Why Korean Stadium Food DESTROYS American Stadium Food!! You’re Being Robbed!!
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- Опубликовано: 18 ноя 2024
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VIDEO EDITOR » Hà Nhật Linh
CAMERA OPERATOR » Wife
The fact that you can bring your own food is so cool. Not everyone can afford an $8 hot dog X5 for the whole family.
@@minigiant8998t’s bad parenting thst we can realize that we’re being over charged for a shitty hotdog? It’s bad parenting you’re so irresponsible with money. Guess we will see you and the fam in government housing next year.
@@minigiant8998 buddy I can afford it all day if I had to. I’m just pointing out that people can go to a game and fill there belly for a decent price. Without breaking the bank. I feel bad for your kids if u got ‘em
@@minigiant8998 I agree but to be fair 6-12 bucks for a fucking beer that tastes like piss anyway and another 20-30+ if you want a bit of food per person is just stupidly expensive for what you're getting.
You can do that in most baseball games in the USA as well.
Ya, they don't want those people at the game. They aren't there to bring people the enjoyment of baseball, they're there to make as much money as possible!
Ah you missed one thing! There is a seat section with bbq grill where you can have your own Korean bbq in the stadium!
Is the seat that Sonny sitting at more expensive? Because I like that they have a table in front but I notice not all of the stadium seats had that.
@@EnzoTheBakertable seats are quite more expensive than normal seats. its different by stadiums but if normal seats are $15~20, table seats are $30~100, depends on the table size. also the bbq seats (which has a barbeque grill and a huge table with benches) are more more expensive than small tables.😮
I know this from 영국남자 Korean Englishman.
바베큐존은 ssg랜더스 파크에만 있고 사직야구장엔 없습니다
5:58 영어가 적혀있는데도 한국어로 써진 메뉴이름을 말하는게 나라에 대한 존중이 보여서 좋네요
ㄹㅇ 뭔가 썸네일만 보고 그냥 국뽕유튜브인줄 알았는데 ㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋ
오뎅이랑 피쉬케이크라고 말한건 왜 언급안함? 안들림?
정말 지겹다 국뽕충 불편충 ㅋㅋ
@@heunchae3562불편충
@@heunchae3562 불편해 하는건 너 같은데
@@heunchae3562오뎅은 일본 거야...
I think a lot of countries could learn from how Korea does things.
Stadium was very clean, no security. Plenty of food options and the atmosphere looked awesome.
Koreans owe Americans for ww2. They would be speaking Japanese if not for the US.
@@antihypocrisy8978 lmao they owe nothing. The only thing the US gov.t wanted was-being able to put a military base there so that they can have aerial radar detection near N. Korea, china and Russia.
The problem is that Americans have absolutely no sense of shame or cultural responsibility so there’s no way anything can be this clean…
I should know.
American 😂
@@antihypocrisy8978then why is american society a shithole?
@@KK-fw4zq Especially since the only reason Japan was in such a position in Korea was because of their sadly predictable response to Commodore Perry forcing Japan open to US mercantile interests at gunpoint.
It's amazing that a country torn by war and conflict in 1950 has come so far in every aspect of life. South Korea in general is the cleanest, safest country I have ever visited. Korean's live by a code of honor and mutual respect for one another that is deeply rooted in society. In Seoul the watch and jewelry stores are all closely located in one area, you can shop several stores and not see one security bar, alarm or guard. It's an amazing country that's worth a visit, but only in spring or early summer. And steamed mandu with kimchi is one of the best meals on the planet.
You might want to travel there, but dont live there. Their work culture is ruthless
@@ladboii2901 If you think their work culture is ruthless you should come over to the US.
@@ladboii2901American work culture is equally as ruthless
@@Asher-Tzvi Habibi, come to india and you will start liking all other work cultures. The only thing is you don't like what you have.
Yeah and it's such a shitty country that everybody is leaving for the US and are jealous of Japan LMAO
Went to a Korean baseball game in Seoul about 10 years ago. One of the best sporting experiences ever. Rivals a college football game in America. Just non stop cheering for 9 innings. Best way to watch baseball.
Can we talk about how clean and safe that stadium is, in addition to the ridiculous amount of fairly priced, amazing food options? Why do I feel like I'm living in Gotham City when i watch stuff like this?
Diversity is our strength 🦍🐵🦍🐵🦍🐵🦍🐵🦍
Bc America is not Korea. In the States, we cater to criminals and wonder why we can't have nice things.
Your not the only one
South Korea is a homogenous society, thats why they hate foreigners and ban then from clubs and bars, they think that foreigners cause too much trouble. Which is very true.
The US is all about $$$. It’s very rare for sports teams here to treat the fans and stadium staff as anything more than potential dollars. It’s part of our “culture” so to speak.
Love my country, but man, must be nice to be able to go to a baseball game without seeing security at the gate, being able to bring food into the stadium, being able to drink as much as you want without seeing a brawl break out, and to be able to buy a beer for a fraction of what I pay at my teams stadium.
Everyone looks civil and peaceful while also having a good time 😏
ikr dont they have mass shootings everyday too?
It makes me wonder where we went wrong as Americans. Why can’t we enjoy these luxuries the same way that South Koreans can?
@williedaviskcmo3037 guns aren't allowed in stadiums, you know that right? 😂
@GloriousSmite I think that's some of the problem, but the biggest issue is loss of values. Americans have absolutely lost all values, love for neighbor, and struggle to make ends meet. Add all that together, and we have the results we see today.
We could have what South Korea and Japan have if we were strict on teaching classical values and respect like they do in these countries
@@ThyHolyNickel94 You really think mass shooters wouldnt know guns are not allowed, so they sneak in and shoot? You dumb or naive? 😂
Another advantage of Korean stadiums is that most of them are connected to public transportation, so you don't have to drive at all to get there. You can drink and enjoy while watching the game, and you can go home comfortably. (Clean wide area buses and subways are all included, and you can go from Osan and Pyeongtaek to Jamsil Stadium. The distance is about 45 miles, and it takes about an hour and a half.)
Suwon could also be a decent choice for the USFK folks in Osan or Pyeongtaek
price is just 3$.
@@kevinreisfresser7951actually suwon is little away from Osan airbase. It takes 40+ min by subway. I know well cuz I served in OS Airbase and am living in Suwon 😂
땅도 좁고 그마저도 대부분이 산지이기에
질적으로도 중요하지만 양적으로 많은 인프라가 필요한
인터넷, 교통 등이 잘 되어있죠
but then you will miss the best part of the game, the tailgate parties! I'm an asian who immigrated to the US. I really love the tailgate party! AWESOME FOOD AND PARTY!!! Too bad asia doesn't have this, a huge missing part of the fun!
Don't forget parking. $30-50. Korea you have subway/bus that drop you off in front.
Whoever is traveling to Korea/Japan. Baseball game is something you should try.
$20 bucks gets you great seats, cheer leaders that dance to kpop songs, whole bunch of cheering and chanting.
The vibe is so different than here in the states.
Love Korean baseball games
Not just cheerleaders dancing to Kpop songs, if you're lucky the actual Kpop group will be there!
You can reserve a ticket for around(or less than) $16 for weekend game in Korea include watching cheerleaders. For weekdays, $14
Parking fees are expensive in most baseball stadiums because they are worried about drunk driving. I want you to use it only for people who really need it. Instead, don't forget the historical truth that all subways head to baseball stadiums.
Most stadiums in America are accessible by public transportation.
As a person who's gone to games in the US and SK, not even close to the same experience. I love watching my boys play in the MLB, but the stadium experience in Korea is a whole new level of awesome.
2$ for a beer compared to LA games... bout 10-14 for a damn tall boy. F that noise. Haha
Yup. Hard to get drunk in US stadiums unless you tailgate
Everything is better outside Murica
@@ladboii2901
Even North Korea?
@@HOTPLATEGAMING Less gun violence for one?
Courteous..friendly..patriotic..moral people. Glad to know the citizens have a wonderful life not based on greed.
Haha.. have you worked with them?
This is most clownish comment yet. You clearly have no idea about South Korean society, economy, mental health, education, et al.
Majority of the South Korean economy is run by a small handful of conglomerates known locally as Chaebols. The head of Samsung recently got convicted of corruption only to then be pardoned by the President; the owners of Chaebols are above the law. South Korea has the highest rate of plastic surgery in the world, and the highest rate of suicides in the world.
@@newetman4382 Wow, that doesn't make you sound like a jerk.
@@yikemoo yes, it doesn’t! Haha
@@newetman4382 It is true Koreans are very competitive, n I think most Koreans enjoy it.
mad respect for this man and his dedication for cultural awareness. So good at using the Korean language and actually putting in effort to say them correctly.
He live in Korea for many years before moving to Vietnam lol
I want to taste the culture and food of other countries❤
Yes he’s a cultured man lol. He does that in every country he’s been in.
한국어도 잘하고, 음식의 맛을 정확하게 표현하시네요! 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
Usually when you move to a country you learn their langauge and culture, but with the U.S it's the opposite we should learn the immigrants culture instead of them assimilating to our own which is pure idiocy
Korean food is 100% S-tier.
I live in Koreantown in Toronto and literally every single restaurant is amazing.
My wife left here iPod in the airport bathroom and her cellphone on the subway and she was able recover both items. That’s not happening here is the US.
When we get other's stuff, the first thing comes to mind is that we should give it back to the original owner so we call police to give things back
There's CCTV and Black Boxes EVERYWHERE IN KOREA 📸🤨
Im actually more impressed about the tables in the stadium where you put your food on.
That's next level genius right there.
You can also bring portable gas stoves to make Ramen or Kbbq. You can also get food delivered there from nearby restaurant.
Word
@@KK-fw4zqjust woow
집에서 온갖 재료를 가져와서 양푼에 섞어서 비빔밥도 해먹습니다.
💀
this episode alone makes me want to visit Korea. All i got to say is wow, what an example of how good stadiums can be
Nah....Would have years ago but politics keep getting in the way now. Really sad.
It’s not the stadium. It’s the people! Americans could never behave.
@@JosePerez-eh7tf It's the people now inhabiting and controlling America. This is what America would look like without it's precious diversity. High trust, no need for high security, not getting price gouged by you-know-who's.
@@nitro2199 just say you dont like black people, we know
Diversity is our strength 🐵🦍🐵🦍🐵🦍🐵🦍🐵🦍
Did you also notice there was ZERO garbage after the game despite all the food they bring? Mad respect for S. Korea
as a korean i am so proud
But also as a Korean, I think that we should take it more serioulsy into consideration when foreign visitors point out that there are not many of trash bins on streets.
@@anstjsdlr길거리에 쓰레기통이 많지않은 이유는 테러리즘을 방지하기위함입니다.
@@anstjsdlr The problem is not that there's not enough trash bins on the streets. The problem is the people throw trash illegally on the street.
Japan has no trash cans, but their streets are way cleaner than Seoul's streets.
I'm Korean, btw. I want Korea to be better, too.
nah bro it aint always that clean we all gotta learn more from japan
LOVE the sporting atmosphere in Korea. Whether you're into sports or not, it's super fun to be there! Loved this episode even more because I was a Doosan Bears fan when I was in Korea 🤣
Its the same in America though. Plenty of non baseball fans are at every single game. Especially STL.
FORMER us ambassader loves doosan bears team. he has visited seoul repeatedly after returning america,
That is so shocking, the difference between the stadiums. Awesome that Korea has an even cooler experience for fan than we do, very cool!
I think that they do pretty much everything better there. They accepted American culture and improved it. You can see this in their fried chicken, hot dogs, baseball stadiums, etc. Korea is probably the most fun country to visit for Americans because the country is in some way, a better, more peaceful, more polite, more efficient version of the US.
@@tejave0ojnc Precisely.
Huge parts of their modern culture have been influenced by US, and it‘s same for japan. Bcz the two are the biggest allies of US.
And those cultures from US have evolved into very advanced and cool culture, harmonizing well with their own local cultures and traditions accumulated for thousands of years, advanced technologies well distributed to the private sector, and diligent ethnicity.
Actually idk much about baseball, but the memory of baseball stadium in sk still remains one of my most memorable experiences.
This whole video just shows you how out of touch us Americans are, no need for security no worry that someone will steal your things. A culture that knows how to act right. Shout out Korea
Same in Japan too. You can leave your umbrella & shoes outside & no one will steal it.
I wouldn't say we're "out of touch," That's the wrong descriptor. There are just too many crazy asses.
Zero freedom there as well
"It's amazing being delusional, I recommend it to everybody."
-Sonny spilling his wisdom
Unfortunately, there are already far too many people who live that way.
@@MarkDeSade100facts😂
he's so real
Especially as of late 😂😉😉
Korea was a real eye opener for us. Great place. KLOUD beer, my favourite beer worldwide, and I'm an Aussie. Word to the unwary...DO NOT leave your phone unattended at Incheon Airport, even if you only turn your back for an instant...personal experience.
Don't leave your phone unattended or out of sight at any airport, especially in the US
@@Truckdriver2022 Without doubt. Not that anybody would be wooed into complacency by the video, and the phone in the stadium, but stuff happens never the less if we drop our guard momentarily. ✌
Coincidentally, one of few places in SK where there are more foreigners than Koreans.
@@CoolDily Yep. No argument with that. It was the Winter Olympics and I think the National Holiday time. They came from near and far alright.
maybe you had a bad experience with the foreigners at ICN. It's rare that a Korean would steal your phone, when they know CCTV are everywhere. Also, recent news about pickpocketing crimes seems to be on the rise. Those pickpocketers were caught and they turned out to be Russians, who were only in Korea to commit such crimes, then leave. Simply, foreigners are committing these kinds of crimes in Korea. That's why I would never leave phone and stay vigilante on subway trains in Korea
We also leave my cell phone so that other people think I am leaving the seat for a moment and so that they know that the seat is occupied in Korea.
Food in US stadiums are such a joke. Not to mention beer cost $15-$20USD. If you want food and beer it cost around $30USD
A humongous joke! Really a turnoff, unfortunately...
If you watched the vid you would see the prices aren't different. The cheap stuff he did get was dry and old "hockey puck" burger
@@__G___ yeah but there’s also an option to bring your own food. US they make us pour out drinks and throw away food.
@@krapj214 you already moving goalposts because I debunked your comment 😂
@@LM-id1bb no, they arent. If you watched the vid and paid attention you would see that 🙂
We as Americans are way behind in social politeness and respect
To be honest, it's the same in Europe (or specifically The Netherlands. There used to be so much trust in each other, but over the years it gradually disappeared. I honestly think it's due to migration, I have to speak English in more than 50% of the cases at my job, and it's simply due to migrants who can't bother to learn our language
if you look at all history europeans were not only the last to everything including hygiene and respect, but they really ramped up the hate when they landed in the Americas. hate only creates hate.
Diversity is our strength 🦍🐵🦍🐵🦍🐵🦍🐵🦍🐵🦍🐵🦍🐵
I mean we just started treating blacks as human 20 years ago or so. I think its because of the crazy religious roots of this country. Until this point, it's been nothing but native genocide and slavery.
@@krono5elAncient Rome and Greece were really hygienic for the time it wasn’t until the fall of the Roman Empire that Europe became unhygienic.
As a football fan from Europe watching a guy just go through a gate with no security, go to a 7eleven inside the stadium, grab a can of beer and sit next to a guy who just leaves his phone, at the stadium, to go and have a wee and get back is like watching X Files and I want the aliens to abduct me
It was so refreshing to see a live stadium game experience that seemed to be so joyful! I live in Seattle. I love Seattle. Beer in Climate Pledge is $25. Bottle of soda at T Mobile field is $9. I want to fly my kids to Korea to enjoy an experience like that.
With the prices at American ballparks, flying the family to Korea might be cheaper. 😂
That is insane. You'd think one vendor would offer beer for $10 and get everyone's business.
Bro what $25? 😭 I pay that for a full bottle of whiskey in India
Chicken tenders in the Tacomadome was insanely expensive. I was desperate and hungry
Oh Seattle! I'm a fan of LOTTE GIANTS. Then, do you remember Dae-Ho Lee who played at the Seattle Mariners in 2016? He is the legendery player of Giants. He has been used NO.10, He's back number is retired number in Giants. All of giants fans are so proud of his all careers in KBO, NPB, and MLB! If you remeber him, how did you remember his play?
Wow respect for the crowd, no fighting, no loitering, just good times.
이분은 잘댈수밖에없으시네... 너무 겸손하시고 동화대려하시고 소개도잘하시고 존경합니다.
잘될
동화되려
대려는 뭐냐 진짜 ㅋㅋ
we would love to see you go to a smaller korean village and try their local food🔥♥️
Would not make a difference. Korea is so small that produce, meats, and seafood can be shipped from anywhere same day. Pohang is known for crab and seafood as are towns north of Pohang, but you can get the same crabs from the same boat in Busan the same day. Anything you can find in a village like Uljin (soft-shell crab), you can find in Busan or Seoul. Probably from the same boat. Certainly from the same fleet.
Local food? There is no local food in Korea. Koreans all eat bibimbap, tteokbokki, jook, gookbap, kalbi, six kinds of pork, hwey, and sushi. To get a 'local' food, you have to go to Ulleungdo, an island in the East Sea. Great place to go. Lots and lots and lots and lots and lots of seafood. Every dish is available on the mainland, but the seafood is the freshest. If you are ever in Korea, make it a point to go to Ulleungdo. Worth the time and the money.
@@hlynnkeith9334 as a korean, i can tell your wrong.
@@sumonnostelga9369 I am willing to accept that I may be mistaken (like your English grammar), but my wife is Korean -- and a certified chef -- and I have lived in Korea for 16 years. You say I am wrong. Prove it. Name one village that does something no other place in Korea does.
@south.korea_monster you have no life
@@hlynnkeith9334 as a korean, your wrong in my opinion. (btw stfu)
Great episode Sonny. This was very fun to watch. Keep up the great work with the team!! ❤️✌️
Regarding the safety, lack of security and cleanliness of the stadium, I sat down to ponder it over and please shoot me down if I'm completely wrong on this, but:
The US, Western Europe, Korea and Japan. They're all "westernized" countries with heavy capitalistic societies (Japan and Korea arguably even more than the US). However, there's a vast difference in how capitalism should be implemented on a social level. To Americans, and a certain degree to Europeans, capitalism works by the grace of unlimited personal freedom. Everybody should be able to do whatever he/she wants. The downside of that is, obviously, if you give EVERYBODY freedom, people start crossing eachother's lawns, infringing other people's freedoms and before you know it you need a shit ton of security, laws, rules and what not in there to safeguard that "unlimited freedom". See the paradox?
Korea and Japan (and some European countries) have defined their capitalistic social system to one of "communal responsibility". The only way everyone can enjoy freedom is ONLY when everyone always upholds the needs of the group/society first, placing themselves second. Only then you can live in a society where there's no need for excessive law-making, rules, security and whatnot.
The guy leaving his phone, no security at the turnstiles, being allowed to bring your own food: all of these things are super logical and obviously is what everybody wants. Unfortunately, in some countries we find personal freedom so important that we have to make rules that have made many leisurely activities extremely restricting. In Korea, you just don't steal a phone, don't openly carry a gun into the stadium and you're still supporting the food stalls inside the stadium even though you brought a couple of cans of beer because you're helping out. You put society first. If you do that, everyone's gonna have a good time. Not just only you. Even though many people see putting themselves first as "winning" in certain societies.
education is what u called for, Social education or social moral is what NA lacking
Add to that Koreans don't carry guns into the stadium.
In fact, They don't carry guns anywhere cause they don't own gun. And we are talking about the country that is still (technically) in the war and most of Korean male knows how to shoot a gun (mandantory army service)
I know its different country and different situation and all but its worth of ponder why Korea is so safe with out hardly any gun shot deaths
this is very perceptive and wise
Well said, and I might also add, people should keep in mind that unbridled freedom isn't exactly "freeing". Certain high-risk freedoms that could harm other individuals in society (like you point out) require a sensible level of maintenance for society to function safely.
free is important but US got it too soon. still alive too many bad people.
Can only imagine what the gentleman sitting next to you thinks, "Wtf this is the 5th time he's coming back with more food"
true!!! so True!!
He probably assumed that's normal for Americans.
As someone from Toronto who lived in Daegu and loves sports, I can vouch for this being the experience. I've been to games in Canada (all the Toronto teams), US (Bills, Lions, Cavs, Pistons, U Michigan basketball, Yankees, and many more), Spain (FC Barcelona), Colombia, and South Korea (Daegu baseball/soccer, Busan basketball/baseball). When it comes to food/drinks, South Korea takes the W. Colombia probably is next since it was so cheap. Barcelona not even selling alcohol in the stadium, woof.
If you're ever in South Korea, highly recommend checking out a baseball game. Then go to a screen baseball place for some more fun!
What about a soccer game, would the experience be similar enough?
@@lordmarwolaeth4570 I only went to see Daegu FC and the stadium had much less food options than the baseball stadiums. Still cheap and good but honestly better to just bring in your own. Also if you do bring hard liquor it needs to be in a plastic bottle.
@@TwiinStar1224 You mean it depends on the stadium... just like it does everywhere but you decided that you could make a blanket statement???
@@thomgizziz imagine getting this angry at a comment trying to help someone, u are either severely depressed, mentally disabled, or just an internet addict
@@thomgizziz show me where I made a blanket statement you weirdo. Without writing a book on all of the stadiums I've been to, I gave my experience on why I believe Korean stadiums are better. If you couldn't read between the lines to figure out I was referring to MY experience, perhaps you should go back to elementary school.
As a Korean I'd like to say I appreciate this man's pronunciation of our language it's very good 👍
Definitely puts American baseball stadiums to shame on food and fan atmosphere, love it
You should see the bat flips after home runs. So entertaining. In America you get beaned for that.
South Korea looks really cool, would love to visit one day.
That looks ridiculously fun. Friendly people, baseball, and cheap good food and beer.
00:04:39 In fact, most of the contents of the Sundea you ate are “glass noodles.”
Sundae is made in a similar way to sausage. Each region has a different recipe, and the ingredients are also diverse.
Traditionally, it was an expensive meal, but since the war, recipes using cheap glass noodles have spread widely, and now, glass noodles sundae is the most common.
You can find sundae made the traditional way in Korean restaurants. When you try it, you won't think it's the same dish at all 😂
My first baseball game was in Korea. The energy is unmatched!
The level of food, the allowance to bring outside food, and the affordable pricing for stadium food makes Korean stadium food unparallelled!
korean englishman made a video where u can have kbbq at stadiums
Much respect to Sonny for the delightful and accurate portrayal of South Korean baseball culture. Speaking of leaving phones in public places, it's safe enough here to leave laptops in cafes unattended.
Not jus SK. But also Japan. As both countries have a different culture. Strict culture. Which US should adopt
@@captainnyan-nyan2005US should work on stop killing each other first
@@captainnyan-nyan2005 There are so many trashes unruly people in US, looting the stores.
@@tazdingo5297 It's a strength and a weakness. On one hand it makes things uniform, on the other, it can make people very unaccepting of outsiders. It's one thing to visit those countries, it's another trying to live there.
@@tazdingo5297 I'm Korean. I 100% agree
So much respect for you, not many people would take the time to learn the language they are visiting. Also, everyone can see how sincere you are to the people you film. Thanks for the educational POV.
I think he lived in Korea for a few years previously 😊
He lived there for seven years i think ❤
@ayamg3732 Great that he still remembers it, because he's been living in Vietnam for quite a while.
@@ziontours5893 yeah he said it is harder to remember what he learned
i mean not many would learn the language if it's only like 2 weeks holiday, a few basic words for stuff maybe but aside from that it takes a while, especially when the korean language is also considered one of the hardest language to learn.
한국문화를 잘보여주네요ㅎㅎ 좋은영상 감사합니다!
I think the level of fanaticism for baseball in Korea is on a whole different level, because of that the team/stadium can relay on ticket sales and merch instead of price gouging the fans for shitty subpar food at the concession stands. Would love to go to a Korean baseball game one day!
That food was what, 22 dollars? Outside of the stadium that would have been 8 dollars... Instead of knowing what you are talking about you opened your mouth and said some really dumb things. Also most of the food at the stadiums in korea are worse than the stuff you get outside. Again you didn't know what you were talking about but felt that you were able to watch a video with zero context and the childlike innocence that allowed you to believe everything the video (that is basically an advertisement that is made to keep you interested by showing you an idealized version of reality) said.
One thing that might be different from US is that most Korean baseball teams are funded in big companies like LG, Samsung, etc. Maybe thats why prices are relatively cheap.
I tried to bring a small sling bag to the last game I went to, and had to take it back to the car because the rules had just changed, and it was slightly bigger than their arbitrary piece of paper. Mind you, there was nothing harmful in there and they could have searched it, but they opted for either clear totes or teensy tiny unrealistic bags. The lack of common sense at US stadiums these days is truly baffling. Korea knows how things should be done.
The US unfortunately has way more crazies than Korea does. Commenter above pointed out how the US is a hodgepodge of cultures compared to countries like Korea and Japan. Within some of those cultures is a higher proclivity to commit crime. I won't get into the socioeconomic implications, its just the reality. The US is filled with Karens ready to sue anyone, so stadiums have to take the utmost precautions.
Safety, cleanliness, civic awareness... What you're saying is
Everything is possible only in Korea and Japan, which are North Pacific cultures.
Except for the two countries, Asia is completely different. Remember that.
Nope.
@@hairtoss7975nope
Yes
Don't forget Taiwan! People always forget Taiwan when praising Korea and Japan, but it's just as developed as those two.
@@jeremylong9421
Taiwan is not a North Pacific cultural region.
I find myself digging Sonny's 'More' content more than the the main channel. Korea looks pretty fun.
I think when it comes to cleanliness Korea is best. Love how organized everything is.
4:33
In Korea, Sundae (Korean sausage) is divided into two major types. One is starch noodle Sundae, which contains glass noodles, and the other is meat Sundae, which has a taste and texture similar to the meat found in Mandu(dumplings). The starch noodle Sundae is delicious when dipped in Tteokbokki (spicy rice cake) sauce, while the meat Sundae is tasty in its own right. For those who might visit Korea someday, I highly recommend trying not only the starch noodle Sundae at snack bars but also the meat Sundae at specialized Sundae restaurants.
As a Korean I am enjoying these recent Korean food videos so much! Go sonny 🎉🎉🎉
As a non-Korean, I'm learning a ton about South Korean culture thanks to Sonny.
Sonny? Is that the Sony playstation baseball team?
Yes, I like to see him covering the food here from a bunch of different angles. And you can tell he enjoys spending time in the country 🙂
Do they really leave their belongings unattended like that?
@@jayesuraj I’d say it depends, but we don’t expect stuff to be stolen in many situations. But we do try to be careful!
Actually rice cake in Korean is just "tteok". "tteok-bokki" is marinated one.
different from baseball in US, korean baseball teams are run by corporations like samsung, lg. they usually run the team for marketing or because the owner is a big fan of baseball. so they don't have to sell it expensive
That's so awesome! Food looks delicious! Yeah I also wish the prices were like that here in the states. Great video as always. Stay safe out there! 😊
와 천사다.. 예쁘다
When I went to baseball games as a kid in the USA, you weren’t allowed to bring in your own water, so you had to buy that overpriced water and drinks inside, which was necessary if you didn’t want to have a heatstroke. All the food in the Korean stadium looked so good, and much cheaper! Plus, if you don’t want to buy anything, you can just bring your own!
Greetings from Korea! Though I'm not a baseball fan or living in Busan, but I'm really glad you're satisfied from our food and culture!! 🎉✨🇰🇷
P.S. We call rice cakes as 'Ttoek'(떡), and 'Ttoekbokki' (or 'Topokki' for easy pronounciation) refers *only* to this particular dish in 2:20, which is stir-fried(='bokki') rice cakes(='Ttoek') with spicy sauce. Just wanna let you know that's not an word that refers to the whole rice cakes like in 9:06 or 9:20!
Btw, we call that food in 9:06 and 9:20 'So-Ttoek-So-Ttoek'(소떡소떡), as the food itself, which is repetitively skewered & deep-fried sausages and rice cakes, looks like.
만약에 typo가 아니시면 로마자 표기법에 따르면 정확히는 '떡' 은 Tteok로 알려주시면 좋습니다.
이분 유투브 한국에서 시작했는데 이제 단어들이 가물가물 한가봐요 ㅎㅎ
Hi, do you know what is the food at 7th minute? (One after the chicken)
@@cihs88You mean food in 7:30? It's 'Inari Sushi' in English(We called it 'Yu-bu(=Fried Tofu) Cho-bab(=Sushi)' btw), the dish with sweet-seasoned deep-fried tofu stuffed with vinegared rice and various ingredients.
@@리바체 Thank you. It looks delicious and it feels like it can easily turned into a gluten free snack. If it wasn't deep fried probably even very health.
This is why I love this channel...exploring place even the nearly unexplorable place just to show us unbelievable foods... I'm your fan from the Philippines
Respect and manners is a big part of Korean culture
I'm Korean, but I don't think Koreans have much manners
@@user-zw40ba50o그건 니생각이고 어떤 매너가 없다는 거냐??? 미국에서 처럼 길거리에서 약을 주사하고 지하철에서 시끄럽게 떠들면서 심지어 오디오를 크게 틀고 춤을 추고 절도는 범죄로 치지도 않을 정도로 범죄가 만연하고 자동차에 반드시 귀중품은 들고 다니는 그런 나라보다 뭐가 매너가 없다는 거냐???
시기 질투하는 중국인 댓글 부대구나
Yup that's why there are self serve stores in Korea with no employees that are open 24/7. It is based on an honor system which is something Koreans are taught and value. In America a store like that wouldn't last 10 minutes. In America you have groups of 30 "smash and gabbers" that steal things even with employees inside stores. Americans can't even figure out what a woman is and more worried about pronouns than respect and manners.
3:52 "~하고" 찐 한국사람 같아요..Best korean language skills👍🏻
한국에서 영어가르친 선생님 출신입니다 ㅋㅋ
Man! This place use to be my old stomping grounds! I used to ride my bike in the parking lot of this stadium as a kids whenever they didn't have games! Crazy to see a place I grew up around on this channel! Thank you for representing!
the first thing i noticed was how clean everything is... just wow, such a huge difference compared to the US, love the US but we have issues we need to address....
More of these videos please! Such a cool vibe
Some stadiums have a place where you can grill at your seat. Small gas tabletop grill where you BYO ingredients. Such a fun idea!
The latest videos are making me way excited to head to Korea next month. So ready for the culinary magic 🙂
come to korea !!!!
@@Wanderingbicycle next month will be my 8th or 9th trip there (I lost count!) 🙂 Excited to eat and make some videos as well!
@@FlavorofMind if you have visited here for 8 or 9 times you are half Korean already
@Yurorb-or5vz I would like to think so, but I still have a long way to go with language skills 😑... have had time to make some fun Korean food video content though! Love eating in this country 🙂
다음달에 한국오면 더위와습도에 녹아버릴껄요 10~11월에 오세요
As a Korean baseball fan, thank you for honestly introducing the part of our country. It feels like someone is showing "We Live Like This" to others instead of us! (Translated by AI)
This was really cool to see. I wish American venues (all sports) were more like this! I added this video to my bucket list, incase i get rich some day I will go try all the stadium food in Korea lol!
I've always really wanted to go to South Korea as my mother as a baby immigrated from there to the United states after her mother escaped North Korea. I just really love the culture of South Korea, and I hope in the future I can experience it for myself.
You are welcome to come here anytime 😊
탈북게이야 어서와라
어머니에게 감사하다는 말을 꼭 전하세요!!
Hello, I'm a Lotte Giants fan living in Korea:) I'm glad you enjoyed your food. I think this video shows all the charms of Korean baseball park. There are clean, safe, cheap and many delicious food. I'm planning to eat delicious food while going on a national baseball stadium tour next year. There are many delicious things in other baseball stadiums, so I recommend you to try them all.
im loving these korea series. Ive been thinking about getting my passport soon so I can travel sometime in the next 5 years and this series really makes me want to go to Korea first instead of Japan.
what i've seen a lot of people do is do a few day lay over in Japan then fly to Korea so they could visit both countries in 1 trip
I lived there for 2 years, although on an army base. But I actually enjoyed visiting the towns, eating the foods, the older generation was very nice to us Americans.
When I visited Korea and stayed in Pusan, we took the Beetle Jet ferry to Fukuoka. Stayed there 3 days and it was a blast. Caught the Fukuoka Hawks game there. Both countries are amazing in their own unique way, but one thing is certain, the people are both very polite in both countries, food is incredible and it is just super clean all around.
@rawx485 because Americans are always welcome in Korea, for the sake of their sacrifice in Korean war. Many oldies will love you especially
Seoul - Busan - Fukuoka would be a good route for exploration.
Going to any arena/stadium event in the US is usually a bad experience. Traffic, long lines, over the top security, overpriced tickets, parking and concessions. I mostly stay away from sporting events these days, only the occasional concert.
무조건 맛있다하면서 국뽕 타려는 외국인 유튜버들보다
솔직히 말하는 당신이 너무 좋아요~
너무 좋을거까지야ㅎㅎ
this needs to go viral and the whole world needs to follow this example ... why the hell is everything so draconian in the western world..
@fallofanempire6039not true. I’ve met nasty people in every race
I hope this guy lives forever. Respects everyone's culture and food. Always putting out awesome content 👏🏿
The way he eats food is probably going to make that difficult
그 와중에 롯데 야들은 또 홈에서 털리고 있네 참말로
ㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋ
ㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋ
ㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋ ㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋ
Zzzzzzzㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋ
Look at how clean the stadium is at the end!
I like how Sonny had to pronounce "fire wing" in Korean. Also, going back to lotteria is hilarious.
LEAVING YOUR PHONE OUT IN THE OPEN TO TAKE A LEAK??? Insane bro… mad respect for some high morals there
I'm giving my age away here, but when Veteran's Stadium opened in 1971 in Philadelphia, we used to bring in a cooler full of Hoagies, bags of chips, and sodas. No cans or bottles allowed - beer(Schmidt's) had to be a stadium purchase!
Honestly, I think it's just awesome how open you are to eating so many different foods. As a Korean-American I'm still a little bit wary (not scared, just don't like it) of eating octopus and blood sausage. You're open-mindedness is incredible.
What was he eating on the stick with the sausage? What were the white cheese stick looking things
@@justinw9119it was a rice cake.
As a Korean who lived half my life in the US, you have to try to Blood sausages, they don't really taste like what the name implies, more like meaty noodles and you have to try it with tteokbokki + fried stuff (dumplings, veggies, shrimp etc) ...lol but yeah I tried the octopus...not my taste....
I mean you don't have to love everything from your country. I am Turkish born and raised but there are still some local foods which is not my type and they don't look so good for me.
Thank you, man. Great video covering one of the more fun aspects of Korean culture people don't know about really. And your Korean is on-point, pronunciation and usage, nice brother.
This is awesome dude! I’m seriously so jealous of Korea and Koreans man! They get to protect their borders and have a safe borders without being called racists. Why can’t we do that? I live in southern Arizona. I just want my family to be safe. Is that racist? 😔
You are scared of Mexicans? How do you tell between the legal and illegal ones? I live in California and I love my Mexican neighbors, great food and fun, generous people.
@@deadtome44 No way! Definitely not. If I could put green chili salsa in an IV I would. But I am scared of all the illegals trafficking guns drugs and kids.
Americans have the right to protect themselves and stop intruders.
Don't give the tax you paid to the intruders, it's yours.
I go to Rangers ball park few times a year, and the food prices are completely rip off. I was in SK stadium in Incheon in 2019, it seemed to be just a bit more expensive than outside food, but still reasonable compared to U.S
I recommend going to Korean ballpark even if you are not a big baseball fan.
In my English class, a Canadian teacher also said that Korean stadium culture is amazing in the same point as yours. :)
Keep up the great work Sonny. Thanks to you, I can add a few countries on my travel bucket list. Joe's react to peace was the best one yet. Love , love love it.
Sonny is the kind of guy to wear a Yankees jersey to a korean baseball match to blend in. 🤣
롯데팬들은 지는것에 익숙합니다…😂😂저는 그냥 분위기를 즐기러 갑니다😊
This was a great video. So many options of food to choose from at a baseball stadium! I also was quite impressed with your knowledge of Korean! :D
This one was awesome Sonny! I really like that the food review was tied to an activity celebrated by the people there
The ticket price is inexpensive too. Right behind the plate seats with tables- around U$30 in weekdays. The cheapest outfield one is 6 bucks.
The part that food can be ordered via text message is left out. I guess the dude can not read and write Korean so he could not try. There are ads with phone numbers posted for fried chicken, pizza whatever. You text that number, make your order and add on your seat number. Your food comes to your seat, usually in 5 to 10minutes. Another cool feature is Korean BBQ. In Daegu, in some seats you can grill pork belly, wrap it up in lettuce and eat it. You can drink soju too, of course. In Seoul, much like Japan, there are kids chugging draft beer kegs during the game. You can order a drink at your seat when they walk by. Unlike the MLB which can operate on ticket prices alone, the KBO can not function without major sponsers that are the team owners. (Samsung Lions, KIA Tigers are actual team names), so most stadiums are awfully old and falling apart. However, these major conglomorates have kept ticket prices and food prices low. That is why it is all so cheap. Of course, lack of security makes it cheaper, too. If you hve the New York Yankees renamed CitiBank Yankees and have their logo plastered all over you can have it cheap.
Ah, living in a society that isn't a mixing pot of cultures. I gotta say, those food and drink options and prices are really amazing. Wish we had that in the states.
리뷰가 진짜 기가막힐 정도로 잘하셨습니다.
i like how they have a small table at your seat, makes it easier to eat food
You had me at SQUID.
I have done spiral cut deep fried potatoes but now they are all going on a stick, what a great idea!
ㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋ무턱대고 찬양하지 않고 '튀긴 공 맛이 난다' 라고 솔직하게 말해주는게 좋아요
"It's amazing being delusional. I recommend it to everybody." Best line of 2023 - needs its own award in the Besties. Thanks dude for making me laugh out loud.
I initially cursed my cousins for taking America's Pastime and somehow making it better.
But after experiencing several games, I have come to accept that Korean Baseball was more fun than 90% of the regular season games I've seen at Fenway. Post Season is a different animal.
God sometimes there's nothing I love more than a faithful foreigner who is willing to learn the native language while also trying their best to not botch the pronounciation.
There was a point in time not too long ago when America and Europe were as safe as Korea is today. Where you could leave your belongings without the worry of theft, where there weren't security guards and metal detectors at stadiums. Where you could leave your doors unlocked at night and when you went to work.
I want to say that was a BRIEF period of time, maybe the forties to the sixties. Australia actually was like that. I probably could have left a wallet full of bills on top of my car and it would still be there after hours. Unfortunately, decades of the music industry glorifying crime hasn't helped.
only for europeans, but if you were from one of the five cradles of civilization you always had a target on your back. imagine being a Indigenous American in european occupied territory, it hasnt been safe for 500 years : D