Wish I did. Although I bet there are Venetians who wish they grew up in a suburb of New York. They say the grass is always greener on the other side ...of the Atlantic.
“Mammoni” is an insult. The reason many italians between 18 and 34 are FORCED to live with their parents is that the cost of housing is skyrocketing while wages have been stagnant for 30 years.
@@giovannipanzeri6431 Sounds like south florida. We have lots of low wage work with stagnant wages due to the travel industry jobs, and then housing skyrocketed post-covid.
“Mammoni” is an insult. The reason many italians between 18 and 34 are FORCED to live with their parents is that the cost of housing is skyrocketing while wages have been stagnant for 30 years.
Exactly and the fault is that Venice is being turned into an amusement park for tourists by a greedy, cynical political class who prioritized easy money over livelihood
Some are definitely forced, but it's also a practice embedded into the culture. Families in mediterranean countries usually have closer ties within them. In Spain, where I live, many stay because moving out is a big change that usually only occurs when you have a partner, and breaking the deep family links is more difficult than in other countries.
In year 2000 a salary was 1200 euro, in 2025 a salary is 1200 euro, IF you are lucky to even have a fixed salary. ALL European countries have surpassed Italy. Spain is better, Poland is better. Even Albania is about to be better than Italy very soon. The management of the country is a disaster. Italy needs some BIG radical changes ASAP!
Please guys, don't put the Tarantella music on every italian city video, the Tarantella is compatible with Venice like the Flamenco is with Paris, it's simply a totally different culture from the south where that music was created. I had to say it because it's always the same with documentaries about Italy. If you want to look at a venetian musician look at Vivaldi for example.
what do you expect from mainstream media? 😅😅😅 stereotypical Chinese music for documentaries in China, mysterious Japanese instrumentals for Japanese documentaries, and ethnic drum music for documentaries in Africa, we're all victims of cliche stereotyping innit
I’ve been to Venice twice. The first time I arrived on December 31, 1998 and it was misty. I felt like I was in a dream world. It was so beautiful. At night when the lights came on I remember wondering, who lives in those houses? I thought, how lucky they must be. I love it that the entire family live in the same building. Nick, you weren’t even born yet in 1998. Thank you for giving us a glimpse inside your home. It’s beautiful.
I lived and worked in Venice for nearly 3 years, and I think it's the most beautiful on misty winter mornings, especially out of season - early November or late January. It's like walking through an elaborate film set
@@dejavu011 Thank you so much for your comment. I’ve been to Venice only once - in late January 1999, indeed ! I remember vividly walking almost meditatively through a misty San Marco Square around ~11:30 pm in a lightly moon-lit, chilly yet invigorating night, while other tourists were equally RESPECTFULLY quiet … Then suddenly, loud noises erupted temporarily this ETHEREAL moment - ~20 Americans arrived, obnoxiously and disrespectfully, loud, arrogant and stupidly unaware of the time and space of that particular moment; further, they seemed to be 30-something, white-collared and college-educated (maybe even postbaccalaureate), presuming in Venice to attend some professional conference.
just went there last winter for several weeks, it was misty at night too and some alleys leading to the main canals just looked like something straight out of a movie scene and i was the same as you, spent many days look up at houses wondering what the locals life must be like so this little doc was fun to watch :) Hope you get to go back one day
I grew up in Padua about 1/2 hour train ride to Venice and when we didn't know what to do we went to Venice...And believe me this city will show you a different amazing corner, building that you didn't see the last time you went... One of my most memorable trip was in 1985 after we had a big snow fall in Norther Italy and I saw Venice with snow....
This was amazing to watch. Loved it. Looks like a great guy, with a great group of friends, and lovely family. Best wishes to him- From an American-Italian envious of this life
I love this series. Please do continue. It's wonderful to see all the experiences fellow youths have around the world. It's fascinating to see all these different perspectives and cultures. It's quite insightful
I am from a town in the Los Angeles area, and I know what it is like for "home" to be a place people fantasize about visiting but to you, it is just everyday stuff! I loved seeing Venice through a resident's eyes.
Honestly we don't fantasize to live in Los Ángeles, just in the hollywood part, we know the rest of LA is just small houses with highways and expensive cafes
@@TheSamuelbest12 OK, I am going to be gracious though I don’t agree. It was an incredible place to grow up. I was 10 years old during the 1984 Olympics in LA and I had never heard of the Olympics at the time! So imagine you are a child that never heard of this magnificent sports festival and it is going to be in your area! I begged my father for tickets (and I recently found my 1984 ticket stub still in perfect condition after 40 years!) I became a lifelong Olympics fanatic!😃i
“Incredible work on this video! Watching it, I feel transported to the heart of Venice, and I can only imagine how inspiring it must be to grow up surrounded by such unique history and beauty. You’ve captured the spirit of the city so vividly that it’s deepened my excitement to visit someday. Thank you for sharing this piece of Venice with us!”
My family originally was from Venice but they moved to florence. It dates back 300 yrs. We were treasurers to the Wealthy. My mom came from Italy in 1921 to the USA, inside my grandmothers belly...lol. I'm a physician here in the US...I went to Med school in Milan. Funny growing up here in the US my mom always criticised the Italian americans ways of doing things she had all kinds of Italian terms for them that weren't nice...She kept saying that's not how Italians do it in Italy...lol great video wish you the best keep the traditions alive.
I'm also in the same boat as this guy, I was born and raised in San Francisco, USA and this video gave me some joy as I grew up in a city where people dream of living and traveling to. I had a very great childhood in SF and I have to say it is an awesome city to grow up in, and I have had unique experiences and made some memories of the like that would not be possible if I lived elsewhere. As of right now, I'm 32 years old and have traveled to 150+ cities around the world, and San Francisco will always be my home no matter where I go, and I wouldn't change what I have experienced my life for anything ever ❤ 🌁
Great job. So proud of you. I only hear from my daughter or grand kids when they need something. In Germany it is the same where a whole family lives in the same house.😊
I have spent a total of several months over the years in Venice, and am absolutely in love with it. While the architecture and history are appealing, what really makes the city great is not that-it’s that it is walkable, incredibly safe (crime rate is almost negligible), as so friendly, with kids playing safely anywhere, all the time. Sadly, it’s is also deteriorating. Its population is only a quarter what it was just a few decades ago, and much of that are the elderly. Real estate prices are astronomical, unaffordable to most middle-class Italians. It has become a city of vacation homes for Europeans who can afford it. So “urban crumble” (that’s what I’m calling it) happens: schools close, the hospital is little more than a walk in clinic (if you have a serious ailment you have to commute inland), even specialist doctors and dentists are hard to find; kids’ sports leagues and activities decline, even barbershops are declining in number (tourists do spa days, not haircuts). It’s sad, because as I said, it would be the most perfect environment in which to raise a family.
We smoke, but one of the things I like about Italy is that the drinking is very measured. We drink to enjoy, not to get drunk. When I travel and see all these people off their tits, it’s a bit of a culture shock
I love this. I would have loved to grow up here. I feel myself so much more at home in Europe than America. The sense of community is stronger, the walking everywhere or taking trains so much better than driving.
Italy is so beautiful ! So refined, stylish, elegant, and such a successful and influential culture which is world-famous and renowned, the origin of white Europe and the nest of western civilisation. Best food ever too, its luxury premium high cuisine. Btw it's not common to live with your family until you're older... Anyway I'm proud of Italia. Viva l'Italia. The most beautiful country in the world. The best. Tanto amore !!! 🇮🇹❤
I had an incredible trip to Italy in 2008 when I was a single guy. Venice was my first city. I stayed in two different hotels in Dorsoduro. The first was Hotel Tivoli, the second was a pensione in the small square nearby. Such a beautiful place; I plan to bring my wife there this Spring. Thanks so much for sharing.
Thank You Nick a nice video of Venice, myself and family have visited Venice and stayed in a Hotel on a canal, we used the Gondola to travel around. We loved Venice it's so unique and must be preserved. Greetings fro Australia 👍 Au
In Venice for a few days, I escaped from my group and explored.. This is a Liberal art university town with musical live performances and little art exhibitions everywhere. I enjoyed seeing a kindergarten class with parents fighting them into coats, spilling out on the sidewalk. And please and thank you in basic Italian, with a lot of pointing, got me luch on a local cafe away from the tourist strip. Lucky kid to grow up there.
Awesome video! Thanks for sharing this. And thanks Nick for being an incredible young man with a bright future. I hope you and loved ones stay healthy and safe. As a joke, I was waiting for that famous lady to start yelling "Pick Pocket!"
Vendo os habitantes locais em seus cotidianos em cidades como Veneza, compreendemos a necessidade de preservar a cidade como uma cidade real e não deixar que vire um parque temático, preservando a cidade, viabilizando-a para seus moradores poderem morar e terem uma existência normal com seu cotidiano. Sem os moradores, só existe um cenário morto. Seria como visitar uma cidade fantasma, ou pior: um shopping center de mau gosto à céu aberto.
I was in Venice in May. I noticed the young ppl didn't look at their cells phones or engage in their laptops. They actually did things which I thought was refreshing.
Davvero frustrati. Sapere che anche per andare a prendere un panino e un litro di latte devi urtare centinaia di persone che non capiscono che questa è una città e non Disneyland.
Wow, very interesting story. Something I have not thought about. 200 years of the same Venetian family is special indeed. I can deal without driving a car but not riding a bicycle seems like it would be torture, though I understand why. Still, I think too I could live in Venice permanently.
wow, obviously the mother is American, and the pasta mixed with the salad is that touch of fundamental Italianness. a true example of Venetianness, also demonstrated by the opening tarantella, as someone pointed out as a negative note. creeping stereotypes, even if apparently masked by the description of a real life
Venice in video. Neapolitan tarantella. Utterly wrong - and Venitian tradition has centuries of magnificent music composed by and for this unique city. Let Napoli have her traditions and Venezia hers. Especially when creating a video that supposedly focuses on a historical city’s traditions.
@@dweuromaxx you got this, your videos deserve perfection. Anyways if one really has no clue and no time about music belonging to and with Venice, the great composer Antonio Vivaldi is a rich resource.
Not really: students 19 euro, Local( me) 37 euro, from all other people of Veneto 45 ( and 90 for the Venice card), tourist : if you don't like it there are the taxi, or stay at home, we go to the work and the scool and the supermarket only single time of our life.
Nicholas is so cute and polite. Anyway, the worst problem in Italy -where I live- is that the salaries are too low and many people can't afford to rent a home or to buy it. Mammoni is not a full insult but it is dispregiative.
Such an awesome city! But keep it underrated, there are already enough places littered in Europe by Americans and Chinese, including Venice. Don't let Bucharest become the same
I noticed in my travels that Italians often eat a little sweet rubbish for breakfast for the same calories as having an egg on toast or some fruit and yoghurt.
Could you imagine growing up in Venice?
Wish I did. Although I bet there are Venetians who wish they grew up in a suburb of New York. They say the grass is always greener on the other side ...of the Atlantic.
No.
“Mammoni” is an insult.
The reason many italians between 18 and 34 are FORCED to live with their parents is that the cost of housing is skyrocketing while wages have been stagnant for 30 years.
Yes, because I did.
@@giovannipanzeri6431 Sounds like south florida. We have lots of low wage work with stagnant wages due to the travel industry jobs, and then housing skyrocketed post-covid.
Nick is literally the cutest thing.
I was surprised he wasn't wearing shorts though.
“Mammoni” is an insult. The reason many italians between 18 and 34 are FORCED to live with their parents is that the cost of housing is skyrocketing while wages have been stagnant for 30 years.
Thought it was an insult, in Mexico mamon sounds very similar to 'mammoni' and it is also an insult.
Exactly and the fault is that Venice is being turned into an amusement park for tourists by a greedy, cynical political class who prioritized easy money over livelihood
Some are definitely forced, but it's also a practice embedded into the culture. Families in mediterranean countries usually have closer ties within them. In Spain, where I live, many stay because moving out is a big change that usually only occurs when you have a partner, and breaking the deep family links is more difficult than in other countries.
@@CityWhispereryou are correct, it's both things. But there's definitely a problem with housing affordability here ,and not just with the youth
In year 2000 a salary was 1200 euro, in 2025 a salary is 1200 euro, IF you are lucky to even have a fixed salary. ALL European countries have surpassed Italy. Spain is better, Poland is better. Even Albania is about to be better than Italy very soon. The management of the country is a disaster. Italy needs some BIG radical changes ASAP!
Please guys, don't put the Tarantella music on every italian city video, the Tarantella is compatible with Venice like the Flamenco is with Paris, it's simply a totally different culture from the south where that music was created. I had to say it because it's always the same with documentaries about Italy. If you want to look at a venetian musician look at Vivaldi for example.
So true, such a cliché to use this..
what do you expect from mainstream media? 😅😅😅 stereotypical Chinese music for documentaries in China, mysterious Japanese instrumentals for Japanese documentaries, and ethnic drum music for documentaries in Africa, we're all victims of cliche stereotyping innit
Ivana Spagna is more contemporary compared to Vivaldi
@@nij9983 Well ... this is true but it doens't make it right or respectfull for those cultures.
@@TomSUGNET I said Vivaldi just because he's one of the most famous venetian musicians, but if you prefer Ivana Spagna i've no problem with it 😊
Grazie! This was the most personal and intimate view I have ever seen of Venice. Seeing it through the eyes and life of a young local was enchanting.
Hi @JamesBrown-ij1px! Thanks!
I’ve been to Venice twice. The first time I arrived on December 31, 1998 and it was misty. I felt like I was in a dream world. It was so beautiful. At night when the lights came on I remember wondering, who lives in those houses? I thought, how lucky they must be. I love it that the entire family live in the same building. Nick, you weren’t even born yet in 1998. Thank you for giving us a glimpse inside your home. It’s beautiful.
I lived and worked in Venice for nearly 3 years, and I think it's the most beautiful on misty winter mornings, especially out of season - early November or late January. It's like walking through an elaborate film set
@@dejavu011My thoughts exactly!
The people living there are so fortunate. I’m longing to visit!
@@dejavu011 Thank you so much for your comment. I’ve been to Venice only once - in late January 1999, indeed ! I remember vividly walking almost meditatively through a misty San Marco Square around ~11:30 pm in a lightly moon-lit, chilly yet invigorating night, while other tourists were equally RESPECTFULLY quiet … Then suddenly, loud noises erupted temporarily this ETHEREAL moment - ~20 Americans arrived, obnoxiously and disrespectfully, loud, arrogant and stupidly unaware of the time and space of that particular moment; further, they seemed to be 30-something, white-collared and college-educated (maybe even postbaccalaureate), presuming in Venice to attend some professional conference.
just went there last winter for several weeks, it was misty at night too and some alleys leading to the main canals just looked like something straight out of a movie scene and i was the same as you, spent many days look up at houses wondering what the locals life must be like so this little doc was fun to watch :) Hope you get to go back one day
Lovely! Great to see an educated, well spoken and polite young man taking us around one the most beautiful and enchanting cities in the world 👏
Nick is raised really well
I grew up in Padua about 1/2 hour train ride to Venice and when we didn't know what to do we went to Venice...And believe me this city will show you a different amazing corner, building that you didn't see the last time you went... One of my most memorable trip was in 1985 after we had a big snow fall in Norther Italy and I saw Venice with snow....
Mi ricordo....
This was amazing to watch. Loved it. Looks like a great guy, with a great group of friends, and lovely family. Best wishes to him- From an American-Italian envious of this life
Hi @DomPruzzo! Grazie!
Venice is a very healthy place for kids. It's safe, no cars, they can play in the streets
I had the chance to spend some summers there, even if I’m from a different city, and yes, it is marvellous to grow up there.
Hahaha, very healthy with that still water...
@@VladimirJakovljevic-h2qit’s not still water, it’s a lagoon, 6 hrs water comes in, 6 hrs water goes out…
Look how social they are, lots of friends. They can walk everywhere .
Healthy? Dis you not see the part about most of the kids smoking and drinking?
Nick is so happy. You can tell.
I love this series. Please do continue. It's wonderful to see all the experiences fellow youths have around the world. It's fascinating to see all these different perspectives and cultures. It's quite insightful
I am from a town in the Los Angeles area, and I know what it is like for "home" to be a place people fantasize about visiting but to you, it is just everyday stuff! I loved seeing Venice through a resident's eyes.
Honestly we don't fantasize to live in Los Ángeles, just in the hollywood part, we know the rest of LA is just small houses with highways and expensive cafes
@@TheSamuelbest12 OK, I am going to be gracious though I don’t agree. It was an incredible place to grow up. I was 10 years old during the 1984 Olympics in LA and I had never heard of the Olympics at the time! So imagine you are a child that never heard of this magnificent sports festival and it is going to be in your area! I begged my father for tickets (and I recently found my 1984 ticket stub still in perfect condition after 40 years!) I became a lifelong Olympics fanatic!😃i
Same here, I am born and raised in San Francisco, also a unique but awesome place to grow up in as like in Venice.
@@unknown66003 I live in the Bay Area now. I am proud to be here .
@@TheSamuelbest12 Jealous much. I bet you've never been to LA and must live in a flyover state.
Using traditional Neapolitan music as a soundtrack for Venice is a little like putting a traditional Vladivostok music for Alaska
Hi @dbertobis! Good point, we will address this in our team!
Enjoyed going along with Nicholas as he tells his story. Venice is my favorite city in Italy.
This guy is grounded and very likable. He will go far in life.
“Incredible work on this video! Watching it, I feel transported to the heart of Venice, and I can only imagine how inspiring it must be to grow up surrounded by such unique history and beauty. You’ve captured the spirit of the city so vividly that it’s deepened my excitement to visit someday. Thank you for sharing this piece of Venice with us!”
Wow, thank you!
My family originally was from Venice but they moved to florence. It dates back 300 yrs. We were treasurers to the Wealthy. My mom came from Italy in 1921 to the USA, inside my grandmothers belly...lol. I'm a physician here in the US...I went to Med school in Milan. Funny growing up here in the US my mom always criticised the Italian americans ways of doing things she had all kinds of Italian terms for them that weren't nice...She kept saying that's not how Italians do it in Italy...lol great video wish you the best keep the traditions alive.
usual things done without study, the tarantella in Venice is like the sirtaki to the waltz
Beautiful city and rich with culture and history. Nick seems like a fine, decent chap.
I'm also in the same boat as this guy, I was born and raised in San Francisco, USA and this video gave me some joy as I grew up in a city where people dream of living and traveling to. I had a very great childhood in SF and I have to say it is an awesome city to grow up in, and I have had unique experiences and made some memories of the like that would not be possible if I lived elsewhere. As of right now, I'm 32 years old and have traveled to 150+ cities around the world, and San Francisco will always be my home no matter where I go, and I wouldn't change what I have experienced my life for anything ever ❤ 🌁
I love this video makes you more understanding of another way of life that many aren’t used to
Hi @barbiemello9612! 😘
Great job. So proud of you. I only hear from my daughter or grand kids when they need something. In Germany it is the same where a whole family lives in the same house.😊
Big city or rural Germany?
Italians are gorgeous🤩
Grazie! 🥂🍾💕✨
It's true. Style and everything is big in Italy
Especially Filippo is pulling
I have spent a total of several months over the years in Venice, and am absolutely in love with it. While the architecture and history are appealing, what really makes the city great is not that-it’s that it is walkable, incredibly safe (crime rate is almost negligible), as so friendly, with kids playing safely anywhere, all the time.
Sadly, it’s is also deteriorating. Its population is only a quarter what it was just a few decades ago, and much of that are the elderly. Real estate prices are astronomical, unaffordable to most middle-class Italians. It has become a city of vacation homes for Europeans who can afford it. So “urban crumble” (that’s what I’m calling it) happens: schools close, the hospital is little more than a walk in clinic (if you have a serious ailment you have to commute inland), even specialist doctors and dentists are hard to find; kids’ sports leagues and activities decline, even barbershops are declining in number (tourists do spa days, not haircuts).
It’s sad, because as I said, it would be the most perfect environment in which to raise a family.
What a charming young man with a great personality and smile.
Keep it up young gentleman !
Bit sad hearing about the smoking and drinking but I'd love to bring my granddaughter up in Italy. Loved Venice.
Europeans in general smoke a lot.
We smoke, but one of the things I like about Italy is that the drinking is very measured. We drink to enjoy, not to get drunk. When I travel and see all these people off their tits, it’s a bit of a culture shock
@@HamelinSong yes, so true about Australia and Russia and the UK. Being measured should mean less harm in the long run hopefully.
I love this. I would have loved to grow up here. I feel myself so much more at home in Europe than America. The sense of community is stronger, the walking everywhere or taking trains so much better than driving.
I appreciated you showing Venice from your perspective, thank you!!!!
I want to see more! Loved it! Follow him for a year!
This was fantastic and very informative 😊
Glad you think so!
Italy is so beautiful ! So refined, stylish, elegant, and such a successful and influential culture which is world-famous and renowned, the origin of white Europe and the nest of western civilisation. Best food ever too, its luxury premium high cuisine. Btw it's not common to live with your family until you're older... Anyway I'm proud of Italia. Viva l'Italia. The most beautiful country in the world. The best. Tanto amore !!! 🇮🇹❤
I had an incredible trip to Italy in 2008 when I was a single guy. Venice was my first city. I stayed in two different hotels in Dorsoduro. The first was Hotel Tivoli, the second was a pensione in the small square nearby. Such a beautiful place; I plan to bring my wife there this Spring. Thanks so much for sharing.
I remember getting so lost in Venice! I could have used Nick to help get around, he's so sweet! 😂
A lovely insight into being young in Venice.
He is so sweet ❤️ typical Italian man always spoiled by grandma !😂
😂😂
what a lovely series! seeing places from the point of view of its young residents
Hi @hetoako! Thanks for your thoughtful comment! It's great to hear you appreciate it, stay tuned for more..😘
Thank You Nick a nice video of Venice, myself and family have visited Venice and stayed in a Hotel on a canal, we used the Gondola to travel around. We loved Venice it's so unique and must be preserved. Greetings fro Australia 👍 Au
Che ragazzo d'oro!!!!!!!!!!
What a beautiful city and life ❤️
OMG, this guy is so cute :)
Wow. Thanks for this post. Very informative. Have an amazing day.
As a Mexican, I appreciate the Modelo Beer hoodie. 🇮🇹🤝🏻🇲🇽
Yo también soy mexicana salu2
In Venice for a few days, I escaped from my group and explored.. This is a Liberal art university town with musical live performances and little art exhibitions everywhere.
I enjoyed seeing a kindergarten class with parents fighting them into coats, spilling out on the sidewalk. And please and thank you in basic Italian, with a lot of pointing, got me luch on a local cafe away from the tourist strip.
Lucky kid to grow up there.
Awesome video! Thanks for sharing this. And thanks Nick for being an incredible young man with a bright future. I hope you and loved ones stay healthy and safe. As a joke, I was waiting for that famous lady to start yelling "Pick Pocket!"
Thanks! We agree - Nick is a lovely fella!
I went to Venice in August, 2022, and Florence as well. It's breath taking...
Im 19, been to Venice in September, took my grandma for her 74th birthday there and it's definitely one of the most beautiful places ive ever seen.
Love this perspective.
Complimenti, Nick, your english is absolutely perfect! 🤌
Fascinating. The house is like an apartment building
Vendo os habitantes locais em seus cotidianos em cidades como Veneza, compreendemos a necessidade de preservar a cidade como uma cidade real e não deixar que vire um parque temático, preservando a cidade, viabilizando-a para seus moradores poderem morar e terem uma existência normal com seu cotidiano.
Sem os moradores, só existe um cenário morto. Seria como visitar uma cidade fantasma, ou pior: um shopping center de mau gosto à céu aberto.
Applausi a scena aperta proprio. Questo è quello che pensa il 90% dei veneziani. Il restante 10% ci governa. 👏👏👏
I love to see these young men playing cards! So neglected by young people here in the US.
Me and my buddies used to have a poker night growing up, so no not entirely neglected.
in Italy is very common to do.
I'm 23 and my friends are between 19 and 22 years old and whenever we don't know what to do we play cards
I dont think you know what young people get up to. Bet I could take some money from you in poker.
@@jonasseorum5471 Oh, the smart mouth children! Typical, boy thinking he invented poker.
One of my favorite cities in the world. Love it there.
Venice is uniquely beautiful!❤❤❤
Interesting take of life in Venice. We always look at it as tourists.
Lovely insight 😊
Thank you! 🙂
1:00 Nick is so cute. Such a good boy. And so well spoken ❤❤❤
That ghorl is so so rude 2:42 😅
You're talking about him like he's a dog or something.
I went to Venezia in 2003. Greetings from Mexico 🇮🇹🇲🇽
I was in Venice in May. I noticed the young ppl didn't look at their cells phones or engage in their laptops. They actually did things which I thought was refreshing.
Impressive short documentation.
Interesting and from an intimate perspective : thank you 😊
Hi @ib2505! Pleasure!
What a good kid and amazing guy!
I remember seeing kids parallel parking their boats in venice, like how we do with cars, it was so cool haha
When I visited Venice, it felt like a movie set. I always wondered how locals felt waking up to this beautiful place every day.
Davvero frustrati. Sapere che anche per andare a prendere un panino e un litro di latte devi urtare centinaia di persone che non capiscono che questa è una città e non Disneyland.
the family is honored 💙💙💙💙💙
Greetings from Redondo Beach 🇺🇸🇺🇸Wonderful Venice life you shared and nice video of this charming city.🌷🌷
Wow, very interesting story. Something I have not thought about. 200 years of the same Venetian family is special indeed. I can deal without driving a car but not riding a bicycle seems like it would be torture, though I understand why. Still, I think too I could live in Venice permanently.
Nice to see the life of a local in Venice. When I went there, its hard to find locals.
i’m in love with nick
enjoy this view point of someone that lives in Venice.
Tarantella napoletana di sottofondo... a posto!
Hi @mafaldarusso6441! Ci dispiace, la prossima volta faremo meglio..🎻🎵
@@dweuromaxxGrazie! E niente mandolino, per favore 😉👏☺️
wow, obviously the mother is American, and the pasta mixed with the salad is that touch of fundamental Italianness. a true example of Venetianness, also demonstrated by the opening tarantella, as someone pointed out as a negative note. creeping stereotypes, even if apparently masked by the description of a real life
We LOVE Dosoduro!
Venice in video. Neapolitan tarantella. Utterly wrong - and Venitian tradition has centuries of magnificent music composed by and for this unique city. Let Napoli have her traditions and Venezia hers. Especially when creating a video that supposedly focuses on a historical city’s traditions.
Hi @GreatMusicIsGoodForYou! Good point, we will address this in our team!
@@dweuromaxx you got this, your videos deserve perfection. Anyways if one really has no clue and no time about music belonging to and with Venice, the great composer Antonio Vivaldi is a rich resource.
The Pettenello Toy shop in Campo Santa Margherita closed in 2005 .
I hope Nick keeps that family property for future generations! I'm assuming they own it at this point.
Local 19 euro. Tourist 260 euro. Sounds about right.
Not really: students 19 euro, Local( me) 37 euro, from all other people of Veneto 45 ( and 90 for the Venice card), tourist : if you don't like it there are the taxi, or stay at home, we go to the work and the scool and the supermarket only single time of our life.
Also the locals like this person are almost always very rich families.
In my next life....!!!! God please let me grow up in beautiful Venice........
Their english is very good, i am impressed
very nice video, when you get some spare time make a nice video of Venice
We’ve been there many times. Great city.
I’m from Venice the only danger in Venice is spritz and cicchetti 😂
😎
their english is surprisingly good!
Spent a few weeks in venice and was always curious about how the locals live life day to day.
Like that they are using the Venetian, regional card deck! Ps did he say they are playing Bisca?
love my homeland
Very informative video. So sad these young adults start their life off smoking & ruining their health
Nick is one handsome Venetian young man.
Ahhhh @4:41 That explains the accent. Thought I was going crazy for a while.
Nicholas is so cute and polite. Anyway, the worst problem in Italy -where I live- is that the salaries are too low and many people can't afford to rent a home or to buy it. Mammoni is not a full insult but it is dispregiative.
Beautiful boy. Perfect English.
Very good nice view ❤❤❤❤
Very cool story. 😀👏
What a Good Boy he is! I'm glad he's half-American!
Ciao. Salut. Hello from Bucharest, Romania - a huge underrated city in Europe:)
@c_cma1971! Hey there! Thanks for watching. Bucharest is on our list for this series so stay tuned ;)
Such an awesome city! But keep it underrated, there are already enough places littered in Europe by Americans and Chinese, including Venice. Don't let Bucharest become the same
Awesome.
I noticed in my travels that Italians often eat a little sweet rubbish for breakfast for the same calories as having an egg on toast or some fruit and yoghurt.