Things Japanese People Think Are Totally Normal But Others Find Totally Bizarre

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  • Опубликовано: 10 дек 2024

Комментарии • 1,9 тыс.

  • @evilwelshman
    @evilwelshman Год назад +729

    Next in this series, I really think we should cover things that are normal in Czech Republic but weird everywhere else. The number of Simon's tangents will be amazing. 😁😁

    • @RC-14
      @RC-14 Год назад +39

      5h of not actually what the title promised? Count me in!

    • @kamukameh
      @kamukameh Год назад +9

      Greatest beer culture of the world (ex aequo with Belgium)!

    • @Thusal99
      @Thusal99 Год назад +12

      Replying so this gets made

    • @ellalawrence5597
      @ellalawrence5597 Год назад +8

      Epic blaze episode?

    • @liszcgsedt
      @liszcgsedt Год назад +3

      Nazino island, Dyatlov pass, well, why not Prague then!

  • @ilicarriedoll2843
    @ilicarriedoll2843 Год назад +94

    Sam's editing really reached a whole new level and I must thank Kevin for the script for giving the opportunity for us to enjoy this glorious work (and ofc Simon's tangent as well).

  • @wwx-lwj-ai-ni
    @wwx-lwj-ai-ni Год назад +456

    Just FYI, I think the ban on donating blood if you're British has to do with mad cow disease. I've seen something about people being banned if they received a blood transfusion in the UK within a certain range of years in the 80s/90s

    • @twiggyjali
      @twiggyjali Год назад +40

      yup, that's exactly it

    • @ladygrndr9424
      @ladygrndr9424 Год назад +63

      Right. British people who lived in the UK and tourists who traveled to the UK during the mad cow times are prohibited from donating blood in the US as well.

    • @Nostripe361
      @Nostripe361 Год назад +19

      It is. The us has a ban on blood transfusion from some British people for the same reason.

    • @Darkflowerchyld718
      @Darkflowerchyld718 Год назад +32

      Didn't Simon do a video on this? 😂😂😂

    • @frankhaugen
      @frankhaugen Год назад +33

      Same ban here in Norway for UK citizens and people having lived in the UK in a certain time frame. That grinding up cows to feed the to cows to save money was a really good idea 😂. Simon Should do a video on it

  • @The_Blazement
    @The_Blazement Год назад +13

    If you wanna talk about weird vending machines, there was a vending machine in Seattle for almost 30 years which managed to gain an almost mythical status. Nobody ever saw anyone stocking the machine, yet it never ran out of drinks. All of the buttons said "mystery" on them, and it dispensed drinks that were normally unavailable in the US and even some that had been discontinued since the '80s.
    Sadly it vanished mid-2018

    • @sydneyslaughter7163
      @sydneyslaughter7163 5 месяцев назад +4

      The SCP Foundation finally found a way to contain it

    • @tateranus4365
      @tateranus4365 11 дней назад

      @@sydneyslaughter7163 I seriously wouldn't be surprised if the MSS (china's poor excuse for an intelligence agency) has something akin to the chaos insurgency, considering they have gotten caught red handed working with anthrax and plague on US soil, are highly suspected in dozens of terror attacks, have been caught red handed arming and training cartel sicarios, have been caught dozens of times shipping entire container ships full of fentanyl to Mexico, and they are getting caught using slave labor on goods they export (that has been illegal for the better part of a century) at least 2 or 3 times a month and that is just the tiny fraction we can prove... those idiots being involved in a literal satanic cult like some south park parody wouldn't surprise me one bit at this point...

  • @growingayeard1061
    @growingayeard1061 Год назад +43

    As an American living in Japan, I might be the demographic for this video...
    Also - the vending machine right outside your apartment is awesome. The morning after a night out, stumbling out in your pajamas to get a canned coffee (hot or cold) is great.

    • @EliotChildress
      @EliotChildress Год назад +1

      I also live in japan and gotta say I’m jealous. My closest vending machine is a half hour walk. But then again my town is VERY inaka.

    • @growingayeard1061
      @growingayeard1061 Год назад

      @@EliotChildress I'm envious - my wife and I are saving up to buy an akiya out in inaka. :)

  • @dameneko
    @dameneko Год назад +14

    My mom used English with me in a Japanese way, and it was the most obtuse, infuriating thing ever, communication-wise. She'd get angry if I asked for something directly (without showing adequate uncertainty or self-deprecation), she'd expect me to read her mind, and talk about herself in the third person. I studied Japanese for many years, both at home and formally, and while I love and appreciate the language, I will say that it is the most passive-aggressive language, depending on the context.

  • @scubaad64
    @scubaad64 Год назад +47

    "And then I imagine, Texas is different". An understatement the size of Texas itself. While traveling abroad, I heard the voice of a fellow American, and before I could go say hi, another person went to them and excitedly said "Are you from America?" The guy said, "No, I'm from Texas." That pretty much sums up a lot of Texans that I know. XD

    • @davedavidson8208
      @davedavidson8208 Год назад +10

      Yeah, really big egos basically. Thats why most Americans view Texans as annoying

    • @scubaad64
      @scubaad64 Год назад +2

      @@davedavidson8208 I have nothing against them. Most of them are a lot of fun to be around. I found the exchange mentioned above to be really funny, not annoying. Like every other place, a few bad apples give the rest a bad rep. And, a vast majority of the people I know have no issues with Texans, so maybe it's just most of the people in your state find them annoying. I challenge the assertion most Americans find them annoying. Some certainly do find them annoying, but Nothing in my experience with others leads me to believe that most people feel that way.

    • @davedavidson8208
      @davedavidson8208 Год назад +5

      @@scubaad64 most folks I know don't like Texans because they're pretty much guaranteed at some point, to think they are special because they are from Texas.
      It's a really weird thing.
      Meanwhile, most folks from Alaska are very modest.
      Two rural hard areas that breed different people, one much more unlikable than the other.

    • @rickwilliams967
      @rickwilliams967 Год назад +1

      There's so many spots in the US that are really strange. I've been all over myself. Seen around two thirds of the states. There are differences in each state on its own even. A lot of them are massive.

    • @rickwilliams967
      @rickwilliams967 Год назад

      ​@@davedavidson8208and no, there's been a movement for them to secede from the country. They're technically a republic. But still part of the country. Won't work, because of the lack of resources, but it's definitely a different place. Not cocky though, they just follow their own rules.

  • @Fuchswinter
    @Fuchswinter Год назад +17

    Vending machines for fresh produce are actually becoming more prominent in Germany. They're typically near a road or intersection with a farm nearby, so the produce is provided by that specific farm. I've gotten all sorts of stuff, from eggs to milk and potatoes from them. It's really cool and circumvents the issue that many small farms don't have the staff or money to run actual stores on their properties. :)

    • @insaincaldo
      @insaincaldo 7 месяцев назад +2

      Better then having staff tend to a stall all day, or the few that just go by some honor system. Makes allot of sense to set up a vending machine.

  • @straymerodach4713
    @straymerodach4713 Год назад +177

    Sounds like Simon need to do another video on Mad Cow disease and the British response to the issue to remember why he`s Banned from donating blood

    • @angerona7366
      @angerona7366 Год назад +10

      Was just coming here to say this

    • @tomrance7142
      @tomrance7142 Год назад

      @@angerona7366same!

    • @b3ans4eva
      @b3ans4eva Год назад +3

      This. Same in New Zealand. My Dad was a regular giver for years until they imposed the ban.

    • @mattiemathis9549
      @mattiemathis9549 Год назад +4

      I was in Germany and I can’t donate. The Red Cross come begging the soldiers for their blood every six weeks, not after that!!😂😂😂😂

    • @elizabethebbighausen9341
      @elizabethebbighausen9341 Год назад +11

      Exactly right! Besides, who wants Simon's blood? Someone incapable of going on a tangent? Someone who wants to know how it feels to turn a 2 paragraph intro into a 20 minute rant/story-telling adventure just to turn around and blame the guys in the Blazement? 😉😆🤣😘 Nah, we love you, Simon! But seriously, you can keep your vCJD. We're straight... 😆🤣

  • @ultimateskillchain
    @ultimateskillchain Год назад +42

    Simon being blissfully unaware of the lucrative market for used women's underwear is almost adorable

    • @cheeseisdelicious111
      @cheeseisdelicious111 Год назад +2

      Haha yup.... he's so lovely

    • @nobodyfamousX
      @nobodyfamousX Год назад +5

      I'm jealous. I wish I could return to innocence, and be unaware of this. And the many other insane things I've seen online.

    • @DanaTheInsane
      @DanaTheInsane Год назад

      Except it’s not. They were very few of those machines and they’ve been gone for a long time.

    • @ultimateskillchain
      @ultimateskillchain Год назад +8

      @@DanaTheInsane oh I don't mean the machines, I mean the fact that there's a market/demand for them at all. There are websites, etc

    • @occamraiser
      @occamraiser Год назад

      Urban myth, surely. It can't be more than a very very minority fetish.

  • @NextEevolution
    @NextEevolution Год назад +80

    I love how Simon unintentionally hires writers and editors who manage to slip in anime references in their work.
    And I laugh my ass off when Sam shows how big a weeaboo he is

    • @dutchvanderlinde2002
      @dutchvanderlinde2002 Год назад +6

      I was happily surprised to see Detective Lunge trying to be Asian thats personally one of my favorite anime scenes

  • @heathersmith8549
    @heathersmith8549 Год назад +9

    The vending machine selling cans of iced coffee are something I still miss to this day, 30 years after I lived in Japan.
    I think for most people Christmas is mostly a secular holiday these days.

    • @wingerding
      @wingerding 6 месяцев назад

      Lol theres over a billion christians.

  • @StephyShadows27
    @StephyShadows27 Год назад +39

    The reason that you can’t give blood Simon is because of the mad cow issues back in the 80s and 90s. People can still be carriers of the prion disease decades after being exposed.

  • @babblerscorner
    @babblerscorner Год назад +10

    Personality is determined by the electric meatball in your skull. Also Kevin and Danny scripts working to break Simon are such treats.

  • @ThatWriterKevin
    @ThatWriterKevin Год назад +30

    When I'm writing, I normally think about what sort of tangents Simon might go on throughout the episode. Vending machines creating an incest porn tangent was NOT on my radar.

    • @phantomechelon3628
      @phantomechelon3628 4 месяца назад

      Given Simon's tangents are the main reason we watch BB - its time to up the weirdness! 😆

  • @ukdecay7587
    @ukdecay7587 Год назад +20

    The gacha machine for the "used panties" shown looked like it was in a random shop. My friend, whom recently got married in Japan, told everyone it was a myth. In M's department store (for adult goods) in Tokyo we found very real used panties which showed pictures of what you could expect including period panties...you're welcome.

    • @riskvideos
      @riskvideos Год назад +3

      There was an itty bitty shop in between akihabara and asakusa that's just crammed full of JAV and lewd toys that had a couple of used panties gacha machines too. Oddly enough I spotted a big gypsy danger just standing on a pile of DVDs and the fact that it just stood out so easily was a surreal experience.
      Anyways Japan is a hell of a place. Would visit again.

  • @Saburi0504
    @Saburi0504 Год назад +69

    We lived in Okinawa for three years when I was a teenager. There was an ice skating rink that had vending machines for hot chocolate and hot ramen. It was fantastic and a highlight of my childhood.

    • @StephyShadows27
      @StephyShadows27 Год назад +2

      I lived on Okinawa too as a kid!

    • @221b-l3t
      @221b-l3t Год назад +1

      Well ramen is just dehydrated noodles being rehydrated, it doesn't spoil. Meat is a little different. Necer trusted a vending machine sandwich.

  • @ambition112
    @ambition112 Год назад +38

    2:38: 🇯🇵 Life in Japan is different from life in America, and there are some bizarre things that might need to be shrugged off if visiting Japan.
    3:40: 🍜 Japan is known for its wide variety of items in vending machines, including hot food.
    6:57: 🎄 Japan has a unique culture around vending machines and celebrates Christmas differently.
    12:06: 🍗 In Japan, celebrating Christmas with KFC is a popular tradition.
    15:37: 😲 The belief in blood type personalities, similar to astrology, is popular in Japan but debunked by psychology.
    19:01: 🗑 In Japan, blood type is seen as an important factor in social interactions, employment, and education. Trash cans are scarce in public areas, and eating on public transport is prohibited.
    22:34: 🇯🇵 Japanese culture values cleanliness and indirect communication, and women traditionally dress in layers during the summer months to prevent tanning.
    26:10: 🤔 Traditional marriage proposals in Japan often involve the man asking the woman to cook for him, but modern women prefer more romantic and less servile proposals.
    Recap by Tammy AI

    • @aanchaallllllll
      @aanchaallllllll Год назад +2

      Damnn this looks pretty summarized. What tool did you use??

    • @Jays-Dream
      @Jays-Dream Год назад

      What I find fascinating is that japan has the Blood-Type personality belief, while South Korea is really into the 16 MBTI personalities.

    • @greenhowie
      @greenhowie Год назад

      I hate this so, so much.

  • @arcturionblade1077
    @arcturionblade1077 Год назад +91

    Lived in Japan for 11 years (4 years in Okinawa and 7 in Tokyo). It's super safe, mass transit is great, and the recent/current yen to USD exchange rate is very favorable to Americans.
    Lots to see and do travel and sightseeing-wise, and the food scene (and vending machines) is just awesome.
    The Japanese are very polite and friendly, even if there are the occasional belligerent drunken salaryman knob and overly pushy J-cop.

    • @yishihara55527
      @yishihara55527 Год назад

      You left out the deep racism and the fact that no fucks are given when they overwork someone to death.

    • @modvavet
      @modvavet Год назад +7

      I lived in Oki for a year. I know there's that whole thing in Japanese culture (to be fair, probably not so much in Okinawa) about having an agreeable public face and a more personal private face, but those people were just largely very warm and kind. Goes double the further you get from an American military base. :P

    • @yishihara55527
      @yishihara55527 Год назад +6

      @@modvavet Honestly, you should look at Okinawa as if it were another country. The people of the Ryukyu Islands are of a different ethnic group. They are more like the aboriginals of Taiwan.

    • @modvavet
      @modvavet Год назад +1

      @@yishihara55527 agreed. Especially among the older folks, though even when I was there 22 years ago the younger people were noticeably diverging from their elders.
      I miss it. One of the best years of my life!

    • @yishihara55527
      @yishihara55527 Год назад

      @@modvavet We call that the "honeymoon" phase. After that, people start noticing the suckage. Were you at Futenma?

  • @diyeana
    @diyeana Год назад +17

    I want to go to Japan one day because I enjoy experiencing different cultures and think Japan sounds beautiful. They have a rich history and I want to experience it all myself.

    • @cheekyb71
      @cheekyb71 Год назад +3

      If you ever get the chance I hope you do go, I spent a fortnight there in 2012 and it was GLORIOUS. The people are so lovely, the culture is mind-blowing, the architecture is stunning. I would absolutely move to Japan if I ever got the chance ❤

    • @runed0s86
      @runed0s86 Год назад

      I've heard that there are more foreigners in Tokyo than actual Citizens

    • @powbobs
      @powbobs Год назад

      @@runed0s86
      You heard wrong.
      About four percent of the Tokyo population is foreign.

  • @Tenchinu
    @Tenchinu Год назад +35

    I want a tangent edit compilation now.
    They are so creative, think Sam deserves a raise for them alone

  • @BluegrassKnight
    @BluegrassKnight Год назад +4

    Yes Simon, I can confirm you do get a Greyhound ticket when you're released from prison, as far as the money goes that depends on what state you are in and whether you we're in the federal or state system. Also, i can't believe KFC is more popular in Japan, than it is here in Kentucky and the USA is huge, that's why everyone needs a car here! Great video Simon!!

  • @zachsmith8633
    @zachsmith8633 Год назад +106

    The rule against british giving blood is a mad cow disease thing. America asks if you were in britain during certain years as well

    • @pgwchaos
      @pgwchaos Год назад +2

      It is the same if you lived in Europe overall, I remember I couldn't give blood because I lived in (West) Germany during the 80s, which there was a mad cow out break. (I do think they did reverse it now)

    • @globalrevolution
      @globalrevolution Год назад +2

      Germany has the exact same rule

    • @cos-9113
      @cos-9113 Год назад +1

      In the US if you lived in Europe during certain years, not just the UK. They may have relaxed this now though, since if you caught Mad Cow presumably you’d be dead by now….

    • @mandaout2427
      @mandaout2427 Год назад

      New Zealand too

    • @thebirdchannelforfans623
      @thebirdchannelforfans623 Год назад

      In Canada as well

  • @cartertoshner1105
    @cartertoshner1105 Год назад +7

    It is also often VERY expensive to go outside of the continental US. Unless you are going to canada or mexico flying over the oceans to get anywhere else takes alot longer than just going from one euro country to another.

  • @roberw1912
    @roberw1912 Год назад +58

    Vending machines are great, you get what you want without any human interaction

    • @Dannie-My0wnReality
      @Dannie-My0wnReality Год назад +9

      I wish I could get through life doing things with little to no human interaction 😂

    • @mentalshatter
      @mentalshatter Год назад

      Exactly

    • @Iris_and_or_George
      @Iris_and_or_George Год назад +2

      You also missing that social distancing Utopia we used to have?😂

    • @gabrielpartanen1194
      @gabrielpartanen1194 Год назад +3

      Human interaction is a good thing for most people. Maybe you should get checked out for mental illness.

    • @oxylepy2
      @oxylepy2 Год назад +3

      ​​​@@Antsylumthe problem (narrowed to only the topical ones) with self checkout seems to be that they're like trying to cram as many people into the area as possible now. Then you got all these dudes like straight ramming their carts into the machines and other people taking up AS MUCH SPACE AS THEY CAN in self checkout. I kinda wish the company minders that stand around to make sure you aren't hiding ipods in a tote, could carry water spray bottles and treat some of the *holes in self checkout like the animals they are

  • @miguelm6794
    @miguelm6794 Год назад +9

    As a Canadian living in Japan, thanks for making this!!!

  • @QueenDramaLlama
    @QueenDramaLlama Год назад +72

    16:19 Simon is spot-on about the Meyers-Briggs. It was created for career placement many moons ago. In psychology, it's proven to not be very reliable as the answers/outcomes will differ depending on what a person is going through at the time, their mood, sense of self, etc.

    • @ThePhysicalReaction
      @ThePhysicalReaction Год назад +9

      additionally: Meyers-Briggs tests (like other personality tests) are observational as opposed to predictive. EG: a profession might have a much higher occurrence of a specific meyers-briggs "type" than the general population. However, that does not mean those in the general population with that "type" will, with any consistency, enter that profession or do well in it.

    • @KattMurr
      @KattMurr Год назад +2

      Meyers- Briggs was created by a housewife and her daughter...

    • @bechaupt865
      @bechaupt865 Год назад +2

      And it was originally created for dating not occupational placement.

    • @Ben_B_Artist
      @Ben_B_Artist Год назад +5

      I once heard it described as astrology for people who like forms

    • @clogs4956
      @clogs4956 Год назад +3

      My workplace once gave staff Myers-Briggs for ‘a bit of fun’. Needless to say, the results were used to sideline people who didn’t fit the preferred profile…

  • @SellswordArts
    @SellswordArts Год назад +5

    I've always called the Myers-Brigg personality test horoscopes for business people 😂

  • @toddavis8151
    @toddavis8151 Год назад +23

    Growing up in Canberra Australia, the local carillon used to play Christmas carols on Christmas Eve. It became a tradition for our family to get take away KFC and have a picnic dinner by the lake while listening to it.
    Now that they no longer do the traditional carols we have still kept the KFC part going but now we have it while watching Christmas shows on tv

    • @belle.m
      @belle.m Год назад

      Our tradition in Melbourne was pizza while watching Carols by Candlelight

  • @wyntermyst
    @wyntermyst Год назад +4

    The editing in this one is just *chef's kiss*
    Even more wonderful job than usual, Samuel!

  • @zwerko
    @zwerko Год назад +25

    Regarding the questionable content of adult websites and the weird overrun of, shall we say, Alabama-friendly materials-a person from that industry explained to me that while it's nowhere near majority, a considerable number of people consider that extra-kinky and while they do not necessarily harbor such fantasies, adding that little spiciness gets them going. The vast majority skip the plot details anyway so this way they cover both, the kinky and the 'regular' consumers without having to create two distinct pieces of content.

    • @Sniperboy5551
      @Sniperboy5551 Год назад +8

      That makes sense. I’ll have to let my step-sis know… 🤣

    • @sboinkthelegday3892
      @sboinkthelegday3892 Год назад

      Realism is Bad, Actually - video by zoe Bee, explains extensively with sources. I forget the GDC pulpit that made a very concise point of the same thing.
      It's interesting because it ISN'T real. Normal functioning people who are NOT addicted to escapism, have a separate mental layer for IMAGERY, information delivered through semiotics. The only reason some basic ideas like innocence is BRANDED onto children, is because moralists USE children as a different kind of material for exploitation, their little objectified plaything that sits nice being all innocent and stuff for their pleasure.
      This mainstream culture causes "kinks", it can target ACTUAL OBEJCTIFIED HUMANS, like sexism does to women, or it can target violent catharsis in video games, or it can target a cartoon like some Mickey Mouse -looking anime girl labeled as "child". It has nothing to do with the actual expereince of touching a human being and recognizing their consent. The human beings involved in media are the artists and the consumer.
      The only people who THINK otherwise, sadly are part of the mainstream and DO NOT think, and by all evidence DO NOT recognize consent, like at all in their lives, and are anxious about the fact they don't recognize the lack of it in children. They're the people lynching each other on mere accusation, and then go back JOKING about it.

  • @danicalifornia505
    @danicalifornia505 Год назад +1

    9:26 Jen dropping the ‘it’s Heiti and it’s art’ from the office was a perfect drop. Thank you Jen.

  • @patc1096
    @patc1096 Год назад +19

    Sam and the team at the formerly business place now brain blaze. You guys should take all the tangents and throw them into a giant marathon. Just so we have something to show how much random content gets thrown in. There's a reason people enjoy this.

  • @sinhelproductions
    @sinhelproductions Год назад +7

    I like the Japanese schools, I've heard the first few years they teach manner to the kids. That's why the Japanese people are so nice and polite.

  • @ianmurphy9955
    @ianmurphy9955 Год назад +33

    Brain Blaze Simon is a different than other channels and we love it 😂

    • @OhiChicken
      @OhiChicken Год назад +3

      I feel like Brain Blaze Simon is just all of a outtakes of him just being himself while filming other videos

    • @ianmurphy9955
      @ianmurphy9955 Год назад

      @@OhiChicken Lol me too

    • @haraberu
      @haraberu Год назад +1

      It's like a reaction video, but instead of reacting to someone else's content he reacts to his own script.

    • @jaylang11
      @jaylang11 Год назад +4

      cocaine

    • @AdamOBrien29
      @AdamOBrien29 Год назад

      Never heard of brain blaze, he's quite funny on business blaze tho

  • @StefaniScheck
    @StefaniScheck Год назад +2

    Simon, I love watching your videos and i love your tangents and humor. I’ve been in a low place lately and watching your videos gets me to laugh. Thank you for being genuinely you ❤️

  • @johnriley4185
    @johnriley4185 Год назад +22

    Yes Simon at least here in Florida,when released from state prison they give you a greyhound bus ticket and $100 plus any money you may have had earned or had sent to you.

    • @Charli_Champagne
      @Charli_Champagne Год назад +1

      Came to say this. They will also use Amtrak trains depending on where you are

    • @rainzerdesu
      @rainzerdesu Год назад

      Speaking of the federal prisons (worked there), they will give you whatever mode of transport gets you reasonably to your release address. Bus, train, taxi, plane, whatever. You work with the release coordinator to discuss your plans, tell you your probation officer (you'll be on federal supervision), and verify what address is "home". They'll check this with US Pretrail and Probation and your probation officer whether this is a valid address with a landline phone (your probation officer will check the address in person to verify before your release).

    • @tubensalat1453
      @tubensalat1453 Год назад

      Here in Germany they arrange accommodation and work before you're released so you don't have to pick up old contacts & habits... At least I believe that's how it works, would be interesting to see if recidivism is actually lower.

  • @digitalyume
    @digitalyume Год назад +1

    These are so well-written, brilliantly tangent-filled, and amazingly edited. I have nothing negative to say 😂😂

  • @eetadakimasu
    @eetadakimasu Год назад +64

    😂😂😂 5 years later I finally understand why I offended a British person! Thanks for explaining 'quite nice'!

    • @Jessepigman69
      @Jessepigman69 Год назад +13

      If you offended them over that, they are too soft. Not worthy of being called British

    • @nulious
      @nulious Год назад +4

      Bless your heart

    • @eetadakimasu
      @eetadakimasu Год назад +4

      @@nulious 😂😂😂(ya ya, I know) I just wish they'd told me!!! We need a Southern-Across the Pond dictionary!

    • @ACME_Kinetics
      @ACME_Kinetics Год назад

      @@eetadakimasu there's a channel called Lost in the Pond, and it's quite nice.

    • @belle.m
      @belle.m Год назад +1

      If you said something is ‘quite nice’ in Australia, it has a similar meaning of not being very impressed.

  • @kg-Whatthehelliseventhat
    @kg-Whatthehelliseventhat Год назад +3

    I was born in the States and now live in Japan. There were a few things that had me twisted when I first got here but have come to appreciate.
    A dish for everything and only that specific thing for 1 person. Everyone has their own rice bowl, fish plate...
    Different shoes for different rooms.
    Smoke inside, talk loud inside, talk softly outside...
    I can't think of anything ATM, I haven't had my coffee.

    • @221b-l3t
      @221b-l3t Год назад +1

      That's common in much of Asia, China as well everyone gets a bowl of rice and a plate and then the main dishes are on one of those spinning thingies and you take from there a bit like a buffet. People will order what they want but it's still for everyone so it is discussed, like oh you already ordered the fish, I'll take that then, rather than 6 ordering the same. The variety is nice and between all thr dishes your alwaya guaranteed to have something you enjoy. Thailand similar, bowl of rice plus big pot of curry and everyone takes some and pour it over their rice. I actually love that. I wish it was an option in Europe. You only pay one dish but get to try a whole bunch, and there is rarely dispute on the bill because people will just pay what they ordered.

  • @MostDopeWooper
    @MostDopeWooper Год назад +21

    I would love to go to Japan for the car scene, go to Ebisu and try some drifting, but I also know people that want to go for nature and temples and such, others to see some war stuff.
    Japan, so many reasons to go.

    • @rubiconnn
      @rubiconnn Год назад +4

      Go for the nerd stuff, leave for the racism.

    • @Sniperboy5551
      @Sniperboy5551 Год назад

      You into JDM cars?

    • @OneOfDisease
      @OneOfDisease Год назад

      Goto Japan and try some drifting? There are places that you can watch other people drift.

    • @TheRealMarxz
      @TheRealMarxz Год назад

      assuming you mean Ebisu race track.. I lived in Ebisu (which is actually about 300klm from the race track) and I can confirm there was no drifting happening there

    • @a.mathis9454
      @a.mathis9454 Год назад

      Go to Disneyland, it’s wild to see Mickey and Minnie speaking Japanese! 😂😂

  • @Silentgrace11
    @Silentgrace11 Год назад +3

    The thing with Meyers Briggs, along with a good number of “this arbitrary thing = this personality” things, often operate on the basis of confirmation bias. A lot of the information in them are very generalized so that they’re applicable to a large amount of people without much fuss, which makes it easier to buy into as you’re reading into that description for INTJ and saying “that’s meeeeee” even though it’s theoretically the rarest Meyer Briggs result.

    • @mostlyvoid.partiallystars
      @mostlyvoid.partiallystars Год назад +1

      Similar to horoscopes. :) and numerology haha.

    • @tharmas13
      @tharmas13 Год назад

      The difference being that with Meyers- Briggs, the outcome is based on how YOU, feel about certain situations, how YOU think about stuff, the person YOU are. Not some arbitrary stuff like what blood type you have or the date you were born. They also acknowledge that having 16 "types" does create a limit and depending on how far you scale types are more or less precise. And they also recognize that your type is not a set thing. It's a description of you at that time and can change as you grow, learn and change as a person.

  • @erikkornfeld785
    @erikkornfeld785 Год назад +6

    Texas has a pecan pie shop which has a vending out front selling their products. Which seems weird, until you find out that they close at reasonable hours and the vending machine becomes quite active after they close. When a Texan wants a pecan pie they want a pecan pie.

    • @mostlyvoid.partiallystars
      @mostlyvoid.partiallystars Год назад +1

      This Alabamian would 100% appreciate the hell out of a 24h pie machine, holy shite the possibilities. Derby pie! Strawberry rhubarb! Peach! Omg a cobbler vending machine! Blackberry mmm.
      Might be midnight snack time. 🎉

    • @erikkornfeld785
      @erikkornfeld785 Год назад +1

      @@mostlyvoid.partiallystars you know... If I could get the revenue to start it, it probably would be a pretty good business.

  • @ignitionfrn2223
    @ignitionfrn2223 Год назад +5

    2:35 - Chapter 1 - Vending machines
    9:40 - Chapter 2 - Simon's favourite holiday
    13:50 - Chapter 3 - Blood type personality theory
    20:30 - Chapter 4 - Everything is clean
    24:05 - Chapter 5 - Bundle up for summer
    25:15 - Chapter 6 - Weird marriage proposals

  • @hummy19
    @hummy19 Год назад +22

    Sam is a true man of culture

  • @WayneKitching
    @WayneKitching Год назад +1

    I am South African and a blood donor. One of the questions we have to answer is about whether you've been in the UK for a certain amount of time in the 90s. It's about mad cow and Creutzfeldt-Jakob diseases.

  • @gmoney4980
    @gmoney4980 Год назад +14

    While I haven't been in Japan for a LONG time, I was born there (military kid). After hearing & knowing about the KFC thing, in which KFC is VERY popular. But I just realized that I do not recall ever having a whole roasted turkey in Japan. Not even turkey legs. 😂

  • @fdeyso
    @fdeyso Год назад +1

    One key thing that everyone forgets about japanese vending machines: THEY ARE CHEAP, THEY BARELY COST MORE THAN THE ONES IN A SHOP, I know it’s hard to imagine not having to shell out £5 for a small lukewarm coke, when you can have a huge variety of hot or cold (icecold) drinks for the same or similar price as in a shop.

  • @MOsaucy
    @MOsaucy Год назад +10

    As an American, I would like to say that I would love to travel abroad. We don't get the time off to make overseas trips worth it.

    • @sipjedekat8525
      @sipjedekat8525 Год назад

      It's really a shame you guys have that all work no vacation ideology going on over there.

    • @han5vk
      @han5vk Год назад

      @@deadzio Lol what? Only in the US. In the EU you get at least 20 but typically 25+ days vacation a year by law. And unlimited sick days.

    • @han5vk
      @han5vk Год назад

      @@deadzio My boss doesn't decide shit, it's the law.

    • @AdamOBrien29
      @AdamOBrien29 Год назад +1

      ​@@han5vkunlimited sick days lol nice joke

  • @LordClarkson
    @LordClarkson Год назад +1

    Brits weren't allowed to donate blood because of an outbreak of Mad Cow disease in the '90s, but that ban has now been lifted.

  • @mycorrhizae86
    @mycorrhizae86 Год назад +6

    The editing on this video is on point. Well done.

  • @nestoraquino-serrano7058
    @nestoraquino-serrano7058 Год назад +1

    I love that I can recall some of his tangents from other series now lmao
    He told the Prisoner-Vending machine story on Casual Criminalist, the episode about the Grayhound decapitation!

  • @deemariedubois4916
    @deemariedubois4916 Год назад +10

    A+ I looked up what the Japanese say about my blood type. “In the Japanese blood type personality chart, people with blood type A are known to be highly-organized, particularly precise, and pay much attention to details. They are diplomatic and friendly in nature, so you won’t have a hard time approaching them. They seek harmony among other people, but they sometimes prefer to be alone because of their sensitive nature.”
    I scanned the other blood types but didn’t find what I was looking for. I didn’t see serial killer in any of the 4 blood types Japan uses. I think finding out if say the majority of serial killers have the same blood type, now that would be interesting and important Science. When a baby is born with that blood type, there could be an agency that keeps an eye on them. Hey, I’d rather my taxes fund the KEEPING AN EYE ON POSSIBLE SERIAL KILLERS AGENCY-yea I know the name needs work, something more secretive-than thousands of more IRS agents.

    • @davedavidson8208
      @davedavidson8208 Год назад +1

      ...this is probably the most un-American and fascist idea I've ever seen someone have, without realizing it.
      You would support an agency that literally stalks people and passes judgement based on a single biological trait viewed as undesireable...?
      My man, that was called the SS... that was called stalins secret police...
      You need to actually use your brain sometime rather than just letting it fall out.

    • @diyeana
      @diyeana Год назад +4

      For a moment there I thought you were confessing to being a serial killer. Hasn't Simon taught you to never write down your crimes? 😂

  • @phranerphamily
    @phranerphamily Год назад +1

    We did blood typing in science class back in the 70s. As a Seattle-itteI can tell you that We didn't look like that until the early 2000s. And then for some reason people started moving there from all over the country and just putting tents on our street because they couldn't afford to rent anywhere. We have a huge problem with homelessness and most people are not from Seattle that are homeless

  • @dempseydoodle2010
    @dempseydoodle2010 Год назад +14

    I visited Japan 7 or 8 years ago during American Thanksgiving so I could get an extra couple days of PTO for the trip, the vending machines were amazing being able to stop on the corner and get a hot bottle of ginger tea while it was cold and raining was the best. I don't remember seeing many machines that weren't food or drink related though, any other items I wanted I went to a store for.

    • @patrickglaser1560
      @patrickglaser1560 Год назад +1

      It's just Thanksgiving... you have to preface the country of origin for everyone else!

    • @Spacemongerr
      @Spacemongerr Год назад

      ​@@patrickglaser1560 Your two sentences seem contradictory to me.
      Anyway, there are a handful of countries that celebrate thanksgiving and they don't all do it at the same dates

  • @ButWhyWasTaken
    @ButWhyWasTaken Год назад +1

    7:20 wow, this was the most old man like move I have ever seen.

  • @EricWall
    @EricWall Год назад +9

    Am I the only one that when I see something completely stupid during my work day I imagine Simon going off on a tangent about it?

  • @adamJKpunk
    @adamJKpunk Год назад +1

    The trade off is that people with O- blood are less susceptible to viral infections, and less likely to go bald for some reason, statistically speaking.

  • @matthewgeorge234
    @matthewgeorge234 Год назад +5

    I remember figuring out the blood type thing as a kid from video game character profiles. I started noticing patterns in character personalities based on their blood types.

    • @SuperKendoman
      @SuperKendoman Год назад

      Blood type marriages were a thing back then iirc. Which is absolute nonsense and already debunked. I'm glad society has improved a little when it comes to stuff like this. Imagine the family of your significant other rejecting you because of what nlood type you had, yikes

  • @michaelchriss3302
    @michaelchriss3302 Год назад +1

    Vending machines seem like something in which the Yakuza would be involved. Control areas, get a piece of each VM in their areas, muscle out any competition. That's a really nice VM you have there, be a shame if something were to happen to it.

  • @laner.845
    @laner.845 Год назад +4

    I used MB personality test stuff to learn about how people can view and react differently to the same situations. I'm not dead set on it being any particularly perfect or real thing, but what I've learned about people (because I became more interested in being a better friend, coworker, etc) based on some "strengths" and "weaknesses" listed among these personality types, let me better judge my own and work on being a better person in general. I think all of these pseudo-psyche things can be good tools if used to improve knowledge of how and why people are the way they are, and how to have better interactions with other people based on some very basic ideology about personalities and typical strengths/weaknesses of those personalities. They can't be taken as gospel-truth, though. So much more factors in: upbringing, neurodivergence, past trauma, etc, but it's a good starting point. It certainly helped me learn to be a better extrovert spouse to my introvert wife by forcing me to look critically at my own biases and weaknesses, and then work to overcome them.

  • @kidShibuya
    @kidShibuya Год назад +1

    25:01 This is just plain wrong, the opposite of the reality of working in Japan. It's always super hot inside any Japanese building. Trust me, I cannot get anything done in any office I have worked in. The average office temperature is around 27c and even then people have full suits and pretend to shiver because it's so cold. If the temp drops below 25c there are massive complaints.

  • @Fire_Score_Maximum
    @Fire_Score_Maximum Год назад +5

    What a coincidence that this video is uploaded on very my second day of Japanese Language and Culture class. 😅
    Maybe you guys should make a video about America and Britain’s special relationship.

  • @ButWhyWasTaken
    @ButWhyWasTaken Год назад +1

    1:42 "America is like the size of Europe" - Simon Whistler, 2023
    That time when both smallness of brain and smoothness of brain align perfectly...

  • @nofosho3567
    @nofosho3567 Год назад +16

    I’ve been living in Japan for half of my life. I’ve definitely waited in the bloody rain for an hour outside of KFC while my husband was at work. They also sell cakes lmao

    • @ThatWriterKevin
      @ThatWriterKevin Год назад +5

      Yeah, I didn't have room to mention the strawberry shortcake

    • @QBCPerdition
      @QBCPerdition Год назад

      KFCs in America sell cakes too. Chocolate is most common, but other kinds have been found, too.

    • @samstevens7888
      @samstevens7888 Год назад

      UK KFC sells cookies now.

    • @BBulletin
      @BBulletin Год назад

      Our local KFC burned down, so they don't sell anything right now... and now I am craving KFC! Dammit Simon!

    • @arcturionblade1077
      @arcturionblade1077 Год назад

      Karismasu keki.

  • @adde9506
    @adde9506 Год назад +1

    The editing of that Sears commercial knocked me over. For real laughing out loud. 💀

  • @CaedenV
    @CaedenV Год назад +4

    Part of it is anime... but part of the nerdy desire to go to Japan is that they embrace and use technology at a whole other level. I live in the midwest, a fairly large city but in the midwest. It is just starting to be normal that people have their phones out when walking around for something other than being on a phone call. But there is basically no technology out in the wild. They are just starting to install some video displays for public information along the sidewalks, and the opposition to it is palpable. Half of the ones that were installed have already been removed 3 months later. The idea of going to a country where things look 'futuristic' seems fascinating.

    • @sophykitten2212
      @sophykitten2212 Год назад +1

      Most of Japan isn't so futuristic though. Depending on where you are, it's a very important to carry cash. Credit cards are more likely in tourist areas. But of course, many places in Tokyo are as futuristic as it gets.

    • @tom.m
      @tom.m Год назад

      People actually looking at the world they're walking through, and no one wants bright adverts flashing at them everywhere they go?
      Sounds lovely.

    • @mostlyvoid.partiallystars
      @mostlyvoid.partiallystars Год назад

      I’m from Alabama. The fact that we just got a Slim Chickens in Athens was huge news lol. And yet, we build rockets too. I swear Alabama gets more weirdly dichotomous every year.

  • @kratze1738
    @kratze1738 Год назад +1

    Seattle: I haven't visited the city, but I did get to experience the airport recently. Virtually every seat had a large collection of trash beside it or under it, and sometimes in it. Sitting on the floor was pretty much a no-go (most airports you can get away with this). The entire place appeared to be used as a gigantic trash can, it was awful and it stunk in some spots as well. The announcements by Duff McKagan were the only thing the airport had going for it. Nothing against the folks who live there, but I never want to visit that airport again. Flew into Sacramento then and had my faith restored in humanity (kudos Sacramento!!).

  • @brandonfrench1699
    @brandonfrench1699 Год назад +6

    What would life be without Fact Boy?
    Probably about the same 😂😂😂
    I'm just kidding though - because I love Simon and ALL his channels!!!

    • @Aileil
      @Aileil Год назад

      Every time he says 'Fact Boy', I can't help but think about the Fact Sphere from Portal 2.

    • @AdamOBrien29
      @AdamOBrien29 Год назад

      Fact boi*

  • @kylerrectec6134
    @kylerrectec6134 Год назад +1

    My family celebrates our Norwegian heritage on Christmas Eve by eating lutefisk and lefse

  • @thechairman74
    @thechairman74 Год назад +5

    My family and I went to Hokkaido last month. There aren't as many vending machines as in Tokyo, but there were still a lot. Also, cigarette vending machines as well.

    • @SuperKendoman
      @SuperKendoman Год назад +1

      The first time I went to Japan I was really surprised how much japanese people smoked and there were so many cigarette vending machines. This was around 2002. Maybe things have changed since then

    • @thechairman74
      @thechairman74 Год назад

      @@SuperKendoman Not really. Maybe a bit fewer smokers, but still way more than western countries.

  • @machenka
    @machenka Год назад +1

    10:45 Denmark here and we have always had our Christmas celebration on the evening of the 24th. The 25th and 26th does not really have any fixed traditions - it’s just holidays you can spend with family and friends. To me it’s always been weird to see how Christmas was on the 25th in the US and UK, while it’s the 24th in most other countries. I wonder why it turned out that way. :)

  • @midnightstorm6576
    @midnightstorm6576 Год назад +5

    It amuses me to watch Simon crumple over the most minor sexual things. It's hilarious to watch them lose their cool because of things that are so vanilla they can't even smell the strawberry. To answer, Simon, the 'used panty' thing is to sniff them, because pharamones do interesting things to people's minds. The reason why school-themed roleplay is so common is because school was a foundational part of the life during most people's sexual development, leading to ingraining of it's themes into people's sex map.

  • @BogWitch8440
    @BogWitch8440 Год назад

    Your editing was superb, Sameru-kun! Lol, great episode!

  • @Lunch2391
    @Lunch2391 Год назад +4

    Here in Germany we also celebrate on Christmas eve. the day starts out like almost any other until 2 pm sharp and everything goes into lookdown.
    the 25. and 26. are also holidays. you either visit family or just stuff yourself at home on these days.
    People eat and drink a lot. then we have 4 days to cure our hangover and food coma until "Sylvester" which is new years eve.
    I used to donate plasma and they asked if I was in the UK during a certain time (can not remember the correct phrasing) same when you donate blood. I was always wondering why but someone mentionef mad cows desease in the comments so now I know.

  • @tysimmons7154
    @tysimmons7154 Год назад

    This channel is a beautiful combination of British disposition, low to mid income American perspective, and GOD TIER MEMES. Thx Sam

  • @gNome_5
    @gNome_5 Год назад +7

    Simon, you should visit the state of Colorado; there they take littering pretty seriously, and individuals caught doing it will be fined! The whole state (or so it seemed) was very focused on keeping their state clean and conscientious about nature and preserving it. I absolutely loved the vacation I took there to Fort Collins around 2007 or so. It definitely had its own extremely enjoyable vibe! The mountains are absolutely gorgeous and breathtaking, and there just aren't many places where you can be dying of sweat one minute and then take a short 20 or 30-minute ride up the mountain and get out and play in the snow the next!
    ♻️🗑️🌞🥵🏔️❄️
    With regards to Japan, my daughter (21) is obsessed with Japanese culture and is dying for an opportunity to travel there. She's an amazingly talented artist, mainly focused and disciplined in the drawing and creation of anime and manga characters. 🇯🇵🎎👘👺

    • @Aileil
      @Aileil Год назад +1

      They used to hold the Speech and Debate state competitions in Fort Collins for Colorado. You're quite correct, it's a really pretty place to visit.

  • @LexieShaw-b8k
    @LexieShaw-b8k Год назад +1

    I LOVE how many times Simon just looses it over the ridiculousness of it all 🤣

  • @josephvanlangeveld2216
    @josephvanlangeveld2216 Год назад +7

    We have a KFC buffet here in Utah. There is might actually be 2 of them now that I think about it.

    • @coreyh233
      @coreyh233 Год назад

      We have quite a few here in North Carolina too

    • @kyleb4059
      @kyleb4059 Год назад

      Almost every KFC has a buffet here in Indiana. Simon would be in heaven. 😅

    • @codykleoppel6919
      @codykleoppel6919 Год назад

      Same here in Missouri. To be more specific, Oak Grove Missouri's Taco Bell/KFC combo restaurant has one.

    • @Static-ash
      @Static-ash Год назад

      Illinois has KFC buffets around too, Silly Simon

    • @Sniperboy5551
      @Sniperboy5551 Год назад

      I wish they had buffets in NY, I’d be in heaven…

  • @Nikkibov81
    @Nikkibov81 Год назад

    Hey, Christmas Eve is my birthday! I'm totally OK with family celebrations on my birthday!
    In my family we celebrate my birthday during the day and go out for lunch
    Then we switch to Christmas mode and start cooking appetizers, having some cocktails, and nibble and laugh and exchange gifts.
    It's an entire day of celebration and I love it!

  • @Vio818
    @Vio818 Год назад +5

    On last name wedding thing I always recommend doing what my cousin did when she got married her last name was stone his mothers maiden name was Blacks, they became the Blackstones. Name mashing last names together to make a more powerful name should be the new tradition. If the ones you have dont work find a family member with a last name that does and steal it!

    • @Caterfree10
      @Caterfree10 Год назад +1

      That is an awesome last name smash tbh!
      Another alternative is just snatching a last name from a favorite media series. I knew a lesbian couple that intended to have the last name Gainsborough bc they love FFVII and I hope to find someone who either would accept the last name Rhapsodos or has a better alternative from something we both love. :D

    • @gamerjaqi7873
      @gamerjaqi7873 Год назад +1

      Black stone is also a magician family. I remember seeing Harry Blackstone as a kid.

  • @Helloworld.11122
    @Helloworld.11122 Год назад +1

    Fun Fact: The more air conditioners that run in close proximity to one another, like in a densely packed city, the hotter the surrounding air becomes, and the more people run their air conditioning. This leads to a feedback loop where the air keeps getting hotter.

  • @captainyossarian388
    @captainyossarian388 Год назад +5

    We could learn a lot from the Japanese, and you should definitely visit. Kyoto is a MUST SEE.
    I love their crazy, whacky TV.
    I love that there are vending machines on every corner if you need a snack.
    I love that every store or mall has automatic doors. No push/pull nonsense to catch someone else's germs.
    I love that many eateries are automats. You enter your order into a terminal with all the details so a middle-person can't muck up your order, and wait to hear your number.
    I love their version of curry. Mmm, chicken, beef, or pork with a plate of rice and GRAVY.

  • @KariHaruka
    @KariHaruka Год назад +1

    I knew that the used panties from a vending machine myth was going to get a mention 😂
    Oh, and fun fact. On the subject of KFC at Christmas. That was started in the 1970s, when the first KFC opened in Japan and the manager of the store heard a group of foreigners talk about how they missed having turkey for Christmas. After a bit of clever marketing (and substituting the turkey for the fried chicken), this new 'tradition' soon took off among the expat community living in Japan and then across the whole of Japan. Though, the practice of Japanese households eating KFC is still quite low. Less than 3% of the population (Japanese & Expats) eat KFC at Christmas.

  • @MEStrahm
    @MEStrahm Год назад +6

    I want to go to Japan just for the vending machines 😭

  • @Smokey_McHerbal
    @Smokey_McHerbal Год назад +1

    Australia use to have KFC Buffets in the 90s, same with Pizza Hut. I have no idea if they were around earlier, still around or not at all, but they were good!

  • @zch7491
    @zch7491 Год назад +6

    Blaze me senpai 🥵

  • @HahahahaKez
    @HahahahaKez Год назад +2

    I feel your pain Simon! I've spent Christmas in Czech and Poland, wonderfully strange experience! Celebrating Christmas a day early feels like cheating ahah!

  • @nathanhill-n8v
    @nathanhill-n8v Год назад +1

    It's exactly the same in Australia you would not be able to donate blood here either and it has to do with the fact that Europe had a mad cow outbreak

  • @daveg7516
    @daveg7516 Год назад

    I watched the whole thing thank you some fantastic insight and great work 🎉

  • @225Perfect
    @225Perfect Год назад +1

    If you go to the hospital and need blood, they'll type and cross match you every time you need it due to possible changes that can happen between visits. It's not terribly important to know what your blood type is.

  • @michellep9867
    @michellep9867 Год назад +1

    I was recently at the Vancouver (CAN) airport, and I got a salmon poke bowl from a vending machine. Raw fish! and it was fresh and delicious! And there was another vending machine next to it, where I purchased a made-to-order smoothie. My mind was blown. I want these things everywhere.

  • @masterhypnostorm
    @masterhypnostorm Год назад +1

    If you we’re living in the UK during the BSE outbreak you are prevented from giving blood in other countries.

  • @mason7067
    @mason7067 Год назад +1

    I studied Japan for six years, went to Japan for three weeks, and have watched anime my entire life. I've never come across the blood type thing.
    It's really not common.

  • @ScooterinAB
    @ScooterinAB Год назад +2

    As far as I could tell, there's one panty vending machine, but it doesn't sell used underwear anymore. I totally didn't go looking for them one time when I was I'm Tokyo. There were probably more in the 80s or 90s, but we're talking about dozens of machines, not something that was terribly common. The same actually goes for some of the other weird ones, though booze and food were absolutely a thing.
    As for school and sex shop being used in the same sentence... yeah. I once went to a little museum set up by a huge school uniform manufacturer... that had a dress up and photo area upstairs that totally wasn't there to let people act out their fetishes.

  • @lizdierdorf
    @lizdierdorf Год назад

    Sam’s editing reached a new height with all the anime references ❤❤❤

  • @masterred82
    @masterred82 Год назад +1

    Here in Western Australia back in the 90's KFC had all you can eat.

  • @jaymzx0
    @jaymzx0 Год назад

    "Horrry shiiiiiit"
    💀
    ty Sam. I needed that.

  • @baalzeebub4230
    @baalzeebub4230 Год назад

    Double comment here. 1) I’m trying to recall an apartment I’ve rented here in the US that didn’t have a vending machine on the property. 2) the air bnb I rented in Japan was an apartment, and had several vending machines out by the parking lot. There were a LOT of vending machines there, that’s certain.

  • @christopherfain8736
    @christopherfain8736 Год назад

    I may have choked to death when Bear sniffed the screen, bringing back memories of doing wake and bake in the kitchen while my kid watched Bear in the Big Blue House....
    🤣🤣🤣☠