Koreans React To Shocking Things In Europe! | Peach Korea
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- Опубликовано: 20 фев 2021
- Hi Peaches!! Let's travel with Genie and Suho! Today, the Peach cast talks about the most shocking experiences they experienced while travelling to Europe!
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📈26,235 - Развлечения
As a European I just want to say that parents that smoke when they are with their children are highly judged here as well!
Maybe in your contry but not in my country...
when I was a child it was completely normal in my country but now it’s not & parents usually smoke outside of the house or try to only smoke at work.
@@rainbowgirl949494 Like I say maybe in your contry but not mine. We don't judge people who smoke with their children even If I don't like myself and that tend to change. You know, in my country it's only since last year that we can't slap a child and a lot of parents still do it.
All Europeans countries are not the same.
@@Shiliitexx where are you from?
True in my country as well people would be pissed and angry to see a parent spoke around children, they would have a very bad impression and consider them a failure as a parent, it does not happen a lot.
So I think it depends on the country, I was at Uni in the UK and I saw tons of parents smoking next to their children but I don't know what other people were thinking about that there.
They compared European clouds to korean clouds lol
having a lot of Korean friends in Canada, they say the same thing about Canadian clouds and it's one of the things they miss most about here
Well because in Korea there is more pollution so the sky/clouds can look different ...
It might have something to do with Mongolia. The winds in the Mongolian desert sometimes kicks up a lot of dust which drifts into China, the Koreas, and Japan...causing air quality to drop and the sky to be kind of hazey and orange looking. Might also explain why East Asians tend to be more 'open' to mask policies and advisories, since they wear them for air quality too.
its hard to see the color of the sky because of the pollution and europe is a lot more north where the inner layers of the atmosphere are much closer to the surface of the earth
@@jayc1139 it mnight have something to do with people burning coal to heat their homes, the 50 year old diersel trucks, the industry in seoul and busan etc
stop blaming everything on people thousands of miles away
9:20 guys i'm italian and it is not normal that your host greets you wearing underwear and having someone naked in their room, i mean we have manners too
Ma sì ma porcozzio sono dei dementi, ma da che mondo è mondo se uno ti accoglie mezzo nudo è considerabile un'usanza o una cosa tipicamente europea? Forse lo giustificano per la maggiore disinibizione e minor senso del pudore rispetto all'Asia... ma il discorso non regge.
Cioè se io vado in un posto in Corea, fai alla sera, e mi accoglie il proprietario ciucco o comunque brillo per il Soju che ha bevuto al bancone... non vado a pensare a chissà quale motivo legato alla loro cultura, dico "bon, cavoli suoi, mi ha dato le chiavi ha fatto il check in, stop", magari me la sghignazzo ma... NON VADO a mettere questo singolo episodio in un video sul tubo (con tanto di montaggio e copione scritto) quindi non possono nemmeno passare per dei poveri ebeti vlogger che magari fanno tremila vlog/live dove sparano boiate senza pensarci su più di un secondo...
Poi, la spesa alla Domenica non l'ha potuta fare??? Ma, o al sud dove è stata lei hanno un mondo tutto a parte...ma io abito al nord, in una città da quasi 30mila abitanti, quindi non parliamo di metropoli eh.. ma ho sì i supermercati aperti in mattinata che riaprono al pomeriggio ma alla domenica fanno metà giornata... poi ci sono i supermercati che sono aperti 7 giorni su 7 che fanno il continuato dalle 8:30/9:00 alle 20:30/21:00.... probabilmente avranno generalizzato da far schifo, magari includendo la realtà tedesca ossia che loro veramente hanno tutto chiuso alla domenica, persino i negozi e molti ristoranti...
@@HamsterTubeHD probabilmente dipende anche da quando è stata in Italia...fino ad una decina di anni fa anche qui a Milano i supermercati erano chiusi la domenica...
in Corea sono aperti tutti, h24 7 su 7, qui abbiamo solo una catena che tiene questi orari, e da un 5 anni al massimo...
@@WhisperOfDoom86 ma probabilmente era finita in qualche paese del sud magari con pochi abitanti e c'era solo magari un alimentari/minimarket nei paraggi... Certo, l'anno in cui si va c'entra, ma se non sei aggiornato non spari a zero.
È come se io dicessi che a Torino i collegamenti cittadini siano scarni perché la metro non c'è perché ci sono andato/a prima del 2007. LOL
Oppure come se io dicessi nelle scuola in Italia non ci siano Lim in ogni classe è che solo il 15% di tutta l'Italia le abbia... perché l'ultima volta che ho messo piede in una scuola era dieci anni fa e non mi sono aggiornato/a. 🤔
Dammit, cancelling my trip now! :P
As a European, I'd be so scared to just leave my phone on the table. If I'm with others, we will literally take turns going to the toilet so somebody is at the table at all times. I can't even imagine not worrying about my stuff being gone lol.
Or if you’re alone taking all your stuff with you, even if you‘ll risk coming back and your seat has been taken by someone else. But that’s better than to be stolen from.
@@meral_k yupp
Same if you go to the beach. Even if everyone goes to the water, someone always has an eye out for your belongings under the sun shade.
@@kirinr8316 Even if the restaurant/coffee is closed and I'm the only one in it I'll still keep an eye on my stuff.
@@beadsman13 same xD It's part of our DNA now
4:22 I can confirm that people still throw away their cigarette butts on the street in Europe despite the cigarette bins 😭
Some fool threw one into my door padlock slot when I was out
my european country: your dog shit on anywhere you are fined hugely. you throw away your finished cigarette anywhere to poison our water & environment, well okay it’s no one’s business
like fuck logic
Then you have not been to Korea... in busy areas they "wash" the streets with water cannons after busy days - you are literally walking on cigarette butts at that point.
@@rainbowgirl949494 Both very true, but nowadays certain European countries have become aware of this type of littering. In the Netherlands you have to clean up after your dog, but not everyone does it. And like dog 'waste' you are allowed to dump cigarette buds into public trashcans, but there aren't many trashcans around to 'dump' your waste into. Kind of like the meme I heard of from Korea; "No trashcans till home". Same reason as Korea, people kept dumping their 'home trash' into public trashcans, instead of just the things you need to dump when 'out in the wild'.
Very counter-intuitive if you ask me. I just ate some street-food and need to get rid of my 'wrapper', 'napkin' or 'paper bag' my lunch came in, but there are not enough public trashcans.. Whyyyy?
I want to be responsible, but I don't understand why 'governmental expense' is so much more important than 'not making Earth look like a landfill'. It's like saying "If you are conscious about the environment, don't bother thinking rich companies can solve the waste you buy along with their products, this is the poor man's job to do the 'right' thing when buying a 10 cent product along with 10 dollars of waste".
@@dimitri877 the last part of your comment is so spot on!
As an European, you learn where the free clean public toilets are 😂. Also, we don't really drink from Starbucks because in most countries coffee is much cheaper than that of Starbucks. Like in Portugal (my country), an expresso is about 60 cents. About the sex culture, I think it depends on the country and the circumstances you're at. For example, in Portugal you have specific beaches where you can be naked 🙃 but people are still very conservative about other stuff. It all depends where you are and who you are with.
I agree I think it’s like a city culture tbh but more rural or just normal wee towns aren’t as all out there
O comentário que eu estava à procura, concordo muito com o que disseste e eu acredito que a parte de nós sermos mais conservadores é por causa da religião a maioria dos portugueses são católicos e a religião sempre foi muito importante em Portugal, só mais recentemente é que as pessoas começaram a ser mais abertas a coisas que antigamente eram muito mal vistas, e nós ainda temos um longo caminho pela frente
@@m.i_myself_and_i_ eu vivo fora de Portugal à 6 anos, e já há coisas na mentalidade do português com que não me identifico. Mas pelo menos há progresso 😊
and like every coffe in europe is better then starbucks
True :) think so too
The thing about Europe is that every country is different, since most countries are over a millenium old. I'm Croatian and a lot of these don't apply to my country, our culture is different.
whats a croatian?
@@jdv943 Someone from Croatia... we call ourselves either Croats or Croatian ....it is like someone from Germany who says he or she is German.
Sure that not everything is the same in every european countries but we do share similiarities some things can be same though.... OK Starbucks def is not a thing here but countries which have a coffee culture like we do wont like starbucks either.... and the stealing happens here as well, especially during tourism season (which sucks but well).
The sky thing is def something which can apply to every country since the air is much cleaner than in some Asian.
Just to name these few they talked about.
But of course in some other cases we are different from others in Europe.
@@Niki91-HR sorry, it was a joke, i am aware what croatia is
@@jdv943 well there are people who dont know that our country exists xD so I am kind of used to see comments like that one 🤷♀️
I’m from Germany and when I was a child, my grandmother told me that may rain makes kids grow faster. So I often rushed outside when it started to rain in spring, hoping to get a little taller.
SAME! but i'm from italy :D
Oh my, my grandma was talking the same thing to me and i'm from Poland ;D And yes i was standing in the may rain but i'm tiny anyway xD
Same in the Czech Republic :D (didn't do a sh*t for me - 152 cm :DD)
@@bichen4151 maybe it was the Chernobyl rain ?
I'm too young for that :'D And the Chernobyl disaster had very small impact in our country.
It’s not really sex culture lol, it’s just that nudity is not necessarily sexual, nudity is just nudity and that’s it. In Korea if someone show they shoulders it’s considered sexual
I kind of prefer that. I lived most of my life in the US, really got tired of the very open sexual content on tv... gets boring after a while. The reason I watch more Korean dramas and other Asian dramas... you have to wait 10 episodes to get a kiss lol
@@Surftouka guess you are the romantical type then? Because I like a bit of romance but watching some Korean dramas it got boring for me too. It's not that I need all that nakedness, even though I don't mind, but Korean dramas seemed very inauthentic. Or maybe I watched the wrong ones. But I definitely don't need a kiss from a 360° angle, in slow motion on top and the amount that Korean woman trip and fall is really unhealthy ;-)
If my room-mate here in England walked out of his room totally naked i would move out instantly, that's so inappropriate. Walking out wearing just underwear is fine i guess, but we're not all walking with our genitals out for everyone to gawk at and be uncomfortable.
@@RoxanneLavender That's one thing too if your roommate is walking around in underwear, if it's someone you've roomed with for a while, or knew prior to moving in... but we're talking complete strangers & this is a paying guest... show some respect keep your clothes on... once they're moved in-do as you please. Having read this though, I've used airbnb with no problems, but will be sure if I use it again, to have their emergency contact number on hand because I seriously wouldn't feel comfortable staying there!
@@RoxanneLavender some people are simply not uncomfortable seeing nudity, I don't care for example. And it depends more on with which personalities you live together rather than country alone
When I went to Korea as an exchange student this year, I had these shocks reversed. I was like "Why is Starbucks literally everywhere and why do Koreans use umbrellas even for a slight bit of rain?"
Same I was so surprised how fast people opened their umbrellas even if there was just a tiny amount of rain coming down. No one bothers here unless the rain is pretty heavy
Same for me. I enjoy standing in the rain but my Korean friend thought I'm stupid and said that I should wash the dirty rain out of my hair when I get home
Are u Czech too
@@kayaa1888 yeah
What did you thought about the sky and clouds? hahaha
I'm a European who lived in Korea, and my biggest culture shock was people talking about poo all the time (as demonstrated in this video!). Like people would ask me how my poo was, or would tell me, in great detail, about a poo they just did. I massively do not need that info.
I had no idea this was even a thing...
Right?! Even in dramas, the pretty girl grabs her stomach in front of her crush like "Sorry, it's that time of the day. Gotta shit." They are way too casual about it for my taste 🤡
You could say ... they have a "open poop culture"?
what 😂
That's all of Asia, what a barbaric culture
I’m really upset because her Italian friends said it’s not necessary to visit Spain. It’s like some Japanese friend tell me not to visit Korea because it’s useless....
I really wonder where those "Italians Friends" come from...I'm italian and I've never met anyone here who doesn't want to go to Spain!
Actually we all thinks it's a beatiful place with lively people! We really feel attached to Spain because even if we have somewhat a similar culture, your culture Is still unique and very fascinating!
I myself have been to Spain twice and I would like to go again and explore more!
I hope you won't think all italians are like that because, trust me, we are not and we all like Spain and spanish people very much!
@@Martunks Actually I find Italian and Spain quite similar, being from Argentina/Spain and having been to both. Maybe they just meant it was not worth it to go to Spain if this would be her only time in Europe. I would try to get a sense of the different cultures, climates and landscapes and Spanish and Italian cultures are pretty close when compared to, say, Italy vs UK vs Sweden
Actually, the majority of the Italians usually prefer Spain as a travel destination, as it's a lot similar to Italy than northern countries f.e., and Italians usually are not too much into trying new things, unfortunately 😅...
But of course, it depends, for example also if I'm Italian, I usually prefer travelling in places with completely different and new cultures ;)
Okay but calm down. No one said Spain is bad.
Something that many people outside of Europe don't realize, is that within the European countries there are many cultural differences. For example is like comparing Asian countries, of course most of them have some basic similarities, but in the end the difference between them is quite great!
in the closing minutes they start to list their experiences with European sex culture.. Guess Yeseul has a new topic for a video now; The differences in sex culture Korea vs European haha
🎯☺️
another topic would be how wwii affected europe
@@Andrei2patrU wwii? You mean WW2?
For Spaniards, Starbucks is a useless luxury, too expensive and tasteless for us. We usually love our local cafes cause we have a relationship with them, it's much more intimate to go drink coffee at a friend's shop than a random chain where you don't even know the owner. In Spain we love coffee and the cafe itself plays an important role in our culture, being most of the times our first choice for a friends gathering.
In greece its exactly the same. We judge hard anyone who goes to starbucks. We may take our morning ong the go coffe(before work, school) from a chain(but never starbucks, greek chains) but we hang out in local cafes . The minimun is 2hours and the maximum about 5 hrs.
same for France, maybe in big cities they sometimes drink Starbucks but honestly why would we chose that ? since you can find cheaper and way more tasteful coffees in small cafes (I mean, idk I don't like coffee lol, but that's what I was told)
We in Croatia have a great coffee culture too and as far as I know we dont even have Starbucks....it would fail horribly and go bankrupt xD Having coffee with friends, family and colleagues is an "event" and it cant be under an hour...mostly it is about 2 hours hahahaahh
In Germany it's maybe half and half for big cities. You will find Starbucks, but it's usually a choice for young people or tourists. Our normal cafes are also not as personal as they are in the South I guess. I personally never liked the usual German coffee, which is just hot water rinsed over the milled coffe aka black water. Only when the French/Italian kind of coffee came around with Cappucino, Latte, Espresso etc. which is made under pressure in proper machines I started to drink it. I don't even need the caffeine, It's just for the taste.
Same in France we have our own coffee
Wait.... they don’t have blue skies? And colorful skies bc of sunrise and sunset??
IKR !!! I was surprised too, though I think their blue sky is t as bright ( or as blue) as in Europe. The other colors, the purples I've only seen that once along with green, orange and pink instead of the standard blue sky but it only lasted about 25 minutes ( I live in Georgia in the USA). Sounds like Europe gets colors even we don't see everyday ( at least in my part of the USA, Southeast.).
@@mysteryelysian I see lots of oranges/reds, seen pink plenty of times too!!! purple, not as much/really?!! and those mostly really are around times of sunset and sunrise!! My dorm is in the city of ghent, center, and I got a roof terrace, so I got a great view!! If the sky is clear, I get to see such beautiful colourful sky every night!
@@mysteryelysian and tbh, we get this clear blue sky in belgium... but it's grey lots of times too bc it likes to rain over here hahaha!
It’s grey-ish most of the year because of the fine dust...😡 It’s never as blue as the sky I have witnessed in Europe for sure... Spring is usually the worst season for fine dust here. So annoying!
@@Peachkorea spring is the worst? oh noo! spring is the best time in europe! my little home is always open for you. just come to see the blue sky and have some fresh air and good food! my heart hurts by hearing this. I really wish, that the situation in south korea with the fine dust will stop as soon as possible. I cannot even imagine it!
German people often say that we don’t have to shower after standing in the rain. It’s a joke obviously, but we really don’t see the rain as dirty. I’m German btw.
In the Netherlands we always say "you are not made of sugar," which means that you can handle the rain.
@@shineexokpop6824 We do too!
@@shineexokpop6824 yeah same in France !!
Maybe it's an old saying, when there was no pollution.
I grew up in Asia and definitely remember being told that your hair will fall out from being under the [acid] rain! I love being in the rain though
They're so cute speaking in Spanish and Italian! I´m from Spain and I'm also shocked when I have to pay to go into a public toilet. And the sex culture...Yes, usually Europe is freer, but it depends on the person and also their religion. That thing of the man from the air bnb in underwear and the naked guest, wth?!
Yeah, I live in Greece & I can't imagine anyone walking out in their underwear in front of a stranger! Dude at least put some shorts on! not everyone wants a peak!
True, that's just rude to your Airbnb guest.
@@jaanaanepaan Agreed! What you do in the privacy of your home with your family & friends, your business... but this is a paying guest, have some respect!
Yeah, I'm Italian and that is NOT normal.
Europe is such a small continent but maybe the richest when it comes to culture. It's amazing how different north and south are (e.g., UK and Spain), east and west (e.g, Russia and Germany), etc. And also within each country, there are different cultures (e.g., in UK - English, Scottish, Irish, Welsh). I mean even looking at the Balkans for example (where I live), we always say most of us are the same people (Serbia, Montenegro, Bosnia, Croatia) and we do culturally have so so many common things (customs, language, music...), but we also differ in many aspects.
So to fully grasp ''European culture'', you would need to travel to each and every country.
Balkan najbolji
Hi from Czech republic 🇨🇿😄
Northern Europe is UK? UK is western Europe, northern Europe is Finland and Sweden.
@@ross6753 Dude, Europe is fucking tiny compared to continents like the Americas or Asia. I'm from Germany and the size of Germany fits comfortably into the size of the state of Texas.
@@ross6753 Yes, but the original comment talked about that Europe is a small continent compared to most of the other continents. So OP has a point. Don't know why you're so bothered about that fact. Europe is small. Period.
It's funny how Europe always means Italy, France, Spain, the UK and Germany
Finland, Sweden, Norway, Iceland, Denmark.....
@@mantailuaa 50 sovereign nations.
Andorra
@Baekhyunie Boo has the prettiest smile Well, Hungary was mentioned/visited by him.
@Baekhyunie Boo has the prettiest smile man he named hungary
Usually, big chain places like Starbucks, Cost, and so on have shity coffee... and people that drink coffee actually drink it to enjoy the "art of coffee". So they go to small private places that have special coffee from around the world brewed corectly, it's like wine, complex and in different variations and there is an art to it. Also, people that know about coffee, prefer it without sugar and black. But I noticed that in Korea people don't know about this stuff generally and they drink coffee as they drink juice, just randomly and at any hour of the day or night.
I agree. In a lot of European countries drinking coffee is like a little ritual or a follow up after lunch in restaurants. Also conferences and seminars have so called "coffee breaks".
Absolutely. Starbucks is not needed.
True.
To add to that - there are some countries where people literally sit for hours at caffes just to drink coffee with friends lmao. Example - Balkan countries. I'd rather sit for an hour and a half and drink 2 great coffees with a friend, than a shitty Starbucks coffee in a car lmao.
Ok when I read "sky is blue" I felt really sorry for you guys! And you dont have beautiful clouds!! That's so sad😥 come visit Europe!!
The thing about paying for toilets is that usually free toilets in very crowded places tend to be very dirty, so, when you find a toilet that you need to pay for you know it will be clean, nothing will be broken, and you'll find both toilet paper and soap inside...
However, the best way of going to a toilet is going inside a coffee shop and ask - usually, if you're polite, they'll let you use it free of charge, or, at worse, you buy a water bottle or an expresso on your way out, and in Portugal (where I'm from), an expresso costs like 65cents, maximum. So it definitely beats a free public toilet with dirty floors and broken sinks...
It’s actually not like this in a lot of parts of Europe, but the Starbucks thing is soo true ngl
Of course. Even in Bulgaria people will think you are fool by going to Starbucks. Why I have to pay "star" buck for brown water? Best is espresso for a one euro ;)
yes!!! But the best thing is when we invite our friends to our house and do some extra coffee like americano, dalgona or late by ourselves ^_^
I know someone who works at Starbucks. They said that the coffee its just water and coffee beans with different names and that its a waste of money.
The downside is it's one of the few places you can get a coffee on the go, with an actual lid on it. But that's been improving lately, at least in Sofia. Still I feel hella fancy whenever I order starbucks (ordering because covid, and I can't seem to figure out how to make decent iced coffee, except greek frape)
About the public toilets, usually they ask 50cents per visit. It’s for the cleaning. Some places are free! But if you are at a tourist spot prices, even toilet prices will be much more expensive!!
I always go Into a restaurant or cafe and ask if I can use the toilet if I can’t hold it and there isn’t a public toilet near! Most are okay with it, some will ask 50 cents (mostly if you are not a client)
about the sex culture it's true it's quite open in Europe but the thing in the airbnb with ppl in underwear or naked is just straight up weird af
In the UK especially around where I'm from, Wales and most probably England the weather is too strong for the use of umbrellas. Too windy they break so we just use hoods. The weather is probably bad most of the time.
In England it's more about the random rain, so we're not always carrying an umbrella around with us. But, there is a wind issue at least 50% of the time here, the little umbrellas just break, or you have to lug around one of those long ones.
I live at the baltic coast so it is very unusual that it's not windy. I never had an umbrella until I was 22 when one of my coworkers gifted one to me when I moved to Hamburg, where it is not really windy at least compared to living directly at the sea.
Most of this is shocking to me and I'm European....just not Western or Central European
Also not seeing a blue or purple or orange or sometimes even red sky is kinda sad when I think about it and here we just take it for granted.
Italy and Spain are in Southern Europe
Most of this is shocking to me and I'm from Italy lol I wonder where she ended up when she was here
@@TomorrowWeLive Spain is the second most west country in europe after Portugal.
Genie, people coming out in underwear or naked would be weird for italians too 😂
But less weird then in korea
Suho gives me, male lead drama character vibes...
Yeah pickpockets are ledgendary good in rome, spain, vienna prague, berlin and london etc. Keep all your personal thing in a bag with zipper and keep it close to your body at all times.
its like the scams in korea
You forgot Paris (I'm from France) I have a korean friend who got her phone stolen twice in a span of 2 months lol. But she still likes Paris smh.
They mostly do it when they think/know you're a tourist.
Paris too omg...
Greece too. And unfortunately the best way to protect yourself is to try not to look like a tourist..
When you travel to Germany, you need an "Allwetterjacke" because man weiß ja nie.
About the rain: I am German, a descendant of the germanic tribes who survived in the wilderness for thousands of years and while at it fought a war against one of the largest empires in history...... and I'm too lazy to carry an umbrella with me
Great duo! I have never thought about a sunset not being colorful or that clouds could be different depending on the country haha
Saludos desde España 😊
aww noo 😣 I can't really imagine waking up to a grey sky everyday, must be really sad. One of the things I love the most is walking, everywhere, for hours, and witnessing the changing of colours, as a mesmerizing palette of blues, purples, oranges, pinks, reds, etc. Now I won't take that for granted next time I look up to the skies.
I come from central Europe and I also have sometimes coulture shock when I travel to southern countries. They are more hmmm.... open-minded than rest of the Europe. It's not good or bad, just different ;) But I think my country is more similar to Korea than to Mediterranean countries.
Yeah I get what you mean. I'm from Italy, which is a Southern country, but I live in the Northern part of the country, near the border with Austria. Therefore the region I live in is heavily influenced by the central European mentality and way of life. When I travel to Southern Italy I feel like in a whole other different country. Don't get me wrong, I love the South and my bff is from there, but it really feels like a whole other country to me. In my region we have a different dialect, a different accent, different food, different sense of humour, we are not as loud and not as welcoming with strangers. we even have our own language (not Italian) that Southerners can't understand and vice versa. There are so many cultures and lifestyles in Europe and I think that's amazing.
@@lauragoreni3020 decisamente ahahahahaha, sono del nord anch’io è c’è un cultural shock assurdo quando vado al sud😂
omg my experience is the total opposite (being from the south) :o
You are from Poland right?
@@Zos331 how would you know whether people are from Poland? There's more than Poland for "conservative" countries in Europe and nonetheless, Poland has quite a huge liberal movement, especially amongst young people
The thing is that they only talked about Western Europe, and it’s the big main tourist cities. If you go outside these usually tourist destinations it can get quite different. Also the cultures are very different within Europe.
There are at least 50 countries that are considered part of Europe and it's a bit... to portray these things as pan-European. Neither of them had been to Northern or Eastern European countries. But it was a fun vid.
as a kid I hated to go out in the rain... my granny (German-Hungarian) was just like "you're not made of sugar, you won't melt", so she forced me to. so i just got used to it.
I think the guy came when that specific Saturday was a holiday, because here in Spain it's only on Sundays were almost everything is close (but you can still find restaurants or small supermarkets in big cities open). Saturdays are usually the days when people go grocery shopping.
Pero si se refiere a refiere a restaurantes (por lo que dicen los subs) me parece rarísimo... Los restaurantes siempre abren los fines de semana, independientemente que sea festivo o no... Y en cuanto a supermercados, muchos abren incluso en días festivos. Me parece un poco raro. La única explicación que encuentro es la hora a la que llegase (aunque desde la hora del desayuno hasta la cena la hostelería está abierta...).
@@myjnr3 exacto, me parece raro, sobre todo siendo Barcelona. yo vivo en una ciudad de tamaño medio y los supermercados no abren los domingos, pero los restaurantes, al menos los del centro si. Y antes, hace años, si que era más difícil encontrar algo abierto el domingo donde vivo que no fuesen restaurantes, pero ahora como hay mas inmigrantes pues el domingo encuentras pequeños supers abiertos, fruterías y carnicerías.
exacto, yo vivo en una ciudad de 150 mil habitantes y los restaurantes abren todos los días. Y muchos de los supermercados también, vaya. Por donde yo vivo solo por lo menos son 5, así que en la totalidad de la ciudad serán muchos más. Y en Barcelona abren las cosas todos los días segurísimo, vamos. Sobre todo porque hay una cantidad de turismo inmensa...
Yo soy de Barcelona y aquí los supermercados abren todos los días, también los domingos y festivos. Además hay un super que se llama Open Cor que esta abierto hasta las 2 de la noche. Y millones de supers pakistanis que están abiertos toda la noche.
@@claudiama3560 sí, sí. Si es que seguro que es así 100%, vaya...
A thing I think most foreigners struggle with when they go to more northern European countries like Sweden (where I'm from) is that the sun in the summer time sets really late, like around 10pm. And it never gets truly dark. There is also the midnight sun waay up north when the sun doesn't set at all.
just fyi, americano is two coffee lungo (or like espresso with 4 times the water), nothing to do with ice. iced coffee is just iced coffee, which is weird in itself lul
Yeah, the only iced coffee we ever really drink in Europe is frappe, which originates in Greece. And even that we drink only in the summer.
Every county in Europe has a different culture just like South Korea and Japan has, even tho both are in Asia
I was very sorry to hear that your wallet was stolen in Europe. It is a shame. When my daughter studied in Seoul, she felt the most safe in her life except for her childhood in a village in the CZ. When you happen to travel to Europe again, don't miss Prague, Wienn and Budapest. Sunsets, skies and genius loci are the nicest there.
as a european (more specificly a finn), some of these only apply to some countries, for example in the northern countries we do NOT have siesta, people smoking with their kids is highly judged etc , but the rain thing is veryy true tho i rarely see anyone with an umbrella
It was so cute when she said "put down my fingers" (maybe she doesnt drink alcohol, I dont know?) for Never have I ever, like... here its a drinking game that is usually used for getting reaaaally drunk, really fast (because most of us have done the things asked).
I live in Romania and there aren't many shops here which are closed on Sunday, you can order anything from pretty much anywhere too. There are businesses that do food or online shopping deliveries every day, like Glovo or FoodPanda.
I've been to Italy (specifically Pisa) and I can confirm most businesses are closed on Sunday, we had to buy more food on Friday or Saturday so we wouldn't starve in weekends.
I have never seen anyone greeting guests wearing only underwear, or nude, that is not normal. The only place where nudity is normal is the nude beach.
As a European, I can say ive never heard of paying for toilets, OR people coming out NAKED of their rooms
Well then you didn't visit the Netherlands 😅 We even pay for the dirty toilets.
@@Mer19961996 ugh, that is the worst. If we have to pay they should at least keep it clean.
Interesting, I never thought people would find the sky and the clouds different lol. Then again I ve never been close to a skyscraper in my life so I wouldnt know
예슬 언니! 이 영상의 주제는 너무 재미있었어요! 🤩 also, they are my new fav combo!
Suho is really CUTE ☺️
My husband is from Peru and he tells me that where his from in Peru the sky is always gray, and this was my face 😳
What, wow. Well you learn something new everyday. 😲
Wow I would have never guessed! 😲 Here in Korea is mostly because of fine dust... especially during spring. It’s very annoying
im from Brasil, but here (in the region where i live, bc in southeast is more urban) the sky is so blue, and when is 16:00(4)pm or 17:00(5)pm the sky it's pink gold, sometimes pink and orange, sometimes it's purple and pink, depends on the day and the season too (but most of the time is always blue and pink)
@@tokkieram how beautiful!! Where I live as a kid in Dominican Republic the sky was also blue clear, it could rain really hard and then sun will come out so nice , but if I by remember ever seen a pink sky. I have seen the sky look pink and blue here in Nj 🇺🇸 is beautiful. I do miss the night sky in Dominican Republic you can see more stars at night and when the moon is very bright that you don’t even need street lights.
I think it’s also interesting to compare the drinking culture. Compared to Korea where you’re allowed to drink at the age of 21, in Germany we‘re allowed to drink and buy beer at the age of 16, it’s the same with wine. At the age of 18, we can buy other drinks like whiskey etc. But a lot of people start drinking the heavier stuff when they’re much younger and even kids sometimes get to take a sip of their parents‘ beer, but just to taste it though!
The luxury of not having to plan your grocery shopping time. Damn. I’m jealous 😅
Ppl don’t wanna work on sundays here! Sunday is a free day for us! Also ppl don’t wanna work late hours xp
In Romania, supermarkets are open everyday and there are some who are open 24/7. So it depends on the country. I work on week-ends . It's not that unusual
In England mostly all of the shops are open Sundays 11am to about 4 or 5pm. All convenience stores are open their usual hours into the night though.
Is this Spain that you're talking about? I came here from New York City a 18 months ago and every Sunday I'm still caught off guard. I HATTTEEEE IT. Especially when it's Friday and that's no dog food and I go on Saturday and there's STILL no dog food. Then I have to feed my dogs some expensive ground beef so they don't starve.
@@fezli8139 no it’s Belgium!! Now most supermarkets are open longen (till 7pm, some i think even till 8pm), where closing time before was 6pm... but still hardly any supermarket is open on Sunday (some are). But I know the struggle.... discovering you are out of food or missing an ingredient or whatever and it’s saturday,evening.... OR it’s a holiday and the stores are closed!!!
@@andreeutza22 yeah we work on Saturdays, but not sundays. (But other services tend not to be open on Saturdays, like dentists etc)
Rather than coffee with ice, try asking for cold coffee. A lot of people have it in summer when it's really hot in the south. It's supposed to be coffee with ice but many times it's just sweetened coffee put in the fridge so it's not diluted (and very strong. I don't recommend it at night)
In northern Europe (at least in Sweden) u can go grocery shopping on sundays too except they close earlier than usual, like 10am - 3pm instead of 9am - 7pm.
In Italy too, I don't understand why she said that... it's always wrong to generalize, especially in Europe, I live in the north (maybe she lived in a town of South Italy... dunno) n a little city of 30.000 citizens... we have some supermarkets even open 7 days/7 from 9.00 to 20:00 without a break, yes, there are some marts that are closed at 12:30 and re-opened in the afternoon at 15...but usually they aren't totally closed on Sunday, they are open only in the morning, let's say from 8:30 to 12:30. :o
Same in Finland (pretty obviously). I was so surprised when I was on a trip to Germany with friends and on the outskirts of Berlin, nothing was open on a Sunday.
@@saturated3821 I was surprised too when I discovered it... I had to check it twice on Google when I read it on the internet. ahah
It can be stupid, but I always thought about Germany as a country which is focused on work so I could never imagine the "quiet Sunday" thing.
France too but more 9am 12am
Bulgaria too! I grew up in Greece and I always feel so spoiled whenever I do my shopping on a sunday :D
really nice video ! I watched lots of videos but this video is the most informative one, and you guys talk about things that are mostly never been said from others! A huge like from me !
Great to hear your experiences! 😃😃🙏 Supporter from Sweden here. 🇸🇪🇸🇪 Well edited as always! 💯✨
Wow!! I've never heard about the topic about the skies and clouds 🌅 🌄 thanx!😁
happy sunday yeseul and cast 🤠
Very nice video ! It was interesting to have their experiences ! Thank u Peach 🍑❤️
🧡🧡
Genie is such a sweetie! Love her ❤️
This vid brings back my own memories of travelling to Europe on different occasions as I could relate to many of their experiences, except the blue sky as I come Australia and we already have lots of that...lol...😜
PD NIM editing/post production skills so on point always - so cool 😎
Please make a detailed video of your life experiences in italy and Spain. We really want to know more🤩
8:10 As a Spanish, I think it's necessary to clarify something about Siesta. In other countries, they used this cliche against us to call Spanish lazy people. But in the summer, when it's really hot weather, people need to stop in the hotter hours of the day. So it's very usual, that shops are closed that hours and streets are empty. However, shops are open until 22:00 h.
I live i the netherlands. If it rains there you can't have a umbrella because of the wind is to hard. So most of the time it breaks. So people don't use them just raincoats. And my mother always said that i wasn't made of sugar so you won't melt away when you get wet.
Pretty accurate I think, and to be honest I found it very cool how open you talked about your experiences!
I'm always learning more Old Wive's Tales from Korea when I watch content like this LOL.
-Leaving a fan on overnight will cause you to suffocate in your sleep
-Playing with fire will make you wet the bed
-Letting your hair get wet will cause hair loss
Are there any others you guys have picked up on?
@@HamsterTubeHD I haven't been all over the world, so I wouldn't know about the 2nd two. I only know that it's not a thing in America, and that I've only ever heard them said by Koreans.
@@Kingdom_Of_Dreams ah my bad, for all over the world I intended that you can hear that in many countries not everywhere, I wrote the sentence too fast haha
... for example the fire one , you can hear it in Poland...
Speaking of the first one about the fan, in Italy they say it isn't so good for you to sleep in front of a functioning fan because it can give you back pain or a headache. :)
Yeees finally someone who has been to Hungary 😍❤️
Greetings from Hungary 🇭🇺😘
If you like iced coffee visit Greece ! Frappe and freddo (espresso or capucinno) are the best !
Oh, they should go down/around the Equator line to see some of the most beautiful skies (and clouds) there is.
this was really informative
I really love ( big fan of ) Suho & Genie! I appreciate Suho & Genie sharing their views and experiences with us! Suho was so cute showing how they dance/twerk in Barcelona! That was so funny! This was really interesting! I enjoyed this video a lot! Well done!
Thank you! 🙏🧡
I'm so early peaches and also I'm shocked whenever they said peaches cause it sounded like b...hes haha.....
I love how Genie laugh and how she be herself in every video. I love her and i even follow her on ig 😁❤️
I’ve noticed that about the clouds!! I see a lot of Koreans post pictures when there are clear skies😸
Happy to see something about Italy finally ☺️☺️🇮🇹🇮🇹!!!! Pls do more european videos.
SHOCKED about The sky color! In Italy we also roll cigarettes, it costs a lot less.
Yeseul is GOALS... and you can't change my mind.
You guys are so cute, wish you all the best in life!
i need a part 2
I studied Seoul's air pollution in college, but I never knew it was so bad that the sky color is affected that badly...
Thanks for the subscribe reminder in the beginning i was always watching the videos and i thought i was already subscribed :D
Haha so it is actually working! 😆 Thank you! 🙏🧡
No,thank you for the great content 😊
I just love her laugh💜
6:54 that's the same in Australia too. We have a strong coffee culture, so Starbucks failed here. Now they only have a few stores strategically placed in high tourist traffic locations in order to 'offer tourists a familiar taste of home'.
Oh really I’m actually surprised about the sky and cloud thing haha (4:37 guilty 🤣 rolling cigarettes that is so French I’m deaddd)
I found your video yesterday. You are so funny to watch!!!👍👏😘
Thank you Danila! 🧡☺️
yesterday I watched a video about rain in Seoul. So there was a person who was walking through Seoul for 1,5h during heavy rain a night. and I was soo surprised and amazed that EVERYONE had an umbrella, there wasn't one person without one (and there were many people). It looked really pretty with the colorful lights of Seoul at night plus the colorful umbrellas. Here in Germany many people wait under a roof until the rain stops or wear a jacket with a hood. If I know its gonna rain a lot, I'm bringing an umbrella but most of the times it's raining and I'm not prepared.😂😩
An Americano is the hot drink. What they're talking about is an iced Americano.
Here in New Zealand there are "some" Starbucks but there's a strong coffee culture, especially here in Wellington so the locals generally don't go there. Maybe if they want one of the flavoured ones or something.
The coffee of choice here is a "flat white" which is a double shot espresso with steamed milk but very little foam. Less foam than a latte.
Omggg Genie, you are sooooo prettyyyy
Some of these of course, cannot be applied to every european country. I live in Finland and we don't have tipping culture because waiters already have tips counted in their salary. Some cafes and restaurants have a tip jar but it's mainly for if you want to thank for good service and support the whole cafe/restaurant instead of just one person.
Also, in here stores aren't closed on sundays. They used to be though like 10 years ago but we changed law so now stores are open every day of the week. And we have stores that are open 24/7 but most stores close either 6pm or 9pm.
I’m so happy she visited Italy, she totally knows about our customs and she speaks (Italian) so well
Coffee! YES! Portugal and Italy represent!
she's so pretty omg
The rain thing - I am only worried if I wear make-up, so that it won't smudge, or when there's a shower, and I would get wet in no time, otherwise I don't bother opening an umbrella...
0:27 damn Allianz arena I only live 20 km away aaaa
Oh my love, they are such sweethearts
Here in the Philippines, wherever it is, people can take shower and enjoy in the rain. It is one of the best childhood memory a child could have.
Opening hours on Sundays are different in every country. However, a good rule of thumb is that catholic countries are more likely to have stores closed on Sundays and holidays, whereas protestant countries are less likely. But of course, it can still vary a lot. Do research before you arrive and you'll be fine