My dad's best friend is a black blues musician from Chicago. Been best friends for 50+ years. And one day, he handed me a piece of paper and said I want you to have this. I opened it up and it was a list of ingredients. I read it and immediately said no way!!! He gave me his mom's Mac n cheese recipe. He said I know she would have wanted you to have this. So now, it is a great privilege to bring the Mac n cheese to every cookout, every gathering I ever attend for the rest of my life.
I loved her like my own grandma, and she coddled me a bit too much in my younger days, spoiled the shit out of me. And her Mac n cheese was my favorite meal on the planet. And now it's the only way my kids will eat Mac n cheese. I wouldn't have it any other way lol.
I'm always asked to tell jokes at the cookouts. I tell all the white people jokes and my best friend tells all the black people jokes. We are all big on stereotyping each other, because we find it hilarious.
Asian person here, i got invited to a black family cookout and i had great time. They fed me low country boil, mac and cheese and the whole shabam. Love them to bits.
Yes! You already posted my relative comment. 13 years together and the food is amazing everytime. I am lucky beyond words to have my family thanks to my beautiful wife and girls. Black women are thee most beautiful, powerful and loving women on Earth
Went to high school with Zach Rushing. Dude will give you the shirt off his back without question and always down to help when you need it. Dude is a rock star for sure and a funny dude to be around.
I will say I'm a Irish/Scottish man. The best BBQ/cookouts I've ever been to are from my family of black people and latino people. God bless multi cultural family.
LOL... I WAS BORN AND RAISED IN THE SOUTH,AND I LIVE IN THE SOUTH AND I HAVEN'T BEEN TO MANY BBQS THAT WERE SEGERATED!! OUR FAMILY AND FRIENDS ARE COLORFUL AND DEVERSE❤😂 AND DANG GOOD COOKS😅
@03:40 *Don't fall for the Aunties trick!* Slide em' both to the side, and ask them what Momma made. When they both scowl at you with crossed arms, eat both and tell them it was great! Grandma will giggle and you just earned full family approval from there on out. 😉
Olive oil and eggs are completely different in Spain. Completely different flavor. They’re fresh and not completely covered in pesticides. They don’t poison their citizens. I miss their food. I got sick coming back to the U.S.
@@ReinitaSofia Our olive oils and seed oils are so gross in the U.S.... you even notice it in the chips they carry over here sometimes. Only imports taste normal ❤🩹❤🩹
@@Wolfiecatmedallion19 I think she is referring to eggs that come from farm chickens not the mass-produced chicken factory eggs that are usually at the grocery store.
I was once engaged to a black woman and I’ve been to all of the gatherings. Cookouts, fish fries, family reunions, grandma’s birthday, you name it. Some of the greatest times I’ve ever had.
@@shells500tutubo where do they come from? how back in time are we going? i was trying to say back east is where they have those kind of cook outs, it could be white or black cookout. but they only have those kind of cooks outs back east and in the south. were the entire family tree shows up. here on the west coast people dont know how to make cherry pie. we have small bbqs not the entire family tree. homes are small out here and space in limited
I enjoyed this video so much. As a white man that has had the honor of being invited to a close friends family BBQ. I meet his mom, I say “Hello Mrs. Jones. “ she grabs me by the front of my shirt, points at me and says “You call me momma” and gave me a hug. I love her. I love all of that family. ❤️❤️❤️
Was coming on here to make the same comment. Southeast GA here. He was out in the country, not the ghetto. Surprised he didn't talk about heading off to do some shooting targets out in the field
I'm a white guy, mostly all black friends. Gotta say... Spades and Dominos are LEGIT. My buddy and his mom taught me to play years ago. I love running spades. Got really good at it. I'm not great at dominos but I'll still smack down a 20 if I get a chance. xD
In 1999 my boyfriend & I were traveling across country, we made it to Phoenix, Arizona from Ohio. We got into a MAJOR argument the evening before Thanksgiving. He took off, walking. I didn't follow. Anyway... Thanksgiving morning, around 10 or 10:30 am I'm sitting in a parking lot of a grocery store, crying and this black guy, around my age or a few years younger... Comes to my drivers window, asks if I'm okay. We get to talking and he's like "ain't no way I'm letting you spend Thanksgiving alone, crying in a parking lot... You come with me to MY family Thanksgiving dinner! My family is your family!" Somewhat reluctant yet somewhat relieved I agree to go. ...... Let me tell you - the FOOD was AMAZING! I Tried collard greens for the first time - loved them! The family was EVEN MORE AMAZING!! They treated me like I was part of the family and I was a blond haired white girl but I left there feeling like I had a new family! It was such an amazing experience for me!! I know you're out there somewhere, family from Phoenix, Arizona and I want you to know I think y'all are AWESOME and I thank you and I hope you all are well! ❤️
I wish people everywhere would figure out we all have more in common than not. Yes, we may have difference skin color, speak different languages, have different traditions, but we are the same. We all love good food, good times, good friends and good memories. And this sounds like it all!
My mom grew up with 8 siblings, and my dad was one of 13 siblings. I don't know many of them, but I have cousins by the dozens. A cousin had her DNA done, with ancestry, out to 3rd cousins there were 500 relatives that she had never met. I was a 1st cousin, and the first one to hear from her, so Happy to be her cousin. Our last family reunion had White's, Black's, Latinas, and a couple Asian, that's who we are.
@@itzTeTeomg yeah that’s kinda like my family lolll I live in the south so we got southern white ppl, me and my brother r half Korean-half white, my cousins are half white half Turkish-Korean, my other cousins r half Chinese, I have some more cousins that are 3/4ths Peruvian, I have a couple half Indian second cousins, one of my older cousins is married to a black woman and they’re expecting children soon, I have a couple half Russian cousins, etc… lolll so yeah we’re a huge melting pot haha
I'm the youngest of 11. My mother was the youngest of 7. My aunt on my father's side had 8 children. When my parents passed away our relatives had to come into the funeral home in groups of 20. Our family reunions were huge. Every family had to bring two dishes and their own drinks. We were trying to minimize the cost of the family. Both of our grandparents would full blood native Americans. We had relatives who married other races. We had Asians, Italians, white people. Some came because they were curious. It was wild.
Just a heads up, due to how people from literally all around the world, came to most parts of Latin america; Latinos, are not a race; they are a mix of literally everything else in the world. So you can have white latinos, black latinos, asian latinos, latino jews, indigenous latinos and a mix of them in varying degrees.
I love hosting bbq. Bunch of people come over. Everyone brings a little something. Play some backyard games. Drink some beer and watch the kids play. A bbq brings everyone together. We need more of it in these times.
Cornhole = Beanbags at the county fair. If you've ever thrown little beanbags into a hole in a painted piece of plywood set at an angle, you've played Cornhole.
@@bradkirchhoff5703I'm from Cincinnati... Cornhole in pretty big here. Never heard of it called bags. But I guess Cincinnati is like the edge of the Midwest though so I don't know🤷
I LOVE seeing black people react to this video of this white dude and the black bbq! I always notice the discussions about past BBQs and favorite foods. There is something we all share... Food, friends, and family are the cores of the American life.
This is what it’s about, appreciating our differences, and occasionally making fun of one another. No room for hate in this short life. Nothing but love and occasional humor.
I was born and raised in South Georgia, and I can verify that everything he said does happen at a black cookout. I'm from a small farming community and yes, we do grow corn here too. Dice, dominoes, checkers, card games are all a part of a cookout. No ghetto needed for good times.
I haven't had a proper chuckle in a fair while but listening to this fellow's recount, I experienced genuine Joy. Always a pleasure to see country folk doing what country folk do
In Chicago, we call Cornhole "Bags" You can buy a plastic version of the game at Walmart, but most people have heavy wooden boards, painted with their favorite sports teams logo and matching bean bags. Also, you can stuff the bags with dried beans or dry corn, thus the names bean bags or cornhole.
Im a white guy from Norway and have 7 cousins. No idea if that is a lot or not, but there it is. Other Norwegians i went to school with would tell me my family was big, so compared to a lot of them, its a lot i guess. Mom has two sisters that both have three kids each. Dad has a sister that has a single kid. Seven in total. And i love it. Family CAN be one of the greatest thing in your life.
Have you even BEEN in America? Wtf you talking about being around corn? 3/4 of the country is around corn lmao. Drive through the midwest and youll ONLY see corn. Even in Florida they have corn fields lol.
Corn is highly subsidized by the federal government because it's cheap and what we use to feed our livestock. Unfortunately, corn is a starch, not a vegetable, and that's why American meat is lower quality with less flavor and nutrition. So it's everywhere.
I have 59 first cousins. On my daddy's side, in SC, the cookouts for my grandmother's birthday were just like this except for the spades. It was poker.
«Spades» is a common card game to play in norway; used to always play it back in the 90´s with my stonerfriends. Is called «spardame», (the e is silent, contrary to how you would usually would say «dame» in norwegian), and translates to «queen of spades». Also, even I know «bones» is afroamerican slang for dice or dominos. And I am a white dude living in Norway!
exactly, no group is a monolith. I don't understand how people don't get that. Any time I hear generalizations like "all men are horndogs" or "all black people are thugs" I'm just like nah, you're just a bigot, that's all.
I was born and raised in the inner city of Baltimore Maryland. I grew up being told that multiple black friends were my cousins. I guess because my parents and grandparents were like family to those that lived on our block. So it made me grow up color blind, and I’m very thankful for that. I’ve been to some of the best cookouts, sleepovers and weddings ever! To this day I eat collard greens with vinegar and hot sauce. I now live in Texas and yes, we grow corn down here 😂
It's so funny, you can tell they are city folk that don't know a thing about the rural side. It's entertaining but also baffling. Then again, I have NO IDEA how to navigate a subway in a city. And busses? Forget it! I'll walk. 🤣
I am mexican. My mother has 18 brothers and sisters same perents. My mother is 2nd oldest. My youngest aunt was in High-school with me i am 38. My perente got married age 14 and 15. At my age at 38 I have 144 cuzens 1st cuzens on just my mother side. Cuzens have kids as so do i. My father comes from a family of 6 brothers and sister. Last year my cuzen got married. We empty out 2 liquir stores we bought the whole store inventory. The couple collected enough money on the wedding to buy a house cash in California. One time my aunty needed a new roof. On her birthday 12 uncles and all the sons showed up. Built a new roof . Built a new fence and painted the house before my aunty got home from work. She cryed 😂
My mother came from 6 my dad from 6, but we were all spread out many miles apart. I am not close with more than 4 cousins. In truth my daddy's side kind of lost the life lottery, 3 didn't see 35, kind of a lot of tragedy , one to cancer, one to an auto accident, one to a worksite fire.
all those i know dont believe more then half the stuff the media and that put out, i would love to be invited to a cook out and im from the uk where all we get is beans and chips lol
Florida here. I grew up in a black church. I was at everyone’s house, social events, etc. I didn’t realize I wasn’t black. God rest your soul Bishop Washington. Your sheep were my sheep❤️
I feel like that’s a universally American thing. Like, I live in the Pacific Northwest in a neighborhood and every garden around the block has a corn patch.
This is awesome! I love people and recognize that we all show love to one another. Instead of fighting over our differences we get the opportunity to brag about our differences which makes all of life more colorful.
I have heard this man tell this story over 3 times now and it still cracks me up. See this is why sharing culture amongst each other is important, you gain perspectives and experiences you will never get staying inside your own lane or box
As a Latino I was invited to my coworkers cook out/son's bday, it was awesome. Mac and cheese, collard greens, okra, they had BBQ and fish fry and jungle juice. I got lit, they were super nice. I miss going to their cook outs.
Been to a brother's BBQ. And it was some bad*ss cookin & laid back.....But when I was over the road. Stopped in Chicago & needed a haircut. I had a taxi driver who asked me if I had ever been to a brother's barber shop. I said nope. But it's cool with me...When I walked into the barber shop. 2pac playing on radio & at least a dozen blk men in there. I literally thought "this is where I'm going to die. I'm gonna get shanked with some scissors". But it was cool, laid back & had the cleanest cut I have ever had. Barber even brought out an old straight razor w/the sharpening belt. It was awesome (never had that before). Good reality check & great cuts.
I've always been proud as hell when my black friends would say I'm "invited to the cookout". Being a south Louisiana girl, I'm white, but I know how to season chicken, lol! With New Orleans and Baton Rouge being major port cities back in the day, Louisiana is rich with a blend of so many traditions and cultures, and the amazing food is one of the many benefits of that. Also, to agree with Zach, when you get invited to a black cookout, it really will be the best food and the nicest people you can experience. They will treat you like family, and try to kill you with food, lol!
@JoeBoone82 Apparently, IIRC, it's Irish tradition to have at least 6 kids, 3 sons and 3 daughters. One son is named for the dad's dad, the other after mom's dad and the third with a unique name. And likewise for the daughters.
Like most people i know who are white i don't even know half my family. Don't have reunions etc. I always admired that with Hispanic and black neighbors. Its always a party with lots of family on nice weekends
Same. My family used to do family reunions when I was small and it was amazing. I'm doing my best to try to get it going again, but no one wants to set aside time. I plan something, and half the guests cancel a week before. I'm close to giving up and doing 'found' family. 😢
My extended family was so spread out, most an 8 hour drive away, even growing up. Now we are even more spread out and getting old. I do have an Aunt and 3 cousins close enough that we made a commitment to getting together either three or four times a year.
Most of the white people I know always get together with family. Reunions is not a black thing or Hispanic thing. Some reunions are small, some big. All depends on how big your family is. My family is smallish because all of our extended family (cousins, aunt, uncles) live across the ocean. We make due with whatever family we have here. If they were all here, we would be having huge parties too! If you don't do reunions, that's a you thing, not a white thing. Maybe it's time that you make an effort to start the tradition.
From Sweden here.. Mom was youngest of 12(farmers in northern of Sweden) and I live in Stockholm where a lot of the relatives lives. Every time someone in the family had birthdays, weddings, events, all relatives with families showed up. When I graduated from school (20 years old) I hade 36 relatives at my party plus other friends. At the table, relatives and friends we started to talk about how many cousins I had at that time. We came up with 46 living ones and I was floored, I think I have met maybe 2/3 over the years. It was 19 years between the oldest child, a sister, and my mother as the youngest. Most of my cousins where a few years younger then mom, and their children where at my age.. so yea all funny when telling my friend this is my cousin and they were like 20-25 years older =)
As a white guy, I grew up with exactly 3 cousins, two of which are brother and sister. I gained more when my two female cousins started having kids, leading to a complete total of 9 cousins.
The laugh that escaped my mouth at 10:52 😂😂😂 I feel proud that my family’s cookouts have been done right since before I was born and we continue to hold up all the traditions 😂❤️🤎
I grew up in ranch land in Nevada, up to the point I joined the Army at 19 I knew exactly one Black person. Everyone I grew up with was Hispanic, Native American or white. Joining the Army I had a lot of learning to do. My first Black cookout was in Birmingham Alabama and what this guy said is spot on. It was one of the best experiences of my life and some of my most treasured memories are sitting around a table with folks I did not know talking smack over a table of bones and walking away friends. They were always amazed that they'd get spanked by a white guy playing dominoes. I had a secret weapon when it came to bones, a Southern Great Grandma that taught us all to play. Nothing more humbling than your Great Grandma smashing that final bone down to end a game. I wish people understood regardless of our color, our religion, who we love, we all have more in common than not.
Bro I've said this once already but, you LIVE IN GEORGIA AND NEVER HEARD OF CORNHOLE?! 😂 I can't understand!! Also I live in south TN and I am SURROUNDED by cornfields! Lmaoo Much love MrLboyd but check yo southern! 😂
Bones can be either dice or dominoes depending on the individuals playing. Where I'm from in Texas, it usually means dominoes. But I have frequently heard it be used for dice.
In some places apparently "Bones" is specific to dice and Dominos is just Dominos. But I'm pretty sure that's a regional distinction. Like - Deep south - and then in Texas or the midwest it might be different! There's a 90s era RUSH album and single produced by Rupert Hine called "Roll the Bones". It's great music but kind of obscure these days.
Not disagreeing with your info, but adding context to the phrase...Does one "throw" dominos or is the term "throwing" used in refernce to a game using dominos by anyone? If not then the phrase "throwing bones" would be specific to dice.
@@GuessWhoAsks You're right, him saying "throw bones" meant it was dice. I know plenty of people who call dominos bones but no one says "throw" in that context.
@GuessWhoAsks that completely depends on the domino game being played. 42 is a domino game that is played a lot like spades, and sub-games within it. Rarely do they have to be placed in a formation, but just "thrown" in a pile, like a book is in spades. Straight dominoes are lined up off of the spinner.
Cornhole originally was you taus corn into the hole in the board across from you. Modern version uses beanbags. Also, corn is grown from Canada through Mexico and South America
I'm Dutch. Yesterday i ate fries with mayo for lunch. Very common (fast)food to eat here. More luxury would be mayo, saté (peanut) sauce with chopped onions. And there are plenty of mayo sauces. Lots of types of additives to make dipsauce for chips, for salads or other food. My latest choice is a meat sanwich with some peper/sesame mayo.
We had five people in my family. After my grandparents have now passed, its my my parents, myself, and a dog. That's literally it. The concept of a larger family has always been a thing I wondered what it was like.
😂😂😂 Cornhole is a beanbag game through a hole! Spades is one of those BLACK CARD musts: play French cut with the kitty, baby Joker ... BONES IS DICE😂😂😂😂
All throughout my military time (18 countries, three warzones, friends and women of all cultures) I love to attend at a cookout. The food is similar, but it's the family interactions that are the same. (Even when you don't have a shared language) The hosts don't realize, until the guest is unexpectedly comfortable being a part of them. Just like they they were hoping for.
Lol as a Dutch person it is so funny hearing you guys wierd out about dipping fries in mayonaise 😂. My brain wasnt braining for a sec trying to understand why that would even raise any questions, you talked about Spain but all throughout Europe it is a very very common thing to dip fries and/or any other fried food in mayonaise. Mayonaise here is more seen to be on the same level as lets say ketchup, at least thats the ways its treated. Im curious as to how our mayonaise compares to US mayonaise.
I’m so blessed to be from the North Gulf Coast. My mom’s family’s got Indian/White/with some Cajun thrown in. If you look @ my pic, you’d probably be shocked that I’ve known how to play spades since I was 6, & everything this white guy was talking about. I feel blessed that I come from an area, where our culture is mixed “gumbo”.. New Orleans, Mobile, & on the P’Cola have the best food, & ppl.
It can mean both. I've heard it used more for dice. I'm East Coast so maybe that's the difference? The term originates from using dice made of animal bones to divine the future. It's called cleromancy.
@thefemininecfo You know I could imagine since dice were quite often made from bone back in the day, I wouldn't be surprised that's where the expression comes from - I am not sure Dominoes were made of bones typically but I wouldn't be surprised they were too :-D
@@andrewchristiansen8311 😊 very close! I grew up in NYC with Caribbean parents. My dad was from the British West Indies my mom from Panama. My dad loved playing dominoes.
Lol. I can relate. I married a Mexican. We live in Detroit. My first visit to see her mom's family was like this guys. 45 to 50 Mexicans all speaking Spanish. They did nothing but love on me. Feed me some of the best food I ever eat. I danced with All 13 Tia's. Was an amazing experience. I miss them all. That was 30 years ago. Most of the Tia's have passed away.
@@enderborn6860 there was no TV or central heating back in my grandparents days my mam is the 2nd youngest of 17 children and my grandfather had 2 kids before he got married no one knew about till he died and they came to the funeral
Cornhole (also known regionally as sack toss, or bags) is a lawn game popular in North America in which players or teams take turns throwing fabric bean bags at an inclined board with a hole in its far end. The goal of the game is to score points by either landing a bag on the board (one point) or putting a bag through the hole (three points)
Small country farms and homes often grow corn for themselves. A lot will also sell it on the roadside by the house. Great video. I taught In Harlem NYC for many years I often was one of three Whites in the entire school. And most often, the only White on the Train downtown. Never had a problem, loved every minute with the kids.
Momma T's Fish Fry and The Tale of Opossum are must watches. Also, you ain't finna bring your cousin in and call it quits. We need more of this man! No disrespect to you MrLboyd.
❤😂I love this!!!!! I have been married to my husband for 25 years! We are a multicultural household! I only have two cousins, my husband has like 25 first cousins and like 40 some second cousins!!!!!😅
(In response to your question at 2:00) white people (in my experience being white) typically only have like 2-5 cousins on average growing up! I had 4 (2 close to the fam and 2 were hardly seen!
Just to be clear, that's probably not a "hood/ghetto" cookout, that's a COUNTRY BBQ!! I am also a white boy lucky enough to be invited to one of these most amazing gatherings. Everything this man said is on point
I mean... I grew up with 4 cousins lol. Now that being said I just found my birth family, and there's 2 more cousins, so between two families... I have 6 cousins lmao.
My dad's best friend is a black blues musician from Chicago. Been best friends for 50+ years. And one day, he handed me a piece of paper and said I want you to have this. I opened it up and it was a list of ingredients. I read it and immediately said no way!!! He gave me his mom's Mac n cheese recipe. He said I know she would have wanted you to have this. So now, it is a great privilege to bring the Mac n cheese to every cookout, every gathering I ever attend for the rest of my life.
You have been blessed
Oowee, a true blessing. Pass it on wisely, when the time is right. Tell the stories of that friendship and pass it on.
Str8 up that is a HUGE HONOR for him to entrust that to you and I have no doubt you know that as well!!! Great story ty
I loved her like my own grandma, and she coddled me a bit too much in my younger days, spoiled the shit out of me. And her Mac n cheese was my favorite meal on the planet. And now it's the only way my kids will eat Mac n cheese. I wouldn't have it any other way lol.
They did that cause they dont want you bringing your potato salad with raisins in it. It wasnt a compliment.
As a member of the Caucasian Delegation, being invited to The Cookout is an honor that must be respected highly and not taken lightly.
As a fellow member I concur. See you at the next cookout. 😆
We Gotta have a Draft!
Taken Whitely
Amen as a white man from Texas I love my black friends and my Mexican friends and together we got some really good food that’s real talk❤💯👍
I'm always asked to tell jokes at the cookouts. I tell all the white people jokes and my best friend tells all the black people jokes. We are all big on stereotyping each other, because we find it hilarious.
Asian person here, i got invited to a black family cookout and i had great time. They fed me low country boil, mac and cheese and the whole shabam. Love them to bits.
as a white guy married to a black girl i can say everything this guy says is true. i love my extended family. nicest people and best food.
Yeah but how many did you go to before you finally thought... "I'm going to be ok." ? 😂
You a colonizer scum I'm a black Hebrew Israelite king 👑 interracial dating and marriage and kids is a sin against god 🙏
@@williambuehler2533 probably depends on which specific family member attends or not lmao. There's always at least 1
Yes! You already posted my relative comment. 13 years together and the food is amazing everytime. I am lucky beyond words to have my family thanks to my beautiful wife and girls. Black women are thee most beautiful, powerful and loving women on Earth
"I'm white, not stupid' should be a t-shirt
Went to high school with Zach Rushing. Dude will give you the shirt off his back without question and always down to help when you need it. Dude is a rock star for sure and a funny dude to be around.
Cornhole is throwing bean bags into a wooden ramp with a hole in it
Until about ten years ago we always called it sack toss. Until I met someone from the midwest I'd never heard of cornhole.
Its called Cornhole in the Notheast..
I'm white from the Northeast and nearly every party I've been to has cornhole.
@@beckerjoniiit is here in the south too
We have it in the NW as well haha.
I will say I'm a Irish/Scottish man. The best BBQ/cookouts I've ever been to are from my family of black people and latino people. God bless multi cultural family.
LOL...
I WAS BORN AND RAISED IN THE SOUTH,AND I LIVE IN THE SOUTH AND I HAVEN'T BEEN TO MANY BBQS THAT WERE SEGERATED!! OUR FAMILY AND FRIENDS ARE COLORFUL AND DEVERSE❤😂
AND DANG GOOD COOKS😅
You probably fit right in. Im a blackman with Scottish ancestry.
Latin bbq are the best.
@03:40 *Don't fall for the Aunties trick!* Slide em' both to the side, and ask them what Momma made. When they both scowl at you with crossed arms, eat both and tell them it was great! Grandma will giggle and you just earned full family approval from there on out. 😉
Honestly, I knew he was about to get ambushed with that tater salad between the two aunties. He played his cards right.
His friends actually stacked the deck while he was napping to set him up. They talked about it.
Olive oil and eggs are completely different in Spain. Completely different flavor. They’re fresh and not completely covered in pesticides. They don’t poison their citizens.
I miss their food. I got sick coming back to the U.S.
@@ReinitaSofia Our olive oils and seed oils are so gross in the U.S.... you even notice it in the chips they carry over here sometimes. Only imports taste normal ❤🩹❤🩹
@@ReinitaSofiaI don’t know where you live but it’s pretty easy to get fresh eggs in the US
@@Wolfiecatmedallion19 I think she is referring to eggs that come from farm chickens not the mass-produced chicken factory eggs that are usually at the grocery store.
@@christinec4919 it’s very easy to get farm fresh eggs in the US. I don’t understand the argument
I was once engaged to a black woman and I’ve been to all of the gatherings. Cookouts, fish fries, family reunions, grandma’s birthday, you name it. Some of the greatest times I’ve ever had.
thats only down south, back east, westcoast dont hove cookouts, fishfrys etc
Colonizer interracial dating and marriage is a sin against god 🙏
@@luedog8385 You have obviously not been back east or to the west coast. Where do you think all those Black people came from who live there?
@@shells500tutubo where do they come from? how back in time are we going?
i was trying to say back east is where they have those kind of cook outs, it could be white or black cookout. but they only have those kind of cooks outs back east and in the south. were the entire family tree shows up.
here on the west coast people dont know how to make cherry pie. we have small bbqs not the entire family tree. homes are small out here and space in limited
@@luedog8385they have bbq’s and it’s all the same
I enjoyed this video so much.
As a white man that has had the honor of being invited to a close friends family BBQ. I meet his mom, I say “Hello Mrs. Jones. “ she grabs me by the front of my shirt, points at me and says “You call me momma” and gave me a hug. I love her. I love all of that family.
❤️❤️❤️
He was in Southern MS barbecue, not ghetto, just country. At our barbecues, we do spades, dominos, and poker.
Was coming on here to make the same comment. Southeast GA here. He was out in the country, not the ghetto. Surprised he didn't talk about heading off to do some shooting targets out in the field
I'm a white guy, mostly all black friends. Gotta say... Spades and Dominos are LEGIT. My buddy and his mom taught me to play years ago. I love running spades. Got really good at it. I'm not great at dominos but I'll still smack down a 20 if I get a chance. xD
He explained the cookouts in the ghetto in Omaha too
Much love to my home state of Mississippi
I’m from the ‘burg.
In 1999 my boyfriend & I were traveling across country, we made it to Phoenix, Arizona from Ohio. We got into a MAJOR argument the evening before Thanksgiving. He took off, walking. I didn't follow. Anyway... Thanksgiving morning, around 10 or 10:30 am I'm sitting in a parking lot of a grocery store, crying and this black guy, around my age or a few years younger... Comes to my drivers window, asks if I'm okay. We get to talking and he's like "ain't no way I'm letting you spend Thanksgiving alone, crying in a parking lot... You come with me to MY family Thanksgiving dinner! My family is your family!" Somewhat reluctant yet somewhat relieved I agree to go. ...... Let me tell you - the FOOD was AMAZING! I Tried collard greens for the first time - loved them! The family was EVEN MORE AMAZING!! They treated me like I was part of the family and I was a blond haired white girl but I left there feeling like I had a new family! It was such an amazing experience for me!! I know you're out there somewhere, family from Phoenix, Arizona and I want you to know I think y'all are AWESOME and I thank you and I hope you all are well! ❤️
I'm glad you had a good time. I also extend invitations to people for the holidays. We believe no one should be alone.
@@TheCrazyCharlie what💀 did we read the same thing
@@TheCrazyCharlie I can see you are probably the ex in the scenario and probably white.
I reported the two trolls for harassment.
I wish people everywhere would figure out we all have more in common than not. Yes, we may have difference skin color, speak different languages, have different traditions, but we are the same. We all love good food, good times, good friends and good memories. And this sounds like it all!
People been at each other's throats since the dawn of man. Cain and Abel
My mom grew up with 8 siblings, and my dad was one of 13 siblings. I don't know many of them, but I have cousins by the dozens. A cousin had her DNA done, with ancestry, out to 3rd cousins there were 500 relatives that she had never met. I was a 1st cousin, and the first one to hear from her, so Happy to be her cousin. Our last family reunion had White's, Black's, Latinas, and a couple Asian, that's who we are.
So you’re family is like the embodiment of America~ one big melting pot of cultures and love ❤️
I absolutely LOVE to hear this!
@@itzTeTeomg yeah that’s kinda like my family lolll I live in the south so we got southern white ppl, me and my brother r half Korean-half white, my cousins are half white half Turkish-Korean, my other cousins r half Chinese, I have some more cousins that are 3/4ths Peruvian, I have a couple half Indian second cousins, one of my older cousins is married to a black woman and they’re expecting children soon, I have a couple half Russian cousins, etc… lolll so yeah we’re a huge melting pot haha
I'm the youngest of 11. My mother was the youngest of 7. My aunt on my father's side had 8 children. When my parents passed away our relatives had to come into the funeral home in groups of 20. Our family reunions were huge. Every family had to bring two dishes and their own drinks. We were trying to minimize the cost of the family. Both of our grandparents would full blood native Americans. We had relatives who married other races. We had Asians, Italians, white people. Some came because they were curious. It was wild.
Just a heads up, due to how people from literally all around the world, came to most parts of Latin america; Latinos, are not a race; they are a mix of literally everything else in the world. So you can have white latinos, black latinos, asian latinos, latino jews, indigenous latinos and a mix of them in varying degrees.
As a middle aged white British man, this sounds epic .. i love great food and meeting different people from different parts of the world 😋
@@campakilla1 and taxing the shit out of them. For the goods they produce and you benefit from.
I love hosting bbq. Bunch of people come over. Everyone brings a little something. Play some backyard games. Drink some beer and watch the kids play. A bbq brings everyone together. We need more of it in these times.
I love that we are different and can still love eachother.
Cornhole = Beanbags at the county fair. If you've ever thrown little beanbags into a hole in a painted piece of plywood set at an angle, you've played Cornhole.
ah, then its Universal
Ya its only called cornhole by some. Most ppl in the midwest call it bags. Cornhole is more southern.
@@bradkirchhoff5703I'm from Cincinnati... Cornhole in pretty big here. Never heard of it called bags. But I guess Cincinnati is like the edge of the Midwest though so I don't know🤷
@@bradkirchhoff5703 I'm from Missouri. We call it beanbags. Our fathers call it cornhole. You're wrong.
@@shaynebarnes175 Ohio is Midwest by honorary position only.
However, you're correct on it being called Beanbags/Cornhole over just "bags".
I LOVE seeing black people react to this video of this white dude and the black bbq! I always notice the discussions about past BBQs and favorite foods. There is something we all share... Food, friends, and family are the cores of the American life.
It’s my understanding that to be invited to a cookout is an honor
@@amyblasingim2136 fat white girls can show up at any black park BBQ... That's know across the nation fit right in and go home with a new man...duh
It definitely is!
Yall must also do Momma T's Fish fry by zach rushing.
Absolutely 😂😂😂❤
And "The tale of Possum" aka that one friend who's an asshole. XD
I need to laugh today and yep 😂 Ditto on your video ❤
Absolutely
Yep fish fry video is so funny
This is what it’s about, appreciating our differences, and occasionally making fun of one another. No room for hate in this short life. Nothing but love and occasional humor.
I was born and raised in South Georgia, and I can verify that everything he said does happen at a black cookout. I'm from a small farming community and yes, we do grow corn here too. Dice, dominoes, checkers, card games are all a part of a cookout. No ghetto needed for good times.
I find it very revealing that this white guy knows the head of the black family is grandma/black wmn. He already knew! Amazing
It is everywhere
especially in the south, white ppl know grandma is always the one in charge! 😂
especially in the south, white ppl know grandma is always the one in charge! 😂
I haven't had a proper chuckle in a fair while but listening to this fellow's recount, I experienced genuine Joy. Always a pleasure to see country folk doing what country folk do
Yes We grow corn in the South. He's in south Mississippi. I in Alabama!
Here in NC everybody grow corn, tomatoes, squash, collard greens etc.
Pretty sure they grow Corn across the Americas. Maize, the original species, is native to the Americas and is used by many indigenous populations.
@@LadyVineXIII You are 💯 right. It was the Indigenous people who interduced Corn to the World population 🔥🔥🔥
Corn fields as far as the eye can see here in South Texas too
@@midnight2600same in ohio
2:05 "I watched Bill Burr the other day..." "Who?" 😂😂 Bruh, now you gotta show him some Bill Burr.
Bill Barr
Australian white guy here. Every part of this video is amazing. 😮
In Chicago, we call Cornhole "Bags" You can buy a plastic version of the game at Walmart, but most people have heavy wooden boards, painted with their favorite sports teams logo and matching bean bags. Also, you can stuff the bags with dried beans or dry corn, thus the names bean bags or cornhole.
8:15 yes we grow corn in the south yall! ❤😂
Hilarious
Fr, what did they think we grow? Nothing but watermelons, tomatoes, and okra? 🤣🤣
Im a white guy from Norway and have 7 cousins. No idea if that is a lot or not, but there it is.
Other Norwegians i went to school with would tell me my family was big, so compared to a lot of them, its a lot i guess.
Mom has two sisters that both have three kids each.
Dad has a sister that has a single kid. Seven in total. And i love it. Family CAN be one of the greatest thing in your life.
Have you even BEEN in America? Wtf you talking about being around corn? 3/4 of the country is around corn lmao. Drive through the midwest and youll ONLY see corn. Even in Florida they have corn fields lol.
From the midwest...we know about corn.
From Ohio to half of South Dakota was pretty much corn when I drove from CT to CA in 06.
Thank you, I swear these two 🤣
Corn is highly subsidized by the federal government because it's cheap and what we use to feed our livestock. Unfortunately, corn is a starch, not a vegetable, and that's why American meat is lower quality with less flavor and nutrition.
So it's everywhere.
I'm in a cornfield at home with kids.... EARS EVERYWHERE! 😂😂❤
I have 59 first cousins. On my daddy's side, in SC, the cookouts for my grandmother's birthday were just like this except for the spades. It was poker.
«Spades» is a common card game to play in norway; used to always play it back in the 90´s with my stonerfriends. Is called «spardame», (the e is silent, contrary to how you would usually would say «dame» in norwegian), and translates to «queen of spades».
Also, even I know «bones» is afroamerican slang for dice or dominos. And I am a white dude living in Norway!
"I don't know if I've ever been to a black barbecue" was adorable!
Black peoples are not a monolith, this proves it. I understood everything the guy was talking about in the video.
exactly, no group is a monolith. I don't understand how people don't get that. Any time I hear generalizations like "all men are horndogs" or "all black people are thugs" I'm just like nah, you're just a bigot, that's all.
I was born and raised in the inner city of Baltimore Maryland. I grew up being told that multiple black friends were my cousins. I guess because my parents and grandparents were like family to those that lived on our block. So it made me grow up color blind, and I’m very thankful for that. I’ve been to some of the best cookouts, sleepovers and weddings ever! To this day I eat collard greens with vinegar and hot sauce. I now live in Texas and yes, we grow corn down here 😂
It's so funny, you can tell they are city folk that don't know a thing about the rural side. It's entertaining but also baffling. Then again, I have NO IDEA how to navigate a subway in a city. And busses? Forget it! I'll walk. 🤣
@ only time I rode the mta was to get to school. Other than that, I’m so lost 🤣🤣 like you I’d rather walk
I am mexican. My mother has 18 brothers and sisters same perents. My mother is 2nd oldest. My youngest aunt was in High-school with me i am 38. My perente got married age 14 and 15. At my age at 38 I have 144 cuzens 1st cuzens on just my mother side. Cuzens have kids as so do i. My father comes from a family of 6 brothers and sister. Last year my cuzen got married. We empty out 2 liquir stores we bought the whole store inventory. The couple collected enough money on the wedding to buy a house cash in California. One time my aunty needed a new roof. On her birthday 12 uncles and all the sons showed up. Built a new roof . Built a new fence and painted the house before my aunty got home from work. She cryed 😂
@frederickvalencia4976 holy fuck dude!!😂🤣😂
My mother came from 6 my dad from 6, but we were all spread out many miles apart. I am not close with more than 4 cousins. In truth my daddy's side kind of lost the life lottery, 3 didn't see 35, kind of a lot of tragedy , one to cancer, one to an auto accident, one to a worksite fire.
And beautiful story of family being in loving service to one another.💕💕
Holy shit!
That is damn beautiful. Your family is blessed.
Lesson learned, we're all just folks despite what the media and politicians would like you to believe. E PLURIBUS UNUM!
We are all HUMAN
all those i know dont believe more then half the stuff the media and that put out, i would love to be invited to a cook out and im from the uk where all we get is beans and chips lol
@@chrischapman1522 Well.... I dunno.... You haven't seen my brother...
Florida here. I grew up in a black church. I was at everyone’s house, social events, etc. I didn’t realize I wasn’t black. God rest your soul Bishop Washington. Your sheep were my sheep❤️
Everybody with even a small patch of land grows corn in Mississippi. 😂
I feel like that’s a universally American thing. Like, I live in the Pacific Northwest in a neighborhood and every garden around the block has a corn patch.
People underestimate the sheer amount of corn produced in America
I've watched this video countless times and every time I smile, chuckle and just laugh it loud. It's very human.
This is awesome! I love people and recognize that we all show love to one another. Instead of fighting over our differences we get the opportunity to brag about our differences which makes all of life more colorful.
I have seen Zach in person, and he is just as crazy on stage as he is in his videos. You should check out his videos about his Nana.
I come from a Polish Catholic family. My mom had 15 siblings. I have over 70 first cousins.
I have heard this man tell this story over 3 times now and it still cracks me up.
See this is why sharing culture amongst each other is important, you gain perspectives and experiences you will never get staying inside your own lane or box
As a Latino I was invited to my coworkers cook out/son's bday, it was awesome. Mac and cheese, collard greens, okra, they had BBQ and fish fry and jungle juice. I got lit, they were super nice. I miss going to their cook outs.
Been to a brother's BBQ. And it was some bad*ss cookin & laid back.....But when I was over the road. Stopped in Chicago & needed a haircut. I had a taxi driver who asked me if I had ever been to a brother's barber shop. I said nope. But it's cool with me...When I walked into the barber shop. 2pac playing on radio & at least a dozen blk men in there. I literally thought "this is where I'm going to die. I'm gonna get shanked with some scissors". But it was cool, laid back & had the cleanest cut I have ever had. Barber even brought out an old straight razor w/the sharpening belt. It was awesome (never had that before). Good reality check & great cuts.
I've always been proud as hell when my black friends would say I'm "invited to the cookout". Being a south Louisiana girl, I'm white, but I know how to season chicken, lol! With New Orleans and Baton Rouge being major port cities back in the day, Louisiana is rich with a blend of so many traditions and cultures, and the amazing food is one of the many benefits of that. Also, to agree with Zach, when you get invited to a black cookout, it really will be the best food and the nicest people you can experience. They will treat you like family, and try to kill you with food, lol!
You are upper middle class black. His story is middle class and lower black experience.
It's not a class issue. It's regional.
@SistaSol he lives in Georgia. The white guys experience is typical here in the south. So then if it is regional why hasn't MrLboyd experienced it.
@@BushmasterBrackett Lives in Georgia, grew up in NY.
If he fell asleep at his very first time going to a black friends cookout business story was definitely made up
It sounded to me as if they were ripping a little on BBQs in the 'hood ("ghetto") toward the end of this video.
I'm Irish. I have 38 first cousins.
Catholic? No judgement, I am as well, lol. Family came over from Kilrush, Co Clare. I need to visit someday.
@JoeBoone82 Apparently, IIRC, it's Irish tradition to have at least 6 kids, 3 sons and 3 daughters. One son is named for the dad's dad, the other after mom's dad and the third with a unique name. And likewise for the daughters.
I'm Catholic. I never counted all my cousins😅
Not Catholic, 52 first cousins. Dad's family is mainly German and Norwegian, mom's family mainly Scottish and Irish ancestry.
😮
As a white dude, we definitely use wash cloths in my family. I had no idea there were people that don't use wash cloths lol
Like most people i know who are white i don't even know half my family. Don't have reunions etc. I always admired that with Hispanic and black neighbors. Its always a party with lots of family on nice weekends
Same. My family used to do family reunions when I was small and it was amazing. I'm doing my best to try to get it going again, but no one wants to set aside time. I plan something, and half the guests cancel a week before. I'm close to giving up and doing 'found' family. 😢
My extended family was so spread out, most an 8 hour drive away, even growing up. Now we are even more spread out and getting old. I do have an Aunt and 3 cousins close enough that we made a commitment to getting together either three or four times a year.
Same!!
My white family eventually just started calling funeral reunions o.o
Most of the white people I know always get together with family. Reunions is not a black thing or Hispanic thing. Some reunions are small, some big. All depends on how big your family is. My family is smallish because all of our extended family (cousins, aunt, uncles) live across the ocean. We make due with whatever family we have here. If they were all here, we would be having huge parties too!
If you don't do reunions, that's a you thing, not a white thing. Maybe it's time that you make an effort to start the tradition.
From Sweden here.. Mom was youngest of 12(farmers in northern of Sweden) and I live in Stockholm where a lot of the relatives lives. Every time someone in the family had birthdays, weddings, events, all relatives with families showed up. When I graduated from school (20 years old) I hade 36 relatives at my party plus other friends. At the table, relatives and friends we started to talk about how many cousins I had at that time. We came up with 46 living ones and I was floored, I think I have met maybe 2/3 over the years. It was 19 years between the oldest child, a sister, and my mother as the youngest. Most of my cousins where a few years younger then mom, and their children where at my age.. so yea all funny when telling my friend this is my cousin and they were like 20-25 years older =)
As a white guy, I grew up with exactly 3 cousins, two of which are brother and sister. I gained more when my two female cousins started having kids, leading to a complete total of 9 cousins.
I love your cousins sense of humor, I think he would make a great asset to the video content.
The laugh that escaped my mouth at 10:52 😂😂😂 I feel proud that my family’s cookouts have been done right since before I was born and we continue to hold up all the traditions 😂❤️🤎
I grew up in ranch land in Nevada, up to the point I joined the Army at 19 I knew exactly one Black person. Everyone I grew up with was Hispanic, Native American or white. Joining the Army I had a lot of learning to do. My first Black cookout was in Birmingham Alabama and what this guy said is spot on. It was one of the best experiences of my life and some of my most treasured memories are sitting around a table with folks I did not know talking smack over a table of bones and walking away friends. They were always amazed that they'd get spanked by a white guy playing dominoes. I had a secret weapon when it came to bones, a Southern Great Grandma that taught us all to play. Nothing more humbling than your Great Grandma smashing that final bone down to end a game. I wish people understood regardless of our color, our religion, who we love, we all have more in common than not.
I love that MrLboyd was confused by both cornhole and spades. Lol
Bro I've said this once already but, you LIVE IN GEORGIA AND NEVER HEARD OF CORNHOLE?! 😂 I can't understand!! Also I live in south TN and I am SURROUNDED by cornfields! Lmaoo Much love MrLboyd but check yo southern! 😂
Cornhole is new. We grew up playing horseshoes. I’ve only known of cornhole for about 10-12 yrs
I’m from Georgia it’s a bunch of cornfields around
@@atlsmostblunted1 Cornhole was invented in 1883, it's not new.
@@atlsmostblunted1 tf are you on about, its older than most american pass times...
@@sage7287 if so go back and find a tv show, movie, commercial or anything that showed ppl playing cornhole before 2005. I don’t care what google say.
7:13 cornhole is bean bag throwing
Bones can be either dice or dominoes depending on the individuals playing. Where I'm from in Texas, it usually means dominoes. But I have frequently heard it be used for dice.
The reason it is called bones is because it used to be bones that were used to make the domino pieces or the dice. Then Ivory. Now plastic, lol
In some places apparently "Bones" is specific to dice and Dominos is just Dominos. But I'm pretty sure that's a regional distinction. Like - Deep south - and then in Texas or the midwest it might be different!
There's a 90s era RUSH album and single produced by Rupert Hine called "Roll the Bones". It's great music but kind of obscure these days.
Not disagreeing with your info, but adding context to the phrase...Does one "throw" dominos or is the term "throwing" used in refernce to a game using dominos by anyone? If not then the phrase "throwing bones" would be specific to dice.
@@GuessWhoAsks You're right, him saying "throw bones" meant it was dice. I know plenty of people who call dominos bones but no one says "throw" in that context.
@GuessWhoAsks that completely depends on the domino game being played. 42 is a domino game that is played a lot like spades, and sub-games within it. Rarely do they have to be placed in a formation, but just "thrown" in a pile, like a book is in spades. Straight dominoes are lined up off of the spinner.
Cornhole originally was you taus corn into the hole in the board across from you. Modern version uses beanbags. Also, corn is grown from Canada through Mexico and South America
I'm Dutch. Yesterday i ate fries with mayo for lunch. Very common (fast)food to eat here. More luxury would be mayo, saté (peanut) sauce with chopped onions.
And there are plenty of mayo sauces. Lots of types of additives to make dipsauce for chips, for salads or other food. My latest choice is a meat sanwich with some peper/sesame mayo.
The country hood is a real thing. Best food and even better people!! God Bless!!
We had five people in my family. After my grandparents have now passed, its my my parents, myself, and a dog. That's literally it. The concept of a larger family has always been a thing I wondered what it was like.
😂😂😂 Cornhole is a beanbag game through a hole! Spades is one of those BLACK CARD musts: play French cut with the kitty, baby Joker ... BONES IS DICE😂😂😂😂
Throwing bones is dice, play some bones is dominos
What is french cut with the kitty?
Born and raised in Texas, it’s amazing to see other people’s reactions to our normal, everyday life. Lol
All throughout my military time (18 countries, three warzones, friends and women of all cultures) I love to attend at a cookout. The food is similar, but it's the family interactions that are the same. (Even when you don't have a shared language) The hosts don't realize, until the guest is unexpectedly comfortable being a part of them. Just like they they were hoping for.
Corn hole is basically the bean bag toss
1:05 I wouldn’t do that and im white. Lmfao.
Same
Me too
I have, just don’t blow past them
Outlier
Me either! Rofl wtf
I have a lot of cousins however at my grandparents passed away we no longer see them.... My grandparents were the glue they kept the family together
"The different calibers of mayonnaise!" is the wildest statement of the year. 😂😅🤣
We grow heaps of corn in the south. Corn, soybeans and tobacco are littered around eastern NC.
Lol as a Dutch person it is so funny hearing you guys wierd out about dipping fries in mayonaise 😂. My brain wasnt braining for a sec trying to understand why that would even raise any questions, you talked about Spain but all throughout Europe it is a very very common thing to dip fries and/or any other fried food in mayonaise. Mayonaise here is more seen to be on the same level as lets say ketchup, at least thats the ways its treated. Im curious as to how our mayonaise compares to US mayonaise.
I’m so blessed to be from the North Gulf Coast. My mom’s family’s got Indian/White/with some Cajun thrown in. If you look @ my pic, you’d probably be shocked that I’ve known how to play spades since I was 6, & everything this white guy was talking about. I feel blessed that I come from an area, where our culture is mixed “gumbo”..
New Orleans, Mobile, & on the P’Cola have the best food, & ppl.
Throwing bones = playing dominoes!! where I'm from. Since when is it dice??
It can mean both. I've heard it used more for dice. I'm East Coast so maybe that's the difference? The term originates from using dice made of animal bones to divine the future. It's called cleromancy.
@thefemininecfo You know I could imagine since dice were quite often made from bone back in the day, I wouldn't be surprised that's where the expression comes from - I am not sure Dominoes were made of bones typically but I wouldn't be surprised they were too :-D
ITS ALWAYS meant playing craps with dice... You're probably Spanish as spanish people love dominos.
@@andrewchristiansen8311 😊 very close! I grew up in NYC with Caribbean parents. My dad was from the British West Indies my mom from Panama. My dad loved playing dominoes.
Do you throw dominoes???
Lol. I can relate. I married a Mexican. We live in Detroit. My first visit to see her mom's family was like this guys. 45 to 50 Mexicans all speaking Spanish. They did nothing but love on me. Feed me some of the best food I ever eat. I danced with All 13 Tia's. Was an amazing experience. I miss them all. That was 30 years ago. Most of the Tia's have passed away.
I think bones are dice ... Cornhole is popular everywhere now.. And you can grow corn anywhere
One of my last family reunions, was about 97 of us taking over a cabin community on a lake. It was amazing
Never been to a black cook out. I have been to a Mexican cook out many times. Way to heal the divide cause by politics. Thanks guys.
Zach is one of my favorite content creators, man is absolutely hilarious!
1:54 i guess depends on how busy the older folks got
I'm Irish and have over a hundred 1st cousins and some of them are great grandparents I'm 36
@@Paddyman8869 damn
@@enderborn6860 there was no TV or central heating back in my grandparents days my mam is the 2nd youngest of 17 children and my grandfather had 2 kids before he got married no one knew about till he died and they came to the funeral
I’m Irish and ⚪️ - I have so many cousins that I don’t know all them… 😂
I’m Irish and ⚪️ - I have so many cousins that I don’t know all them… 😂
Cornhole (also known regionally as sack toss, or bags) is a lawn game popular in North America in which players or teams take turns throwing fabric bean bags at an inclined board with a hole in its far end. The goal of the game is to score points by either landing a bag on the board (one point) or putting a bag through the hole (three points)
😂😂😂 Drive outside of the Atlanta area during the summer and I guarantee you’ll see corn growing 😂😂😂. Cornhole is the revamped horseshoes.
I have 22 cousins, idk if that’s a lot but it’s always been normal to me 🤷🏻♀️
2:14 I have 87 cousins, my gramps had 12 children (2 wives, yes polygamy) soooo,
Small country farms and homes often grow corn for themselves. A lot will also sell it on the roadside by the house. Great video. I taught In Harlem NYC for many years I often was one of three Whites in the entire school. And most often, the only White on the Train downtown. Never had a problem, loved every minute with the kids.
They say throwing bones because Domino’s used to be made out of ivory so they were literally animal bones 11:48
True mayonnaise has a "splash" of fresh lemon juice. So it's Technically a pallet fixer.
But that said, I play cut throat.
Momma T's Fish Fry and The Tale of Opossum are must watches.
Also, you ain't finna bring your cousin in and call it quits. We need more of this man! No disrespect to you MrLboyd.
Who is he? I would like to watch more.
@@denisekehlerl802 Zach Rushing. The man is hysterical.
@@singingwolf3929 thank you
@@denisekehlerl802 No problem. Check out: It's Simply Out of Respect as well, It's a great watch.
Im white in south-eastern TN and thats exactly what our cook-outs are like spades, BBQ, food comas, and great-grandma force feedin you some pie
❤😂I love this!!!!! I have been married to my husband for 25 years! We are a multicultural household! I only have two cousins, my husband has like 25 first cousins and like 40 some second cousins!!!!!😅
(In response to your question at 2:00) white people (in my experience being white) typically only have like 2-5 cousins on average growing up! I had 4 (2 close to the fam and 2 were hardly seen!
23 cousins😂
@@wendybenton9762geez u guys got around lol you guys are the abnormality lol
Same, I only had four, and they’re all younger than me by 5 to 16 years, so we didn’t grow up together and don’t really have a relationship.
@@AnnaVictrix yeah I'm 13 years older than the oldest and 17 years older than the youngest lol All four of them kind of grew up close though
I have over 200 cousins and discovering more everyday
You guys missed he said "3 Glock 9s hit the top of the table" 14:40
Haha I love it
Just to be clear, that's probably not a "hood/ghetto" cookout, that's a COUNTRY BBQ!! I am also a white boy lucky enough to be invited to one of these most amazing gatherings. Everything this man said is on point
I mean... I grew up with 4 cousins lol. Now that being said I just found my birth family, and there's 2 more cousins, so between two families... I have 6 cousins lmao.
Bones could either be Dominoes or Dice. Basically slang that comes from Ivory style game pieces.