I don't know why but I always love watching people just go around and do normal things like shopping in their own country. I love seeing how each country is unique in their own ways. Nice video
@Robert because you are here for a reason. If you are not feeling connection and purpose of your life, then something inside is blocking you (trauma and beliefs generally). Life unfolds according to what we already have inside. And it can be incredible. There are ways to work through blocks. One of them is Theta healing. Look it up and good luck! 🤗 PS I hope you will feel better soon. And God/universe loves you. However cheesy that sounds...
Good idea with lockers up front and the cashier gets to sit down. I also noticed many products packaged in more eco friendly containers. Very interesting, thank you for sharing!
See no sense to stand. I live all my life in Russia and always they sit and it is never caused any problems. More than that probably relaxed cashiers have a better mood and more power to do their for just faster.
@@idylledoll In no shape, form or fashion does the U.S care for its people. Actually, the U.S sets out to make life deliberately hard on its fellow Americans. No love here, no kind of way.
Thank you for your tour- you are intelligent, well dressed and have great manners.... The prices here are very similar ,but we rarely run into people who can speak even English so fluently... and knowing that your native tongue is Russian- you do an EXCELLENT job. Again- Thank you.
the prices might be the same but who knows people in russia might make less money than in the usa, iam guessing they make 500-800$ a month or less.35$ might be a lot for that.
Even though this is an older video from 2014 I enjoyed it very much. I was surprised at how expensive coffee and tea is at first but then I remembered coffee has gotten fairly expensive in America as well in 2019. Great video guys!
That Tea he Showed us is Expensive it's "Ahmed Tea" it's 10$ in the U.S it's the brand I'm sure Lipton Tea if he had it, it would have been similar prices! They're prices are better than ours
Commenting late, but one of the reasons why coffee is becoming super expensive is because most of the farmers are having to deal with mold known as coffee rust. Also, deforestation, climate change, and soil quality is playing a huge part as well. In about a decade, coffee will be 700x the cost it is now.
I work in a grocery store and i can tell just from this video that the store is well maintained. The shelves are neat. Everything is well stocked and pulled forward, everything in neat rows. That takes a lot of work to keep everything looking that way. Nothing wrong with this place.
Pamela Mojo Fabulous Strange, I thought you were there to shop, not judge other people for how they look. There are jobs out there where you get paid to be a snob, going to the shops isn’t one of them.
@@CaptchaNeonI can say and think any thing I want. Just like the pajama wearing braless wonders I see lerkng in Walmart. Sorry to burst your bubble but people judge others in looks, dress, speech. It is a cruel world .
I very much enjoyed Russian markets, both large and small. My favorites were actually the smaller markets in the countryside and near villages. They were run by families and had a beautiful selection of items. The workers were helpful and polite even though they were wary of me (speaking English).
Good job just started watching your videos. your delivery and content are natural and easygoing that is, you have a friendly relaxed nature. keep up the good work.
Sergey , you did a wonderful job on this video. Very informative! You're helping break through stereotypes and propaganda that people have of your country. Keep up the videos.🌹
Yeah, I found that funny too but we'll forgive him, English is not his mother tongue... lol Gee, some of the things he bought were cheaper than in Quebec, Canada...
I smiled too but hey, this guy obviously doesn't live in an English speaking country and Russians aren't known to speak English well, so I'm giving him a big thumb up.
Southern Fried Kitchen is good too and Roasted Kitchen. His English is much better than my speaking Russian would be. I chop up Spanish all the time. I saw an Asian restaurant menu with Fried Lice instead of Rice being offered, and they say it that way too when speaking English.
Lol planning a motorcycle trip from Dublin Ireland to Moscow Russia for next year. Fitting I come across a video like this! Thanks for putting this up!
A person with an accent= Seen more, Done more, Understands more, And has a great story to tell. Welcome to the US to all people with accents . Thank for making our boring lives more interesting.
0:52 ..."it's comfortable to go shopping in the big supermarkets to get a large amount of goods, if you have a car under your ass and don't have to carry weighty bags," - Paraphrased of Sergey. That truly is funny.
***** Sergey, have you thought about a road trip to California? Do it or the people of Russia? I live in San Diego, a few miles from the Mexican border. The desert to the East would be perfect for an episode. Much of it is below sea level, many different types of cactus, very few animals of any kind, only coyotes, roadrunners, rattlesnakes etc.. There are hundreds of natural caves to explore and escape the desert heat. Come on over with your family, and I will be your guide! Love what you do my friend!
Andrew Phillips But you can ask? And as in the United States for a foreign tourist, you can look at the tornado?? "Tornado Alley" I am Russian, but since childhood I dream to see the tornado, f 5!!
Roman Gennadievich Roman, I have lived in California my entire life. We don't see many tornados here. I have seen two up high in the clouds, but didn't touch the ground. But we do have occasional earthquakes!
Andrew Phillips I don't know whether it is possible in the USA to hitchhike?? I've heard all kinds of conflicting information on this subject, in some States can and others cannot, some where even the police could pick.
***** Hey guys, I recognize a lot of the same brands of products at your store that we find in our local grocery stores. That surprised me some. It resembles some of the smaller groceries here in many ways. Biggest difference I noticed is that the cashier is allowed to sit down, which is great. I don't recall seeing that here. Really glad they have a "camera friendly" policy! Warmest greetings from USA!! Paul
Volga Las I really do not know why this practice exists. I suspect it is about presenting an enthusiastic appearance to customers. All I know is that it is not common practice in the USA. I think it should be, because standing all day in one spot is very difficult.
Volga Las I agree. I am working in a retail store recently (temporarily) and I am on my feet about 9 hours a day. It is very tiring, and bad for the back and feet. Paul
Faux Eden Yes, quite literally it is a pain! Cashier is a lot more demanding job than most people realize. Frequently a cashier also works close to the door, and in winter is exposed to a lot of cold from the door opening frequently. It can be a very unpleasant job.
hi, still a fan after all this time. can you show cooking at home? What is an average home cooked meal? Do you mostly fry, bake, boil food etc. thank you. love you!!!!!
@@Jenny_Lee_ must give Aldi a thumbs up. They make you pay a quarter to use the cart and give it back when you return it. Very smart, obviously not a American store.. Look at all the Wal Mart carts all over the country. Homeless people's storage containers
Very enjoyable video, most videos on youtube from Russia are car crashes and people in Adidas track suits, very nice change of pace, those security lockups aren't big enough to store your akm or aksu though.
I noticed many brands that we see here in the US: Lays, Pringles, etc. Undoubtedly every store in Russia is going to sell Coke and Pepsi as well. One major distributor of foods and household items (cleaning supplies, etc.) is based right here in Cincinnati, and is known as P&G (Proctor and Gamble). They got their start back in the 1800's with soap, and have since grown to become a massive distributor handling such items as the Pringles you showed in your video. If I were to read the fine print on everything found inside a typical American store, a considerable portion (maybe 10 - 20%) would be under the P&G company brand. This is a massive amount to come from a single source.
***** interesting...I would have thought most other countries sell products from their own countries..I thought most canadian markets would sell canadian labels & brands, whether national or local brands but nevertheless canadian.
***** The amount of Western European or American brands in this Russian supermarket is quite scary. I have heard that Russians love those Western brands. This Russian store has more German branded goods than the typically discount store in Germany has. Here in Germany I always try to don't buy overprices branded products, it's seems much more difficult to avoide those products in Russia.
***** But if you look in a typically American grocery store, there are so many European brands. I wouldn't be surprised if most Americans don't know what products are from an American company or from an European company. It's the same over here. Most Germans probably think that "Kraft" and "Ferrero" are German companies. I have seen a video where an American couple in a french hypermarket was astonished that they sell Axe deodorants. They didn't know that this is a European product.
Thanks this is fascinating. From an Australian perspective, we all have cars and drive to the food stores mostly. Some inner city residents may not drive as they most likely will be near a food store. But very much like USA, we are a very urbanized society and so need to drive everywhere.
Stephen Woods Driving everywhere is not a sign of a very urbanized society. It is a sign of a society based on car ownership. Most urbanized societies that do not have miles of land to waste have concentrated on public transportation and neighborhood shopping. Many people in those societies have never even learned how to drive because they don't need that skill. My sister-in-law and her mother never learned how to drive because they had mass transit. It was the post WWII suburbanites and the farm dwellers who needed to have a car in the US because of a lack of public transportation.
If you are an '"urbanized" society, you do not need a car, you just walk or take public transport. It is suburbia, where people are driving to all places.
I live in Kentucky and yes, our moonshine rocks. I love it when my face goes numb from it. I've had the brown and the clear. For some reason the brown has always been better for me. I asked and was told it's just burnt sugar to give it color for camouflage. I don't claim to be a maker or expert but I sure do love it, especially when it's brown.
hi Sergey, I'm going to subscribe and like every video just to pay for this one, it's awesome. I also wonder if you have a video about wages because that is like the other half of the equation. For example I am a welder in canada and have a paycheck every two weeks ( 80 hours work ) of $1700
This was very cool. Your food is less expensive than in America, yet it was all pretty much the same. Those same items would have been well over 50$ American dollars here.
For everyone watching this in the USA, I actually did the math on the price tags and they are about half of every price he said. For example if he said it cost $3 American dollars it actually is only $1.50 in 2017 currency conversion.
Correct. The video filmed 3 years ago when exchange rate was different. Now that cart would cost not $35 but about $20. But once prices are growing too.... so with an inflation maybe roughly $25-27.
In Australia there are 2 shops Woolworths and Coles and basically were ever you go there are right next to each other and they sell the same shit but different prices like Smith Original chips is in Coles $3.46 and in Woolworths $3.43. Woolworths is way better. :D
3:43 "The next think is popular around Russians is the leg of kitchen" LOL!!! I totally give him credit for speaking english well. I've just never heard a chicken called a kitchen before lol. Good work tho!
Amy Graef agreed! I congratulate him for knowing a second language! and it's really funny to hear him say "leg of the kitchen"! Very Borat! I've said that before when I was jrunk
I was surprised by the number of American Brand Products available. The prices are generally slightly higher than my local Kroger here in Kentucky. It seemed to have a decent selection of items for a small store.
@@Timenow1 they are not. In fact, most of them doesn't have anything in common with the original US food. All of them are made in Russia. You won't find anything imported in such stores.
At a Las Palmas HEB in the West Side of San Antonio, about 5 years ago , it was required that shoppers leave backpacks, anything that was not your purse there. .... I was shocked. Oh well, that was because it's a poor side of town.
Oh my heart. I spent a summer in Moscow studying Russian and I left part of myself there. 😍 We always shopped at the street vendors (bumaga tualyet 😂😂😂). Take us through the banya! Hahaha not American at all, it one of my favorite parts of Moskvye. ❤️😘Ochen horosho.
In one summer you will not learn enough RUSSIAN language.I been staring 9 years in school as second language and for me was a HELL.Much easy I did French then RUSSIAN.And because I never use this language now in NYC I 👂 RUSSIAN tolling and I start to take back this language and very interesting they told me that I have no accent.They good people but I don't like the language,German the same since I am in USA I forget it.When I don't use language u forget it.
@@timofte566 I took a year of Russian in college. Also took 4 years of french. I had no problem getting around France in my 20s. Loved Russia so much though. I haven't spoken either in 20 years. My daughter is learning Japanese now.☺️
Interesting that your cashiers at the store sit down while here in the USA they are all expected to remain standing. Most of the prices seem comparable to the usa although your coffee is expensive! Thanks for the tour.
+swimbait1 You're welcome! I think it's a good thing that the cashiers in Russia are sitting. Because I am sure it's pretty tiring to stand up all the day long.
+Real Russia Yeah, man, there's some weird stigma in the U.S. where if you're not standing, you're not working! It's kind of ridiculous. I mean there are plenty of desk jobs where people sit all day, but I see no reason why cashiers, who are stuck in one place anyway should have to stand alllll day with no option to sit down except for a 15-30min break time.
+swimbait1- Many people here in the US who stand in their jobs all day often contract ailments to their legs and body, due to stresses that can affect a person the rest of their lives. I've told many employers about this with blank stares. There is no rule anywhere or even in the Holy Bible that says you must stand for many hours in jobs that don't require it to complete your tasks. Just like the Mexicans who think a person there must work for 15-18 hours 6 days a week, and anything less is looked down among the employers.
+Swimbait1 The counters and register areas are not even built for cashiers to be sitting. There are circumstances where cashiers are allowed to sit but those are the exception not the rule.I have worked in supermarkets and gas stations for several years in the USA. The place I work at is crazy busy I do not have time to sit. I could not even do my job unless cashier area is done over.
Real Russia it's a joke about hilary blaming the russian government for interfering with us elections causing her to lose to trump. im sure he meant to write colluding which is synonymous with conspire.
Real Russia Funny thing is, most Americans had never heard the words "collude" or "collusion" until that witch Hillary started crying about the election being "stolen" damn libtards!
The cashier seemed much more friendly than the ones at my local store in Utah. We have a misconception here where we generally think of Russians as unfriendly and aloof.
Its pretty cool to see everyday life in other parts of our world. Funny how watching something as simple as you grocery shopping to be very informative. Great video my dude!!! 👍✌ Thanks for the education!!!
I live in China and was away for fourteen years. My parents came to China and saw me a few times in that time. When I came back from the airport, I was told they built a new supermarket in our suburb and I wanted to go there. My mind was blown. More like angels singing, and the night manager was God. Holy fuck! Real food!
gameplay no one cares about And she didn't have to bag, or do the speech "Hey, how are you doing? Thank you for shopping at So-and-So! Hope you found everything okay today!"
Joyce Re+ Don't like the "Hi, how are doing" speeches (imagine how many times they ask that question in a shift, it's fake). A simple "Hi" is good enough. People should bag their own groceries, thats why the have hands after all. It really stinks when a person is holding up the cashier and there is another 50 people in line waiting.
Offcourse the cashier was sitting down. its no fun standing all day! And yes a simple hello is good enough. And like the same in holland no fake happy b..llshit and bag your own groceries (and that keep the prices low!)
I so agree with all of you. There is no reason cashiers should have to stand constantly - it must be bad for their legs. People working in similar pay job - they stand a lot too but they are more active( i.e working at starbucks) you have to walk around more. But staying stationary is no good. I hate the North American way customer service is. A simply hi is fine. It was a bit of culture shock to go to different countries where they are far more relaxed in service. At times it almost felt like you were inconveniencing them when they had to serve you as a lot of the time they were so serious looking rather than attempting to be friendly. And if they are more friendly - you can tell that it's natural. When you get used to the service workers who seem more standoffish, it's no big deal and I can see the merit in it. They ARE doing their job, they are seeing to your needs(within reason) they just aren't putting on a performance on top of that. I'm sick of people having to pretend they like their jobs, they are doing their damn jobs - there is no earthly reason they also have to act like it's their pleasure in life to help you at a store, restaurant, hotel ect.
Speaking as a retired Business School Professor and notorious skinflint when it comes to shopping, the prices of the goods is maybe 25% to 50% more than here in the United States. However, what doesn't get discussed in this video is the average hourly wage in Ufa compared to the average minimum wage here in the USA. THAT's the difference. So food is much more expensive in Mother Russia.
Autumn Aurora its Moscow, everyone knows that Moscow city small shops are expensive, but wages in the city are big too, but going away from the city or huge stors are much much cheaper
Your fruit is cheaper then in Oklahoma. The meat is cheaper here. Chips, tea and coffee high there. Milk and can food toilet paper and soup about the same. Cashiers stand here and we have micro-chips in the packages so that the security wont freak when you have a bag not from them. In many ways i like the new Russia better then the new U.S. Seems the world flipped over. Good to see you both looking well. Thanks.
Exactly! Some things higher here, some things lower there! It's true, Russia, has become the way we wish America was. If I was younger and single, I would be in Russia already!
hellavadeal I'm taking the kids out runnin and gunnin this Sunday, except the little one. The gun culture was almost non existent here 15 years ago, but now guns are sexier than Prada and Madison Ave. The Marxist democrats are loosing local elections big time. Hopefully we can clean them out at the state level, and launch investigations into to these half mafia, half federal creatures. Considering that CT is nothing more these days than a suburb of NY city, it'll be an up hill battle pressing back against the kind of money they can put into campaigns. My town was taken over by Tea party style republicans, our new mayor owns an auto shop, I think it's our first mayor that's not a lawyer. It looks like a lot of the changes they made are going to lead to fraud indictments, but the paper trail is so thick, I'm not sure if it'll ever be unwound. On the plus side, the police just got a whole lot nicer, the employees at city hall appear to actually be working now, the construction projects are getting finished instead of being endless money pits and the big tax increases the town swore it needed are starting to look like they'll be tax decreases. Things are starting to turn around a little bit here, hopefully it's not too little, to late. And the best part is, all the scumbags that voted for the commie gun control, are chitting their pants and want the state to pay for round the clock security like the governor has!
Thank You so much for sharing this simple task. I have always wanted to learn the culture of Russia, the every day living and things Russians are comparisons to American Lifestyles. You Rock! I subscribed and can't wait to see more about Russia. Oh, by the way, My dream is to one day visit Russia.
People outside the US don't refrigerate their eggs, learned something new. Always interesting when you go your whole life thinking the way you do things is normal only to find out you're the weirdo.
I found out people put bread in the fridge. Absolutely barbaric. Also, I don't understand why people put tomatoes to the fridge - they lose all the taste.
+Mocsk I don't understand putting bread in the fridge either, maybe because I never toast my bread. Eggs, however, are not bread. Eggs for me are the same as raw meat. They should be kept refridgerated at all times.
$4 for Pringles! 😨 $1 here I like the lockers, very convenient. This was a cute little store but seemed so quiet or maybe it was just a slow time of the day. I saw Lipton tea😁my favorite! Thanks for this nice informative video💙🇺🇸
@@rayjennings3637😲 oh no! Lol What's the popular tea now there? I'll see if they have it here in the U.S. and try it😉 Growing up in Southeastern U.S., we always drank Lipton but as long as it's sweet, I'll try another 😁
Most family people prefer to buy a week supply of food in a big stores like Walmart - here we got Auchan, Lenta, Okey. ruclips.net/video/Tfs_xU9fGE4/видео.html Stores like this mostly used for buying something you forgot to buy in a big store, or like you suddenly want a bottle of soda. Or for singles who don't plan for a week ahead.
Why do so many stores in Europe not like it when people film inside? I was at a supermarket in Madrid and wanted to shoot some video of the fish section, and they immediately told me to stop.
I studied Russian at a university here in the U.S. under my professor who translated for President Reagan in the 1980’s and ever since I’ve been wanting to explore the language, life and culture there one day! Thanks for the vid bro! Большое спасибо!
I don't know why but I always love watching people just go around and do normal things like shopping in their own country. I love seeing how each country is unique in their own ways. Nice video
I do that when I'm really stoned. Its super interesting and relaxing.
@@stuff8605 never even thought of that thanks
same lol
@@stuff8605 I am never stoned but always find it interesting too.
Weirdo
I honestly have no idea why I'm watching this but I like it
the raucous lemon cause you ain’t got shit to do lol
7 schmeckels
Q Russian anthem
same here
It is nice to see about life in other places.
“Let’s make shopping right now, together.”
Beautiful
And in this edition of ‘youtube’s algorithm for weird insomniacs’ we watch some russian dude buy groceries.
It's actually interesting. One for the algorithm.
с учетом что в долларах цены стали в 2 раза дешевле
:D
going to grocery stores in other countries is my favorite thing to do when I travel
@Robert because you are here for a reason. If you are not feeling connection and purpose of your life, then something inside is blocking you (trauma and beliefs generally). Life unfolds according to what we already have inside. And it can be incredible. There are ways to work through blocks. One of them is Theta healing. Look it up and good luck! 🤗
PS I hope you will feel better soon. And God/universe loves you. However cheesy that sounds...
I am an American, I live in San Antonio, Texas.
It's so cool to see how Russia's culture is like.
So happy to see and learn about Russia.
+Richard Escobedo ...Hey, Richard, we're also in SA! Love "No fake and no bullshit"! 210!!!!!
Nothing says Russia in 2017 more than workers lined up to piss against a building on a busy street in the middle of the day. 0.26
I agree I'm from dallas
I watch this too, interesting. Greetings from Corpus Christi TX.
They are not peeing, they are applying color dye on the building!
No fake and no bullshit!I love your videos! Toronto, Canada!
InfoSecGuru False, I live in Toronto and have lived in Moscow.
Canada is cheaper and stuff r of much better quality.
Good idea with lockers up front and the cashier gets to sit down. I also noticed many products packaged in more eco friendly containers. Very interesting, thank you for sharing!
Cashiers sit at aldi. The lockers are cool.
jet guy not always "gals".
Well in Baltimore they would steal the keys to the loxkers
Natalie Junge it's happening the cashiers at the Aldis stores sit down as well
I like bagged mayonnaise!
Seeing how excited that man got over Pringle's made my day
Omg cashiers get to sIT DOWN?! My legs kill me after cashiering all day;-; Standing for 10 hours straight. I envy them!
Lol where are you from that cashiers have to stand up right??
See no sense to stand. I live all my life in Russia and always they sit and it is never caused any problems. More than that probably relaxed cashiers have a better mood and more power to do their for just faster.
America does not look after its citizens in terms of health or comfort in the work force :-/
@@idylledoll In no shape, form or fashion does the U.S care for its people. Actually, the U.S sets out to make life deliberately hard on its fellow Americans. No love here, no kind of way.
Envy? You probably make 10 times more money than they do.
I am unable to travel, so I love to visit your country this way. Thank You
+frenchbroad1431 you're welcome!
Thank you for your tour- you are intelligent, well dressed and have great manners.... The prices here are very similar ,but we rarely run into people who can speak even English so fluently... and knowing that your native tongue is Russian- you do an EXCELLENT job. Again- Thank you.
the prices might be the same but who knows people in russia might make less money than in the usa, iam guessing they make 500-800$ a month or less.35$ might be a lot for that.
Yes....that's a great point.
+Jose Avila Moscow is with Saint Peterburg the most expensive city in Russia, the salarys are more bigger in this cities too
Even though this is an older video from 2014 I enjoyed it very much. I was surprised at how expensive coffee and tea is at first but then I remembered coffee has gotten fairly expensive in America as well in 2019. Great video guys!
TIDE is still expensive there... Its high in the US too.
That Tea he Showed us is Expensive it's "Ahmed Tea" it's 10$ in the U.S it's the brand I'm sure Lipton Tea if he had it, it would have been similar prices! They're prices are better than ours
Commenting late, but one of the reasons why coffee is becoming super expensive is because most of the farmers are having to deal with mold known as coffee rust. Also, deforestation, climate change, and soil quality is playing a huge part as well. In about a decade, coffee will be 700x the cost it is now.
So expensive. If you take into account that the average Russian earns about 200 to 500 a month.
I work in a grocery store and i can tell just from this video that the store is well maintained. The shelves are neat. Everything is well stocked and pulled forward, everything in neat rows. That takes a lot of work to keep everything looking that way. Nothing wrong with this place.
This reminds me I need to buy paste for the tooth.
Do it!
Luis Foreal lol
And paper for the toilet.
Classic
And cream for my shoes.
Nothing like Walmart. No screaming kids or people in pajamas.
Means nothing is good there😝
Pamela Mojo Fabulous Do you have a problem with what people wear in public?
@@CaptchaNeon yes I do.
Pamela Mojo Fabulous Strange, I thought you were there to shop, not judge other people for how they look. There are jobs out there where you get paid to be a snob, going to the shops isn’t one of them.
@@CaptchaNeonI can say and think any thing I want. Just like the pajama wearing braless wonders I see lerkng in Walmart. Sorry to burst your bubble but people judge others in looks, dress, speech. It is a cruel world .
I am an Indonesia, I live in Yogyakarta.
It's so cool to see how Russia's culture is like.
So happy to see and learn about Russia.
I very much enjoyed Russian markets, both large and small. My favorites were actually the smaller markets in the countryside and near villages. They were run by families and had a beautiful selection of items. The workers were helpful and polite even though they were wary of me (speaking English).
Good job just started watching your videos. your delivery and content are natural and easygoing that is, you have a friendly relaxed nature. keep up the good work.
Informative and interesting video.I enjoy all your episodes, always seeing something never before seen here.Keep up the good work, Sergey & Sergey.
Sergey , you did a wonderful job on this video. Very informative! You're helping break through stereotypes and propaganda that people have of your country. Keep up the videos.🌹
Mmm my favourite... leg of the Kitchen.
Yeah, I found that funny too but we'll forgive him, English is not his mother tongue... lol Gee, some of the things he bought were cheaper than in Quebec, Canada...
I smiled too but hey, this guy obviously doesn't live in an English speaking country and Russians aren't known to speak English well, so I'm giving him a big thumb up.
😂😂😂😂🤣🤣🤣
Southern Fried Kitchen is good too and Roasted Kitchen. His English is much better than my speaking Russian would be. I chop up Spanish all the time. I saw an Asian restaurant menu with Fried Lice instead of Rice being offered, and they say it that way too when speaking English.
Enjoyed your accent...You speak english very well.
Russian can speak English. American can't speak Russian.
@@stanislavctvrty9699 Copy that. 🌊🚣⚓
@@BaldwinBay Fast response
@@stanislavctvrty9699Im in the hole with the hatch secured hiding from the evil virus. Lay low. Beware of the evil C19. Stay healthy and safe! 🤹🃏🤹
@@stanislavctvrty9699 english is very popular here. But some russians even have problems with native lang
I lived in Moscow for three years. This brings back great memories
на моменте, когда он 70 рублей называет 2 мя долларами у меня потекли слёзы... а ведь прошло всего 6 лет
Эх
Те же мысли)
Бля.... Аж поплохело
1000 rubles = 35 USD in 2014 (date of this video)
1000 rubles = 14 USD in 2021
Russia lost value by more than 100%
@@jesscast5122 It has to be really bad now with the sanctions and all...
@@smooth_ops2942 Yeah. It's prob less than 1 buck for 1000 rbl..........
3:45 The leg of the kitchen ...
Where do you cook?
In the chicken. :D
kkkkk
WAKAKAKAKAKAKA!!! Oh, it's damn hilarious.
StillUp2Date Such an easy mistake if you rhink about it.
StillUp2Date 😂
Come on countertop get in the pan
5:53 love the way you say "sausage" another great Real Russia video, now subscribed.
CNDjack5 I just watched it...its classic,...what a great guy :)
As a grocery store employee, thank you for putting everything back in the right place! It boils my blood when my department is trashed.
Lol planning a motorcycle trip from Dublin Ireland to Moscow Russia for next year. Fitting I come across a video like this! Thanks for putting this up!
$4 for pringles? You're getting ripped off man.
If you want to buy American cereal (in the Netherlands) you have to pay about 10-15$
i.ve seen pringles go for 6€ per can...now fuck that
I wonder where that 5 euro overhead goes? It can't all be taxes...
+opl500 idk,but someone's making a hell of a good profit
Да ваще не говори (I know, right?)
Some of those prices seem like good deals... but $4 for Pringles? Damn...
In Soviet Russia, groceries buy YOU.
Ha haaaaa
😂😂😂😂🤣🤣🤣🤣😂😂
johnnymcblaze So grateful in US we have dollar stores.
Omg u didn't go there ,but funny 😂😂😂🌷🌺💖
Naaahh nah nah that's cheap compared to the US
This was really relaxing for some reason.
He forgot to say it so I will say it for him "This is the real Russia with'a no fake and no Bullshit!!"
I like listening to Russians speaking English. Their accent goes easy on the ears unlike some others.
terrafirma91 I agree, but must admit that all accents spoken by the female gender is far easier on the ears.
Evil Fan Don't hate your accent ! Accents are cool 👍🏼
A person with an accent=
Seen more,
Done more,
Understands more,
And has a great story to tell.
Welcome to the US to all people with accents .
Thank for making our boring lives more interesting.
Very much agree. It actually sounds cool. I like. I would actually like to learn Russian myself.
It feels like paradise compared to Indian accent.
I'm intrigued that there are so many American brands there. I could almost feel at home.
Right?
HunterXray You clearly haven’t seen the candy and soft drink aisles here in Eurasia, almost all of it is American.
It's American brand, European flavours produced in Eastern Europe then exported across the eu/russian region, you would be disappointed I'm afraid.
This is very similar to Poland. Except it's easier for Americans to fly to, you only need a passport.
Ismail Khayam why
This was my 1st Sergey video. I'm now hooked on his awesome live streams 😎
0:52 ..."it's comfortable to go shopping in the big supermarkets to get a large amount of goods, if you have a car under your ass and don't have to carry weighty bags," - Paraphrased of Sergey. That truly is funny.
Slaxok I heard it too, funny.
Slaxok - try saying that in Russian
Best line in the video. Truly a classic!
it's amazing how there is no annoying music and loud announces, very quiet and clean! nice!
You don't need a plastic bag for bananas dude. They ain't going anywhere.
Probably they ask you to bag them and tie the bag in order to weight the fruit and print the price tag and stick it in the bag
@@Gastyz Yep. That's what they do in some shops in Germany.
fat gay Das macht hier keiner mehr, außer bei Äpfeln oder so.
@@mexikunt I'm no environmentalist but single use plastic is terrible
Who said he doesn't need it?
Thank you. I’ve never been to Russia but I really enjoyed watching your video. 👏👏👏👏 please do more videos
Come to Russia
As always, terrific and instructive! So great!!
Thank you, Bob!
***** Sergey, have you thought about a road trip to California? Do it or the people of Russia? I live in San Diego, a few miles from the Mexican border. The desert to the East would be perfect for an episode. Much of it is below sea level, many different types of cactus, very few animals of any kind, only coyotes, roadrunners, rattlesnakes etc.. There are hundreds of natural caves to explore and escape the desert heat. Come on over with your family, and I will be your guide! Love what you do my friend!
Andrew Phillips But you can ask?
And as in the United States for a foreign tourist, you can look at the tornado?? "Tornado Alley"
I am Russian, but since childhood I dream to see the tornado, f 5!!
Roman Gennadievich Roman, I have lived in California my entire life. We don't see many tornados here. I have seen two up high in the clouds, but didn't touch the ground. But we do have occasional earthquakes!
Andrew Phillips I don't know whether it is possible in the USA to hitchhike??
I've heard all kinds of conflicting information on this subject, in some States can and others cannot, some where even the police could pick.
***** Hey guys, I recognize a lot of the same brands of products at your store that we find in our local grocery stores. That surprised me some. It resembles some of the smaller groceries here in many ways. Biggest difference I noticed is that the cashier is allowed to sit down, which is great. I don't recall seeing that here. Really glad they have a "camera friendly" policy!
Warmest greetings from USA!!
Paul
Paul, why they can not sit? You are not the first person to talk about it.
Whyyyyyyy
Volga Las
I really do not know why this practice exists. I suspect it is about presenting an enthusiastic appearance to customers. All I know is that it is not common practice in the USA. I think it should be, because standing all day in one spot is very difficult.
RealUnitedStatesVlog
Спасибо.
So I thought, it is not very good for health...
Volga Las
I agree. I am working in a retail store recently (temporarily) and I am on my feet about 9 hours a day. It is very tiring, and bad for the back and feet.
Paul
Faux Eden
Yes, quite literally it is a pain! Cashier is a lot more demanding job than most people realize. Frequently a cashier also works close to the door, and in winter is exposed to a lot of cold from the door opening frequently. It can be a very unpleasant job.
hi, still a fan after all this time. can you show cooking at home? What is an average home cooked meal? Do you mostly fry, bake, boil food etc. thank you. love you!!!!!
One of the most coolest vids I’ve seen over the years and keep hoping you make more videos like this
I love Russian accents. Reminds me of Gru.
Chelsee Lynn but that could mean Gru is... woah...
HOLY SHIIIT GRU IS RUSSIAN! YESSSSSSSS!!!!!
Reminds me of borat
treatment
Are you going to eat that?
@saint jack couldn't possibly be because English isn't his main language. ..right?
That store doesn't depress me just looks like a clean neighborhood store you should see some local shops look like shitholes .
It reminds me of Aldi. I love these small stores. In and out with out the fuss.
Yeah, just come to Detroit
Reminds me of grocery stores in the 90s in the US.
@@travisdubose7637 50s
@@Jenny_Lee_ must give Aldi a thumbs up. They make you pay a quarter to use the cart and give it back when you return it. Very smart, obviously not a American store.. Look at all the Wal Mart carts all over the country. Homeless people's storage containers
Very enjoyable video, most videos on youtube from Russia are car crashes and people in Adidas track suits, very nice change of pace, those security lockups aren't big enough to store your akm or aksu though.
The packaging on a lot of products is eco-friendly and this was uploaded back in 2014. The US/Western world can learn a thing or two. Great video.
That's really cool!!! I love your channel. It let's me explore your beautiful country through your videos!!! Greetings from U.S.A!!!
I noticed many brands that we see here in the US: Lays, Pringles, etc. Undoubtedly every store in Russia is going to sell Coke and Pepsi as well.
One major distributor of foods and household items (cleaning supplies, etc.) is based right here in Cincinnati, and is known as P&G (Proctor and Gamble). They got their start back in the 1800's with soap, and have since grown to become a massive distributor handling such items as the Pringles you showed in your video.
If I were to read the fine print on everything found inside a typical American store, a considerable portion (maybe 10 - 20%) would be under the P&G company brand. This is a massive amount to come from a single source.
And I thought they make only сleaning and maintenance products.
*****
interesting...I would have thought most other countries sell products from their own countries..I thought most canadian markets would sell canadian labels & brands, whether national or local brands but nevertheless canadian.
I noticed that too. Tons of American products especially in the household items section.
***** The amount of Western European or American brands in this Russian supermarket is quite scary. I have heard that Russians love those Western brands. This Russian store has more German branded goods than the typically discount store in Germany has. Here in Germany I always try to don't buy overprices branded products, it's seems much more difficult to avoide those products in Russia.
***** But if you look in a typically American grocery store, there are so many European brands. I wouldn't be surprised if most Americans don't know what products are from an American company or from an European company. It's the same over here. Most Germans probably think that "Kraft" and "Ferrero" are German companies. I have seen a video where an American couple in a french hypermarket was astonished that they sell Axe deodorants. They didn't know that this is a European product.
Thanks this is fascinating. From an Australian perspective, we all have cars and drive to the food stores mostly. Some inner city residents may not drive as they most likely will be near a food store. But very much like USA, we are a very urbanized society and so need to drive everywhere.
Stephen Woods Driving everywhere is not a sign of a very urbanized society. It is a sign of a society based on car ownership. Most urbanized societies that do not have miles of land to waste have concentrated on public transportation and neighborhood shopping. Many people in those societies have never even learned how to drive because they don't need that skill. My sister-in-law and her mother never learned how to drive because they had mass transit. It was the post WWII suburbanites and the farm dwellers who needed to have a car in the US because of a lack of public transportation.
If you are an '"urbanized" society, you do not need a car, you just walk or take public transport. It is suburbia, where people are driving to all places.
Thanks for a visit to Russian market, this gives this Kentuckian a view of Russia I would not see under normal circumstances, very cool!
I live in Kentucky and yes, our moonshine rocks. I love it when my face goes numb from it. I've had the brown and the clear. For some reason the brown has always been better for me. I asked and was told it's just burnt sugar to give it color for camouflage. I don't claim to be a maker or expert but I sure do love it, especially when it's brown.
That was really interesting! Nice to compare, lots of similar brands and quite cheap for some things.
$4 for pringles? jesus that's hella expensive
2014 year, we have at this year 25 rub per dollar
Just convert it, or try to look at real price at video, 119 rub for pringles
They export Pringles from a half of the world, so in Russia there are extra tax and cargo fees in price.
Hadrian Hugh - now the exchange rate has changed. now you can buy Pringles for 1.6$, Jesus has heard you! )))
pringles are like $1.50 a can at Wal-Mart here in the US
All that food would be approximately $43 here in Canada going off the usd. Seems pretty close to what I'd pay for that here. Nice video.
Thank you, James!
Subscribe and make sure to watch hundreds of other of videos I have filmed.
Canada in rural area is parasitized by the shell companies for the royal family
This video is about 3 years old. That same food in Russia today would cost about $15-20 USD or around $18-25 CAD.
hi Sergey, I'm going to subscribe and like every video just to pay for this one, it's awesome. I also wonder if you have a video about wages because that is like the other half of the equation. For example I am a welder in canada and have a paycheck every two weeks ( 80 hours work ) of $1700
Third, I can still go back to school to specialize.
This was very cool. Your food is less expensive than in America, yet it was all pretty much the same. Those same items would have been well over 50$ American dollars here.
In 2014, when video recorded, one dollar was ~35 roubles, and when u wrote this comment, dollar was 70 roubles
For everyone watching this in the USA, I actually did the math on the price tags and they are about half of every price he said. For example if he said it cost $3 American dollars it actually is only $1.50 in 2017 currency conversion.
Correct. The video filmed 3 years ago when exchange rate was different. Now that cart would cost not $35 but about $20. But once prices are growing too.... so with an inflation maybe roughly $25-27.
25....jeez for that bag full? that'd be cheaper than here in the USA
Looks like our well deserved sanctions are working.
Christopher Michaud Well did you also considered the average salary in russia?
What about 3:46 "the leg of a kitchen"? Lol
“The leg of a kitchen” 😀
For non native English speakers , is somehow confusing chicken and kitchen , I did it myself a few times
@@perseuxx As a native English speaker learning Russian, I got man and car mixed up quite often (мужчина and машина)
I understood "the lack of a kitchen" and thought what?! "so we put it here" hahah.
@@sandwichbreath0 Успехов тебе в изучении Русского языка!
@@nd5301 Большое спасибо!
thats quite reasonable, I love the packaging for your ketchup and mayo
Thank you for comment, Garnet
Very Civilized experience Sergey! Thank-you for your excellent commentary.
"Make Shopping Right Now Together" - 2:40
😂😂😂
Yeah I know lol
Keep up the great work guys. Love from Australia♡♥
Thanks a lot and best regards back from Russia!
In Australia there are 2 shops Woolworths and Coles and basically were ever you go there are right next to each other and they sell the same shit but different prices like Smith Original chips is in Coles $3.46 and in Woolworths $3.43. Woolworths is way better. :D
3:43 "The next think is popular around Russians is the leg of kitchen" LOL!!! I totally give him credit for speaking english well. I've just never heard a chicken called a kitchen before lol. Good work tho!
Amy Graef
agreed! I congratulate him for knowing a second language!
and it's really funny to hear him say "leg of the kitchen"!
Very Borat!
I've said that before when I was jrunk
Drunk
Mexicans say shiken...
The first Real Russia video I’ve ever watched years ago, and been a fan since 😎
Man you guys would have a field day in our Texas grocery stores called H. E. B 👍
Love the HEB in college Station
@@JustinAbroad
Shout Out from Harlingen Tx!!!
Shop at HEB Myself😊
Tx Army Vet🇺🇸
Heb is the shiznit.
@@bartstarr2371
That is an Affirmative for HEB!!!
On my way there,later on today😊
Harlingen,Tx🍀
TX Army Vet🇺🇸
YES I left Texas against my wishes...and I MISS HEB...I almost cry when I go to "supermarkets" in NYC.
I was surprised by the number of American Brand Products available. The prices are generally slightly higher than my local Kroger here in Kentucky. It seemed to have a decent selection of items for a small store.
More expensive and he jas to bag it himself
Thx1138sober : I will agree with this statement I shop Krogers all the time and yes they are higher in price than he thinks.
Well ya, it costs MORE to ship (LET'S HOPE IT'S MADE IN 🇺🇸) American made products to Russia tho 😢
Gee, I live in the northeast, which has a high cost of living and I found these prices around half of what I pay in Vermont!
@@Timenow1 they are not. In fact, most of them doesn't have anything in common with the original US food. All of them are made in Russia. You won't find anything imported in such stores.
3:45 leg of the KITCHEN улыбнуло. :)
кухонная ножка )))))
Hello everyone!! I just found these guys and 1 video and I'm hooked!🐠🐠🦈🦈Thanks guys !!
The lockers at the entrance are a good idea.
Should have the guard watching lockers
At a Las Palmas HEB in the West Side of San Antonio, about 5 years ago , it was required that shoppers leave backpacks, anything that was not your purse there. .... I was shocked. Oh well, that was because it's a poor side of town.
Oh my heart. I spent a summer in Moscow studying Russian and I left part of myself there. 😍 We always shopped at the street vendors (bumaga tualyet 😂😂😂). Take us through the banya! Hahaha not American at all, it one of my favorite parts of Moskvye. ❤️😘Ochen horosho.
In one summer you will not learn enough RUSSIAN language.I been staring 9 years in school as second language and for me was a HELL.Much easy I did French then RUSSIAN.And because I never use this language now in NYC I 👂 RUSSIAN tolling and I start to take back this language and very interesting they told me that I have no accent.They good people but I don't like the language,German the same since I am in USA I forget it.When I don't use language u forget it.
@@timofte566 I took a year of Russian in college. Also took 4 years of french. I had no problem getting around France in my 20s. Loved Russia so much though. I haven't spoken either in 20 years. My daughter is learning Japanese now.☺️
@@mycupoverflows7811 Good for you.
Interesting that your cashiers at the store sit down while here in the USA they are all expected to remain standing. Most of the prices seem comparable to the usa although your coffee is expensive! Thanks for the tour.
+swimbait1 You're welcome! I think it's a good thing that the cashiers in Russia are sitting. Because I am sure it's pretty tiring to stand up all the day long.
+swimbait1 I think the US is alone in that. In Europe they sit down as well. Doesn't seem worth the money if you have to stand all day.
+Real Russia Yeah, man, there's some weird stigma in the U.S. where if you're not standing, you're not working! It's kind of ridiculous. I mean there are plenty of desk jobs where people sit all day, but I see no reason why cashiers, who are stuck in one place anyway should have to stand alllll day with no option to sit down except for a 15-30min break time.
+swimbait1- Many people here in the US who stand in their jobs all day often contract ailments to their legs and body, due to stresses that can affect a person the rest of their lives. I've told many employers about this with blank stares. There is no rule anywhere or even in the Holy Bible that says you must stand for many hours in jobs that don't require it to complete your tasks. Just like the Mexicans who think a person there must work for 15-18 hours 6 days a week, and anything less is looked down among the employers.
+Swimbait1 The counters and register areas are not even built for cashiers to be sitting. There are circumstances where cashiers are allowed to sit but those are the exception not the rule.I have worked in supermarkets and gas stations for several years in the USA. The place I work at is crazy busy I do not have time to sit. I could not even do my job unless cashier area is done over.
it's been a while since I watched a video of yours, I didn't see this one & its from 2014. I will continue to watch more of your videos.
Now, in dollar terms, all products are more than two times cheaper. I am amazed at how expensive it was then compared to today!
I think the guy is lying
someone call the federal investigator Lays and Pringles are colluding with the Russians
😂😂😂
7 Likes... but I am not sure what you said :)
Real Russia it's a joke about hilary blaming the russian government for interfering with us elections causing her to lose to trump. im sure he meant to write colluding which is synonymous with conspire.
Zephyr Zephyr I meant to write that auto fill in on my phone went something different
Pugedon Yücesan Don't forget Tide and Persil!
Real Russia Funny thing is, most Americans had never heard the words "collude" or "collusion" until that witch Hillary started crying about the election being "stolen" damn libtards!
Oh man! What a great video!!! I dont know how I came to this video, but now I want to go to Russia... maybe to buy some "Paste for the Tooth."
I love it. Everything is organized and labeled and categorized perfectly and simply. I love it!!!!
Привет! А ты пироги умеешь печь?
@@СергейЛозовенко-ф1р oh my goodness that is the funniest question ive ever been asked. No i do not know how to bake pies. :(
The cashier seemed much more friendly than the ones at my local store in Utah. We have a misconception here where we generally think of Russians as unfriendly and aloof.
Because of video record
Correct. There is unstoppable anti-Russian propaganda all the time.
That's because they think "just" smiling people are up to something! Or crazy.
@@olegpetrov2617 не надо врать.
Utah is mormon so....
Your English is very good my friend
Thank you, I really enjoyed that...was very interesting 😊
SoCal
I enjoyed your video very much! Thank you for sharing! God bless from Oklahoma!
Thanks for letting us see you're beautiful country, greetings from the United States ! 🇷🇺🇺🇸
"Make shopping right now together"🤣🤣🤣 I watched this whole video in Borats voice
And now I go make sexy time.
Looks like a ALDI store here in the US
Bextar636 It should because ALDI originated in Europe. It’s design is based off of some European style grocery stores
Doesn't look like aldi at all. Even aldi looks more fancy
@@spturner360 aldi, fancy? Everytime I go into aldi its a mess
@@iamjimb seems like aldi is completely different in the states than where i live (germany)
@@iamjimb Aldi is pretty normal in Germany
Its pretty cool to see everyday life in other parts of our world. Funny how watching something as simple as you grocery shopping to be very informative. Great video my dude!!! 👍✌ Thanks for the education!!!
Noticed the eggs are not refrigerated, much like many other countries.
In America, out in the country, we don't refrigerate fresh eggs for a long time. But once they get cold, they need to stay cold.
Yep it's because they have been washed
These still have the poop on them.
I have chickens, there's no room in the fridge. Plus if we decide to incubate them, we haven't damaged the embryo.
If the girls are allowed to roam and you keep the nests clean, poop is usually not a problem.
If he saw a Publix in Florida he would freak out
Cody Fletcher facts lol fellow floridan
I live in China and was away for fourteen years. My parents came to China and saw me a few times in that time. When I came back from the airport, I was told they built a new supermarket in our suburb and I wanted to go there. My mind was blown. More like angels singing, and the night manager was God. Holy fuck! Real food!
Beer cheeper there
Now I want a Cubano sub from Publix.
Chicken tenders sub!! Now I have to go get one
weirdest thing to me was that the cashier was sitting down lol
gameplay no one cares about And she didn't have to bag, or do the speech "Hey, how are you doing? Thank you for shopping at So-and-So! Hope you found everything okay today!"
Joyce Re+ Don't like the "Hi, how are doing" speeches (imagine how many times they ask that question in a shift, it's fake). A simple "Hi" is good enough. People should bag their own groceries, thats why the have hands after all. It really stinks when a person is holding up the cashier and there is another 50 people in line waiting.
Offcourse the cashier was sitting down. its no fun standing all day! And yes a simple hello is good enough. And like the same in holland no fake happy b..llshit and bag your own groceries (and that keep the prices low!)
I so agree with all of you. There is no reason cashiers should have to stand constantly - it must be bad for their legs. People working in similar pay job - they stand a lot too but they are more active( i.e working at starbucks) you have to walk around more. But staying stationary is no good. I hate the North American way customer service is. A simply hi is fine. It was a bit of culture shock to go to different countries where they are far more relaxed in service. At times it almost felt like you were inconveniencing them when they had to serve you as a lot of the time they were so serious looking rather than attempting to be friendly. And if they are more friendly - you can tell that it's natural. When you get used to the service workers who seem more standoffish, it's no big deal and I can see the merit in it. They ARE doing their job, they are seeing to your needs(within reason) they just aren't putting on a performance on top of that. I'm sick of people having to pretend they like their jobs, they are doing their damn jobs - there is no earthly reason they also have to act like it's their pleasure in life to help you at a store, restaurant, hotel ect.
Well, poor baby. You don't have to live "the North American way." You sound like like a whiner.
Speaking as a retired Business School Professor and notorious skinflint when it comes to shopping, the prices of the goods is maybe 25% to 50% more than here in the United States. However, what doesn't get discussed in this video is the average hourly wage in Ufa compared to the average minimum wage here in the USA. THAT's the difference. So food is much more expensive in Mother Russia.
@Mor Dor Duly noted. Thank you for your reply!
Some stuff seems surprisingly expensive there!
Autumn Aurora its Moscow, everyone knows that Moscow city small shops are expensive, but wages in the city are big too, but going away from the city or huge stors are much much cheaper
Its a middle man market. It looks like they buy the products from private growers and outside the country. I doubt they can grow summer crops there.
Not really. Average out pretty close.
our economy is stronger hense 1000 Russian bucks = 35 american dollars
Gmo
Your fruit is cheaper then in Oklahoma. The meat is cheaper here. Chips, tea and coffee high there. Milk and can food toilet paper and soup about the same. Cashiers stand here and we have micro-chips in the packages so that the security wont freak when you have a bag not from them. In many ways i like the new Russia better then the new U.S. Seems the world flipped over.
Good to see you both looking well. Thanks.
About the same here in Connecticut.
xxHANNONxx Stick to your guns over there. Oklahoma's support your 2nd amendment right.
Exactly! Some things higher here, some things lower there! It's true, Russia, has become the way we wish America was. If I was younger and single, I would be in Russia already!
hellavadeal I'm taking the kids out runnin and gunnin this Sunday, except the little one. The gun culture was almost non existent here 15 years ago, but now guns are sexier than Prada and Madison Ave. The Marxist democrats are loosing local elections big time. Hopefully we can clean them out at the state level, and launch investigations into to these half mafia, half federal creatures. Considering that CT is nothing more these days than a suburb of NY city, it'll be an up hill battle pressing back against the kind of money they can put into campaigns.
My town was taken over by Tea party style republicans, our new mayor owns an auto shop, I think it's our first mayor that's not a lawyer. It looks like a lot of the changes they made are going to lead to fraud indictments, but the paper trail is so thick, I'm not sure if it'll ever be unwound. On the plus side, the police just got a whole lot nicer, the employees at city hall appear to actually be working now, the construction projects are getting finished instead of being endless money pits and the big tax increases the town swore it needed are starting to look like they'll be tax decreases.
Things are starting to turn around a little bit here, hopefully it's not too little, to late. And the best part is, all the scumbags that voted for the commie gun control, are chitting their pants and want the state to pay for round the clock security like the governor has!
John Harrison That's sadly the truth, and I'm getting sick of being called racist or anti gay for complaining about it.
Thank You so much for sharing this simple task. I have always wanted to learn the culture of Russia, the every day living and things Russians are comparisons to American Lifestyles. You Rock! I subscribed and can't wait to see more about Russia. Oh, by the way, My dream is to one day visit Russia.
Really good selection of food and household products in that store! Thanks for the tour!
car under your ass?? haha
Your voice is pleasant to listen to. Hello from los angeles!
People outside the US don't refrigerate their eggs, learned something new. Always interesting when you go your whole life thinking the way you do things is normal only to find out you're the weirdo.
We put eggs in the fridge in Romania too, it's normal.
klavier285 here in uk we do it
If you wash them, they lose the coating that keeps them fresh in an unrefrigerated environment.
I found out people put bread in the fridge. Absolutely barbaric. Also, I don't understand why people put tomatoes to the fridge - they lose all the taste.
+Mocsk
I don't understand putting bread in the fridge either, maybe because I never toast my bread. Eggs, however, are not bread. Eggs for me are the same as raw meat. They should be kept refridgerated at all times.
So fascinating! Thank you for sharing with us. 🙏
$4 for Pringles! 😨 $1 here
I like the lockers, very convenient.
This was a cute little store but seemed so quiet or maybe it was just a slow time of the day.
I saw Lipton tea😁my favorite!
Thanks for this nice informative video💙🇺🇸
@@rayjennings3637😲 oh no! Lol
What's the popular tea now there? I'll see if they have it here in the U.S. and try it😉
Growing up in Southeastern U.S., we always drank Lipton but as long as it's sweet, I'll try another 😁
Most family people prefer to buy a week supply of food in a big stores like Walmart - here we got Auchan, Lenta, Okey. ruclips.net/video/Tfs_xU9fGE4/видео.html
Stores like this mostly used for buying something you forgot to buy in a big store, or like you suddenly want a bottle of soda. Or for singles who don't plan for a week ahead.
@@angelg.8462 Personally, I prefer Luzianne Tea. Very excellent southern brand.
@@tinasan3870 oh yes, I like sweet Luzianne tea too!!😉
Pringles is concidered 'luxury' brand here in Russia for some odd reason.
It's one of the most expensive snack here.
Why do so many stores in Europe not like it when people film inside? I was at a supermarket in Madrid and wanted to shoot some video of the fish section, and they immediately told me to stop.
iTheGeek... Both. Everyone's a dick.
Hey Guys
Is there anything we have in Canada that you don't get in Russia that I can send you?
maple sirup
I studied Russian at a university here in the U.S. under my professor who translated for President Reagan in the 1980’s and ever since I’ve been wanting to explore the language, life and culture there one day! Thanks for the vid bro!
Большое спасибо!
Go play CS GO u will change ur mind