Anime Man finds Genetic Matches with DNA Test

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  • Опубликовано: 13 сен 2024
  • In this Professional Genealogist Reacts, I watch "I Took a DNA Test and the Results are SHOCKING..." by ‪@TheAnimeMan‬
    Check out the original video - • I Took a DNA Test and ...
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Комментарии • 51

  • @tedgraham5739
    @tedgraham5739 Год назад +9

    Hungry was ruled by the Ottoman Empire for centuries. Anatolia was the center of the Ottoman Empire. This might explain the Anatolian ancestry.

  • @mrquwe
    @mrquwe Год назад +8

    The reason myheritage is big in europe is because myherritage is cheaper and advertise more.

  • @PowPowSunshine100
    @PowPowSunshine100 Год назад +9

    Hi Jared. My husband is also 50% Japanese. Both Ancestry and 23&me are very accurate in pointing out the location of his family there. Japan is and has been very insular since the first modern humans (like the Yayoi and Jamon) arrived to the island country. I think most 100% Japanese people would get 100% Japanese, and could be pinpointed to North, Central, or Southern Japan.
    Edited: My grandmother's family came over from Norway in the early 1900's, and it was only through MyHeritage that I found my many Norwegian (rather close) cousins who still live in Norway! Great video, btw, thank you!

  • @Matty06001
    @Matty06001 Год назад +6

    You’re so logical and unsilly. I frankly really love that. Always interesting.

  • @GoogleAccount-cq9xr
    @GoogleAccount-cq9xr 11 месяцев назад +5

    He looks more indian than me 😂

  • @yespls4184
    @yespls4184 11 месяцев назад +4

    It makes sense that he has Anatolian ancestry if there are rumors of a Serbian relative. The Ottoman Empire ruled over much of the Balkans for centuries, which includes Serbia. Also-- there are a lot of ethnic Hungarians in northern Serbia (Voyvodina)

  • @gopherlyn
    @gopherlyn Год назад +12

    I took both Ancestry and 23andme, and then uploaded to other websites. I got my mom to do both also, but I only have my dad doing the 23andme because it was so difficult to get him to get enough spit into the tube, that I didn't even try to get him to do Ancestry. Both of my parents are in their 80s.

    • @debismith6239
      @debismith6239 Год назад +1

      My sisters did the Ancestry tests but zip have dry mouth so I haven't completed my test.

  • @revert6417
    @revert6417 Год назад +3

    As a Serb, I'm proud of my amoeba ancestors.

  • @cal8354
    @cal8354 Год назад +2

    The spit tubes look really big, like that's a lot of spit, but actually the amount is small because you don't fill up the whole tube.

  • @HowWeGotHere
    @HowWeGotHere Год назад +9

    It's true what you say about My Heritage one of my wife's great Grandparent's came from Finland in the 1920's and she tests 24.9% Finnish and she has about 16k matches and over 14 are in Finland - we joke based on that population of Funland and the % of people who probably do DNA tests she has good odds if she ever goes over there Going up to the first person she meets and say Hello cousin and she would probably be right.

    • @loislewis5229
      @loislewis5229 Год назад +1

      I think your family joke will be true 😊 I’m 1st generation American and I’m also Finnish. My father and his ancestors came from the islands between Sweden and Finland. After doing some research, I found a lot of crossover of relatives. That’s when I learned the word endogamy 😅
      Interestingly, the majority of my genetic matches on 23&me are from Finland, even though my mother was from Germany.

  • @drewred9308
    @drewred9308 Год назад +2

    I thought this one was a pretty good laugh. I think that maybe 23andMe could maybe alter their timeline feature - or go slightly more in depth with their description - to clear up the misunderstandings some people have around it.
    But kudos to him for being the only Australian to date to post a 23andMe results video. As an Australian who’s recently taken this test (currently waiting for my results, am very excited) I can say it is bit of a tricky process when compared to Ancestry.

  • @TheDanEdwards
    @TheDanEdwards Год назад +2

    It's 51% from his mother because he is male and the Y-chromosome is not used in 23andMe ethnicity.

  • @BobTheSchipperke
    @BobTheSchipperke Год назад +3

    I took Ancestry, FamilyTreeDNA and 23 and Me. I then uploaded into other places like MyHeritage, LivingDNA, and of course GEDMatch (plus others). Very few are “better” than others. It depends on what you want out of a single DNA company if you want to “go there” and say one is the “best”.

  • @Zodia195
    @Zodia195 6 месяцев назад

    Thanks for explaining that timeline from 23 and Me because I found that pretty confusing lol.

  • @karmagal78
    @karmagal78 Год назад +3

    Mentioning not receiving any DNA, I was able to figure out the side by side comparison on the ancestry DNA because with my mom’s side. She has Irish showing up, but I didn’t.

  • @debjordan4399
    @debjordan4399 10 месяцев назад +1

    My thought in why he chose the 2 he did...Ancestry has a larger database of matches but 23&me has the Y-dna option. 23&me has 12 million subs and FTDNA just over 2 million. I agree with you about him using one of the Asian companies.

  • @virre1981
    @virre1981 Год назад +3

    Ancestry does split the DNA in which side it comes from now (and it looks correct so far), and the first example he looked at even said Paternal to continue that.

    • @TheDanEdwards
      @TheDanEdwards Год назад

      "Ancestry does split the DNA " - AncestryDNA splits _the matches_ into parent side. This is done by associating shared matches into groups.

  • @cefcat5733
    @cefcat5733 Год назад +3

    Guess, his dark eyes make one think East Indian but my bro has that and its source is his being 50 percent Italian. His hair and dark eyes, Balkan. Knew a guy who could be his brother, kind of a Dr. Zhivago look. Maybe he has a Persian look, but he is too dark-skinned for that. He says Japanese. That's cool. He should watch your channel and see what he thinks then. Yes, he should check the Asian side for accuracy. His look-alike who I met, is really in Wisconsin but would be 70 something now. There will come a day, when we can't guess by looks anymore. By that time, DNA will have been replaced by something better or disinterest. 😂

  • @hawkeyescoffee6399
    @hawkeyescoffee6399 Год назад +2

    I wonder if what happened is if he asked someone which was best to take, and someone said "well if you just want to know where you're from then 23& me is good, but if you're looking to build your tree then AncestryDNA has the bigger datagpbase for matching to telatives". And, considering his misunderstanding of the most recent full ancestry, he then took that to mean: 23 & Me _only_ did the location testing and AncestryDNA _only_ did person matching.
    That would be my guess anyway.
    Interesting to see how distant the majority ofhis matches are on AncestryDNA, and it seemed from the names that most of them were from his European side - that's not really surprising, as I guess most still in Asia would take more Asian based tests since they can't easily get 23 & Ancestry, but I thought there might be more Japanese names in the US matches.i wonder if he expected to see more matches in Australia sndstill in german/Eastern Europe? I guess that would depend how much he knows about the family tree & history.
    I was curious about what happened with the Anatolian & North African from 23 and how some of that somehow became Swedish on AncestryDNA. And he didn't seem to notice. I didn't see, but did Ancestry pinpoint ore specific regions for him? Eg. my 24% Swedish pinpoints Helsingborg and Skåne. Which is accurate to what little I know of my Swedish GGM (which is basically that on a census she put "Helsingborg, Sweden" as her birthplace).
    Had to laugh at your reaction to him misunderstanding the closest full ancester chart, but if my above guess is true (and based on what he said at the beginning) then it would make sense that he's Misunderstood what that shows too. That he somehow that that was a migration pattern. Yet, interstingly, the one thing that he might have found that actual migration pattern from - the Y-DNA - he completely missed. Lol.
    And yes, I agree it was amusing that he covered his parents names and left the other matches visible (he could have at least blurred their surnames, kinda suggests that he's less interested in protecting _everyone's_ privacy, just his own & his parents - I'm assuming the name he used for himself was a made up surname). Perhaps it was deliberate, if he's hoping he has a cousin who is a fan watching (idk how popular his channel is, never heard of him before), but that seems a stretch. Like you, I enjoy seeing matches, but you have to be careful with people's info too. And the fact he blurred his parents showed he's savvy enough to blur info. Thankfully, the person he clicked through to didn't have a tree linked, though he showed enough if someone was determined to try & track him considering he told us he comes from a line of 6 Josephs (and idk if that would be annoying af,more super useful for family tree research, I guess it depends if they had middle names, bad enough that I had three generations on my dad's side who flipped James Frederick back and forth, but never used them consistently 🤦).

  • @jfme8785
    @jfme8785 Год назад +1

    I like Ancestry Dna because they give the specific country instead of the other dna tests that give just a region of continent

    • @mattpotter8725
      @mattpotter8725 Год назад +2

      You might like it and it may be right for a lot of people but DNA didn't respect borders and borders have changed a lot even over the past 100 years ago regions might be all the DNA testing company can provide the to the mixing of populations, migrations, and the changes in borders over the past number of centuries. Unless your ancestors didn't move, only married people from the same area that also has no ancestors from outside their area then it may be extremely difficult, and that's discarding the fact that the base DNA that the companies are comparing your DNA against may actually have DNA from somewhere else that they have misidentified (in my grandpa's case Scotland instead of Ireland, but it could equally for someone else be France and Germany or Austria and Northern Italy), so we might all like being able to know exactly which country we came from, but it's not very easy to do this.

  • @Hennessyvybezz
    @Hennessyvybezz Год назад +1

    Please cover CRI Genetics dna tests! I just ordered mine and my sons today.

  • @debjordan4399
    @debjordan4399 Год назад +2

    He could upload to WeGene.

  • @Richard-zm6pt
    @Richard-zm6pt Год назад +2

    Well, the Hungarians, originally, came from Asia, and if Anatolian refers to Turks, the Turks also came to the border of Austria at one point in the middle ages, so that result does make sense, especially at the lower percentages represented. Could have done without all the f bombs.

  • @sheppeyescapee
    @sheppeyescapee Год назад

    I find the Ancestry timeline feature interesting, my three closest ethnicities on there are correct. British & Irish (1890-1950) - I have 2 grandparents who are fully English. French & German (1830-1890) - 2x Great Grandparent who was North Dutch, Southern Chinese & Taiwanese (1830-1890) - 2x Great Grandparent Chinese from Guangdong, China. My other ethnicities are further back because my maternal grandfather came from the Mauritian Creole community and it is very mixed so the ancestors being 100% of those ethnicities will be much further back (especially when it comes to the Malagasy ancestors).

  • @elizabethelias1005
    @elizabethelias1005 11 месяцев назад +1

    23 and Me also shows your Neanderthal %.

  • @desertboot9755
    @desertboot9755 Год назад +1

    My Ancestry Timeline is SOOOOO wrong. I'm very confused by that tbh.

  • @cennethadameveson3715
    @cennethadameveson3715 Год назад +1

    Do keep arguing against those who say "I'm omg I'm 0.05 percent Italian no wonder I like pasta/curry/bangers nash!

  • @mattpotter8725
    @mattpotter8725 Год назад

    I've recently taken an AncestryDNA test and got my results back 3 years after testing my 100 grandfather. Having done a bit of clustering of my results I've noticed quite a few of my matches that should have my grandfather just don't. I've checked on his results that he matches them and he does, there no other possible way these matches can come through any other line (plus he matches them as well) so I'm not sure what is going on. I've also noticed for some matches that this occurs from I seem to be a higher match than him. I've put this down to the fact that the sample he gave maybe was lower quality, that the way the tests and/or analysis is done can never be 100% accurate, just as with the ethnicity estimates there is a level of inaccuracy, maybe less so but it's still there. This isn't obvious unless you have tested yourself and either a parent or child, but I wonder if anyone else has seen this, because it's very odd when you see it.

    • @TheDanEdwards
      @TheDanEdwards Год назад +1

      There are several things at work here. Other people have reported that they match a person with slightly more reported centiMorgans (cM) than their parent matches that person. Possibilities:
      1) AncestryDNA algorithm for filtering out overly common DNA (pile-up regions) filtered out more for your parent (or grandparent) than yourself.
      2) recombination that led to you put some shared from your other grandparents next to the region that is reported as the shared segment(s). This is related to the first problem but may not be caught by filtering out pile-ups. Remember, your grandparent is your cousin as well as being your grandparent.

  • @mcalanchini1
    @mcalanchini1 Год назад +1

    I love sushi! I have 0% japanese LOL

  • @karmagal78
    @karmagal78 Год назад +1

    Does 23andme do the Y haplogroup? Asking in part because we’re trying to solve a mystery.

    • @ginagaladriel
      @ginagaladriel Год назад +2

      Yes, it gives both the maternal and paternal haplogroups (of course, if you're a female you will only get the maternal unless your father or a male descendant from your father's line take the test)

    • @karmagal78
      @karmagal78 Год назад +1

      @@ginagaladriel thank you! I’m hoping that this will solve our mystery. Wasn’t sure if they did or not. I was getting mixed responses from others. My dad has agreed to take the test. He was confused, at first, because he had taken the AncestryDNA test, but I explained about the Y haplogroup. He’s now curious what it will say.

    • @Humphreyat86
      @Humphreyat86 Год назад

      Yes, 23andme do Y haplogroups, but you'll only get a rough answer from it. If you want accurate state of the art Y DNA testing you're better off going to FTDNA, but it costs a lot more & may need to arrive at FTDNA with questions & cousins who could answer your questions. My nephew tested on 23and me about 4 or 5 years ago & got a generic haplogroup which has been known for about 15 years & is only specific to about 2000 years ago. I had my father tested on FTDNA (Big Y, expensive) & immediately he belonged to a haplogroup at least 2 branches down from my nephew's group (his grandson). I persuaded my father's closest match on FTDNA YDNA to test more accurately which resulted in a MCRA at about 1700 AD. Then came the real question I wanted to answer ... I was able to contact male line descendants of people who immigrated from the same parish in Ireland in the 1860s, with the same surname & kept in contact with my family for 50 years or so afterwards. Various descendants of that family have significant autosomal matches with my father's sister. Before YDNA testing it was impossible to conclusively answer whether we had a common ancestor on the male line, or whether the common surname was coincidental.
      The FTDNA results have come back & the common surname relatives share the same Y Haplogroup back to about 1700, but Snip testing suggests a closer match - rstimate 1750. I'm not able to place this family directly into my family tree yet, but it may be a matter of time with study of common matches & using the tools suggested on this channel. Thanks!

  • @marna_li
    @marna_li 7 месяцев назад

    I like Joey and so. But I'm kind of tired of people misrepresenting DNA-tests as something that determines ethnicity. These are groupings based on the needs to classify from our current view of the world, around nationalities. But it is really about the populations, and not their cultures. If you go back 100-200 years the world look different. It is not like DNA should be the truth when coming to ethnicity. Although DNA influence us as individuals, thinking that some groups have inherent personality traits in their genes, enforces stereotypes, and borders to some scientific racism.

  • @bitteranjel6782
    @bitteranjel6782 Год назад

    Me n my friend who were 2nd cousin go back 28 generations to Poland that's 1750ish oh we re from Isreal before that I did my stuff through just purely medical records. I'm an old school Jew

  • @HowWeGotHere
    @HowWeGotHere Год назад

    I am not sure about food but I have a preference for Whisky and as far as beer I prer Stout and Porter and I am Irish and Scottish yes but food I mean I do enjoy a Good Blood Pudding or Haggis but I'd prefer Hamburgers and French Fries and as far as I know I have no German or French oh wait that's American Food yeah my peopel went to USA not the other way around. So yeah food likes doesn't equate to ethnic Heritage.

  • @GoogleAccount-cq9xr
    @GoogleAccount-cq9xr 11 месяцев назад

    Hard to digest he doesn't have South Asian ancestry 😂

  • @abdomahfouad4699
    @abdomahfouad4699 Год назад

    I am unable to comprehend this just How can he inherit over 40% European ancestry when he look completely asian !!

    • @ihavenoidea9426
      @ihavenoidea9426 Год назад +2

      I’d actually say he looks more European then Asian.Especially considering the fact that he’s half East Asian while he looks like a mix of European and south Asian not East Asian .I’m Just to trying to say that he doesn’t look East Asian at all while being 51 percent .

    • @gardogodinez6621
      @gardogodinez6621 Год назад +2

      He looks like someone that is actually geographically in between Western Europe and Japan, the Middle-East. Genetics is funny that way.

  • @vaguelyelena
    @vaguelyelena 10 месяцев назад

    I was looking forward to watching these videos but whoa you are getting so upset at other people who literally arent versed in this like you are. You should refigure out how to approach this reaction thing because they didn't make the content for you and your anger is a major turn off to watching your videos. I was looking forward to you teaching what was right and wrong but this aint it.

  • @seekerandroses
    @seekerandroses Год назад

    102 like