBlargh 4 года назад +100

    1:58 Hierarchy!?
    Girl, that's a 3 dollar word... Hella fancy. I have no idea how to say hierarchy in Japanese.
    Kaisoo?
    It's a sad but true observation.

    • @VVayVVard
      @VVayVVard 4 года назад +19

      Actually it's just ヒエラルキー / hierarukii (borrowed from German _hierarchie_) lmao

    • @custos3249
      @custos3249 4 года назад +6

      **sound of banjos dueling in the distance**

    • @zheping
      @zheping 4 года назад +1

      Japanese usually use the word so It's normal.

    • @nycsongman9758
      @nycsongman9758 3 года назад +1

      Yeah; she bested half of the US on that one. #badass

    • @chikonikol
      @chikonikol 3 года назад

      @@VVayVVard actually hierarchy is Greek word 🙂

  • @kleeblattchen38
    @kleeblattchen38 3 года назад +28

    3:38 this is probably the most innocent way of talking about the ridiculous double standards in the US 😂

  • @paulgoldsmith6504
    @paulgoldsmith6504 5 лет назад +38

    i really like your videos, i'm also learning Japanese through your online classes, thanks for the lessons

  • @KedsomhedDK
    @KedsomhedDK 5 лет назад +10

    Such smiling, well-mannered and loveable people. Hope i'll get the chance to visit Japan and experience their culture someday.

  • @Daniellopez-cd2bi
    @Daniellopez-cd2bi 5 лет назад +30

    most of the people in the comments have no real interactions or gone to japan... but have very strong comments on there culture and the way they act.... its just rude really to think like that... my family hosted many exchange students and the japanese where the most respectful and kind. and yes they hold things in its how they are raised so i dont see any problems people need in general need to be more open minded and kind... in saying that japanese people adapt to other cultures very fast, they have a very isolated history also dont forget. and not just that a very cool culture rich in history and thats what makes them who they are. we should all love each other more and judge less. also Arigatō too yuta for your videos =)

    • @StarWarsftw12
      @StarWarsftw12 5 лет назад +1

      Nobody gives a fuck about what you've done lad. The fact remains that the East has weird-ass as all hell culture. Borderline creepy culture at that.

    • @YUGAMISEKAI
      @YUGAMISEKAI 4 года назад +3

      @@StarWarsftw12 Define weird

    • @crazypanda9870
      @crazypanda9870 4 года назад +6

      @@StarWarsftw12 Just like the west?

    • @ahmadal_shanqeety802
      @ahmadal_shanqeety802 4 года назад

      @@StarWarsftw12 daddy chill !

    • @jpg-mw1vc
      @jpg-mw1vc 4 года назад

      @@StarWarsftw12 bro calm down

  • @The7Girlie
    @The7Girlie 3 года назад +77

    The last girl was straight up catcalled and thought it was a greeting😂

    • @ghostboy929
      @ghostboy929 3 года назад +15

      Really?! You can't call someone cute anymore? You're generation is fucking stupid.

    • @ChomperkaGregnant
      @ChomperkaGregnant 3 года назад +14

      @@ghostboy929 yeah i understand complaint when someone says "i like your ass",it's rough. But just cute? There's nothing inappropriate in this.

    • @Fromatic
      @Fromatic 3 года назад +1

      @@ChomperkaGregnant Almost seems since social media came along its become unacceptable to complement a random in person, whereas exactly the same random complement to the same random person on social media would probably get a 'like' or 'heart' or whatever from that person

  • @haldir108
    @haldir108 5 лет назад +31

    Surprised Yuta didn't offer us his thoughts, or tell us what he concluded. I think that usually makes for a more interesting video, that i can think more about. Now i feel like i lack a springboard for discussion.

    • @farmerjohn8770
      @farmerjohn8770 4 года назад

      I think he wants to avoid biasing our impressions.

  • @CassiusXs
    @CassiusXs 5 лет назад +201

    I met a Japanese girl once in a hostel in Belgium. And during our conversation she started crying because she said she just started to realise how open the world is compared to Japan. She thanked me afterwards for talking to her.

    • @vivienkoles1880
      @vivienkoles1880 4 года назад +24

      That's cute and sad in the same time.

    • @GlockInMyPants8
      @GlockInMyPants8 4 года назад +26

      Did you tap it

    • @garyoakham9723
      @garyoakham9723 4 года назад +6

      Japan needs more diversity. Especially Muslims and blacks

    • @stefannotchev7209
      @stefannotchev7209 4 года назад

      Alhadi Balouch *pounds fist* nice

    • @hollowpoint8261
      @hollowpoint8261 4 года назад +34

      @@garyoakham9723 that's the opposite of what they need. Their culture would be wiped out like European culture is right now by the hoards

  • @ivoyulolavrador9166
    @ivoyulolavrador9166 5 лет назад +548

    Every Japanese seem to think that they're generally shy! Being naturally introverted, I feel like I should’ve been born in Japan lol. It’s tiring being born and growing up in very extroverted countries, I feel like everyone wants to force me to speak up because I stand out being the silent one. 😓

    • @Luna-ry8lv
      @Luna-ry8lv 5 лет назад +277

      @@LucasCarter2 introversion doesn't mean lack of social skills

    • @Luna-ry8lv
      @Luna-ry8lv 5 лет назад +58

      @Lala Fontaine Agreed, some of the best writers and scientists are introverts.

    • @ivoyulolavrador9166
      @ivoyulolavrador9166 5 лет назад +74

      I love being an introvert and I don’t really wanna get out of it (or do you mean get /away/ with it? cause that's a different thing). And yes I do like people but specifically the right people for me (hence, me expressing my opinion that I think I'll feel comfortable in that kind of society). I agree that silence can present some challenges, but silence isn’t always that bad. Silence makes way for thinking and contemplating and those are what introverts can be strong at. Besides that, actions can do as much as words can say. 🙂

    • @SadistModeOn
      @SadistModeOn 5 лет назад +86

      grew up in America, now living in Japan. although there are Americans who are ok being quiet when with someone you know, people generally feel really uncomfortable with silence and have to talk about things just to fill that silence. whereas japamese people feel ok with that silence, and it actually gives them more room to say things they actually care about when it comes to mind. as someone who feels more introvert than not, that does take alot of pressure off

    • @kara7054
      @kara7054 5 лет назад +37

      Yes! These videos always make me want to move to Japan. I've always been called out for being "too quiet" or told I need to speak up more or get out more, and I try but it's exhausting trying to force yourself to be extroverted when you definitely are not

  • @aguaf
    @aguaf 3 года назад +18

    When I visited Japan, I found it comfortable. It was clean, people were polite and helpful. The weird thing was that people dressed up and ate noodles in corner stores standing. Their foods are in small portions and I get hungry early if I order their standard meal.

    • @yongrytiger
      @yongrytiger 3 года назад

      Haha, the people who were dressed up eating noodles must have been the office workers/ salary men! Usually during lunch time those places are packed with workers!

  • @LaoSoftware
    @LaoSoftware 5 лет назад +6

    I'm from Laos in Southeast Asia. Lao people are super friendly. We greet everyone with a "Sabaidee". That means " hello " It doesn't matter if you're a male or female. Old or young. Stranger or not. You're greeted with a generic word "Sabaidee"

  • @Mtaalas
    @Mtaalas 5 лет назад +97

    Come to Finland, we're not so barbaric to wear shoes inside the house :)

    • @jari2018
      @jari2018 5 лет назад +5

      @Ragnarok Upper class swedes do wear rshoes inside since its apperently classy and show their class...I guess thats why they are so thin with a ll the crap indoors making their immunesystem good giving them the good bacteria.

    • @BlackHoleSpain
      @BlackHoleSpain 5 лет назад

      @Ragnarok We in Spain never ever have guest slippers, even if the floors are cold. Visits always keep their street shoes on until they leave, that's why we have doormats at the entrance of the buildings and the apartments, for people to clean their shoes. In my own house I wear slippers anyway, but if I enter with friends, I don't use to take my shoes off, to not make my friends uncomfortable. Anyway, Spain weather is quite dry (in most cities it won't snow for years, and you get about 10 rainy days), so generally speaking, you don't bring that much dirt from the street.

    • @theramendutchman
      @theramendutchman 5 лет назад +1

      In the Netherlands this used to be the case too but it's disappearing because people think the extra effort is not worth it.

    • @bigbruh4399
      @bigbruh4399 5 лет назад +35

      I dont know why tf anyone would wear shoes in the house, honestly. Just gets everything dirty for no real reason.

    • @virtualarmageddon6232
      @virtualarmageddon6232 5 лет назад +3

      Us swedes don't either, well, at least not those native/or living in the North. I've lived in the UK for years and no one takes their shoes off at the door, it drives me crazy.

  • @_Leoneee_
    @_Leoneee_ 4 года назад +49

    5:19 he did not say Australia. He said Österreich, which is the German word for Austria xD

    • @user-cdf9fk2rqa
      @user-cdf9fk2rqa 4 года назад +18

      He said オーストラリア人 which means Australian. I doubt he speaks German.

    • @_Leoneee_
      @_Leoneee_ 4 года назад +5

      @@user-cdf9fk2rqa Could be... I mean, I can't speak Japanese, but this sounded like Austrian/German word for Austria so much :D. You are probably right haha

    • @Kalani_Saiko
      @Kalani_Saiko 4 года назад +2

      @@_Leoneee_ LOL to be fair though, people in america sometimes confuse australia with austria due to the similarity in names.

    • @Proto_Type614
      @Proto_Type614 4 года назад +2

      I also heard "Österreich", because of the slight ch-sound he made at the end and it would not come as a huge surprise because Austria/Österreich is not too unknown in Japan

    • @KoooLPhiL
      @KoooLPhiL 3 года назад +2

      I clearly heard Österreich as well. I do not think he said オーストラリア, which has way more mora than what I could understand at least. And the ch sound in the end makes it very clear to me.

  • @papillonqui6017
    @papillonqui6017 2 года назад +4

    There was definitely a theme regarding Americans being extroverted. And that is most definitely something you see almost only in America. For example, here in Europe, the teachers are never you're friends and you must never really get very close with them, while in the US it is heavily encouraged. I definitely prefer the way it is in America though because at least it promotes good use of social skills whilst still staying completely respectful of others most of the time.

  • @Jorge-nv4fw
    @Jorge-nv4fw 4 года назад +24

    In my country we don't remove our shoes when entering our home or someone else's. I've visited another country which had this costume and it was so weird for me. I've felt unprotected, which was odd given that I was on a relative's house. I wasn't able to get used to that. In my country it could be seen as rude to remove your shoes unless you were invited to stay, you would only do that on your own house.

    • @bonniestevenson2221
      @bonniestevenson2221 4 года назад +3

      Yeah same in my country. 🇮🇪
      (feet germs ew) id rather have dirt on my floor, plus doormats!!

    • @donaldtusk2678
      @donaldtusk2678 4 года назад

      Apart from upstairs I only take my shoes off upstairs

    • @user-yi5mt2df5q
      @user-yi5mt2df5q 4 года назад +6

      @@bonniestevenson2221
      Feet germs is a lot better than the stuff your shoes can carry.

    • @tarambukis-c2q
      @tarambukis-c2q 4 года назад

      Y'all weird

    • @Jorge-nv4fw
      @Jorge-nv4fw 4 года назад +1

      ​@Mahima Bhat We also have mats on the entrance, where we stomp our feet to lose dirt. It's cultural, we know the floor has to me mopped regularly so we don't care for a little dirt for a few hours because we'll clean it. Even when we remove our shoes, we stay on our rooms, if we have to move around the house, we use another more loose footware.

  • @E-A-Z-Y
    @E-A-Z-Y 5 лет назад +525

    “Gaijin”
    Ah yes, I know this word.

    • @jamesvelazquez1004
      @jamesvelazquez1004 4 года назад +24

      Foreigner ?

    • @ryanwest9451
      @ryanwest9451 4 года назад +27

      Wonder if you know, how they live in Tokyo, drift,drift,drift

    • @TheBudakSkema
      @TheBudakSkema 4 года назад +9

      Outsider

    • @palody_en-ja
      @palody_en-ja 4 года назад +33

      @@TheBudakSkema yes, "outsider" is more accurate. Foreigner is gaikokujin, the koku meaning "country." You won't hear "gaijin" used much outside of casual conversation among Japanese.

    • @matguimond92
      @matguimond92 4 года назад +34

      "Gay Gin"
      Tonic for homosexuals.

  • @ramboIII3
    @ramboIII3 4 года назад +46

    I think every culture will find weird what other people from other cultures do, could be a tradition, or a some type of food or manners. Thanks for the video

    • @user-rr5ce1wb2j
      @user-rr5ce1wb2j 3 года назад

      This is true. I think the amazing thing about exploring new cultures is those "weird things" and embracing them. The world would be an incredibly boring place if we were all the same.

  • @Gods2ndFavoriteBassPlyr
    @Gods2ndFavoriteBassPlyr 3 года назад +2

    I really liked this - They are willing to actually Discuss differences and laugh about them, rather than wishing ill on those who are different. Well done.

  • @mfaizsyahmi
    @mfaizsyahmi 5 лет назад +15

    Now I wanna see Yuta in a Greg production! Make it happen! :D

    • @ShaferHart
      @ShaferHart 5 лет назад

      They actually did one a while ago. They have also made appearances in each other videos a few times.

  • @wondertraveller9928
    @wondertraveller9928 5 лет назад +18

    The topic this time was very good

  • @Vanlifecrisis
    @Vanlifecrisis 4 года назад +16

    In america the greeting kiss is very antiquated and pretty much unheard of except reaaaly elderly, the hugs are common though.

    • @slimshady9147
      @slimshady9147 4 года назад +10

      VanLifeCrisis In Hispanic culture and Latin America you will find it common among family and friends , kisses on the cheeks for the ladies and a hug with a few pats on the back for the gentlemen and handshake for anyone in general.

    • @companyoflosers
      @companyoflosers 4 года назад +3

      even greeting hugs are on their way out for all but close and trusted friends. girls are getting sick of being groped by pervy old men and i dont blame them.

    • @feyolopez2520
      @feyolopez2520 4 года назад +2

      Yes, throughout America. Such as Venezuela, Peru, Brazil, El Salvador, Mexico, Canada and even USA.

    • @jordyv.703
      @jordyv.703 4 года назад +1

      Kisses are more European (at least in the south and middle)

  • @keekee300
    @keekee300 3 года назад +36

    -Do you find kissing is a good way of greeting?
    -Mhhm i think its a good thing
    Covid: *yes its a good thing (screeching noises)*

  • @kart0ffel
    @kart0ffel 4 года назад +112

    It is interesting, for an european, that there are so many people in Japan that did not visit any foreign country. We are blessed in this continent to have so many different cultures on such small distance.

    • @MrPatriickzz
      @MrPatriickzz 4 года назад +12

      You forget that we have open borders my friend. It isn't so easy for Japanese people to travel as it is for us. Cost more too.

    • @IcidLink
      @IcidLink 4 года назад +7

      MrPatriickzz open boarders are great but what you have from it if you can’t afford Traveling? I can’t afford it and never even visited an neighbor Country. I simply can’t afford Vacations

    • @MrPatriickzz
      @MrPatriickzz 4 года назад +7

      @@IcidLink it's always possible? You even cycle to Germany or Belgium. Or make a Roadtrip with tents. You don't have to be in a 4-5* hotel. In 2019 I drove from Netherlands to Spain with 2 friends. Only sleeping at campings.

    • @TitanKaempfer
      @TitanKaempfer 4 года назад +3

      @@MrPatriickzz Always depends on your age, your income, where exactly you live in your country, how much time you have for traveling (how much vaccation can you actually aford to take or how your vaccations around the year) and what options of traveling you have. Do you have a driving license and a car or do you rely on public transport and bikes?
      Cycling a bike from like Görlitz, Germany to Poland is literally just crossing a bridge (it's even a distance you can literally walk btw.), but imagine living somewhere in the middle of the country and only owning a bike. Suddenly the way to poland becomes a whole day of cycling on your bike. Now living in a small village you might not even have a good connection to public transport and would need to take the bus to the next big city to get a train station to get close to the border or into another country.
      I'll agree, doesn't have to be a very noble hotel or something and it's obviously way easier to get to other countries than for a japanese to get to somewhere else but how much you can actually travel is still determined by a lot of factors.

    • @MrPatriickzz
      @MrPatriickzz 4 года назад +1

      @@TitanKaempfer yes you're right. I agree with you. But if you can afford a car. You can basically have a holiday for barely anything. Especially if you take 2-3 people with you. Campings are like 20-30 euros a night for the whole car. Food is also cheap at campings. And then just the gas. But also divided by 3/4.

  • @EinLucas
    @EinLucas 5 лет назад +6

    Great video with interesting interviews!

  • @lidyaflorensia7604
    @lidyaflorensia7604 4 года назад +54

    I have met some Japanese people in Indonesia and they are more polite, helpful and kind than people from China or South Korea.

    • @jennyescanilla8901
      @jennyescanilla8901 3 года назад +7

      oh dear don't get me started on some koreans and chinese. there're already a lot of them here, from where i am and they're not so friendly and polite as the japanese

    • @higari7924
      @higari7924 3 года назад +2

      you just get lucky.thats all

    • @fakuri913
      @fakuri913 3 года назад +8

      not all of them of course, but a lot of them Chinese and South Korean usually cold and lack of manner in Southeast Asian country. They see us as inferior or something idk

    • @jaochannel6142
      @jaochannel6142 3 года назад +3

      @@fakuri913 most of koreans adore and level themselves to americans and european country, but if you are an asian. naah don't expect too much from them.

  • @marciemoo
    @marciemoo 2 года назад +1

    I am an American, in Vegas and while making dinner, I was randomly watching videos. I just saw your channel for the first time and have watched some of your videos….I am SO LOVING your videos! I’ve never seen any like these and never really thought to get this perspective! As Americans, we do this all the time -as far as wondering or commenting about how others live and talk and also, mimic others. I have rarely, if ever, actually seen others from other countries, mimic us or give their perspective. I have been laughing so much and they are so right about us, the way we are and like in your other videos, the way we talk. So funny, I love this and it’s nice, because we need a “dose of our own medicine”! As Americans, we’re always so pompous and mimicking other people, so this is good! We should all learn about each other and be able to laugh about differences, as well, so keep up the good videos!!

  • @n0denz
    @n0denz 4 года назад +91

    It would be amazing if cashiers didn't try sparking up conversations with me.

    • @65EKS65
      @65EKS65 4 года назад +15

      Lmao come to Finland, here the cashiers are either old grumpy people waiting to retire from that cashier chair or some young students who couldn't care less about customer service and tries to bear it till the end of the week so that they can open a beer. 🤣
      The ONLY exceptions are very small villages where every 132 inhabitants know each other and/or if the village is close to some summer cottages and there is that one small shop where people go get their last purchases for the cottage.

    • @destulderece2982
      @destulderece2982 4 года назад +8

      Or hair-stylists /barbers

    • @n0denz
      @n0denz 4 года назад +1

      @@65EKS65 I'd actually love to come to Finland. My favorite Scandinavian country.

    • @VeryEpicPotato
      @VeryEpicPotato 4 года назад +1

      I live in Sweden and cashiers pretty much never start conversation.

    • @irou95
      @irou95 4 года назад +1

      @@65EKS65 I legit went to a 24/7 supermarket last night and there were 2 young student girls having a conversation about going to get wasted next friday. and they were legit speaking loud over the counters. AND THIS WAS ON TUESDAY

  • @grifonoia8256
    @grifonoia8256 5 лет назад +4

    I'm a very introvert guy but here in Brazil, there's no scape: I just get used to the way people here are warm in their meeting. Thanks to my culture of hugs and kisses (even with strangers) maybe I could easily be considered an "open/extrovert" guy" in Japan.
    Love your videos and of course, love your country and culture!

  • @Invisibleplqnetsmusic
    @Invisibleplqnetsmusic 4 года назад +6

    They seem to be very reserved there. It's refreshing.

  • @gamalaberhtaz
    @gamalaberhtaz 3 года назад +3

    TL;DR in New Zealand, removing shoes before entering someone's home has a deeply rooted cultural origin and is a part of the 'tikanga' that helps build trust between two parties.
    Very ironic and unusual that her host family in New Zealand wore shoes in the house.
    As someone who has grown up in various countries including New Zealand, I've never seen so much emphasis anywhere on removing footwear than in New Zealand.
    Wearing shoes inside is particularly impolite, even going against fundamental tikanga (appropriate cultural practices), especially inside any building that has a 'sacred' status so to speak e.g. a Marae. In Māori culture there's an ceremonial mindset that emphasises 'stripping away the conflict' of the outside world, necassary for maintaining peaceful gatherings of different Iwi (clans/tribes). To bring outdoor shoes inside is seen as bringing the conflict and negative energy of Tū (god of war, conflict etc.) into a peaceful space.